Thread: REVOKE to an user that doesn't exist
Hi all, I'm trying to pg_upgrade a cluster from 9.1 to 10 (Windows 10, but I don't think it matters). At a certain point an error is thrown while parsing a trigger: could not execute query: ERROR: role "1067431" does not exist command was: REVOKE ALL ON FUNCTION "x"() FROM PUBLIC; GRANT ALL ON FUNCTION "public"."x"() TO "1067431" WITH GRANT OPTION; Here's the evidence :-) postgres=# \du List of roles Role name | Attributes | Member of ------------------+-------------------------------------------------+----------- user5 | Create role, Create DB | {} user2 | Superuser, Create role, Create DB, Replication | {} user4 | Create role, Create DB | {} user3 | | {} user1 | Superuser, Create role, Create DB, Replication | {} postgres | Superuser, Create role, Create DB, Replication | {} postgres=# select * from pg_roles; rolname | rolsuper | rolinherit | rolcreaterole | rolcreatedb | rolcatupdate | rolcanlogin | rolreplication | rolconnlimit | rolpassword | rolvaliduntil | rolconfig | oid ------------------+----------+------------+---------------+-------------+--------------+-------------+----------------+--------------+-------------+---------------+-----------+--------- postgres | t | t | t | t | t | t | t | -1 | ******** | | | 10 user1 | t | t | t | t | t | t | t | -1 | ******** | | | 16393 user2 | t | t | t | t | t | t | t | -1 | ******** | | | 16394 user3 | f | t | f | f | f | t | f | -1 | ******** | | | 16395 user4 | f | t | t | t | f | t | f | -1 | ******** | | | 1067432 user5 | f | t | t | t | f | t | f | -1 | ******** | | | 30602 (6 rows) So, no user with that OID. I checked in the trigger pointed to the error and I found GRANT EXECUTE ON FUNCTION x() TO "1067431" WITH GRANT OPTION; How to REVOKE that non-existing user so pg_upgrade can proceed? thanks Moreno.-
On 12/12/18 5:11 AM, Moreno Andreo wrote: > Hi all, > > I'm trying to pg_upgrade a cluster from 9.1 to 10 (Windows 10, but I > don't think it matters). > > At a certain point an error is thrown while parsing a trigger: > > could not execute query: ERROR: role "1067431" does not exist > > command was: REVOKE ALL ON FUNCTION "x"() FROM PUBLIC; > GRANT ALL ON FUNCTION "public"."x"() TO "1067431" WITH GRANT OPTION; > > Here's the evidence :-) The below is from the 9.1 cluster, correct? > postgres=# select * from pg_roles; > rolname | rolsuper | rolinherit | rolcreaterole | rolcreatedb > | rolcatupdate | rolcanlogin | rolreplication | rolconnlimit | > rolpassword | rolvaliduntil | rolconfig | oid > ------------------+----------+------------+---------------+-------------+--------------+-------------+----------------+--------------+-------------+---------------+-----------+--------- > > postgres | t | t | t | t | > t | t | t | -1 | ******** | > | | 10 > user1 | t | t | t | t | t | > t | t | -1 | ******** | > | | 16393 > user2 | t | t | t | t | > t | t | t | -1 | ******** > | | | 16394 > user3 | f | t | f | f | f | > t | f | -1 | ******** | > | | 16395 > user4 | f | t | t | t | > f | t | f | -1 | ******** > | | | 1067432 > user5 | f | t | t | t | > f | t | f | -1 | ******** | > | | 30602 > (6 rows) > > So, no user with that OID. I checked in the trigger pointed to the error > and I found > > GRANT EXECUTE ON FUNCTION x() TO "1067431" WITH GRANT OPTION; I am not following as a trigger would not have that in its code. Are you referring to the function x()? If so is the GRANT in the function? > > How to REVOKE that non-existing user so pg_upgrade can proceed? > > thanks > > Moreno.- > > > > -- Adrian Klaver adrian.klaver@aklaver.com
Moreno Andreo <moreno.andreo@evolu-s.it> writes: > I'm trying to pg_upgrade a cluster from 9.1 to 10 (Windows 10, but I > don't think it matters). > At a certain point an error is thrown while parsing a trigger: > could not execute query: ERROR: role "1067431" does not exist > command was: REVOKE ALL ON FUNCTION "x"() FROM PUBLIC; > GRANT ALL ON FUNCTION "public"."x"() TO "1067431" WITH GRANT OPTION; Hm. We've seen similar bugs before; the mechanism is that at some point the function owner granted privileges to somebody else, and at some later point the somebody-else role got dropped, but the privilege grant stayed behind because the system had lost, or never made, the pg_shdepend entry indicating that this function had an ACL entry mentioning that role. The extra ACL entry is harmless, until you wonder why pg_dump is printing a nonsensical command due to it. We fixed a couple of bugs of that ilk just last month [1], but they were for cases involving types and schemas, not functions. The last case involving function privileges that I see in a quick trawl of the commit log predates 9.0 release [2]. I wonder how old this cluster is ... > How to REVOKE that non-existing user so pg_upgrade can proceed? The safest way to clean it up manually would be to set the pg_proc.proacl field for that function to NULL. If there are other grants about the function, you could try removing the bad entry, but it would likely be safer to just re-grant after the upgrade. regards, tom lane [1] https://git.postgresql.org/gitweb/?p=postgresql.git&a=commitdiff&h=fa2952d8e [2] https://git.postgresql.org/gitweb/?p=postgresql.git&a=commitdiff&h=d691cb914
Il 12/12/2018 15:39, Adrian Klaver ha scritto: > On 12/12/18 5:11 AM, Moreno Andreo wrote: >> Hi all, >> >> I'm trying to pg_upgrade a cluster from 9.1 to 10 (Windows 10, but I >> don't think it matters). >> >> At a certain point an error is thrown while parsing a trigger: >> >> could not execute query: ERROR: role "1067431" does not exist >> >> command was: REVOKE ALL ON FUNCTION "x"() FROM PUBLIC; >> GRANT ALL ON FUNCTION "public"."x"() TO "1067431" WITH GRANT OPTION; >> >> Here's the evidence :-) > > The below is from the 9.1 cluster, correct? Correct, 9.1.6, IIRC > >> postgres=# select * from pg_roles; >> rolname | rolsuper | rolinherit | rolcreaterole | >> rolcreatedb | rolcatupdate | rolcanlogin | rolreplication | >> rolconnlimit | rolpassword | rolvaliduntil | rolconfig | oid >> ------------------+----------+------------+---------------+-------------+--------------+-------------+----------------+--------------+-------------+---------------+-----------+--------- >> >> postgres | t | t | t | t | >> t | t | t | -1 | ******** >> | | | 10 >> user1 | t | t | t | t | t | >> t | t | -1 | ******** >> | | | 16393 >> user2 | t | t | t | t | >> t | t | t | -1 | ******** >> | | | 16394 >> user3 | f | t | f | f | f | >> t | f | -1 | ******** >> | | | 16395 >> user4 | f | t | t | t | >> f | t | f | -1 | ******** >> | | | 1067432 >> user5 | f | t | t | >> t | f | t | f | -1 | >> ******** | | | 30602 >> (6 rows) >> >> So, no user with that OID. I checked in the trigger pointed to the >> error and I found >> >> GRANT EXECUTE ON FUNCTION x() TO "1067431" WITH GRANT OPTION; > > I am not following as a trigger would not have that in its code. > > Are you referring to the function x()? > > If so is the GRANT in the function? Sorry, the grant above is extracted from the CREATE statement that PgAdmin3 shows when you click on the trigger
Il 12/12/2018 16:01, Tom Lane ha scritto: > Moreno Andreo <moreno.andreo@evolu-s.it> writes: >> I'm trying to pg_upgrade a cluster from 9.1 to 10 (Windows 10, but I >> don't think it matters). >> At a certain point an error is thrown while parsing a trigger: >> could not execute query: ERROR: role "1067431" does not exist >> command was: REVOKE ALL ON FUNCTION "x"() FROM PUBLIC; >> GRANT ALL ON FUNCTION "public"."x"() TO "1067431" WITH GRANT OPTION; > Hm. We've seen similar bugs before; the mechanism is that at some > point the function owner granted privileges to somebody else, and > at some later point the somebody-else role got dropped, but the > privilege grant stayed behind because the system had lost, or never > made, the pg_shdepend entry indicating that this function had an ACL > entry mentioning that role. The extra ACL entry is harmless, until > you wonder why pg_dump is printing a nonsensical command due to it. That's the case. The customer never complained about any problem but today, while upgrading his cluster, we bumped into it. > > We fixed a couple of bugs of that ilk just last month [1], but they were > for cases involving types and schemas, not functions. The last case > involving function privileges that I see in a quick trawl of the commit > log predates 9.0 release [2]. I wonder how old this cluster is ... The cluster is version 9.1.6, IIRC > >> How to REVOKE that non-existing user so pg_upgrade can proceed? > The safest way to clean it up manually would be to set the pg_proc.proacl > field for that function to NULL. If there are other grants about the > function, you could try removing the bad entry, but it would likely be > safer to just re-grant after the upgrade. Is it not the case to edit proacl column to just remove the unwanted role? Is it faster and safer to null the column and just reGRANT? Thanks Moreno.-
Il 12/12/2018 16:01, Tom Lane ha scritto: > > The safest way to clean it up manually would be to set the pg_proc.proacl > field for that function to NULL. If there are other grants about the > function, you could try removing the bad entry, but it would likely be > safer to just re-grant after the upgrade. > Setting the column (and several others from other tables such as pg_class) to null made me possible to upgrade the cluster. After the upgrade, I issued the necessary GRANTs and everything is up & running on Postgres 10 now! Thanks again Moreno.-