This page is shown in Figure 1 and shows all the information relating to the selected
transaction.
edit or
delete; or to add a new
attachment or
comment to this transaction.
Some details of the transaction are displayed in subsections just below the top header area, such as the transaction’s location within Psoda, and it’s category, title, description and owner. In another subsection, you will be presented with information about the transaction’s workflow information. From this workflow subsection you may be able to
request or
authorise a state transition. The rest of the page is made up of a number of tabs or sections (depending on your selected view):
This tab shows an asset listing of all of the attachments that have been added to this transaction, as shown in Figure 3. By default, this table will present you with a number of details about the attachments such as the file’s name, attachment type, view the version and access a download link.
From the Actions column of this attachments table, you can act on individual attachments by
editing,
deleting,
moving or
locking/
unlocking the selected attachment.
edit button at the bottom of the attachment table or navigate to this same spot to
add more attachments to this transaction. Here, you can also export this list to
Excel or
CSV files.
At the very bottom of this tabbed view, you have the option to add more attachments by utilising the drag and drop functionality to drag the files you wish to upload into the drop box (note that this function works in HTML5 compliant browsers only).
This tab shows an asset listing of all of the comments that
users have made on this transaction, as shown in Figure 4. By default, this table will present you with a number of details about the comments such as, the date that this comment was last updated, who created the comment, the comment itself and any associated tags to name a few.
From the Actions column of this comments table, you can act on individual comments by
editing or
deleting the selected comment.
edit button at the bottom of the comment table or navigate to this same spot to
add more comments to this transaction. Here, you can also export this list to
Excel or
CSV files.
This tab shows some additional details on the transaction, for example the pre and post mitigation probability,proximity, level of transaction as visually represented in radar charts as well as the implications and treatment plan, as shown in Figure 5.

Figure 1 – Transaction view page
The top header area allows you to
Attachments
This tab shows an asset listing of all of the attachments that have been added to this transaction, as shown in Figure 3. By default, this table will present you with a number of details about the attachments such as the file’s name, attachment type, view the version and access a download link.
From the Actions column of this attachments table, you can act on individual attachments by 
Figure 3 – Transaction attachments tab
Note that you can customise your table view by clicking the
Comments
This tab shows an asset listing of all of the comments that 
Figure 4 – Transaction comments tab
Note that you can customise your table view by clicking the
Details
This tab shows some additional details on the transaction, for example the pre and post mitigation probability,proximity, level of transaction as visually represented in radar charts as well as the implications and treatment plan, as shown in Figure 5.

Figure 5 – Transaction details tab
Some fields may allow for inline editing although these permissions may be linked to your access rights. If you feel that you should have access to some of these permissions, contact your System Administrator.