Bruce, > I think the community's priorities are to add security at the SQL > level, and then we can see clearly what SE-PostgreSQL requires. This > has been discussed before so it should not come as a surprise.
Well, I'm not that clear on exactly the SE implementation, but I spent a fair amount of time with Trusted Solaris and I can tell you that a multilevel security implementation would work in a different way from SQL row-level permissions. Multilevel frameworks have concepts of data hiding and data substitution based on labels. That is, if a user doesn't have permissions on data, he's not merely supposed to be denied access to it, he's not even supposed to know that the data exists. In extreme cases (think military / CIA use) data at a lower security level should be substitited for the higher security level data which the user isn't allowed. Silently. So it's quite possible that the SE and/or multilevel framework could remain parallel-but-different from SQL-level permissions, which would not include data hiding or data substitution. -- --Josh Josh Berkus PostgreSQL San Francisco -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers