Re: why can't a table be part of the same publication as its schema
От | Alvaro Herrera |
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Тема | Re: why can't a table be part of the same publication as its schema |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 20220921142422.3geaqus4ebuwtew2@alvherre.pgsql обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: why can't a table be part of the same publication as its schema (Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>) |
Ответы |
Re: why can't a table be part of the same publication as its schema
Re: why can't a table be part of the same publication as its schema |
Список | pgsql-hackers |
On 2022-Sep-20, Robert Haas wrote: > > I don't think we should change this behavior that's already in logical > > replication. While I understand the reasons why "GRANT ... ALL TABLES IN > > SCHEMA" has a different behavior (i.e. it's not applied to future > > objects) and do not advocate to change it, I have personally been > > affected where I thought a permission would be applied to all future > > objects, only to discover otherwise. I believe it's more intuitive to > > think that "ALL" applies to "everything, always." > > Nah, there's room for multiple behaviors here. It's reasonable to want > to add all the tables currently in the schema to a publication (or > grant permissions on them) and it's reasonable to want to include all > current and future tables in the schema in a publication (or grant > permissions on them) too. The reason I don't like the ALL TABLES IN > SCHEMA syntax is that it sounds like the former, but actually is the > latter. Based on your link to the email from Tom, I understand now the > reason why it's like that, but it's still counterintuitive to me. I already proposed elsewhere that we remove the ALL keyword from there, which I think serves to reduce confusion (in particular it's no longer parallel to the GRANT one). As in the attached. -- Álvaro Herrera Breisgau, Deutschland — https://www.EnterpriseDB.com/ "No renuncies a nada. No te aferres a nada."
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