Administration of oracle database - sql

I create tables with user system than I create another user user1 , I give to him all privileges but when I connect with user1 I can't see or select the tables created by system

First of all, you should never ever create any objects in SYS or SYSTEM schema. Leave them alone, they own the database and - if you do something wrong, you might destroy the database.
As of your question: "all privileges" is quite broad term. What exactly did you grant to user1? You should've - as system
grant select on table_created_by_system;
and then, connected as user1,
select * from system.table_created_by_system;
In other words, you have to precede table name with its owner's name (system in this case). Other option is to create a synonym (public, perhaps?) and then you don't have to use owner's name.
I suggest you abandon it altogether. Drop tables from system schema and start over in user1's schema.

Related

Accessing Database jobs from another schema in ORACLE

I have two schema "OWNER" and "USER".
I've created job in "OWNER" schema in PROD and we don't have access to login into this schema. Now I want to find a way to access these jobs in "USER" schema.
Below are the methods, I tried and did not work for me:
1)I created view in "OWNER" schema (create view test_view as select * from all_scheduler_jobs) and gave a grant "GRANT SELECT OWNER.test_view to USER". But still I did not find any records in USER schema.
2)Created a view as mentioned above and after that I created synonym in USER schema( create synonym USER.test_view for OWNER.test_view.
Please let me know if there is anything that I'm missing or is there any other way that I can implement.
The ALL_SCHEDULER_JOBS view only lets you see jobs to which you already have access - essentially just your own. To see properties or output from scheduler jobs belonging to other schemas, USER must have the SELECT ANY DICTIONARY privilege, which would allow access to the DBA_SCHEDULER_JOBS view. Check with your DBA to see if you are allowed to have that privilege (it opens up access to a lot of other things, too), or if they would prefer that you have a custom role that just grants access to the various DBA_SCHEDULER_% views. Note that these views would expose all jobs for all users, not just your OWNER schema; there isn't really a way to fine-tune that.
If USER needs to execute the job in another schema, then it will need the EXECUTE ANY JOB privilege, which would allow it to run any job in any schema. There's no way to make that more fine-grained at this time, either.
You can try below SQL.
SCHEMA: OWNER
commit;
SCHEMA: USER
select * from OWNER.test_view;

Checking if a user has the required permission in snowflake to create and write into a table

I was using node.js to work on snowflake datawarehouse as a destination for users. I wanted to check if a user has the required permission level on the schema to create a table and write into it before adding the user to the database otherwise it should give an error saying that the user does not have the appropriate permission level. How can I achieve that programatically?
Thanks,
one way you could do is check if the role has SEELCT privilege on the table by looking into the view TABLE_PRIVILEGES in information_schema schema.
select * from information_schema.TABLE_PRIVILEGES where table_name = 'SALES_RAW'
Due to how permissions can be inherited through the role hierarchy, this isn't easy to do. Permissions aren't assigned to users in Snowflake, they are assigned to roles. You could use the table_privileges in the information schema (as Himanshu said). You'll need to ask your admin for privileges to the information_schema schema in the databsae:
You could probably use some combination of these too:
show grants to user [username]
with
show grants on schema [schema name]
The easiest way would be to have your app / script / service assume the same role as the user and see if you can select from a table in the schema or try to create a temporary table in the schema. If you receive an error code, the user doesn't have permissions!

DBA readonly account

I had a schema in one oracle DB as ui_prod. I asked my DBA team guys to create exactly same schema like ui_prod but as read only and name it ui_prod_readonly. Usually I will use Oracle SQL developer to connect a DB and query directly with table name like below.
--Connect to ui_prod
select * from table
but why I requested to put owner name infront when query for readonly schema they created for me, as without putting it, I get error table not exist.
--Connect to ui_prod_readonly
select * from ui_prod.table
I have project files which hardcode the sql query with only table names and adding owner name in front will cause many changes and effort. Can anyone explain me on this? or provide me any document/link to read. Thanks
You should look into synonyms, apparently the user you are connecting to the database as is not the owner of the objects. So to view the object you have to prepend the names with the schema name (the owner of the object themselves).
http://www.techonthenet.com/oracle/synonyms.php
CREATE OR REPLACE SYNONYM ui_prod_readonly.synonym_name
FOR ui_prod.object_name
It seems to me that your dbas have not created another set of tables but just granted the existing tables to the user ui_prod_readonly.
When you log in to Oracle, the current schema is the name of the user you used to log in. So if you log in with ui_prod_readonly Oracle checks that schema for the table if you do not qualify it with the owner (=schema).
If you want to change the current schema so that you don't need to fully qualify the tables, you can do that with ALTER SESSION
alter session set current_schema = ui_prod;
Once you have done that, you don't need to fully qualify the table with the owner (=schema).
if you need a user to read the data only
its simple to create new user and grant it only select privilege
you can create user and grant select privilege using
CREATE USER [user] IDENTIFIED BY [your_password];
grant select on table to [user]

System and database leveled users in Oracle Database

I'm using the Oracle Database EX 11.2.0.2.0 and I hava a quite simple database created there.
Now the issue is i would like to have multiple users with different privileges set up. I have found that topic: How to create a user in Oracle 11g and grant permissions
but I cannot find anywhere the basic thing about users accounts:
what are the difference between creating system-leveled and particular database-leveled user?
I've logged in sqlplus as SYSTEM and executed the following commands:
CREATE USER TEST IDENTIFIED BY password;
GRANT CONNECT TO TEST;
and now the problem is that my databse is actually called let's say BASE with one table called PAYMENTS and to give any privileges to a newly created user I cannot execute:
GRANT SELECT ON PAYMENTS TO TEST;
but I have to type in:
GRANT SELECT ON BASE.PAYMENTS TO TEST;
so I suppose I missed something. Is it any way of connecting the created user to a particular database? So that the newly created user will be visible as a database user in Oracle APEX?
When referencing objects in other schemas, you must provide the schema name. An other user might have a table with the same name. Currently you are logged in with the system user, which is not advisable. When creating objects in the BASE schema (another name for user in de Oracle DB), why not give the user some extra rights (like granting privileges)?
The core of your problem is that you want to grant privileges to user A on object owned by B, logged in as user C. You have to be very specific in that case to Oracle what privileges are granted to whom ;)
Users and schemas are synonymous in Oracle - basically. A schema is the collection of objects owned by a user.
To get what you want, you would need to create users lacking the privs to create anything and only have the ability to select from the objects of others.

User/Role can Create table or view, but not select from it SQL Server 2008 - Ownership not passing to creator

I'm trying to create a role to give a few users permission to create and alter views, procedures and tables.
I don't want these users to be able to select from/update/delete/alter etc. any table in the database, there are tables we want to keep control of - but they should have full permissions on any objects they create.
I've given the users permissions to create views etc. and that works fine, but they can't then select from views they then create. Is it possible to do this?
-- ADDED 25/july/2013
Example:
An example user Mike has specific permissions granted on a handful of tables. All Grant, no Deny.
No other database level permissions beyond "connect"
Plus is a member of public (not altered - no denys), plus 3 other roles we have set up
Role: Standard_Reader
Specific Select permissions on a number of tables. All Grant, no Deny.
No other database level permissions
Role: SensitiveDemographicsReader
Specific Select permissions on sensitive tables. All Grant, no Deny
Role: Analyst
No Specific securables
Database level permissions:
Create Function
Create Procedure
Create Table
Create View
This user can create a table or view, but once created, can't select from it.
Is it possible to set up SQL server so that whenever a user user creates a table or view they then have permissions to select from it (assuming they have permissions on underlying tables in view)
-- EDIT
After some investigation it has become apparent that for some reason in our database, ownership of objects is not acruing to their creators.
Found using this code
select so.name, su.name, so.crdate from sysobjects so join sysusers su on so.uid = su.uid
order by so.crdate
All owners, with a couple of exceptions are DBO.
I can't understand why ownership is not passing to the creators of objects. Any idea what could cause this?
Sounds like what you're using to deny them in the first place is overriding the default settings. Can you post more information on what permissions the users have?
Can't comment :(
I would comment but lack privileges; have you taken a look at MySQL table permissions? It's a rather good system.
you need to grant SELECT on the schema to user/group:
GRANT SELECT ON SCHEMA::dbo TO User/Group;