You'd think the implicit SELECT perm of that table for the explicit use of UPDATE would be covered by GRANT UPDATE.

On 4/4/19 7:25 AM, Patrick FICHE wrote:

Hi,

If I’m not wrong, UPDATE requires SELECT permission as the UPDATE statement needs to read the data to be updated.

So, you should probably add GRANT SELECT and you get it work.

Regards,

*Patrick Fiche*

Database Engineer, Aqsacom Sas.

*c.*33 6 82 80 69 96

01-03_AQSA_Main_Corporate_Logo_JPEG_White_Low.jpg <http://www.aqsacom.com/>

*From:* Durgamahesh Manne <maheshpostgr...@gmail.com>
*Sent:* Thursday, April 4, 2019 12:07 PM
*To:* pgsql-general@lists.postgresql.org
*Subject:* dbuser acess privileges

hi

Respected international pgsql team

pershing=# grant INSERT on public.hyd to ravi;

GRANT

i have granted insert command access to non superuser(ravi)

pershing=> insert into hyd (id,name) values('2','delhi');

INSERT 0 1

here data inserted

pershing=# grant UPDATE on public.hyd to ravi;

GRANT

i have granted update command access to non superuser(ravi)

pershing=> update public.hyd set id = 3 where name = 'hyderabad';

ERROR:  permission denied for relation hyd

please let me know what is the issue with update command


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