On 23 November 2015 at 13:27, Praveen M <thr...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi All, > > When the user attempts to make a connection with the database , the code > will look into various pg_catalog tables internally. However the user also > can query the pg_catalog tables. Is there a way to identify the user > requested (or typed query) vs the system requested (internal) queries? >
As far as I know there is no simple and reliable method.... but I'm no expert. Most system accesses to common catalogs use the syscache, which doesn't go through the SQL parse/bind/execute process. Or they construct simple scans directly, again bypassing the full parser. The system will run internal queries with the SPI though, and that's full-fledged SQL. Triggers, rules, views, etc, use the SPI, as does plpgsql, fulltext search, XML support, and a few other parts of the system. So you cannot assume that anything using SQL is user-originated. Take a look at PostgresMain in src/backend/tcop/postgres.c for the top-level user query entry point. You'll see there that you cannot rely on testing isTopLevel because multiple statements sent as a single query string are treated as if they were a nested transaction block. (see exec_simple_query(), postgres.c around line 962). That'd also cause problems with use of PL/PgSQL. You can't assume that all SPI queries are safe, because the user can run queries via the SPI using plpgsql etc. I don't see any way to do this without introducing the concept of a "system query"... and in PostgreSQL that's not simple, because the system query could cause the invocation of user-defined operators, functions, triggers, etc, that then run user-defined code. You'd have to clear the "system query" flag whenever you entered user-defined code, then restore it on exit. That seems exceedingly hard to get right reliably. Reading between the lines, it sounds like you are looking for a way to limit end-user access to system catalogs as part of a lockdown effort, perhaps related to multi-tenancy. Correct? If so, you may wish to look at the current work on supporting row security on system catalogs, as that is probably closer to what you will need. > Also what procedure or function in the code that indicates the user can > write queries , something like I wanted to know the code where the > connection is created and available for user to use. > Start reading at src/backend/tcop/postgres.c . -- Craig Ringer http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/ PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services