ALTER USER MAPPING
7
SQL - Language Statements
ALTER USER MAPPING
change the definition of a user mapping
ALTER USER MAPPING
ALTER USER MAPPING FOR { username | USER | CURRENT_USER | PUBLIC }
SERVER servername
OPTIONS ( [ ADD | SET | DROP ] option ['value'] [, ... ] )
Description
ALTER USER MAPPING changes the definition of a
user mapping.
The owner of a foreign server can alter user mappings for that
server for any user. Also, a user can alter a user mapping for
his own user name if USAGE> privilege on the server has
been granted to the user.
Parameters
username
User name of the mapping. CURRENT_USER>
and USER> match the name of the current
user. PUBLIC> is used to match all present and future
user names in the system.
servername
Server name of the user mapping.
OPTIONS ( [ ADD | SET | DROP ] option ['value'] [, ... ] )
Change options for the user mapping. The new options override
any previously specified
options. ADD>, SET>, and DROP>
specify the action to be performed. ADD> is assumed
if no operation is explicitly specified. Option names must be
unique; options are also validated by the server's foreign-data
wrapper.
Examples
Change the password for user mapping bob>, server foo>:
ALTER USER MAPPING FOR bob SERVER foo OPTIONS (user 'bob', password 'public');
Compatibility
ALTER USER MAPPING conforms to ISO/IEC 9075-9
(SQL/MED). There is a subtle syntax issue: The standard omits
the FOR key word. Since both CREATE
USER MAPPING and DROP USER MAPPING use
FOR in analogous positions, and IBM DB2 (being
the other major SQL/MED implementation) also requires it
for ALTER USER MAPPING, PostgreSQL diverges from
the standard here in the interest of consistency and
interoperability.
See Also