A database role can have a number of attributes that define its privileges and interact with the client authentication system.
Only roles that have the LOGIN
attribute can be used
as the initial role name for a database connection. A role with
the LOGIN
attribute can be considered the same
as a “database user”. To create a role with login privilege,
use either:
CREATE ROLEname
LOGIN; CREATE USERname
;
(CREATE USER
is equivalent to CREATE ROLE
except that CREATE USER
assumes LOGIN
by
default, while CREATE ROLE
does not.)
A database superuser bypasses all permission checks, except the right
to log in. This is a dangerous privilege and should not be used
carelessly; it is best to do most of your work as a role that is not a
superuser. To create a new database superuser, use CREATE
ROLE
. You must do
this as a role that is already a superuser.
name
SUPERUSER
A role must be explicitly given permission to create databases
(except for superusers, since those bypass all permission
checks). To create such a role, use CREATE ROLE
.
name
CREATEDB
A role must be explicitly given permission to create more roles
(except for superusers, since those bypass all permission
checks). To create such a role, use CREATE ROLE
.
A role with name
CREATEROLECREATEROLE
privilege can alter and drop
other roles, too, as well as grant or revoke membership in them.
However, to create, alter, drop, or change membership of a
superuser role, superuser status is required;
CREATEROLE
is insufficient for that.
A role must explicitly be given permission to initiate streaming
replication (except for superusers, since those bypass all permission
checks). A role used for streaming replication must
have LOGIN
permission as well. To create such a role, use
CREATE ROLE
.
name
REPLICATION
LOGIN
A password is only significant if the client authentication
method requires the user to supply a password when connecting
to the database. The password
and
md5
authentication methods
make use of passwords. Database passwords are separate from
operating system passwords. Specify a password upon role
creation with CREATE ROLE
.
name
PASSWORD 'string
'
A role's attributes can be modified after creation with
ALTER ROLE
.
See the reference pages for the CREATE ROLE
and ALTER ROLE commands for details.
It is good practice to create a role that has the CREATEDB
and CREATEROLE
privileges, but is not a superuser, and then
use this role for all routine management of databases and roles. This
approach avoids the dangers of operating as a superuser for tasks that
do not really require it.
A role can also have role-specific defaults for many of the run-time configuration settings described in Chapter 19. For example, if for some reason you want to disable index scans (hint: not a good idea) anytime you connect, you can use:
ALTER ROLE myname SET enable_indexscan TO off;
This will save the setting (but not set it immediately). In
subsequent connections by this role it will appear as though
SET enable_indexscan TO off
had been executed
just before the session started.
You can still alter this setting during the session; it will only
be the default. To remove a role-specific default setting, use
ALTER ROLE
.
Note that role-specific defaults attached to roles without
rolename
RESET varname
LOGIN
privilege are fairly useless, since they will never
be invoked.