Creating and Managing Schemas
Background
Schemas function as models. Schema management allows multiple users to use the same database without mutual impacts, to organize database objects as manageable logical groups, and to add third-party applications to the same schema without causing conflicts. Schema management involves creating a schema, using a schema, deleting a schema, setting a search path for a schema, and setting schema permissions.
Precautions
- openGauss contains one or more named databases. Users and user groups are shared within openGauss, but their data is not shared. Any user who has connected to a server can access only the database specified in the connection request.
- A database can have one or more schemas, and a schema can contain tables and other data objects, such as data types, functions, and operators. One object name can be used in different schemas. For example, both schema1 and schema2 can have a table named mytable.
- Different from databases, schemas are not isolated. You can access the objects in a schema of the connected database if you have schema permissions. To manage schema permissions, you need to have knowledge about database permissions.
- A schema named with the PG_ prefix cannot be created because this type of schema is reserved for the database system.
- Each time a new user is created, the system creates a schema with the same name for the new user in the current database. In other databases, such a schema needs to be manually created.
- To reference a table that is not modified with a schema name, the system uses search_path to find the schema that the table belongs to. pg_temp and pg_catalog are always the first two schemas to be searched no matter whether or how they are specified in search_path. search_path is a schema name list, and the first table detected in it is the target table. If no target table is found, an error will be reported. (If a table exists but the schema it belongs to is not listed in search_path, the search fails as well.) The first schema in search_path is called “current schema”. This schema is the first one to be searched. If no schema name is declared, newly created database objects are saved in this schema by default.
- Each database has a pg_catalog schema, which contains system catalogs and all embedded data types, functions, and operators. pg_catalog is a part of the search path and has the second highest search priority. It is searched after the schema of temporary tables and before other schemas specified in search_path. This search order ensures that database built-in objects can be found. To use a custom object that has the same name as a built-in object, you can specify the schema of the custom object.
Procedure
Manage users and their permissions.
Run the following command to create a schema:
postgres=# CREATE SCHEMA myschema;
If the following information is displayed, the schema named myschema is successfully created:
CREATE SCHEMA
To create or access an object in the schema, the object name in the command should consist of the schema name and the object name, which are separated by a dot (.), for example, myschema.table.
Run the following command to create a schema and specify the owner:
postgres=# CREATE SCHEMA myschema AUTHORIZATION omm;
If the following information is displayed, the myschema schema that belongs to omm is created successfully:
CREATE SCHEMA
Use a schema.
If you want to create or access an object in a specified schema, the object name must contain the schema name. To be specific, the name consists of a schema name and an object name, which are separated by a dot (.).
Run the following command to create the mytable table in myschema:
postgres=# CREATE TABLE myschema.mytable(id int, name varchar(20)); CREATE TABLE
To specify the location of an object, the object name must contain the schema name.
Run the following command to query all data of the mytable table in myschema:
postgres=# SELECT * FROM myschema.mytable; id | name ----+------ (0 rows)
View search_path of a schema.
You can set search_path to specify the sequence of schemas in which objects are searched. The first schema listed in search_path will become the default schema. If no schema is specified during object creation, the object will be created in the default schema.
Run the following command to view search_path:
postgres=# SHOW SEARCH_PATH; search_path ---------------- "$user",public (1 row)
Run the following command to set search_path to myschema and public (myschema will be searched first):
postgres=# SET SEARCH_PATH TO myschema, public; SET
Set permissions for a schema.
By default, a user can only access database objects in their own schema. Only after a user is granted with the usage permission for a schema by the schema owner, the user can access the objects in the schema.
By granting the CREATE permission for a schema to a user, the user can create objects in this schema. By default, all roles have the USAGE permission in the public schema, but common users do not have the CREATE permission in the public schema. It is insecure for a common user to connect to a specified database and create objects in its public schema. If the common user has the CREATE permission on the public schema, it is advised to:
Run the following command to revoke PUBLIC's permission to create objects in the public schema. public indicates the schema and PUBLIC indicates all roles.
postgres=# REVOKE CREATE ON SCHEMA public FROM PUBLIC; REVOKE
Run the following command to view the current schema:
postgres=# SELECT current_schema(); current_schema ---------------- myschema (1 row)
Run the following commands to create user jack and grant the usage permission for myschema to the user:
postgres=# CREATE USER jack IDENTIFIED BY 'xxxxxxxxx'; CREATE ROLE postgres=# GRANT USAGE ON schema myschema TO jack; GRANT
Run the following command to revoke the usage permission for myschema from jack:
postgres=# REVOKE USAGE ON schema myschema FROM jack; REVOKE
Delete a schema.
If a schema is empty, that is, it contains no database objects, you can execute the DROP SCHEMA command to delete it. For example, run the following command to delete an empty schema named nullschema:
postgres=# DROP SCHEMA IF EXISTS nullschema; DROP SCHEMA
To delete a schema that is not null, use the keyword CASCADE to delete it and all its objects. For example, run the following command to delete myschema and all its objects in it:
postgres=# DROP SCHEMA myschema CASCADE; DROP SCHEMA
Run the following command to delete user jack:
postgres=# DROP USER jack; DROP ROLE