community.postgresql.postgresql_membership – Add or remove PostgreSQL roles from groups

Note

This plugin is part of the community.postgresql collection (version 1.6.0).

You might already have this collection installed if you are using the ansible package. It is not included in ansible-core. To check whether it is installed, run ansible-galaxy collection list.

To install it, use: ansible-galaxy collection install community.postgresql.

To use it in a playbook, specify: community.postgresql.postgresql_membership.

Synopsis

  • Adds or removes PostgreSQL roles from groups (other roles).

  • Users are roles with login privilege.

  • Groups are PostgreSQL roles usually without LOGIN privilege.

  • Common use case:

    1. add a new group (groups) by community.postgresql.postgresql_user module with role_attr_flags=NOLOGIN

    1. grant them desired privileges by community.postgresql.postgresql_privs module

    1. add desired PostgreSQL users to the new group (groups) by this module

Requirements

The below requirements are needed on the host that executes this module.

  • psycopg2

Parameters

Parameter

Comments

ca_cert

aliases: ssl_rootcert

string

Specifies the name of a file containing SSL certificate authority (CA) certificate(s).

If the file exists, the server’s certificate will be verified to be signed by one of these authorities.

db

aliases: login_db

string

Name of database to connect to.

fail_on_role

boolean

If yes, fail when group or target_role doesn’t exist. If no, just warn and continue.

Choices:

  • no

  • yes ← (default)

groups

aliases: group, source_role, source_roles

list / elements=string / required

The list of groups (roles) that need to be granted to or revoked from target_roles.

login_host

string

Host running the database.

If you have connection issues when using localhost, try to use 127.0.0.1 instead.

login_password

string

The password this module should use to establish its PostgreSQL session.

login_unix_socket

string

Path to a Unix domain socket for local connections.

login_user

string

The username this module should use to establish its PostgreSQL session.

Default: “postgres”

port

aliases: login_port

integer

Database port to connect to.

Default: 5432

session_role

string

Switch to session_role after connecting. The specified session_role must be a role that the current login_user is a member of.

Permissions checking for SQL commands is carried out as though the session_role were the one that had logged in originally.

ssl_mode

string

Determines whether or with what priority a secure SSL TCP/IP connection will be negotiated with the server.

See https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/libpq-ssl.html for more information on the modes.

Default of prefer matches libpq default.

Choices:

  • allow

  • disable

  • prefer ← (default)

  • require

  • verify-ca

  • verify-full

state

string

Membership state.

state=present implies the groupsmust be granted to target_roles.

state=absent implies the groups must be revoked from target_roles.

Choices:

  • absent

  • present ← (default)

target_roles

aliases: target_role, users, user

list / elements=string / required

The list of target roles (groups will be granted to them).

trust_input

boolean

added in 0.2.0 of community.postgresql

If no, check whether values of parameters groups, target_roles, session_role are potentially dangerous.

It makes sense to use no only when SQL injections via the parameters are possible.

Choices:

  • no

  • yes ← (default)

Notes

Note

  • Supports check_mode.

  • The default authentication assumes that you are either logging in as or sudo’ing to the postgres account on the host.

  • To avoid “Peer authentication failed for user postgres” error, use postgres user as a become_user.

  • This module uses psycopg2, a Python PostgreSQL database adapter. You must ensure that psycopg2 is installed on the host before using this module.

  • If the remote host is the PostgreSQL server (which is the default case), then PostgreSQL must also be installed on the remote host.

  • For Ubuntu-based systems, install the postgresql, libpq-dev, and python-psycopg2 packages on the remote host before using this module.

  • The ca_cert parameter requires at least Postgres version 8.4 and psycopg2 version 2.4.3.

See Also

See also

community.postgresql.postgresql_user

The official documentation on the community.postgresql.postgresql_user module.

community.postgresql.postgresql_privs

The official documentation on the community.postgresql.postgresql_privs module.

community.postgresql.postgresql_owner

The official documentation on the community.postgresql.postgresql_owner module.

PostgreSQL role membership reference

Complete reference of the PostgreSQL role membership documentation.

PostgreSQL role attributes reference

Complete reference of the PostgreSQL role attributes documentation.

Examples

- name: Grant role read_only to alice and bob
  community.postgresql.postgresql_membership:
    group: read_only
    target_roles:
    - alice
    - bob
    state: present

# you can also use target_roles: alice,bob,etc to pass the role list

- name: Revoke role read_only and exec_func from bob. Ignore if roles don't exist
  community.postgresql.postgresql_membership:
    groups:
    - read_only
    - exec_func
    target_role: bob
    fail_on_role: no
    state: absent

Return Values

Common return values are documented here, the following are the fields unique to this module:

Key

Description

granted

dictionary

Dict of granted groups and roles.

Returned: if state=present

Sample: {“ro_group”: [“alice”, “bob”]}

queries

string

List of executed queries.

Returned: always

Sample: [“GRANT \”user_ro\” TO \”alice\””]

revoked

dictionary

Dict of revoked groups and roles.

Returned: if state=absent

Sample: {“ro_group”: [“alice”, “bob”]}

state

string

Membership state that tried to be set.

Returned: always

Sample: “present”

Authors

  • Andrew Klychkov (@Andersson007)