F.40. pg_proaudit — enables detailed logging of various security events #
- F.40.1. Installing the
pg_proaudit
Extension- F.40.2. Uninstalling the
pg_proaudit
Extension- F.40.3. Functions to Configure Security Event Logging
- F.40.4. pg_proaudit_settings View
- F.40.5. Security Events
- F.40.6. Security Event Log Configuration Parameters
- F.40.7. Viewing Security Event Log
- F.40.8. Examples
- F.40.2. Uninstalling the
The pg_proaudit
extension enables detailed logging of various security events.
pg_proaudit
works in parallel with the standard PostgreSQL logging solutions (logging collector) and does not depend on them. Security event log of the pg_proaudit
extension is stored separately from the server log. At the Postgres Pro Standard startup, pg_proaudit
launches a special background process to log security events.
Logging rules are stored in the pg_proaudit.conf
configuration file located in the cluster data directory (PGDATA
). It is a text file that can be edited directly using operating system facilities. To modify the file using SQL, you can use several pg_proaudit
functions. The pg_proaudit_settings
view displays the current pg_proaudit
rules, even if they have not been saved into the pg_proaudit.conf
file yet.
All the logged events belong to the following classes:
DDL commands for creating, changing, and deleting DBMS objects (databases, tablespaces, schemas, tables, views, sequences, languages, functions)
access control commands for database objects (
GRANT
,REVOKE
)DML commands for access to database objects (
INSERT
,UPDATE
,DELETE
,SELECT
,TRUNCATE
for tables and/or views,EXECUTE
for functions)database authentication/disconnection events
all commands executed by a particular user
Security events can be logged both in the centralized logging solution of the operating system (syslog) and in the standard file-system files. Event logs can be written both into the syslog and into the files simultaneously. For clear identification, all pg_proaudit
records in the syslog are marked with AUDIT
. Event log files are written in the CSV format. Each event is logged on a separate line that contains the following fields:
date and time of the event
username
database name
server process ID (PID)
severity level:
INFO
orERROR
serial number of the command in a session
subcommand number in complex commands (
CREATE TABLE ... AS SELECT ...
)operator name
object type
object name
operator execution results:
SUCCESS
orFAILURE
error message in case of
FAILURE
text of the SQL command
parameters of the command (for example, for
PREPARE
)
You can define a directory to store security log files and set up log file rotation. pg_proaudit
can switch to a new log file either after the specified time interval, or when the specified size of the log file is exceeded. This enables you to define a workflow for cleaning up security event logs.
Postgres Pro user with the SUPERUSER
attribute should grant access to the pg_proaudit
extension and security event log files only to the user with the information security administrator role.
F.40.1. Installing the pg_proaudit
Extension #
The pg_proaudit
extension is a built-in extension included into Postgres Pro Standard. To enable pg_proaudit
, complete the following steps:
Add
pg_proaudit
to theshared_preload_libraries
variable in thepostgresql.conf
file:shared_preload_libraries = 'pg_proaudit'
Restart the database server for the changes to take effect. To verify that the
pg_proaudit
library was installed correctly, you can run the following command:SHOW shared_preload_libraries;
Create the
pg_proaudit
extension using the following query:CREATE EXTENSION pg_proaudit;
The
pg_proaudit
extension adds several functions for managing thepg_proaudit.conf
file, thepg_proaudit_settings
view that displays the currentpg_proaudit
rules and event triggers. For convenience, thepg_proaudit
extension should be created in each database for which you are going to log security events.
F.40.2. Uninstalling the pg_proaudit
Extension #
To properly uninstall pg_proaudit
, complete the following steps:
Delete the
pg_proaudit
extension using the following query:DROP EXTENSION pg_proaudit;
Remove
pg_proaudit
from theshared_preload_libraries
variable in thepostgresql.conf
file.Skip this step if you have several databases in the cluster and you want to remove the extension only for one of them. In this case, it is recommended to remove logging rules related to the corresponding database prior to uninstalling the extension.
F.40.3. Functions to Configure Security Event Logging #
To configure security event logging, pg_proaudit
provides an SQL interface that consists of several functions and the pg_proaudit_settings
view.
pg_proaudit_set_rule(db_name text, event_type text, object_type text, object_name text, role_name text, comment text)
Creates the logging rule with the specified parameters. When the pg_proaudit_set_rule()
function completes, security event logging starts immediately, but the pg_proaudit.conf
file is not updated. To save the changes in the pg_proaudit.conf
file, call the pg_proaudit_save()
function.
Arguments:
db_name
— name of the database for which the logging rule is established. An empty string or NULL specified in this argument means that events are logged for all databases where thepg_proaudit
extension is created. When set to current_database(), events for the current database are logged.event_type
— type of the event that needs to be logged, including SQL operator names, as well asAUTHENTICATE
andDISCONNECT
events. When set toALL
, as well as when an empty string or NULL is specified, enables logging for all events available for the specified object type. For example, for theTABLE
object type, theALL
keyword enables logging for commandsSELECT
,INSERT
,UPDATE
,DELETE
,TRUNCATE
,COPY
, as well asCREATE
,ALTER
,DROP
. You can also set up logging of event classes by specifying the following values:ALL_DDL
,ALL_DML
,ALL_MOD
,ALL_PROC
, andALL_ROLE
. For the full list of possibleevent_type
values, see Section F.40.5.object_type
— type of the object for which security events need to be logged. When set toALL
, as well as when an empty string or the NULL is specified, enables logging of events for all object types. For example, specifyFOREIGN TABLE
object type for theSELECT
event to log all attempts to access foreign tables. Use NULL ifevent_type
is set toAUTHENTICATE
,DISCONNECT
,SET
, orRESET
, and theROLE
value for all events that reference user actions, such asCREATE USER
orDROP USER
. The following object types are supported:COMPOSITE TYPE
,DATABASE
,EVENT TRIGGER
,FUNCTION
,INDEX
,PREPARED STATEMENT
,ROLE
,SEQUENCE
,SCHEMA
,TABLE
,FOREIGN TABLE
,TOAST TABLE
,TABLESPACE
,VIEW
, andMATERIALIZED VIEW
.object_name
— name of the object for which the logging rule is established. When an empty string or NULL is specified, enables logging of events for all object names.role_name
— name of the role for which the logging rule is established. If specified, allows logging the actions caused by the specified DBMS user or the user who is directly or indirectly a member of this role. When an empty string or NULL is specified, enables logging of events for all role names. When set to current_role, events for the current role are logged.comment
— comment to describe the created logging rule. This argument does not affect the rule execution and is not reflected in the log.
pg_proaudit_remove_rule(db_name text, event_type text, object_type text, object_name text, role_name text)
Removes the specific logging rule with the set parameters. To save the changes in the pg_proaudit.conf
file, call the pg_proaudit_save()
function.
Arguments:
db_name
— name of the database for which the logging rule needs to be removed.event_type
— type of the event for which the logging rule needs to be removed. For the full list of possibleevent_type
values, see Section F.40.5.object_type
— type of the object for which the logging rule needs to be removed.object_name
— name of the object for which the logging rule needs to be removed.role_name
— name of the role for which the logging rule needs to be removed.
pg_proaudit_show()
Returns logged events in a table view. This function is used by the pg_proaudit_settings
view.
pg_proaudit_reload()
Reads logging configuration from the pg_proaudit.conf
file. You must call this function if the pg_proaudit.conf
file was modified manually using the operating system facilities.
pg_proaudit_reset()
Removes all logging rules. To save information about the canceled logging in the pg_proaudit.conf
file, call the pg_proaudit_save()
function.
pg_proaudit_save()
Saves logging rules from memory into the pg_proaudit.conf
file. The pg_proaudit.conf
file is located in the cluster data directory (PGDATA
). You cannot change the pg_proaudit.conf
file location.
F.40.3.1. Handling Object Names #
Comparison of string representations of names for database, user, role and other objects is case-insensitive even if the object name in the database is enclosed in quotes. These string representations are stored as lower-case strings.
Strings representing object names need to be passed to functions pg_proaudit_set_rule
and pg_proaudit_remove_rule
as regular strings: a single quote needs repeating, and other characters are passed as is, without escaping or wrapping.
For example, rules for tables table1
and "TaBlE1"
will be the same, and their names can be passed in upper-case or lower-case characters. The same holds for roles. As for databases, before creating a rule, pg_proaudit checks whether this database actually exists, and this check is case-sensitive.
The following examples illustrate creation of "weird" object names and specifying correct audit rules for them.
create table "TAbLe''123"(); SELECT pg_proaudit_set_rule(current_database(), null, null, 'public.TabLe''''123', null, 'tst cmnt');
create table "taBlE""123"(); SELECT pg_proaudit_set_rule(null, null, null, 'public.taBlE"123', null);
create schema "(BIG!) Schema"; create table "(BIG!) Schema"."My Tab.lE"(); SELECT pg_proaudit_set_rule(null, null, null, '(BIG!) Schema.My Tab.lE', null);
create role "Some '@#$%' person" with login; SELECT pg_proaudit_set_rule(null, 'authenticate', null, null, 'Some ''@#$%'' person');
create role "Some '@#$%' person" with superuser; \c - "Some '@#$%' person" SELECT pg_proaudit_set_rule(null, 'disconnect', null, null, current_user);
create database " D B 1"; SELECT pg_proaudit_set_rule(' D B 1', 'authenticate', null, null, null);
create database " D b 2"; \c " D b 2" create extension pg_proaudit; SELECT pg_proaudit_set_rule(current_database(), 'disconnect', null, null, null);
F.40.4. pg_proaudit_settings View #
This view displays the current pg_proaudit
rules, even if they have not been saved into the pg_proaudit.conf
file yet. The pg_proaudit_settings
view consists of the following columns:
db_name
(text
) — name of the database for which to log security events.event_type
(text
) — event type to log.object_type
(text
) — type of the object for which security events are to be logged.object_name
(text
) — name of the object for which security events are to be logged.role_name
(text
) — the role on behalf of which logged actions are performed.comment
(text
) — comment to describe the created logging rule.
F.40.5. Security Events #
You can configure the pg_proaudit
extension to log classes of security events and specific events by specifying the respective value in the event_type
argument of the pg_proaudit_set_rule() function.
The following classes of security events are supported:
ALL_DDL
:CREATE
,ALTER
,DROP
for any database object.ALL_DML
:SELECT
,INSERT
,UPDATE
,DELETE
,TRUNCATE
,EXECUTE
for any table type as well as functions and stored procedures.ALL_MOD
:INSERT
,UPDATE
,DELETE
,TRUNCATE
for any table type.ALL_PROC
:CREATE
,MODIFY
,DROP
for any function and stored procedure.ALL_ROLE
:CREATE
,ALTER
,DROP
forUSER
,ROLE
,GROUP
, as well as execution of theGRANT
command.
The following specific security events are supported:
AUTHENTICATE
DISCONNECT
ALTER AGGREGATE
ALTER COLLATION
ALTER CONVERSION
ALTER DATABASE
ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES
ALTER DOMAIN
ALTER EVENT TRIGGER
ALTER EXTENSION
ALTER FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER
ALTER FOREIGN TABLE
ALTER FUNCTION
ALTER INDEX
ALTER LANGUAGE
ALTER LARGE OBJECT
ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW
ALTER OPERATOR
ALTER OPERATOR CLASS
ALTER OPERATOR FAMILY
ALTER POLICY
ALTER ROLE, ALTER USER, ALTER GROUP
ALTER RULE
ALTER SCHEMA
ALTER SEQUENCE
ALTER SERVER
ALTER SYSTEM
ALTER TABLE
ALTER TABLESPACE
ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION
ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY
ALTER TEXT SEARCH PARSER
ALTER TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE
ALTER TRIGGER
ALTER TYPE
ALTER USER MAPPING
ALTER VIEW
CLUSTER
COMMENT
COPY
CREATE ACCESS METHOD
CREATE AGGREGATE
CREATE CAST
CREATE COLLATION
CREATE CONVERSION
CREATE DATABASE
CREATE DOMAIN
CREATE EVENT TRIGGER
CREATE EXTENSION
CREATE FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER
CREATE FOREIGN TABLE
CREATE FUNCTION
CREATE INDEX
CREATE LANGUAGE
CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW
CREATE OPERATOR
CREATE OPERATOR CLASS
CREATE OPERATOR FAMILY
CREATE POLICY
CREATE ROLE, CREATE USER, CREATE GROUP
CREATE RULE
CREATE SCHEMA
CREATE SEQUENCE
CREATE SERVER
CREATE TABLE, CREATE TABLE AS, SELECT INTO
CREATE TABLESPACE
CREATE TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION
CREATE TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY
CREATE TEXT SEARCH PARSER
CREATE TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE
CREATE TRANSFORM
CREATE TRIGGER
CREATE TYPE
CREATE USER MAPPING
CREATE VIEW
DEALLOCATE
DELETE
DO
DROP ACCESS METHOD
DROP AGGREGATE
DROP CAST
DROP COLLATION
DROP CONVERSION
DROP DATABASE
DROP DOMAIN
DROP EVENT TRIGGER
DROP EXTENSION
DROP FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER
DROP FOREIGN TABLE
DROP FUNCTION
DROP INDEX
DROP LANGUAGE
DROP MATERIALIZED VIEW
DROP OPERATOR
DROP OPERATOR CLASS
DROP OPERATOR FAMILY
DROP OWNED
DROP POLICY
DROP ROLE, DROP USER, DROP GROUP
DROP RULE
DROP SCHEMA
DROP SEQUENCE
DROP SERVER
DROP TABLE
DROP TABLESPACE
DROP TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION
DROP TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY
DROP TEXT SEARCH PARSER
DROP TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE
DROP TRANSFORM
DROP TRIGGER
DROP TYPE
DROP USER MAPPING
DROP VIEW
EXECUTE
GRANT
INSERT
PREPARE
REASSIGN OWNED
REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW
REINDEX
RESET
REVOKE
SECURITY LABEL
SELECT
SET
UPDATE
TRUNCATE TABLE
F.40.6. Security Event Log Configuration Parameters #
The pg_proaudit
extension provides several configuration parameters for managing security event log files. These parameters can be set in the postgresql.conf
configuration file, or with the help of the ALTER SYSTEM
command. For the changes to take effect, call the pg_reload_conf()
function or restart the database server. For additional configuration, the syslog_ident and syslog_facility configuration parameters can be used.
pg_proaudit.log_destination
(string
) #Defines the method for logging security events. Possible values are:
csvlog
— log security events in a CSV file.syslog
— log security events in syslog.
You can specify one or more values separated by commas.
Default:
csvlog
pg_proaudit.log_catalog_access
(boolean
) #Specifies whether to log access to system catalog objects in the
pg_catalog
schema.Default:
off
pg_proaudit.log_command_text
(boolean
) #Specifies whether to log the SQL command text for security events.
Default:
on
pg_proaudit.log_directory
(string
) #Specifies the path to the directory that stores CSV log files. This can be an absolute path, or a relative path to the cluster data directory (
PGDATA
). This parameter is used ifpg_proaudit.log_destination
contains thecsvlog
value.Default:
pg_proaudit
pg_proaudit.log_filename
(string
) #Defines the filenames of the created security event log files. The filename template can contain %-escapes, similar to the ones listed in the
strftime
specification of the Open Group (http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/strftime.html). This parameter is used ifpg_proaudit.log_destination
contains thecsvlog
value.Default:
postgresql-%Y-%m-%d_%H%M%S.log
pg_proaudit.log_rotation_size
(integer
) #Sets the maximum size of the CSV log file, in kilobytes. When this size is achieved,
pg_proaudit
creates a new file for logging security events. This parameter is used ifpg_proaudit.log_destination
contains thecsvlog
. If set to 0, disables size-based creation of new log files.Default: 10MB
pg_proaudit.log_rotation_age
(integer
) #Sets the maximum lifetime of a log file, in minutes. After this timeframe has elapsed,
pg_proaudit
creates a new file for logging security events. This parameter is used ifpg_proaudit.log_destination
contains thecsvlog
value. If set to 0, disables time-based creation of new log files.Default: 1 day
pg_proaudit.log_truncate_on_rotation
(boolean
) #Specifies whether to truncate log files when logging is switched to an existing log file. If set to
off
,pg_proaudit
appends new log entries to the end of the file. This parameter is used ifpg_proaudit.log_destination
contains thecsvlog
value.Default:
off
pg_proaudit.max_rules_count
(integer
) #Specifies the maximum number of rules allowed. For the parameter changes to take effect, the database server must be restarted.
Default: 500
F.40.7. Viewing Security Event Log #
Security event log files are text files that can be viewed by the operating system facilities. To access log files using SQL, you can use the file_fdw
extension — a foreign data wrapper for accessing files on the database server. To use this method, complete the following steps:
Install the
file_fdw
and create an external server:CREATE EXTENSION file_fdw; CREATE SERVER pg_proauditlog FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER file_fdw;
Create a foreign table, specifying the columns and the absolute path to the log file. The actual log file location is determined by the
pg_proaudit.log_directory
andpg_proaudit.log_filename
parameters.CREATE FOREIGN TABLE pg_proaudit_log ( log_time timestamp(3) with time zone, role_name text, database_name text, session_pid text, error_severity text, session_line_num bigint, session_line_subcommand_num bigint, event_type text, object_type text, object_name text, status text, error_message text, query_text text, query_args text ) SERVER pg_proauditlog OPTIONS (filename 'absolute_file_path_to_log_file.csv', FORMAT 'csv' );
Make sure that the pg_proaudit.log_destination
parameter contains the csvlog
value, which enables writing security event logs to CSV files.
F.40.8. Examples #
As an example, let's set up logging for the following security events:
authentications/disconnections to the
postgres
databaseall actions of the
postgres
usercreating, updating, and deleting any tables
all operations on the
app_table
table that belongs to thepublic
schema
All events must be logged in the CSV format and stored for a week. It is required to set up SQL access to the security event log. To complete the scenario, do the following:
In psql, check that the preliminary setup of the pg_proaudit
extension is complete in the postgres
database:
SHOW shared_preload_libraries; shared_preload_libraries -------------------------- pg_proaudit \dx pg_proaudit List of installed extensions Name | Version | Schema | Description -------------+---------+--------+--------------------------------- pg_proaudit | 2.0 | public | provides auditing functionality
Add the following lines to the postgresql.conf
configuration file:
pg_proaudit.log_destination = 'csvlog' pg_proaudit.log_directory = 'audit' pg_proaudit.log_filename = 'audit-%u.csv' pg_proaudit.log_rotation_age = 1440 pg_proaudit.log_rotation_size = 0 pg_proaudit.log_truncate_on_rotation = on pg_proaudit.log_command_text = on
For the changes to take effect, run the following query:
SELECT pg_reload_conf();
Check that the following parameters are set as expected:
SHOW pg_proaudit.log_destination; SHOW pg_proaudit.log_directory; SHOW pg_proaudit.log_filename; SHOW pg_proaudit.log_rotation_age; SHOW pg_proaudit.log_rotation_size; SHOW pg_proaudit.log_truncate_on_rotation; SHOW pg_proaudit.log_command_text;
Suppose your PGDATA
environment variable points to the cluster data directory. Since the pg_proaudit.log_directory
defines a relative path to the log files, they will be located in the $PGDATA/audit
directory. Let's create an empty file for each day of the week and make them available to their owner only:
touch $PGDATA/audit/audit-1.csv touch $PGDATA/audit/audit-2.csv touch $PGDATA/audit/audit-3.csv touch $PGDATA/audit/audit-4.csv touch $PGDATA/audit/audit-5.csv touch $PGDATA/audit/audit-6.csv touch $PGDATA/audit/audit-7.csv chmod 600 $PGDATA/audit/audit-*.csv
Create a table for reading log entries:
CREATE TABLE pg_proaudit_log ( log_time timestamp(3) with time zone, role_name text, database_name text, session_pid text, error_severity text, session_line_num bigint, session_line_subcommand_num bigint, event_type text, object_type text, object_name text, status text, error_message text, query_text text, query_args text );
Install the file_fdw
extension and create an external server:
CREATE EXTENSION file_fdw; CREATE SERVER pg_proauditlog FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER file_fdw;
Now let's create seven child foreign tables for the pg_proaudit_log
table, for each day of the week:
CREATE FOREIGN TABLE pg_proaudit_log_1 () INHERITS (pg_proaudit_log) SERVER pg_proauditlog OPTIONS (filename '/path_to_PGDATA
/audit/audit-1.csv', FORMAT 'csv'); CREATE FOREIGN TABLE pg_proaudit_log_2 () INHERITS (pg_proaudit_log) SERVER pg_proauditlog OPTIONS (filename '/path_to_PGDATA
/audit/audit-2.csv', FORMAT 'csv'); CREATE FOREIGN TABLE pg_proaudit_log_3 () INHERITS (pg_proaudit_log) SERVER pg_proauditlog OPTIONS (filename '/path_to_PGDATA
/audit/audit-3.csv', FORMAT 'csv'); CREATE FOREIGN TABLE pg_proaudit_log_4 () INHERITS (pg_proaudit_log) SERVER pg_proauditlog OPTIONS (filename '/path_to_PGDATA
/audit/audit-4.csv', FORMAT 'csv'); CREATE FOREIGN TABLE pg_proaudit_log_5 () INHERITS (pg_proaudit_log) SERVER pg_proauditlog OPTIONS (filename '/path_to_PGDATA
/audit/audit-5.csv', FORMAT 'csv'); CREATE FOREIGN TABLE pg_proaudit_log_6 () INHERITS (pg_proaudit_log) SERVER pg_proauditlog OPTIONS (filename '/path_to_PGDATA
/audit/audit-6.csv', FORMAT 'csv'); CREATE FOREIGN TABLE pg_proaudit_log_7 () INHERITS (pg_proaudit_log) SERVER pg_proauditlog OPTIONS (filename '/path_to_PGDATA
/audit/audit-7.csv', FORMAT 'csv');
To set up logging for the required security events, connect to the postgres
database and execute the following commands:
SELECT pg_proaudit_set_rule (current_database(), 'AUTHENTICATE', null, null, null, 'Any authentication in the current DB'); SELECT pg_proaudit_set_rule (current_database(), 'DISCONNECT', null, null, null, 'Any disconnect from the current DB'); SELECT pg_proaudit_set_rule (current_database(), 'ALL', 'TABLE', null, null, 'Any operations with any table in the current DB'); SELECT pg_proaudit_set_rule (current_database(), 'ALL', null, null, 'postgres', 'Any operation by "postgres" user in the current DB');
Create the app_table
table and enable logging for all operations on this table:
CREATE TABLE app_table (id int, name text); SELECT pg_proaudit_set_rule (current_database(), 'ALL', null, 'public.app_table', null);
Check that event logging is configured as expected:
SELECT * FROM pg_proaudit_settings; db_name | event_type | object_type | object_name | role_name | comment ----------+--------------+-------------+------------------+-----------+---------------------------------------------------- postgres | authenticate | ALL | | | Any authentication in the current DB postgres | disconnect | ALL | | | Any disconnect from the current DB postgres | ALL | table | | | Any operations with any table in the current DB postgres | ALL | ALL | | postgres | Any operation by "postgres" user in the current DB postgres | ALL | ALL | public.app_table | | (5 rows)
Save these logging rules into the pg_proaudit.conf
file, so that they are not lost after the server restart:
SELECT pg_proaudit_save();
Let's run several queries on the app_table
table:
INSERT INTO app_table VALUES (1, 'first'); SELECT * FROM app_table;
Check the log entries for the app_table
table:
SELECT to_char(log_time, 'DD.MM.YY HH24:MI:SS') AS when, role_name, session_pid, event_type, query_text FROM pg_proaudit_log where object_name = 'public.app_table'; when | role_name | session_pid | event_type | query_text -------------------+-----------+-------------+--------------+--------------------------------------------- 27.09.23 12:44:27 | postgres | 2010 | CREATE TABLE | CREATE TABLE app_table (id int, name text); 27.09.23 12:45:55 | postgres | 2010 | INSERT | INSERT INTO app_table VALUES (1, 'first'); 27.09.23 12:46:00 | postgres | 2010 | SELECT | SELECT * FROM app_table; (3 rows)
We have set up a weekly rotation of log files, with the log file switched once a day. It means that queries to the pg_proaudit_log
table will return only those security events that have happened in the latest week. Older events will be automatically removed at log file rotation. To define additional access constraints for specific log entries, you can create separate views based on queries to the pg_proaudit_log
table and grant read rights to such views using built-in Postgres Pro access control methods.