Greetings, * Robert Haas (robertmh...@gmail.com) wrote: > On Tue, Jul 26, 2022 at 1:50 PM David G. Johnston > <david.g.johns...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Still, it seems somewhat appealing to give > >> people fine-grained control over this, rather than just "on" or "off". > > Appealing enough to consume a couple of permission bits? > > https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAKFQuwZ6dhjTFV7Bwmehe1N3%3Dk484y4mM22zuYjVEU2dq9V1aQ%40mail.gmail.com > > I think we're down to 0 remaining now, so it'd be hard to justify > consuming 2 of 0 remaining bits. However, I maintain that the solution > to this is either (1) change the aclitem representation to get another > 32 bits or (2) invent a different system for less-commonly used > permission bits. Checking permissions for SELECT or UPDATE has to be > really fast, because most queries will need to do that sort of thing. > If we represented VACUUM or ANALYZE in some other way in the catalogs > that was more scalable but less efficient, it wouldn't be a big deal > (although there's the issue of code duplication to consider).
I've long felt that we should redefine the way the ACLs work to have a distinct set of bits for each object type. We don't need to support a CONNECT bit on a table, yet we do today and we expend quite a few bits in that way. Having that handled on a per-object-type basis instead would allow us to get quite a bit more mileage out of the existing 32bit field before having to introduce more complicated storage methods like using a bit to tell us to go look up more ACLs somewhere else. Thanks, Stephen
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