5.6. Privileges
When an object is created, it is assigned an owner. The owner is normally the role that executed the creation statement. For most kinds of objects, the initial state is that only the owner (or a superuser) can do anything with the object. To allow other roles to use it, privileges must be granted.
There are different kinds of privileges:
SELECT
,
INSERT
,
UPDATE
,
DELETE
,
TRUNCATE
,
REFERENCES
,
TRIGGER
,
CREATE
,
CONNECT
,
TEMPORARY
,
EXECUTE
, and
USAGE
.
The privileges applicable to a particular
object vary depending on the object's type (table, function, etc).
For complete information on the different types of privileges
supported by
PostgreSQL
, refer to the
GRANT
reference
page. The following sections and chapters will also show you how
those privileges are used.
The right to modify or destroy an object is always the privilege of the owner only.
An object can be assigned to a new owner with an
ALTER
command of the appropriate kind for the object, e.g.,
ALTER TABLE
. Superusers can always do
this; ordinary roles can only do it if they are both the current owner
of the object (or a member of the owning role) and a member of the new
owning role.
To assign privileges, the
GRANT
command is
used. For example, if
joe
is an existing role, and
accounts
is an existing table, the privilege to
update the table can be granted with:
GRANT UPDATE ON accounts TO joe;
Writing
ALL
in place of a specific privilege grants all
privileges that are relevant for the object type.
The special
"
role
"
name
PUBLIC
can
be used to grant a privilege to every role on the system. Also,
"
group
"
roles can be set up to help manage privileges when
there are many users of a database - for details see
Chapter 21
.
To revoke a privilege, use the fittingly named
REVOKE
command:
REVOKE ALL ON accounts FROM PUBLIC;
The special privileges of the object owner (i.e., the right to do
DROP
,
GRANT
,
REVOKE
, etc.)
are always implicit in being the owner,
and cannot be granted or revoked. But the object owner can choose
to revoke their own ordinary privileges, for example to make a
table read-only for themselves as well as others.
Ordinarily, only the object's owner (or a superuser) can grant or revoke privileges on an object. However, it is possible to grant a privilege " with grant option " , which gives the recipient the right to grant it in turn to others. If the grant option is subsequently revoked then all who received the privilege from that recipient (directly or through a chain of grants) will lose the privilege. For details see the GRANT and REVOKE reference pages.