On 8/9/15 6:23 PM, Tom Lane wrote: > It looks to me like the reason for this is that pg_dump forces the > "typacl" of a type to be '{=U}' when reading the schema data for a > pre-9.2 type, rather than reading it as NULL (ie default permissions) > which would result in not printing any grant/revoke commands for > the object. > > I do not see a good reason for that; quite aside from this problem, > it means there is one more place that knows the default permissions > for a type than there needs to be. Peter, what was the rationale?
This was probably just copied from how proacl and lanacl are handled, which predate typacl by quite a bit. Maybe there was a reason in those days. It might also have something to do with how owner privileges are handled. An explicit '{=U}' doesn't create owner privileges, unlike a null value in that field. Maybe this is necessary if you dump and restore between databases with different user names. -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers