Declarative PostgreSQL access control. Define roles, schema ownership, grants, and memberships in YAML — pgroles diffs against your live database and generates the exact SQL to converge it.
For simple setups, use a single manifest. For larger teams, the CLI also supports bundle composition: shared profiles plus multiple scoped policy fragments merged into one desired plan with conflict checks before any database diff or apply.
By default, anything not in the manifest gets revoked or dropped. Same model as Terraform, applied to PostgreSQL. For incremental adoption, use --mode additive to only grant and never revoke, or --mode adopt to manage declared roles fully without dropping undeclared ones. In additive mode, pgroles also leaves attributes and comments unchanged on pre-existing roles.
Define a policy. Profiles are reusable privilege templates that expand across schemas:
profiles:
editor:
grants:
- privileges: [USAGE]
object: { type: schema }
- privileges: [SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, REFERENCES, TRIGGER]
object: { type: table, name: "*" }
- privileges: [USAGE, SELECT, UPDATE]
object: { type: sequence, name: "*" }
- privileges: [EXECUTE]
object: { type: function, name: "*" }
default_privileges:
- privileges: [SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, REFERENCES, TRIGGER]
on_type: table
- privileges: [USAGE, SELECT, UPDATE]
on_type: sequence
- privileges: [EXECUTE]
on_type: function
viewer:
grants:
- privileges: [USAGE]
object: { type: schema }
- privileges: [SELECT]
object: { type: table, name: "*" }
schemas:
- name: inventory
owner: app_owner
profiles: [editor, viewer]
- name: catalog
profiles: [viewer]
roles:
- name: app-service
login: true
memberships:
- role: inventory-editor
members:
- name: app-serviceThis generates roles inventory-editor, inventory-viewer, and catalog-viewer, each scoped to their schema. pgroles will create inventory if it is missing and keep it owned by app_owner. app-service gets inventory-editor membership.
Run pgroles diff to see exactly what SQL will be executed:
CREATE ROLE "inventory-editor"
NOLOGIN NOSUPERUSER INHERIT;
GRANT USAGE ON SCHEMA "inventory"
TO "inventory-editor";
GRANT SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, REFERENCES, TRIGGER
ON TABLE "inventory"."orders"
TO "inventory-editor";
GRANT SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, REFERENCES, TRIGGER
ON TABLE "inventory"."customers"
TO "inventory-editor";
GRANT USAGE, SELECT, UPDATE
ON SEQUENCE "inventory"."orders_id_seq"
TO "inventory-editor";
GRANT EXECUTE
ON FUNCTION "inventory"."refresh_inventory_cache"()
TO "inventory-editor";
-- Roles removed from the manifest get cleaned up:
REVOKE ALL ON SCHEMA "legacy"
FROM "old-reader";
DROP ROLE "old-reader";For wildcard relation grants, pgroles expands the current objects of the requested
type safely, so table grants do not accidentally touch views or materialized
views. A wildcard grant remains a strict desired-state declaration: every
matching current object must either already have the requested privilege or be
grantable by the database user running pgroles. If some matching objects are
owned by another role and are missing the required grant option, diff, plan,
and apply fail with an UnsatisfiableWildcardGrant diagnostic instead of
printing or applying repeated wildcard SQL.
Then pgroles apply to execute it.
# Already have a database with roles? Generate a manifest from it:
pgroles generate --database-url postgres://... > pgroles.yaml
# See what SQL pgroles would run:
pgroles diff -f pgroles.yaml --database-url postgres://...
# Apply the changes:
pgroles apply -f pgroles.yaml --database-url postgres://...
# Write the generated manifest directly to a file:
pgroles generate --database-url postgres://... --output pgroles.yaml--database-url can also be set via the DATABASE_URL environment variable.
Pre-built binaries from GitHub Releases (Linux x86_64/aarch64, macOS x86_64/aarch64).
Cargo CLI:
cargo install pgroles-cliRust crates:
pgroles-cli— end-user CLIpgroles-core— manifest model, diff engine, SQL renderingpgroles-inspect— database inspection and managed-provider detectionpgroles-operator— Kubernetes operator crate, controller runtime, and CRD types
Docker:
docker run --rm ghcr.io/hardbyte/pgroles --help- Convergent — the manifest is the desired state. Missing roles get created, extra roles get dropped, drifted grants get fixed.
- Reconciliation modes —
--mode authoritative(default) for full convergence,--mode additiveto only grant and never revoke,--mode adoptto manage declared roles without dropping undeclared ones. Additive mode is the safest way to start using pgroles on an existing database. - Profiles — define privilege templates once, apply them across schemas. Each
schema x profilepair becomes a role, and profiles can set generated-roleloginandinheritattributes. - Bundle composition — compose shared profiles plus multiple scoped policy fragments in the CLI, with duplicate/conflict detection and managed-scope enforcement before diff or apply. Use
pgroles render-bundle --bundle bundle.yaml --output pgroles.yamlto compose a bundle into a single flat manifest suitable for committing as aPostgresPolicysource in GitOps. - Schema management — declared schemas can be created and have ownership converged, while undeclared referenced schemas must already exist.
- Safer privilege bundles — common application profiles can pair table, sequence, and function privileges so identity columns and trigger-driven routines are covered together.
- Brownfield adoption —
pgroles generateintrospects an existing database and produces a manifest you can refine. Add--suggest-profilesto deterministically refactor roles that share a privilege shape across schemas into reusable profiles, with a built-in round-trip check that guarantees the suggested manifest doesn't widen privileges. - Reproducible export —
pgroles generate --outputwrites the current database state directly to a manifest file. - Drift detection —
pgroles diff --exit-codereturns exit code 2 on drift, designed for CI gates. - Password management — login roles can set passwords from environment variables (CLI) or Kubernetes Secrets (operator), with
VALID UNTILexpiration and redacted output. - Safe role removal — preflight checks for owned objects, active sessions, and dependencies before dropping roles. Explicit
retirementsdeclare cleanup steps. - Managed PostgreSQL — works with RDS, Aurora, Cloud SQL, AlloyDB, and Azure Database for PostgreSQL. Detects provider-specific reserved roles and warns about privilege limitations.
- Kubernetes operator — reconcile
PostgresPolicycustom resources continuously. Install via Helm:Usehelm install pgroles-operator oci://ghcr.io/hardbyte/charts/pgroles-operator
spec.mode: planto inspect drift without executing SQL.
Full documentation is published at hardbyte.github.io/pgroles.
MIT