CREATE ROLE — define a new database role
CREATE ROLEname
[ [ WITH ]option
[ ... ] ] whereoption
can be: SUPERUSER | NOSUPERUSER | CREATEDB | NOCREATEDB | CREATEROLE | NOCREATEROLE | INHERIT | NOINHERIT | LOGIN | NOLOGIN | REPLICATION | NOREPLICATION | BYPASSRLS | NOBYPASSRLS | CONNECTION LIMITconnlimit
| [ ENCRYPTED ] PASSWORD 'password
' | PASSWORD NULL | VALID UNTIL 'timestamp
' | IN ROLErole_name
[, ...] | ROLErole_name
[, ...] | ADMINrole_name
[, ...] | SYSIDuid
CREATE ROLE
adds a new role to a
PostgreSQL database cluster. A role is
an entity that can own database objects and have database privileges;
a role can be considered a “user”, a “group”, or both
depending on how it is used. Refer to
Chapter 21 and Chapter 20 for information about managing
users and authentication. You must have CREATEROLE
privilege or be a database superuser to use this command.
Note that roles are defined at the database cluster level, and so are valid in all databases in the cluster.
During role creation it is possible to immediately assign the newly created
role to be a member of an existing role, and also assign existing roles
to be members of the newly created role. The rules for which initial
role membership options are enabled are described below in the
IN ROLE
, ROLE
, and
ADMIN
clauses. The GRANT
command has fine-grained option control during membership creation,
and the ability to modify these options after the new role is created.
name
The name of the new role.
SUPERUSER
NOSUPERUSER
These clauses determine whether the new role is a “superuser”,
who can override all access restrictions within the database.
Superuser status is dangerous and should be used only when really
needed. You must yourself be a superuser to create a new superuser.
If not specified,
NOSUPERUSER
is the default.
CREATEDB
NOCREATEDB
These clauses define a role's ability to create databases. If
CREATEDB
is specified, the role being
defined will be allowed to create new databases. Specifying
NOCREATEDB
will deny a role the ability to
create databases. If not specified,
NOCREATEDB
is the default.
Only superuser roles or roles with CREATEDB
can specify CREATEDB
.
CREATEROLE
NOCREATEROLE
These clauses determine whether a role will be permitted to
create, alter, drop, comment on, and change the security label for
other roles.
See role creation for more details about what
capabilities are conferred by this privilege.
If not specified, NOCREATEROLE
is the default.
INHERIT
NOINHERIT
This affects the membership inheritance status when this
role is added as a member of another role, both in this and
future commands. Specifically, it controls the inheritance
status of memberships added with this command using the
IN ROLE
clause, and in later commands using
the ROLE
clause. It is also used as the
default inheritance status when adding this role as a member
using the GRANT
command. If not specified,
INHERIT
is the default.
In PostgreSQL versions before 16, inheritance was a role-level attribute that controlled all runtime membership checks for that role.
LOGIN
NOLOGIN
These clauses determine whether a role is allowed to log in;
that is, whether the role can be given as the initial session
authorization name during client connection. A role having
the LOGIN
attribute can be thought of as a user.
Roles without this attribute are useful for managing database
privileges, but are not users in the usual sense of the word.
If not specified,
NOLOGIN
is the default, except when
CREATE ROLE
is invoked through its alternative spelling
CREATE USER
.
REPLICATION
NOREPLICATION
These clauses determine whether a role is a replication role. A role
must have this attribute (or be a superuser) in order to be able to
connect to the server in replication mode (physical or logical
replication) and in order to be able to create or drop replication
slots.
A role having the REPLICATION
attribute is a very
highly privileged role, and should only be used on roles actually
used for replication. If not specified,
NOREPLICATION
is the default.
Only superuser roles or roles with REPLICATION
can specify REPLICATION
.
BYPASSRLS
NOBYPASSRLS
These clauses determine whether a role bypasses every row-level
security (RLS) policy. NOBYPASSRLS
is the default.
Only superuser roles or roles with BYPASSRLS
can specify BYPASSRLS
.
Note that pg_dump will set row_security
to
OFF
by default, to ensure all contents of a table are
dumped out. If the user running pg_dump does not have appropriate
permissions, an error will be returned. However, superusers and the
owner of the table being dumped always bypass RLS.
CONNECTION LIMIT
connlimit
If role can log in, this specifies how many concurrent connections the role can make. -1 (the default) means no limit. Note that only normal connections are counted towards this limit. Neither prepared transactions nor background worker connections are counted towards this limit.
ENCRYPTED
] PASSWORD
'password
'PASSWORD NULL
Sets the role's password. (A password is only of use for
roles having the LOGIN
attribute, but you
can nonetheless define one for roles without it.) If you do
not plan to use password authentication you can omit this
option. If no password is specified, the password will be set
to null and password authentication will always fail for that
user. A null password can optionally be written explicitly as
PASSWORD NULL
.
Specifying an empty string will also set the password to null, but that was not the case before PostgreSQL version 10. In earlier versions, an empty string could be used, or not, depending on the authentication method and the exact version, and libpq would refuse to use it in any case. To avoid the ambiguity, specifying an empty string should be avoided.
The password is always stored encrypted in the system catalogs. The
ENCRYPTED
keyword has no effect, but is accepted for
backwards compatibility. The method of encryption is determined
by the configuration parameter password_encryption.
If the presented password string is already in MD5-encrypted or
SCRAM-encrypted format, then it is stored as-is regardless of
password_encryption
(since the system cannot decrypt
the specified encrypted password string, to encrypt it in a
different format). This allows reloading of encrypted passwords
during dump/restore.
VALID UNTIL
'timestamp
'
The VALID UNTIL
clause sets a date and
time after which the role's password is no longer valid. If
this clause is omitted the password will be valid for all time.
IN ROLE
role_name
The IN ROLE
clause causes the new role to
be automatically added as a member of the specified existing
roles. The new membership will have the SET
option enabled and the ADMIN
option disabled.
The INHERIT
option will be enabled unless the
NOINHERIT
option is specified.
ROLE
role_name
The ROLE
clause causes one or more specified
existing roles to be automatically added as members, with the
SET
option enabled. This in effect makes the
new role a “group”. Roles named in this clause
with the role-level INHERIT
attribute will have
the INHERIT
option enabled in the new membership.
New memberships will have the ADMIN
option disabled.
ADMIN
role_name
The ADMIN
clause has the same effect as
ROLE
, but the named roles are added as members
of the new role with ADMIN
enabled, giving
them the right to grant membership in the new role to others.
SYSID
uid
The SYSID
clause is ignored, but is accepted
for backwards compatibility.
Use ALTER ROLE
to
change the attributes of a role, and DROP ROLE
to remove a role. All the attributes
specified by CREATE ROLE
can be modified by later
ALTER ROLE
commands.
The preferred way to add and remove members of roles that are being
used as groups is to use
GRANT
and
REVOKE
.
The VALID UNTIL
clause defines an expiration time for a
password only, not for the role per se. In
particular, the expiration time is not enforced when logging in using
a non-password-based authentication method.
The role attributes defined here are non-inheritable, i.e., being a
member of a role with, e.g., CREATEDB
will not
allow the member to create new databases even if the membership grant
has the INHERIT
option. Of course, if the membership
grant has the SET
option the member role would be able to
SET ROLE
to the
createdb role and then create a new database.
The membership grants created by the
IN ROLE
, ROLE
, and ADMIN
clauses have the role executing this command as the grantor.
The INHERIT
attribute is the default for reasons of backwards
compatibility: in prior releases of PostgreSQL,
users always had access to all privileges of groups they were members of.
However, NOINHERIT
provides a closer match to the semantics
specified in the SQL standard.
PostgreSQL includes a program createuser that has
the same functionality as CREATE ROLE
(in fact,
it calls this command) but can be run from the command shell.
The CONNECTION LIMIT
option is only enforced approximately;
if two new sessions start at about the same time when just one
connection “slot” remains for the role, it is possible that
both will fail. Also, the limit is never enforced for superusers.
Caution must be exercised when specifying an unencrypted password
with this command. The password will be transmitted to the server
in cleartext, and it might also be logged in the client's command
history or the server log. The command createuser, however, transmits
the password encrypted. Also, psql
contains a command
\password
that can be used to safely change the
password later.
Create a role that can log in, but don't give it a password:
CREATE ROLE jonathan LOGIN;
Create a role with a password:
CREATE USER davide WITH PASSWORD 'jw8s0F4';
(CREATE USER
is the same as CREATE ROLE
except
that it implies LOGIN
.)
Create a role with a password that is valid until the end of 2004. After one second has ticked in 2005, the password is no longer valid.
CREATE ROLE miriam WITH LOGIN PASSWORD 'jw8s0F4' VALID UNTIL '2005-01-01';
Create a role that can create databases and manage roles:
CREATE ROLE admin WITH CREATEDB CREATEROLE;
The CREATE ROLE
statement is in the SQL standard,
but the standard only requires the syntax
CREATE ROLEname
[ WITH ADMINrole_name
]
Multiple initial administrators, and all the other options of
CREATE ROLE
, are
PostgreSQL extensions.
The SQL standard defines the concepts of users and roles, but it regards them as distinct concepts and leaves all commands defining users to be specified by each database implementation. In PostgreSQL we have chosen to unify users and roles into a single kind of entity. Roles therefore have many more optional attributes than they do in the standard.
The behavior specified by the SQL standard is most closely approximated
creating SQL-standard users as PostgreSQL
roles with the NOINHERIT
option, and SQL-standard
roles as PostgreSQL roles with the
INHERIT
option.
The USER
clause has the same behavior as
ROLE
but has been deprecated:
USER role_name
[, ...]
The IN GROUP
clause has the same behavior as IN
ROLE
but has been deprecated:
IN GROUP role_name
[, ...]