Hi, >> > > No, DefaultACLs applies to objects created in the future while GRANT ON ALL > affects existing objects.
I see. > DefaultACLs is more important functionality so it should probably take > precedence in review process. > > There is however one thing that needs some attention. Both patches add > distinction between VIEW and TABLE objects for acls into parser and they > both do it differently. GRANT ON ALL works by adding ACL_OBJECT_VIEW and > tracks that object type in code (that was my original method in both > patches) while DefaultACLs uses method suggested by Stephen Frost which is > creating new enum with relation, view, function and sequence members (those > are object types for which both DefaultACLs and GRANT ON ALL are > applicable). The second method has advantage of minimal changes to existing > code. I briefly looked at the DefaultACLs patch. Can you not re-use the GrantStmt structure for the defaults purpose too? You might have to introduce an "is_default" boolean similar to the "is_schema" boolean that you have added in the "GRANT ON ALL" patch. If you think you can re-use the GrantStmt structure, then we might as well stick with the existing object type code and not add the enums in the DefaultACLs patch too.. Regards, Nikhils -- http://www.enterprisedb.com -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers