Обсуждение: dump cannot be restored if schema permissions revoked

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dump cannot be restored if schema permissions revoked

От
Richard Yen
Дата:
Hello hackers,

I noticed that in some situations involving the use of REVOKE ON SCHEMA, pg_dump
can produce a dump that cannot be restored.  This prevents successful pg_restore (and by corollary, pg_upgrade).

An example shell script to recreate this problem is attached.  The error output appears at the end like this:

<snippet>
+ pg_restore -d postgres /tmp/foo.dmp
pg_restore: [archiver (db)] Error while PROCESSING TOC:
pg_restore: [archiver (db)] Error from TOC entry 2748; 0 0 ACL TABLE mytable owneruser
pg_restore: [archiver (db)] could not execute query: ERROR:  permission denied for schema private
    Command was: GRANT SELECT ON TABLE private.mytable TO privileged WITH GRANT OPTION;
SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION privileged;
GRANT SELECT ON TABLE private.mytable TO enduser WITH GRANT OPTION;
RESET SESSION AUTHORIZATION;
WARNING: errors ignored on restore: 1
-bash-4.2$
</snippet>

Note that `privileged` user needs to grant permissions to `enduser`, but can no longer do so because `privileged` no longer has access to the `private` schema (it was revoked).

How might we fix up pg_dump to handle these sorts of situations?  It seems like pg_dump might need extra logic to GRANT the schema permissions to the `privileged` user and then REVOKE them later on?

Thanks for looking,
--Richard



Вложения

Re: dump cannot be restored if schema permissions revoked

От
Noah Misch
Дата:
On Wed, Apr 07, 2021 at 10:13:30AM -0700, Richard Yen wrote:
> I noticed that in some situations involving the use of REVOKE ON SCHEMA,
> pg_dump
> can produce a dump that cannot be restored.  This prevents successful
> pg_restore (and by corollary, pg_upgrade).
> 
> An example shell script to recreate this problem is attached.  The error
> output appears at the end like this:
> 
> <snippet>
> + pg_restore -d postgres /tmp/foo.dmp
> pg_restore: [archiver (db)] Error while PROCESSING TOC:
> pg_restore: [archiver (db)] Error from TOC entry 2748; 0 0 ACL TABLE
> mytable owneruser
> pg_restore: [archiver (db)] could not execute query: ERROR:  permission
> denied for schema private
>     Command was: GRANT SELECT ON TABLE private.mytable TO privileged WITH
> GRANT OPTION;
> SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION privileged;
> GRANT SELECT ON TABLE private.mytable TO enduser WITH GRANT OPTION;
> RESET SESSION AUTHORIZATION;
> WARNING: errors ignored on restore: 1
> -bash-4.2$
> </snippet>
> 
> Note that `privileged` user needs to grant permissions to `enduser`, but
> can no longer do so because `privileged` no longer has access to the
> `private` schema (it was revoked).
> 
> How might we fix up pg_dump to handle these sorts of situations?

I would approach this by allowing GRANT to take a grantor role name.  Then,
we'd remove the SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION, and the user running the restore
would set the grantor.  "GRANT SELECT ON TABLE foo TO bob GRANTED BY alice;"
looks reasonable to me, though one would need to check if SQL requires that to
have some different behavior.

> It seems
> like pg_dump might need extra logic to GRANT the schema permissions to the
> `privileged` user and then REVOKE them later on?

That could work, but I would avoid it for a couple of reasons.  In some
"pg_restore --use-list" partial restores, the schema privilege may already
exist, and this design may surprise the DBA by removing the existing
privilege.  When running a restore as a non-superuser, the additional
GRANT/REVOKE could be a source of permission denied failures.