grants
You can manage access to the datasets you're producing with dbt by using grants. To implement these permissions, define grants as resource configs on each model, seed, or snapshot. Define the default grants that apply to the entire project in your dbt_project.yml
, and define model-specific grants within each model's SQL or YAML file.
The grant resource configs enable you to apply permissions at build time to a specific set of recipients and model, seed, or snapshot. When your model, seed, or snapshot finishes building, dbt ensures that the grants on its view or table match exactly the grants you have configured.
dbt aims to use the most efficient approach when updating grants, which varies based on the adapter you're using, and whether dbt is replacing or updating an object that already exists. You can always check the debug logs for the full set of grant and revoke statements that dbt runs.
You should define grants as resource configs whenever possible, but you might occasionally need to write grants statements manually and run them using hooks. For example, hooks may be appropriate if you want to:
- Apply grants on other database objects besides views and tables.
- Create more granular row- and column-level access, use masking policies, or apply future grants.
- Take advantage of more-advanced permission capabilities offered by your data platform, for which dbt does not offer out-of-the-box support using resource configuration.
- Apply grants in a more complex or custom manner, beyond what the built-in grants capability can provide.
For more information on hooks, see Hooks & operations.
Definition
You can use the grants
field to set permissions or grants for a resource. When you run
a model, seed
data, or snapshot
a dataset, dbt will run grant
and/or revoke
statements to ensure that the permissions on the database object match the grants
you have configured on the resource.
Like all configurations, grants
will be included in dbt project metadata, including the manifest artifact.
Common syntax
Grants have two key components:
- Privilege: A right to perform a specific action or set of actions on an object in the database, such as selecting data from a table.
- Grantees: One or more recipients of granted privileges. Some platforms also call these "principals." For example, a grantee could be a user, a group of users, a role held by one or more users (Snowflake), or a service account (BigQuery/GCP).
Configuring grants
You can configure grants
in dbt_project.yml
to apply grants to many resources at once—all models in your project, a package, or a subfolder—and you can also configure grants
one-by-one for specific resources, in YAML config:
blocks or right within their .sql
files.
- Models
- Seeds
- Snapshots
models:
- name: specific_model
config:
grants:
select: ['reporter', 'bi']
The grants
config can also be defined:
- under the
models
config block indbt_project.yml
- in a
config()
Jinja macro within a model's SQL file
See configs and properties for details.
seeds:
- name: seed_name
config:
grants:
select: ['reporter', 'bi']
The grants
config can also be defined under the seeds
config block in dbt_project.yml
. See configs and properties for details.
snapshots:
- name: snapshot_name
config:
grants:
select: ['reporter', 'bi']
The grants
config can also be defined:
- under the
snapshots
config block indbt_project.yml
- in a
config()
Jinja macro within a snapshot's SQL block
See configs and properties for details.
Grant config inheritance
When you set grants
for the same model in multiple places, such as in dbt_project.yml
and in a more-specific .sql
or .yml
file, dbt's default behavior replaces the less-specific set of grantees with the more-specific set of grantees. This "merge and clobber" behavior updates each privilege when dbt parses your project.
For example:
models:
+grants: # In this case the + is not optional, you must include it for your project to parse.
select: ['user_a', 'user_b']
{{ config(grants = {'select': ['user_c']}) }}
As a result of this configuration, specific_model
will be configured to grant the select
privilege to user_c
only. After you run specific_model
, that is the only granted privilege you would see in the database, and the only grant
statement you would find in dbt's logs.
Let's say we wanted to add user_c
to the existing list of grantees receiving the select
privilege on specific_model
, rather than replacing that list entirely. To accomplish that, we can use the +
("addition") symbol, prefixing the name of the privilege:
{{ config(grants = {'+select': ['user_c']}) }}
Now, the model will grant select to user_a
, user_b
, AND user_c
!
Notes:
- This will only take effect for privileges which include the
+
prefix. Each privilege controls that behavior separately. If we were granting other privileges, in addition toselect
, and those privilege names lacked the+
prefix, they would continue to "clobber" rather than "add" new grantees. - This use of
+
, controlling clobber vs. add merge behavior, is distinct from the use of+
indbt_project.yml
(shown in the example above) for defining configs with dictionary values. For more information, see the plus prefix. grants
is the first config to support a+
prefix for controlling config merge behavior. Currently, it's the only one. If it proves useful, we may extend this capability to new and existing configs in the future.
Revoking grants
dbt will only modify grants on a node (including revocation) when a grants
configuration is attached to that node. For example, imagine you had originally specified the following grants in dbt_project.yml
:
models:
+grants:
select: ['user_a', 'user_b']
If you delete the +grants
section altogether, dbt will assume you no longer want it to manage grants, and will not change anything. To have dbt revoke all existing grants from a node, provide an empty list of grantees instead.
- Revoke from one user
- Revoke from all users
- Stop dbt from managing grants
models:
+grants:
select: ['user_b']
models:
+grants:
select: []
models:
# this section intentionally left blank
General examples
You can grant each permission to a single grantee, or a set of multiple grantees. In this example, we're granting select
on this model to just bi_user
, so that it can be queried in our Business Intelligence (BI) tool.
{{ config(materialized = 'table', grants = {
'select': 'bi_user'
}) }}
When dbt runs this model for the first time, it will create the table, and then run code like:
grant select on schema_name.table_model to bi_user;
In this case, we're creating an incremental model, and granting the select
privilege to two recipients: bi_user
and reporter
.
{{ config(materialized = 'incremental', grants = {
'select': ['bi_user', 'reporter']
}) }}
When dbt runs this model for the first time, it will create the table, and then run code like:
grant select on schema_name.incremental_model to bi_user, reporter;
In subsequent runs, dbt will use database-specific SQL to show the grants already on incremental_model
, and then determine if any revoke
or grant
statements are needed.
Database-specific requirements and notes
While we try to standardize the terms we use to describe different features, you will always find nuances in different databases. This section outlines some of those database-specific requirements and notes.
In our examples above and below, you will find us referring to a privilege named select
, and a grantee named another_user
. Many databases use these or similar terms. Be aware that your database may require different syntax for privileges and grantees; you must configure grants
in dbt with the appropriate names for both.
- BigQuery
- Databricks
- Redshift
- Snowflake
On BigQuery, "privileges" are called "roles," and they take the form roles/service.roleName
. For instance, instead of granting select
on a model, you would grant roles/bigquery.dataViewer
.
Grantees can be users, groups, service accounts, domains—and each needs to be clearly demarcated as such with a prefix. For instance, to grant access on a model to someone@yourcompany.com
, you need to specify them as user:someone@yourcompany.com
.
We encourage you to read Google's documentation for more context:
The grants
config and the grant_access_to
config are distinct.
grant_access_to
: Enables you to set up authorized views. When configured, dbt provides an authorized view access to show partial information from other datasets, without providing end users with full access to those underlying datasets. For more information, see "BigQuery configurations: Authorized views"grants
: Provides specific permissions to users, groups, or service accounts for managing access to datasets you're producing with dbt. For more information, see "Resource configs: grants"
You can use the two features together: "authorize" a view model with the grants_access_to
configuration, and then add grants
to that view model to share its query results (and only its query results) with other users, groups, or service accounts.
BigQuery examples
Granting permission using SQL and BigQuery:
{{ config(grants = {'roles/bigquery.dataViewer': ['user:someone@yourcompany.com']}) }}
Granting permission in a model schema using BigQuery:
models:
- name: specific_model
config:
grants:
roles/bigquery.dataViewer: ['user:someone@yourcompany.com']
- OSS Apache Spark / Delta Lake do not support
grants
. - Databricks automatically enables
grants
on SQL endpoints. For interactive clusters, admins should enable grant functionality using these two setup steps in the Databricks documentation: - In order to grant
READ_METADATA
orUSAGE
, use post-hooks
- dbt accounts for the
copy_grants
configuration when calculating which grants need to be added or removed. - Granting to / revoking from is only fully supported for Snowflake roles (not database roles).