Authorization in CockroachDB

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Warning:
CockroachDB v22.2 is no longer supported as of June 5, 2024. For more details, refer to the Release Support Policy.

Authorization, generally, is the control over who (users/roles) can perform which actions (e.g read, write, update, delete, grant, etc.) to which resources or targets (databases, functions, tables, clusters, schemas, rows, users, jobs, etc.).

CockroachDB has a unified authorization model, meaning that a given user's permissions are governed by the same policies in different contexts such as accessing the SQL shell or viewing data from the DB Console.

Authorization models

Note:

Starting in v22.2, CockroachDB introduces a new granular system-level privilege model that provides finer control over a user's ability to work with the database. This new system-level privilege model is intended to replace the existing role options model in a future release of CockroachDB. As such, any legacy role options that now have corresponding system-level privilege versions are deprecated in CockroachDB v22.2, though both are supported alongside each other in v22.2. We recommend familiarizing yourself with the new system-level privilege model, and implementing it where possible.

New in v22.2: CockroachDB offers two authorization models:

Authorization Model Features
System-level Privileges
  • Introduced in CockroachDB v22.2.
  • Supported in CockroachDB v22.2, alongside the existing role options.
  • Apply cluster-wide. A system-level privilege is granted at the cluster level, and is inherited via role membership, similar to how object-level privileges are inherited.
  • Are granted with the GRANT statement using the SYSTEM parameter, and viewed with the SHOW SYSTEM GRANTS statement.
  • May be assigned with the GRANT OPTION, which allows the assigned user or role to further grant that same system-level privilege to other users or roles.
Role Options
  • Specific role options which have had corresponding system-level privileges introduced in CockroachDB v22.2 are now deprecated.
  • Supported in CockroachDB v22.2, alongside the new system-level privileges.
  • Apply only to specific users, and are not inheritable via role membership.
  • Are granted with the GRANT statement, and viewed with the SHOW GRANTS statement.
  • May be assigned with the GRANT OPTION, which allows the assigned user or role to further grant that same role option to other users or roles.

If a system-level privilege exists with the same name as a role option, the system-level privilege should be used.

Users and roles

Both authorization models make use of the concept of user and roles. There is no technical distinction between a role or user in CockroachDB. A role/user can:

  • Be permitted to log in to the SQL shell.
  • Be granted privileges to specific actions and database objects.
  • Be a member of other users/roles, inheriting their privileges.
  • Have other users/roles as members that inherit its privileges.
  • Be configured with other role options.

We refer to these as "roles" when they are created for managing the privileges of their member "users" and not for logging in directly, which is typically reserved for "users".

The SQL statements CREATE USER and CREATE ROLE will create the same entity with one exception: CREATE ROLE will add the NOLOGIN option by default, preventing the user/role from being used to log in. Otherwise, for enhanced PostgreSQL compatibility, the keywords ROLE and USER can be used interchangeably in SQL statements.

Throughout the documentation, however, we will refer to a "user" or "role" based on the intended purpose of the entity.

SQL users

A SQL user can interact with a CockroachDB database using the built-in SQL shell or through an application.

Create and manage users

Use the CREATE USER and DROP USER statements to create and remove users, the ALTER USER statement to add or change a user's password and role options, the GRANT and REVOKE statements to manage the user’s privileges, and the SHOW USERS statement to list users.

A new user must be granted the required privileges for each database and table that the user needs to access.

Note:

By default, a new user belongs to the public role and has no privileges other than those assigned to the public role.

Reserved identities

These identities are reserved within CockroachDB. These identities are created automatically and cannot be removed.

Identity Description
node Used for all internode communications and for executing internal SQL operations that are run as part of regular node background processes. The node user does not appear when listing a cluster's users.
root Used for administrator access in cases where it is required to manage other admins, such as when deploying a new cluster. The root user is created by default for each cluster. The root user is assigned to the admin role and has all privileges across the cluster.
For routine administration in production, Cockroach Labs recommends that you:
  • Assign a password for the root user using the ALTER USER statement, and restrict access to the password.
  • Avoid relying on the root user, and instead grant the admin role to users.

In production, access to the node and root cluster certificates must be handled with care due to the broad level of access they confer on their holders.

Roles

Note:

This section describes roles. For role options like CREATEROLE, see role options.

A role is a group of users and/or other roles for which you can grant or revoke privileges as a whole. To simplify access management, create a role and grant privileges to the role, then create SQL users and grant them membership to the role.

Default roles

The admin and public roles exist by default.

admin role

The admin role is created by default and cannot be dropped. Users belonging to the admin role have all privileges for all database objects across the cluster. The root user belongs to the admin role by default.

An admin user is a member of the admin role. Only admin users can use CREATE ROLE and DROP ROLE.

To assign a user to the admin role:

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> GRANT admin TO <username>;

public role

All new users and roles belong to the public role by default. You can grant and revoke the privileges on the public role.

Terminology

Role admin

Role admin is a role option that allows a given user or role to administrate itself, by granting and revoking it to other users and roles.

To create a role admin, use WITH ADMIN OPTION.

Tip:

The terms “admin role” and “role admin” can be confusing. The admin role is a role (specifically the role granting all privileges on all database resources across a cluster), whereas role admin is a role option that is either enabled or disabled or not on any given role or grant of a role to another user or role.

Learn more about role options.

Direct member

A user or role that is an immediate member of the role.

Example: A is a member of B.

Indirect member

A user or role that is a member of the role by association.

Example: A is a member of C ... is a member of B where "..." is an arbitrary number of memberships.

Object ownership

All CockroachDB objects (such as databases, tables, schemas, and types) must have owners. The user that created the object is the default owner of the object and has ALL privileges on the object. Similarly, any roles that are members of the owner role also have all privileges on the object.

All objects that do not have owners (for example, objects created before upgrading to v20.2) have admin set as the default owner, with the exception of system objects. System objects without owners have node as their owner.

To allow another user to use the object, the owner can assign privileges to the other user. Members of the admin role have ALL privileges on all objects.

Users that own objects cannot be dropped until the ownership is transferred to another user.

Privileges

When a user connects to a database, either via the built-in SQL client or a client driver, CockroachDB checks the user and role's privileges for each statement executed. If the user does not have sufficient privileges for a statement, CockroachDB gives an error.

Supported privileges

Roles and users can be granted the following privileges:

Privilege Levels Description
ALL System, Database, Schema, Table, Sequence, Type For the object to which ALL is applied, grants all privileges at the system, database, schema, table, sequence, or type level.
BACKUP System, Database, Table Grants the ability to create backups at the system, database, or table level.
CANCELQUERY System Grants the ability to cancel queries.
CHANGEFEED Table Grants the ability to create changefeeds on a table.
CONNECT Database Grants the ability to view a database's metadata, which consists of objects in a database's information_schema and pg_catalog system catalogs. This allows the role to view the database's table, schemas, user-defined types, and list the database when running SHOW DATABASES. The CONNECT privilege is also required to run backups of the database.
CREATE Database, Schema, Table, Sequence Grants the ability to create objects at the database, schema, table, or sequence level. When applied at the database level, grants the ability to configure multi-region zone configs.
DELETE Table, Sequence Grants the ability to delete objects at the table or sequence level.
DROP Database, Table, Sequence Grants the ability to drop objects at the database, table, or sequence level.
EXECUTE Function Grants the ability to execute functions.
EXTERNALCONNECTION System Grants the ability to connect to external systems such as object stores, key management systems, Kafka feeds, or external file systems. Often used in conjunction with the BACKUP, RESTORE, and CHANGEFEED privilege.
EXTERNALIOIMPLICITACCESS System Grants the ability to interact with external resources that require implicit access.
INSERT Table, Sequence Grants the ability to insert objects at the table or sequence level.
MODIFYCLUSTERSETTING System Grants the ability to modify cluster settings.
MODIFYSQLCLUSTERSETTING System Grants the ability to modify SQL cluster settings (cluster settings prefixed with sql.).
NOSQLLOGIN System Prevents roles from connecting to the SQL interface of a cluster.
RESTORE System, Database Grants the ability to restore backups at the system or database level. Refer to RESTORE Required privileges for more details.
SELECT Table, Sequence Grants the ability to run selection queries at the table or sequence level.
UPDATE Table, Sequence Grants the ability to run update statements at the table or sequence level.
USAGE Schema, Sequence, Type Grants the ability to use schemas, sequences, or user-defined types.
VIEWACTIVITY System Grants the ability to view other user's activity statistics of a cluster.
VIEWACTIVITYREDACTED System Grants the ability to view other user's activity statistics, but prevents the role from accessing the statement diagnostics bundle in the DB Console, and viewing some columns in introspection queries that contain data about the cluster.
VIEWCLUSTERMETADATA System Grants the ability to view range information, data distribution, store information, and Raft information.
VIEWCLUSTERSETTING System Grants the ability to view cluster settings and their values.
VIEWDEBUG System Grants the ability to view the Advanced Debug Page of the DB Console and work with the debugging and profiling endpoints.
ZONECONFIG Database, Table, Sequence Grants the ability to configure replication zones at the database, table, and sequence level.

System-level privileges

New in v22.2: System-level privileges (also known as global privileges) offer more granular control over a user's actions when working with CockroachDB, compared to the role options authorization model.

System-level privileges are a special kind of privilege that apply cluster-wide, meaning that the privilege is not tied to any specific object in the database.

You can work with system-level privileges using the GRANT statement with the SYSTEM parameter, and the SHOW SYSTEM GRANTS statement.

The following table lists the new system-level privileges introduced with CockroachDB v22.2, and indicates which system-level privileges replace role options:

New System-level Privilege Replaces Legacy Role Option
MODIFYCLUSTERSETTING Yes: the MODIFYCLUSTERSETTING and NOMODIFYCLUSTERSETTING role option
EXTERNALCONNECTION No, new in v22.2
VIEWACTIVITY Yes: the VIEWACTIVITY and NOVIEWACTIVITY role options
VIEWACTIVITYREDACTED Yes: the VIEWACTIVITYREDACTED and NOVIEWACTIVITYREDACTED role options
VIEWCLUSTERSETTING Yes: the VIEWCLUSTERSETTING and NOVIEWCLUSTERSETTING role options
CANCELQUERY Yes: the CANCELQUERY and NOCANCELQUERY role options
NOSQLLOGIN Yes: the SQLLOGIN and NOSQLLOGIN role options
VIEWCLUSTERMETADATA No, new in v22.2
VIEWDEBUG No, new in v22.2
BACKUP No, new in v22.2
RESTORE No, new in v22.2
EXTERNALIOIMPLICITACCESS No, new in v22.2

If a system-level privilege exists with the same name as a role option, the system-level privilege should be used. Some role options do not have a corresponding system-level privilege, since they configure per-user attributes. For those system-level privileges that replace legacy role options (such as VIEWACTIVITY), if both the system-level privilege and its legacy role option are specified for a user/role, the system-level privilege will take precedence and the legacy role option will be ignored.

Managing privileges

Use the GRANT and REVOKE statements to manage privileges for users and roles.

Take the following points into consideration while granting privileges to roles and users:

  • When a role or user is granted privileges for a database, that role or user is not automatically granted access to any new or existing objects within that database. To change access to those objects, see Default privileges. This does not apply to system-level privileges, which apply cluster-wide.
  • When a role or user is granted privileges for a table, the privileges are limited to the table.
  • In CockroachDB, privileges are granted to users and roles at the database and table levels, or cluster-wide at the system level. They are not yet supported for other granularities such as columns or rows.
  • The root user automatically belongs to the admin role and has the ALL privilege for new databases.
  • For privileges required by specific statements, see the documentation for the respective SQL statement.

Default privileges

By default, CockroachDB grants the current role/user ALL privileges on the objects that they create.

To view the default privileges for a role, or for a set of roles, use the SHOW DEFAULT PRIVILEGES statement.

To change the default privileges on objects that a user creates, use the ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES statement.

The creator of an object is also the object's owner. Any roles that are members of the owner role have ALL privileges on the object, independent of the default privileges. Altering the default privileges of objects created by a role does not affect that role's privileges as the object's owner. The default privileges granted to other users/roles are always in addition to the ownership (i.e., ALL) privileges given to the creator of the object.

For more examples of default privileges, see the examples on the SHOW DEFAULT PRIVILEGES and ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES statement pages.

Role options

Users' authorization to perform certain actions are governed not by grants but by role options. These options govern whether users can perform actions such as:

  • Viewing or canceling ongoing queries and sessions owned by other roles.
  • Pausing, resuming, and canceling jobs.
  • Creating or renaming databases.
  • Managing authentication for other users.
  • Modifying cluster settings.
  • Creating changefeeds.

Authorization best practices

We recommend the following best practices to set up access control for your clusters:

  • Use the root user only for database administration tasks such as creating and managing other users, creating and managing roles, and creating and managing databases. Do not use the root user for applications; instead, create users or roles with specific privileges based on your application’s access requirements.
  • Use the Principle of Least Privilege (PoLP) as a golden rule when to designing your system of privilege grants.

For improved performance, CockroachDB securely caches authentication information for users. To limit the authentication latency of users logging into a new session, we recommend the following best practices for ROLE operations (CREATE ROLE, ALTER ROLE, DROP ROLE):

  • Run bulk ROLE operations inside a transaction.
  • Run regularly-scheduled ROLE operations together, rather than at different times throughout the day.
  • Generally, if a system-level privilege exists with the same name as a role option, the system-level privilege should be used.

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