Hi,
Maybe I found the underlying problem...
too psql, I typed:
canon=# \dn gallo
and it told me:
List of schemas
Name | Owner
-------+-------
gallo | ysu
(1 row)
Maybe the supersuer postgres is unable to grant select
on that table... But it told me it did.
>> canon=# grant select on gallo.unlinkcol1 to galloan;
>> GRANT
It doesn't make sense... I am confused.
Tena Sakai
Tsakai@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
-----Original Message-----
From: pgsql-admin-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx on behalf of Tena Sakai
Sent: Sat 2/28/2009 2:55 PM
To: Andreas Wenk
Cc: pgsql-admin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: grant question
Hi Andy,
Thank you for your walk through.
Here's what I did, emulating your guidance and spirit:
-- about to create a new role
canon=# create role galloan;
CREATE ROLE
canon=#
canon=# \dg galloan
List of roles
Role name | Superuser | Create role | Create DB | Connections | Member of
-----------+-----------+-------------+-----------+-------------+-----------
galloan | no | no | no | no limit | {}
(1 row)
-- grant a particular select on this role
canon=# grant select on gallo.unlinkcol1 to galloan;
GRANT
-- put a user/role into galloan group/role
canon=# grant galloan to gjoslyn;
GRANT ROLE
canon=#
canon=# \dg gjoslyn
List of roles
Role name | Superuser | Create role | Create DB | Connections | Member of
-----------+-----------+-------------+-----------+-------------+------------------
gjoslyn | no | no | no | no limit | {wetlab,galloan}
(1 row)
--now test it as user gjoslyn
[tsakai@vixen ~]$ psql canon gjoslyn
Password for user gjoslyn:
Welcome to psql 8.3.6, the PostgreSQL interactive terminal.
Type: \copyright for distribution terms
\h for help with SQL commands
\? for help with psql commands
\g or terminate with semicolon to execute query
\q to quit
canon=>
canon=> select * from gallo.unlinkcol1 limit 5;
ERROR: permission denied for schema gallo
canon=>
-- it is having a problem with this schema called gallo
-- as you can see below, there is no problem with schema public
canon=> select * from allele limit 5;
alleleid | markerid | value | datecreated | datereplaced
----------+----------+-------+-------------------------+---------------------
3775273 | 1890310 | 138 | 2007-10-30 20:13:48.104 | 3000-01-01 12:00:00
3775276 | 1890310 | 136 | 2007-10-30 20:13:48.35 | 3000-01-01 12:00:00
3775278 | 1890310 | 122 | 2007-10-30 20:13:48.731 | 3000-01-01 12:00:00
3775280 | 1890310 | 142 | 2007-10-30 20:13:49.358 | 3000-01-01 12:00:00
3775282 | 1890310 | 124 | 2007-10-30 20:13:49.86 | 3000-01-01 12:00:00
(5 rows)
So, I don't know how to cure this problem.
Any hints, poiters are appreciated.
Regards,
Tena Sakai
tsakai@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
-----Original Message-----
From: Andreas Wenk [mailto:a.wenk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Sat 2/28/2009 1:01 PM
To: Tena Sakai
Cc: pgsql-admin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: grant question
Tena Sakai schrieb:
> Thank you, Scott, for your reply.
>
> > Two problems. 1: you don't grant select on schemas, you grant it on
> > tables. 2: case folding. If you're gonna use a name "schema_Z" then
> > you have to quote it, because it's mixed case, not all lower.
>
> > You need to grant it for each table.
>
> In actual command issued, there is no case mixing. I wanted
> to emphasize the argument was a schema name, not a table name.
> But this means as new tables get created in the schema, a set
> of new commands must be issued?
>
> > Note that instead of granting it to a user, you should grant it
> > to a role, then give membership to that role to the user.
>
> That sounds like a good idea. Would you mind showing an exmple?
Hi Tena,
-- your user role
roletest=# CREATE ROLE tena LOGIN;
CREATE ROLE
-- a group role
roletest=# CREATE ROLE musicians;
CREATE ROLE
-- put tena 'in' the group role
roletest=# GRANT musicians to tena;
GRANT ROLE
-- connect to roletest a user tena
roletest=# \c roletest tena
You are now connected to database "roletest" as user "tena".
roletest=> select * from test;
ERROR: permission denied for relation test
STATEMENT: select * from test;
ERROR: permission denied for relation test
-- grant SELECT right as superuser in roletest
roletest=> \c roletest postgres
You are now connected to database "roletest" as user "postgres".
roletest=# GRANT SELECT on test to musicians;
GRANT
roletest=# \c roletest tena
You are now connected to database "roletest" as user "tena".
roletest=> SELECT * FROM test;
id | value
----+-------
(0 rows)
Cheers
Andy
--
St.Pauli - Hamburg - Germany
Andreas Wenk
> Regards,
>
> Tena Sakai
> tsakai@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Scott Marlowe [mailto:scott.marlowe@xxxxxxxxx]
> Sent: Sat 2/28/2009 12:04 PM
> To: Tena Sakai
> Cc: pgsql-admin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Subject: Re: grant question
>
> On Sat, Feb 28, 2009 at 12:56 PM, Tena Sakai <tsakai@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > Hi Everybody,
> >
> > I want to issue a command:
> >
> > grant select on schema_Z to user_a;
> >
> > so that the user_a can look at all tables in schema_Z.
> > Sadly, what I get is:
> > ERROR: relation "schema_Z" does not exist
>
> Two problems. 1: you don't grant select on schemas, you grant it on
> tables. 2: case folding. If you're gonna use a name "schema_Z" then
> you have to quote it, because it's mixed case, not all lower.
>
> > I tried:
> >
> > grant select on schema_Z.* to user_a;
>
> Sorry no wildcarding on grant (At least not yet). You need to grant
> it for each table. Note that instead of granting it to a user, you
> should grant it to a role, then give membership to that role to the
> user.
>