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Re: Grants not working on partitions

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On 9/28/24 04:02, Lok P wrote:
Hi,
While we are creating any new tables, we used to give SELECT privilege on the newly created tables using the below command. But we are seeing now , in case of partitioned tables even if we had given the privileges in the same fashion, the user is not able to query specific partitions but only the table. Commands like "select * from schema1.<partition_name> " are erroring out with the "insufficient privilege" error , even if the partition belongs to the same table.

Grant SELECT ON <table_name> to <user_name>;

Grant was seen as a one time command which needed while creating the table and then subsequent partition creation for that table was handled by the pg_partman extension. But that extension is not creating or copying any grants on the table to the users. We were expecting , once the base table is given a grant , all the inherited partitions will be automatically applied to those grants. but it seems it's not working that way. So is there any other way to handle this situation?


The docs are there for a reason:

https://github.com/pgpartman/pg_partman/blob/master/doc/pg_partman.md#child-table-property-inheritance

"Privileges & ownership are NOT inherited by default. If enabled by pg_partman, note that this inheritance is only at child table creation and isn't automatically retroactive when changed (see reapply_privileges()). Unless you need direct access to the child tables, this should not be needed. You can set the inherit_privileges option if this is needed (see config table information below)."


And:

"reapply_privileges(
    p_parent_table text
)
RETURNS void

This function is used to reapply ownership & grants on all child tables based on what the parent table has set. Privileges that the parent table has will be granted to all child tables and privileges that the parent does not have will be revoked (with CASCADE). Privileges that are checked for are SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, TRUNCATE, REFERENCES, & TRIGGER. Be aware that for large partition sets, this can be a very long running operation and is why it was made into a separate function to run independently. Only privileges that are different between the parent & child are applied, but it still has to do system catalog lookups and comparisons for every single child partition and all individual privileges on each. p_parent_table - parent table of the partition set. Must be schema qualified and match a parent table name already configured in pg_partman.
"



In other databases(say like Oracle) we use to create standard "roles"(Read_role, Write_role etc..) and then provide grants to the user through those roles. And the objects were given direct grants to those roles. Similarly here in postgres we were granting "read" or "write" privileges on objects to the roles and letting the users login to the database using those roles and thus getting all the read/write privileges assigned to those roles. Are we doing anything wrong?

Regards
Lok

--
Adrian Klaver
adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx






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