Robert Haas <robertmh...@gmail.com> writes: > On Fri, Mar 7, 2025 at 9:37 AM Michael Banck <mba...@gmx.net> wrote: >> Also, I think there is case to be made that a cloud provider (or site >> admin) would like to delegate the decision whether users with CREATE >> rights on a particular database are allowed to install some extensions >> or not. Or rather, assign somebody they believe would make the right >> call to do that, by granting pg_manage_extensions.
> Hypothetically, somebody could want a feature at various levels of > granularity. The most fine-grained would be something like: [1] allow > user X to install extension Y. Then, more broadly, you could have: [2] > allow any user who can install extensions to install extension Y. Or > conversely: [3] allow user X to install any extension. This patch > implements [3], but you could make an argument for any of the others. It's not apparent to me how [3] is meaningfully different from giving user X superuser. If you have the ability to install and use, say, file_fdw, then nothing except honesty stands between you and a superuser bit. Is the argument for this feature that cloud providers won't realize that? Or perhaps the argument is that the provider will only provide pre-vetted extensions to install --- but then the existing "trusted extension" feature does everything they need. While I'm all for chipping away at what superuser privilege is needed for, we have to tread VERY carefully about chipping away at things that allow any outside-the-database access. regards, tom lane