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NAME

       GRANT - define access privileges

SYNOPSIS

       GRANT { { SELECT | INSERT | UPDATE | DELETE | TRUNCATE | REFERENCES | TRIGGER }
           [,...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
           ON [ TABLE ] tablename [, ...]
           TO { [ GROUP ] rolename | PUBLIC } [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]

       GRANT { { SELECT | INSERT | UPDATE | REFERENCES } ( column [, ...] )
           [,...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] ( column [, ...] ) }
           ON [ TABLE ] tablename [, ...]
           TO { [ GROUP ] rolename | PUBLIC } [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]

       GRANT { { USAGE | SELECT | UPDATE }
           [,...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
           ON SEQUENCE sequencename [, ...]
           TO { [ GROUP ] rolename | PUBLIC } [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]

       GRANT { { CREATE | CONNECT | TEMPORARY | TEMP } [,...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
           ON DATABASE dbname [, ...]
           TO { [ GROUP ] rolename | PUBLIC } [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]

       GRANT { USAGE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
           ON FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER fdwname [, ...]
           TO { [ GROUP ] rolename | PUBLIC } [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]

       GRANT { USAGE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
           ON FOREIGN SERVER servername [, ...]
           TO { [ GROUP ] rolename | PUBLIC } [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]

       GRANT { EXECUTE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
           ON FUNCTION funcname ( [ [ argmode ] [ argname ] argtype [, ...] ] ) [, ...]
           TO { [ GROUP ] rolename | PUBLIC } [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]

       GRANT { USAGE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
           ON LANGUAGE langname [, ...]
           TO { [ GROUP ] rolename | PUBLIC } [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]

       GRANT { { CREATE | USAGE } [,...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
           ON SCHEMA schemaname [, ...]
           TO { [ GROUP ] rolename | PUBLIC } [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]

       GRANT { CREATE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
           ON TABLESPACE tablespacename [, ...]
           TO { [ GROUP ] rolename | PUBLIC } [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]

       GRANT role [, ...] TO rolename [, ...] [ WITH ADMIN OPTION ]

DESCRIPTION

       The GRANT command has two basic variants: one that grants privileges on
       a database object (table, column, view,  sequence,  database,  foreign-
       data wrapper, foreign server, function, procedural language, schema, or
       tablespace), and one that grants membership in a role.  These  variants
       are similar in many ways, but they are different enough to be described
       separately.

       As of PostgreSQL 8.1, the  concepts  of  users  and  groups  have  been
       unified into a single kind of entity called a role.  It is therefore no
       longer necessary to use the keyword GROUP to identify whether a grantee
       is  a user or a group. GROUP is still allowed in the command, but it is
       a noise word.

   GRANT ON DATABASE OBJECTS
       This variant of the  GRANT  command  gives  specific  privileges  on  a
       database  object  to  one  or more roles. These privileges are added to
       those already granted, if any.

       The key word PUBLIC indicates that the privileges are to be granted  to
       all  roles,  including those that might be created later. PUBLIC can be
       thought of as an implicitly defined  group  that  always  includes  all
       roles.   Any  particular  role  will have the sum of privileges granted
       directly to it, privileges granted to any role it is presently a member
       of, and privileges granted to PUBLIC.

       If  WITH  GRANT OPTION is specified, the recipient of the privilege can
       in turn grant it to others.  Without  a  grant  option,  the  recipient
       cannot do that. Grant options cannot be granted to PUBLIC.

       There is no need to grant privileges to the owner of an object (usually
       the user that created it), as the owner has all privileges by  default.
       (The  owner could, however, choose to revoke some of his own privileges
       for safety.)  The right to drop an object, or to alter  its  definition
       in any way is not described by a grantable privilege; it is inherent in
       the owner, and cannot be granted or revoked. The owner  implicitly  has
       all grant options for the object, too.

       Depending  on  the type of object, the initial default privileges might
       include granting some privileges to PUBLIC.  The default is  no  public
       access for tables, columns, schemas, and tablespaces; CONNECT privilege
       and TEMP table creation privilege for databases; EXECUTE privilege  for
       functions;  and USAGE privilege for languages.  The object owner can of
       course revoke these privileges. (For maximum security, issue the REVOKE
       in  the  same  transaction  that  creates  the object; then there is no
       window in which another user can use the object.)

       The possible privileges are:

       SELECT Allows SELECT [select(7)]  from  any  column,  or  the  specific
              columns listed, of the specified table, view, or sequence.  Also
              allows the use of COPY [copy(7)] TO.   This  privilege  is  also
              needed to reference existing column values in UPDATE [update(7)]
              or DELETE  [delete(7)].   For  sequences,  this  privilege  also
              allows the use of the currval function.

       INSERT Allows INSERT [insert(7)] of a new row into the specified table.
              If specific columns  are  listed,  only  those  columns  may  be
              assigned  to in the INSERT command (other columns will therefore
              receive default values).  Also allows COPY [copy(7)] FROM.

       UPDATE Allows UPDATE [update(7)] of any column, or the specific columns
              listed,  of  the  specified table.  (In practice, any nontrivial
              UPDATE command will require SELECT privilege as well,  since  it
              must  reference table columns to determine which rows to update,
              and/or to compute new  values  for  columns.)   SELECT  ...  FOR
              UPDATE  and  SELECT ... FOR SHARE also require this privilege on
              at least one column, in addition to the  SELECT  privilege.  For
              sequences,  this  privilege  allows  the  use of the nextval and
              setval functions.

       DELETE Allows DELETE [delete(7)] of a row  from  the  specified  table.
              (In  practice, any nontrivial DELETE command will require SELECT
              privilege as well, since it  must  reference  table  columns  to
              determine which rows to delete.)

       TRUNCATE
              Allows TRUNCATE [truncate(7)] on the specified table.

       REFERENCES
              To create a foreign key constraint, it is necessary to have this
              privilege on both the referencing and  referenced  columns.  The
              privilege  may  be  granted  for all columns of a table, or just
              specific columns.

       TRIGGER
              Allows the creation of a trigger on the  specified  table.  (See
              the CREATE TRIGGER [create_trigger(7)] statement.)

       CREATE For  databases,  allows  new  schemas  to  be created within the
              database.

              For schemas, allows new objects to be created within the schema.
              To  rename  an existing object, you must own the object and have
              this privilege for the containing schema.

              For tablespaces, allows tables, indexes, and temporary files  to
              be  created  within  the  tablespace, and allows databases to be
              created that have the tablespace as  their  default  tablespace.
              (Note  that revoking this privilege will not alter the placement
              of existing objects.)

       CONNECT
              Allows the user to  connect  to  the  specified  database.  This
              privilege  is  checked  at  connection  startup  (in addition to
              checking any restrictions imposed by pg_hba.conf).

       TEMPORARY

       TEMP   Allows temporary tables to be created while using the  specified
              database.

       EXECUTE
              Allows  the  use  of  the  specified function and the use of any
              operators that are implemented on top of the function.  This  is
              the  only  type  of  privilege  that is applicable to functions.
              (This syntax works for aggregate functions, as well.)

       USAGE  For procedural  languages,  allows  the  use  of  the  specified
              language for the creation of functions in that language. This is
              the only type of privilege  that  is  applicable  to  procedural
              languages.

              For schemas, allows access to objects contained in the specified
              schema (assuming that the objects’  own  privilege  requirements
              are  also  met).  Essentially  this allows the grantee to ‘‘look
              up’’ objects within the schema. Without this permission,  it  is
              still  possible  to  see  the object names, e.g. by querying the
              system tables.  Also, after revoking this  permission,  existing
              backends  might  have  statements that have previously performed
              this lookup, so this is not a completely secure way  to  prevent
              object access.

              For  sequences, this privilege allows the use of the currval and
              nextval functions.

              For foreign-data wrappers, this privilege enables the grantee to
              create new servers using that foreign-data wrapper.

              For  servers,  this  privilege  enables the grantee to query the
              options of the server and associated user mappings.

       ALL PRIVILEGES
              Grant all of the available privileges at once.   The  PRIVILEGES
              key  word  is  optional  in PostgreSQL, though it is required by
              strict SQL.

       The privileges required by other commands are listed on  the  reference
       page of the respective command.

   GRANT ON ROLES
       This variant of the GRANT command grants membership in a role to one or
       more other roles. Membership  in  a  role  is  significant  because  it
       conveys the privileges granted to a role to each of its members.

       If  WITH  ADMIN  OPTION  is  specified,  the  member  can in turn grant
       membership in the role to others, and revoke membership in the role  as
       well. Without the admin option, ordinary users cannot do that. However,
       database superusers can grant or  revoke  membership  in  any  role  to
       anyone.    Roles  having  CREATEROLE  privilege  can  grant  or  revoke
       membership in any role that is not a superuser.

       Unlike the case with privileges, membership in a role cannot be granted
       to  PUBLIC.  Note also that this form of the command does not allow the
       noise word GROUP.

NOTES

       The REVOKE [revoke(7)] command is used to revoke access privileges.

       A user may perform SELECT, INSERT, etc. on a column if  he  holds  that
       privilege  for  either the specific column or its whole table. Granting
       the privilege at the table level and then revoking it  for  one  column
       will not do what you might wish: the table-level grant is unaffected by
       a column-level operation.

       When a non-owner of an object  attempts  to  GRANT  privileges  on  the
       object,  the  command  will fail outright if the user has no privileges
       whatsoever on the object. As long as some privilege is  available,  the
       command will proceed, but it will grant only those privileges for which
       the user has grant options. The GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES forms will issue a
       warning  message  if  no  grant options are held, while the other forms
       will issue a warning  if  grant  options  for  any  of  the  privileges
       specifically  named  in  the command are not held.  (In principle these
       statements apply to the object owner as well, but since  the  owner  is
       always  treated  as  holding  all  grant  options,  the cases can never
       occur.)

       It should be noted that database  superusers  can  access  all  objects
       regardless  of  object  privilege  settings.  This is comparable to the
       rights of root in a Unix system.  As with root, it’s unwise to  operate
       as a superuser except when absolutely necessary.

       If  a superuser chooses to issue a GRANT or REVOKE command, the command
       is performed as though it were issued by  the  owner  of  the  affected
       object.  In  particular,  privileges  granted  via  such a command will
       appear to have been granted by the object owner.  (For role membership,
       the  membership  appears  to  have  been granted by the containing role
       itself.)

       GRANT and REVOKE can also be done by a role that is not  the  owner  of
       the  affected object, but is a member of the role that owns the object,
       or is a member of a role that holds privileges WITH GRANT OPTION on the
       object.  In  this  case  the privileges will be recorded as having been
       granted by the  role  that  actually  owns  the  object  or  holds  the
       privileges WITH GRANT OPTION. For example, if table t1 is owned by role
       g1, of which role u1 is a member, then u1 can grant privileges on t1 to
       u2,  but  those privileges will appear to have been granted directly by
       g1. Any other member of role g1 could revoke them later.

       If the role executing GRANT holds the  required  privileges  indirectly
       via  more  than  one  role  membership  path,  it  is unspecified which
       containing role will be recorded as having  done  the  grant.  In  such
       cases  it  is best practice to use SET ROLE to become the specific role
       you want to do the GRANT as.

       Granting  permission  on  a  table  does   not   automatically   extend
       permissions  to  any  sequences  used by the table, including sequences
       tied  to  SERIAL  columns.  Permissions  on  sequences  must   be   set
       separately.

       Use   psql(1)’s  \dp  command  to  obtain  information  about  existing
       privileges for tables and columns. For example:

       => \dp mytable
                                     Access privileges
        Schema |  Name   | Type  |   Access privileges   | Column access privileges
       --------+---------+-------+-----------------------+--------------------------
        public | mytable | table | miriam=arwdDxt/miriam | col1:
                                 : =r/miriam             :   miriam_rw=rw/miriam
                                 : admin=arw/miriam
       (1 row)

       The entries shown by \dp are interpreted thus:

             rolename=xxxx -- privileges granted to a role
                     =xxxx -- privileges granted to PUBLIC

                         r -- SELECT ("read")
                         w -- UPDATE ("write")
                         a -- INSERT ("append")
                         d -- DELETE
                         D -- TRUNCATE
                         x -- REFERENCES
                         t -- TRIGGER
                         X -- EXECUTE
                         U -- USAGE
                         C -- CREATE
                         c -- CONNECT
                         T -- TEMPORARY
                   arwdDxt -- ALL PRIVILEGES (for tables, varies for other objects)
                         * -- grant option for preceding privilege

                     /yyyy -- role that granted this privilege

       The above example display would be seen by user miriam  after  creating
       table mytable and doing:

       GRANT SELECT ON mytable TO PUBLIC;
       GRANT SELECT, UPDATE, INSERT ON mytable TO admin;
       GRANT SELECT (col1), UPDATE (col1) ON mytable TO miriam_rw;

       For  non-table  objects  there  are  other \d commands that can display
       their privileges.

       If the ‘‘Access privileges’’ column is empty for  a  given  object,  it
       means the object has default privileges (that is, its privileges column
       is null). Default privileges always  include  all  privileges  for  the
       owner,  and  can  include  some  privileges for PUBLIC depending on the
       object type, as explained above. The first GRANT or REVOKE on an object
       will  instantiate  the  default  privileges  (producing,  for  example,
       {miriam=arwdDxt/miriam})  and  then  modify  them  per  the   specified
       request.  Entries  are  shown  in ‘‘Column access privileges’’ only for
       columns with nondefault privileges.

       Notice that the owner’s implicit grant options are not  marked  in  the
       access privileges display. A * will appear only when grant options have
       been explicitly granted to someone.

EXAMPLES

       Grant insert privilege to all users on table films:

       GRANT INSERT ON films TO PUBLIC;

       Grant all available privileges to user manuel on view kinds:

       GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON kinds TO manuel;

       Note that while the above will indeed grant all privileges if  executed
       by  a superuser or the owner of kinds, when executed by someone else it
       will only grant those permissions for which the someone else has  grant
       options.

       Grant membership in role admins to user joe:

       GRANT admins TO joe;

COMPATIBILITY

       According  to  the  SQL  standard,  the  PRIVILEGES  key  word  in  ALL
       PRIVILEGES is required. The SQL standard does not support  setting  the
       privileges on more than one object per command.

       PostgreSQL   allows   an  object  owner  to  revoke  his  own  ordinary
       privileges: for example, a table owner can make the table read-only  to
       himself  by  revoking  his  own  INSERT,  UPDATE,  DELETE, and TRUNCATE
       privileges. This is not possible according to  the  SQL  standard.  The
       reason  is that PostgreSQL treats the owner’s privileges as having been
       granted by the owner to himself; therefore he can revoke them  too.  In
       the  SQL  standard,  the  owner’s  privileges are granted by an assumed
       entity ‘‘_SYSTEM’’. Not being  ‘‘_SYSTEM’’,  the  owner  cannot  revoke
       these rights.

       The  SQL  standard  provides  for  a  USAGE privilege on other kinds of
       objects: character sets, collations, translations, domains.

       Privileges  on  databases,  tablespaces,  schemas,  and  languages  are
       PostgreSQL extensions.

SEE ALSO

       REVOKE [revoke(7)]