PostgreSQL
Synopsis
ALTER POLICY name ON table_name RENAME TO new_name
ALTER POLICY name ON table_name
[ TO { role_name | PUBLIC | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER } [, ...] ]
[ USING ( using_expression ) ]
[ WITH CHECK ( check_expression ) ]
Description
ALTER POLICY
changes the definition of an existing row-level security policy. Note that ALTER POLICY
only allows the set of roles to which the policy applies and the USING
and WITH CHECK
expressions to be modified. To change other properties of a policy, such as the command to which it applies or whether it is permissive or restrictive, the policy must be dropped and recreated.
To use ALTER POLICY
, you must own the table that the policy applies to.
In the second form of ALTER POLICY
, the role list, `using_expression, and check_expression` are replaced independently if specified. When one of those clauses is omitted, the corresponding part of the policy is unchanged.
Parameters
- `name`
-
The name of an existing policy to alter.
- `table_name`
-
The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the table that the policy is on.
- `new_name`
-
The new name for the policy.
- `role_name`
-
The role(s) to which the policy applies. Multiple roles can be specified at one time. To apply the policy to all roles, use
PUBLIC
. - `using_expression`
-
The
USING
expression for the policy. See CREATE POLICY for details. - `check_expression`
-
The
WITH CHECK
expression for the policy. See CREATE POLICY for details.
See Also
[.refentrytitle#CREATE POLICY], DROP POLICY#
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