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Workspaces
A Workspace is an environment that allows you to manage your Bitrise apps and the team members working on the apps. You can create multiple Workspaces, and you can be invited to Workspaces by other Bitrise users.
A Workspace is an environment that allows you to manage your Bitrise apps and the team members working on the apps. You can create multiple Workspaces, and you can be invited to Workspaces by other Bitrise users.
To be able to add apps and run builds, you either need to be part of a Workspace, or you have to be an outside contributor on an app's team.
You also need a Workspace to have a paid subscription plan on Bitrise. Each of your Workspaces can have a different subscription plan which determines how many credits your Workspace's apps can use.
Legacy users
Legacy users are users with concurrency-based accounts: you have a concurrency-based account if you do not use credits when running builds. Legacy users can still add apps on their personal account and run builds of those apps without a Workspace.
Workspace Team
Being the member of a Workspace's Team means being a member in one of the Workspace groups. Groups can be assigned to the apps that are owned by the Workspace.
You can categorize your team members into groups using the Workspace Team tab on Bitrise.
Workspace team membership is based on groups: A Workspace group works as a wrapper for team members. Workspace owners and admins can manage groups and add multiple members to each app's team at once, making it faster and easier to set up new projects on Bitrise. A given group can be assigned to work on an app with a specific role, and all members of the same group will have the same level of access to the app.
Difference between app teams and Workspace groups
App teams are handled per app, while Workspace groups are handled globally.
A Workspace group has no inherent roles on its own. You can assign groups to app teams and choose their role there, which means the same group can have different roles on different apps.
Workspaces can take advantage of SAML Single Sign-On: we have guides for setting it up with several major identity providers.
An app on Bitrise represents a Git repository that stores source code and has been connected to Bitrise to be able to run builds on it. As such, a Bitrise app isn't necessarily an actual application: it's just the code on which you run builds with Bitrise.
An app on Bitrise represents a Git repository that stores source code and has been connected to Bitrise to be able to run builds on it. As such, a Bitrise app isn't necessarily an actual application: it's just the code on which you run builds with Bitrise.
An app on Bitrise represents a Git repository that stores source code and has been connected to Bitrise to be able to run builds on it. As such, a Bitrise app isn't necessarily an actual application: it's just the code on which you run builds with Bitrise.