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Inside of some stored procedure I have to change security context to more powerful login. I tried something like this:

USE ProjectsDB
EXECUTE AS login = 'sa'

--SOME OPERATIONS

REVERT;

but I get the following error message:

Msg 15406, Level 16, State 1, Line 3
Cannot execute as the server principal because the principal "sa" does not exist,
this type of principal cannot be impersonated, or you do not have permission.

The 'sa' login exist with all needed permissions. What may be the problem?

Ilan.

1 Answer 1

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You need to have the "IMPERSONATE" permission to do this. Check out the GRANT IMPERSONATE statement.

Besides that I believe the best way to do this (instead of bumping up the permission level to SA) in sql server is:

  • Create a certificate
  • Sign the stored procedure with the certificate
  • Remove the private key from the certificate
  • Create a user from the certificate
  • Grant the required rights to the user

Optional if you need "Server wide rights":

  • Export the certificate to disk
  • Import the certificate in the master database
  • Create a login from the certificate
  • Grant the appropriate rights to the login

More optional if you need "cross database rights"

  • import the certificate in the database where you want to grant permissions
  • create a user from the certificate.
  • grant the correct rights to the user

SQL Server will chain all the users/login permissions together through the certificates and when you execute the signed procedure it will use the permissions of the users linked to the certificate.

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  • @Flip Wow!!!!!!!!!!!! Could you recommend some book (e-book) that covers all these? :)
    – Ilan
    Sep 13, 2011 at 13:08
  • 1
    Erland Sommarskog has the best info (as usual) sommarskog.se/grantperm.html Sep 13, 2011 at 18:44

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