The view role_table_grants identifies all privileges granted on tables or views where the grantor or grantee is a currently enabled role. Further information can be found under table_privileges. The only effective difference between this view and table_privileges is that this view omits tables that have been made accessible to the current user by way of a grant to PUBLIC.
Table 35.35. role_table_grants Columns
| Column Type
Description
| | --- | |
grantor sql_identifier
Name of the role that granted the privilege
| |
grantee sql_identifier
Name of the role that the privilege was granted to
| |
table_catalog sql_identifier
Name of the database that contains the table (always the current database)
| |
table_schema sql_identifier
Name of the schema that contains the table
| |
table_name sql_identifier
Name of the table
| |
privilege_type character_data
Type of the privilege: SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, TRUNCATE, REFERENCES, or TRIGGER
| |
is_grantable yes_or_no
YES if the privilege is grantable, NO if not
| |
with_hierarchy yes_or_no
In the SQL standard, WITH HIERARCHY OPTION is a separate (sub-)privilege allowing certain operations on table inheritance hierarchies. In PostgreSQL, this is included in the SELECT privilege, so this column shows YES if the privilege is SELECT, else NO.
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