# Define for granting permissions to roles. See README.md for more details. define postgresql::server::grant ( $role, $db, $privilege = undef, $object_type = 'database', $object_name = undef, $psql_db = $postgresql::server::default_database, $psql_user = $postgresql::server::user, $port = $postgresql::server::port, $onlyif_exists = false, ) { $group = $postgresql::server::group $psql_path = $postgresql::server::psql_path if ! $object_name { $_object_name = $db } else { $_object_name = $object_name } validate_bool($onlyif_exists) ## Munge the input values $_object_type = upcase($object_type) $_privilege = upcase($privilege) ## Validate that the object type is known validate_string($_object_type, #'COLUMN', 'DATABASE', #'FOREIGN SERVER', #'FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER', #'FUNCTION', #'PROCEDURAL LANGUAGE', 'SCHEMA', #'SEQUENCE', 'TABLE', 'ALL TABLES IN SCHEMA', #'TABLESPACE', #'VIEW', ) # You can use ALL TABLES IN SCHEMA by passing schema_name to object_name ## Validate that the object type's privilege is acceptable # TODO: this is a terrible hack; if they pass "ALL" as the desired privilege, # we need a way to test for it--and has_database_privilege does not # recognize 'ALL' as a valid privilege name. So we probably need to # hard-code a mapping between 'ALL' and the list of actual privileges that # it entails, and loop over them to check them. That sort of thing will # probably need to wait until we port this over to ruby, so, for now, we're # just going to assume that if they have "CREATE" privileges on a database, # then they have "ALL". (I told you that it was terrible!) case $_object_type { 'DATABASE': { $unless_privilege = $_privilege ? { 'ALL' => 'CREATE', 'ALL PRIVILEGES' => 'CREATE', default => $_privilege, } validate_string($unless_privilege,'CREATE','CONNECT','TEMPORARY','TEMP', 'ALL','ALL PRIVILEGES') $unless_function = 'has_database_privilege' $on_db = $psql_db $onlyif_function = undef } 'SCHEMA': { $unless_privilege = $_privilege ? { 'ALL' => 'CREATE', 'ALL PRIVILEGES' => 'CREATE', default => $_privilege, } validate_string($_privilege, 'CREATE', 'USAGE', 'ALL', 'ALL PRIVILEGES') $unless_function = 'has_schema_privilege' $on_db = $db $onlyif_function = undef } 'TABLE': { $unless_privilege = $_privilege ? { 'ALL' => 'INSERT', default => $_privilege, } validate_string($unless_privilege,'SELECT','INSERT','UPDATE','DELETE', 'TRUNCATE','REFERENCES','TRIGGER','ALL','ALL PRIVILEGES') $unless_function = 'has_table_privilege' $on_db = $db $onlyif_function = $onlyif_exists ? { true => 'table_exists', default => undef, } } 'ALL TABLES IN SCHEMA': { validate_string($_privilege,'SELECT','INSERT','UPDATE','DELETE', 'TRUNCATE','REFERENCES','TRIGGER','ALL','ALL PRIVILEGES') $unless_function = 'custom' $on_db = $db $onlyif_function = undef $schema = $object_name # Again there seems to be no easy way in plain SQL to check if ALL # PRIVILEGES are granted on a table. By convention we use INSERT # here to represent ALL PRIVILEGES (truly terrible). $custom_privilege = $_privilege ? { 'ALL' => 'INSERT', 'ALL PRIVILEGES' => 'INSERT', default => $_privilege, } # This checks if there is a difference between the tables in the # specified schema and the tables for which the role has the specified # privilege. It uses the EXCEPT clause which computes the set of rows # that are in the result of the first SELECT statement but not in the # result of the second one. It then counts the number of rows from this # operation. If this number is zero then the role has the specified # privilege for all tables in the schema and the whole query returns a # single row, which satisfies the `unless` parameter of Postgresql_psql. # If this number is not zero then there is at least one table for which # the role does not have the specified privilege, making it necessary to # execute the GRANT statement. $custom_unless = "SELECT 1 FROM ( SELECT table_name FROM information_schema.tables WHERE table_schema='${schema}' EXCEPT DISTINCT SELECT table_name FROM information_schema.role_table_grants WHERE grantee='${role}' AND table_schema='${schema}' AND privilege_type='${custom_privilege}' ) P HAVING count(P.table_name) = 0" } default: { fail("Missing privilege validation for object type ${_object_type}") } } # This is used to give grant to "schemaname"."tablename" # If you need such grant, use: # postgresql::grant { 'table:foo': # role => 'joe', # ... # object_type => 'TABLE', # object_name => [$schema, $table], # } if is_array($_object_name) { $_togrant_object = join($_object_name, '"."') # Never put double quotes into has_*_privilege function $_granted_object = join($_object_name, '.') } else { $_granted_object = $_object_name $_togrant_object = $_object_name } $_unless = $unless_function ? { false => undef, 'custom' => $custom_unless, default => "SELECT 1 WHERE ${unless_function}('${role}', '${_granted_object}', '${unless_privilege}')", } $_onlyif = $onlyif_function ? { 'table_exists' => "SELECT true FROM pg_tables WHERE tablename = '${_togrant_object}'", default => undef, } $grant_cmd = "GRANT ${_privilege} ON ${_object_type} \"${_togrant_object}\" TO \"${role}\"" postgresql_psql { "grant:${name}": command => $grant_cmd, db => $on_db, port => $port, psql_user => $psql_user, psql_group => $group, psql_path => $psql_path, unless => $_unless, onlyif => $_onlyif, require => Class['postgresql::server'] } if($role != undef and defined(Postgresql::Server::Role[$role])) { Postgresql::Server::Role[$role]->Postgresql_psql["grant:${name}"] } if($db != undef and defined(Postgresql::Server::Database[$db])) { Postgresql::Server::Database[$db]->Postgresql_psql["grant:${name}"] } }