I have DB "test" in PostgreSql. I want to write sql to get owner my database.
7 Answers
You can find such things in the system catalog
SELECT d.datname as "Name",
pg_catalog.pg_get_userbyid(d.datdba) as "Owner"
FROM pg_catalog.pg_database d
WHERE d.datname = 'database_name'
ORDER BY 1;
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1'your_name'?? What is this? I need to pass something that I don't know in order to know something? Apr 26, 2020 at 0:34
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@DanielMöller You would know the DB name. It's just the owner of the given DB that you're trying to ascertain. If you don't know the DB name, then just omit that WHERE clause. May 28, 2020 at 13:38
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1You can use
current_database()
if you need to dynamically find out which database you are connected to and which owner you are interested in. Sep 28, 2021 at 13:54 -
You can remove the
where
clause to get owners of all databases in the current cluster. Jun 21, 2022 at 21:09
If you use the psql command-line tool, you can simply use \l
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5@Flimm I didn't understand your comment - this returns a list of all existing DBs on the server (that current user has permission to view) with the owner of each DB.– gilad905Mar 20, 2017 at 8:50
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1You're right. I was using
pgcli
which for some reason gives a different result.– FlimmMar 20, 2017 at 16:04 -
1This works beautifully and simply. 2 characters is the way to do it. lol– TmanokOct 17, 2021 at 19:45
You can use the combination of pg_database
, pg_users
system tables and current_database()
function in this way:
SELECT u.usename
FROM pg_database d
JOIN pg_user u ON (d.datdba = u.usesysid)
WHERE d.datname = (SELECT current_database());
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This won't work if database is owned by a role (a group of users) and not a user. Sep 25, 2016 at 10:20
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current_catalog is a synonym for current_database()
SELECT u.usename FROM pg_database d JOIN pg_user u ON (d.datdba = u.usesysid) WHERE d.datname = current_catalog;
Oct 31, 2023 at 17:36
can just cast the role OID with magic ::regrole to give the role name of owner:
SELECT datdba::regrole FROM pg_database WHERE datname = 'test' ;
This work with database owned by group role:
SELECT
U.rolname
,D.datname
FROM
pg_roles AS U JOIN pg_database AS D ON (D.datdba = U.oid)
WHERE
D.datname = current_database();
Using pg_authid
(as I did in my previous version) instead of pg_roles
is limited to SuperUser because it holds password (see documentation):
Since this catalog contains passwords, it must not be publicly readable.
pg_roles
is a publicly readable view onpg_authid
that blanks out the password field.
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When running this, it gave permission denied for relation pg_authid. What's required? Dec 24, 2019 at 2:39
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1@StevenYong, Thank you for pointing this out, I have updated my answer. Reading the doc, it is sufficient to replace
pg_authid
bypg_roles
. Have a nice day. Dec 24, 2019 at 7:11
The follwing query displays info for all tables in the public schema:
select t.table_name, t.table_type, c.relname, c.relowner, u.usename
from information_schema.tables t
join pg_catalog.pg_class c on (t.table_name = c.relname)
join pg_catalog.pg_user u on (c.relowner = u.usesysid)
where t.table_schema='public';
source :http://cully.biz/2013/12/11/postgresql-getting-the-owner-of-tables/
Remember in SQL including postgres that you have a heirarchy within a given sql server instance: catalog/db > schema > tables
When looking for perms/metadata for within a catalog you want to look at information_schema
Example: information_schema.role_table_grants
for table perms
Example: information_schema.role_usage_grants
for SEQUENCE/schema perms
https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/information-schema.html
For catalog/db-level config/meta, you need to look another level up in pg_catalog
.
https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/catalogs.html
Example:
SELECT dbs.datname, roles.rolname
FROM pg_catalog.pg_database dbs, pg_catalog.pg_roles roles
WHERE dbs.datdba = roles.oid;
pg_catalog.pg_database.datdba
has ID of owner role.
pg_catalog.pg_roles.oid
has ID of owner role (join)
pg_catalog.pg_roles.rolname
has name/string of owner role