'Create PostgreSQL ROLE (user) if it doesn't exist
How do I write an SQL script to create a ROLE in PostgreSQL 9.1, but without raising an error if it already exists?
The current script simply has:
CREATE ROLE my_user LOGIN PASSWORD 'my_password';
This fails if the user already exists. I'd like something like:
IF NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM pg_user WHERE username = 'my_user')
BEGIN
CREATE ROLE my_user LOGIN PASSWORD 'my_password';
END;
... but that doesn't work - IF
doesn't seem to be supported in plain SQL.
I have a batch file that creates a PostgreSQL 9.1 database, role and a few other things. It calls psql.exe, passing in the name of an SQL script to run. So far all these scripts are plain SQL and I'd like to avoid PL/pgSQL and such, if possible.
Solution 1:[1]
Simple script (question asked)
Building on @a_horse_with_no_name's answer and improved with @Gregory's comment:
DO
$do$
BEGIN
IF EXISTS (
SELECT FROM pg_catalog.pg_roles
WHERE rolname = 'my_user') THEN
RAISE NOTICE 'Role "my_user" already exists. Skipping.';
ELSE
CREATE ROLE my_user LOGIN PASSWORD 'my_password';
END IF;
END
$do$;
Unlike, for instance, with CREATE TABLE
there is no IF NOT EXISTS
clause for CREATE ROLE
(up to at least Postgres 14). And you cannot execute dynamic DDL statements in plain SQL.
Your request to "avoid PL/pgSQL" is impossible except by using another PL. The DO
statement uses PL/pgSQL as default procedural language:
DO [ LANGUAGE
lang_name
] code
...lang_name
The name of the procedural language the code is written in. If omitted, the default isplpgsql
.
No race condition
The above simple solution allows for a race condition in the tiny time frame between looking up the role and creating it. If a concurrent transaction creates the role in between we get an exception after all. In most workloads, that will never happen as creating roles is a rare operation carried out by an admin. But there are highly contentious workloads like @blubb mentioned.
@Pali added a solution trapping the exception. But a code block with an EXCEPTION
clause is expensive. The manual:
A block containing an
EXCEPTION
clause is significantly more expensive to enter and exit than a block without one. Therefore, don't useEXCEPTION
without need.
Actually raising an exception (and then trapping it) is comparatively expensive on top of it. All of this only matters for workloads that execute it a lot - which happens to be the primary target audience. To optimize:
DO
$do$
BEGIN
IF EXISTS (
SELECT FROM pg_catalog.pg_roles
WHERE rolname = 'my_user') THEN
RAISE NOTICE 'Role "my_user" already exists. Skipping.';
ELSE
BEGIN -- nested block
CREATE ROLE my_user LOGIN PASSWORD 'my_password';
EXCEPTION
WHEN duplicate_object THEN
RAISE NOTICE 'Role "my_user" was just created by a concurrent transaction. Skipping.';
END;
END IF;
END
$do$;
Much cheaper:
If the role already exists, we never enter the expensive code block.
If we enter the expensive code block, the role only ever exists if the unlikely race condition hits. So we hardly ever actually raise an exception (and catch it).
Solution 2:[2]
Or if the role is not the owner of any db objects one can use:
DROP ROLE IF EXISTS my_user;
CREATE ROLE my_user LOGIN PASSWORD 'my_password';
But only if dropping this user will not make any harm.
Solution 3:[3]
Some answers suggested to use pattern: check if role does not exist and if not then issue CREATE ROLE
command. This has one disadvantage: race condition. If somebody else creates a new role between check and issuing CREATE ROLE
command then CREATE ROLE
obviously fails with fatal error.
To solve above problem, more other answers already mentioned usage of PL/pgSQL
, issuing CREATE ROLE
unconditionally and then catching exceptions from that call. There is just one problem with these solutions. They silently drop any errors, including those which are not generated by fact that role already exists. CREATE ROLE
can throw also other errors and simulation IF NOT EXISTS
should silence only error when role already exists.
CREATE ROLE
throw duplicate_object
error when role already exists. And exception handler should catch only this one error. As other answers mentioned it is a good idea to convert fatal error to simple notice. Other PostgreSQL IF NOT EXISTS
commands adds , skipping
into their message, so for consistency I'm adding it here too.
Here is full SQL code for simulation of CREATE ROLE IF NOT EXISTS
with correct exception and sqlstate propagation:
DO $$
BEGIN
CREATE ROLE test;
EXCEPTION WHEN duplicate_object THEN RAISE NOTICE '%, skipping', SQLERRM USING ERRCODE = SQLSTATE;
END
$$;
Test output (called two times via DO and then directly):
$ sudo -u postgres psql
psql (9.6.12)
Type "help" for help.
postgres=# \set ON_ERROR_STOP on
postgres=# \set VERBOSITY verbose
postgres=#
postgres=# DO $$
postgres$# BEGIN
postgres$# CREATE ROLE test;
postgres$# EXCEPTION WHEN duplicate_object THEN RAISE NOTICE '%, skipping', SQLERRM USING ERRCODE = SQLSTATE;
postgres$# END
postgres$# $$;
DO
postgres=#
postgres=# DO $$
postgres$# BEGIN
postgres$# CREATE ROLE test;
postgres$# EXCEPTION WHEN duplicate_object THEN RAISE NOTICE '%, skipping', SQLERRM USING ERRCODE = SQLSTATE;
postgres$# END
postgres$# $$;
NOTICE: 42710: role "test" already exists, skipping
LOCATION: exec_stmt_raise, pl_exec.c:3165
DO
postgres=#
postgres=# CREATE ROLE test;
ERROR: 42710: role "test" already exists
LOCATION: CreateRole, user.c:337
Solution 4:[4]
Bash alternative (for Bash scripting):
psql -h localhost -U postgres -tc \
"SELECT 1 FROM pg_user WHERE usename = 'my_user'" \
| grep -q 1 \
|| psql -h localhost -U postgres \
-c "CREATE ROLE my_user LOGIN PASSWORD 'my_password';"
(isn't the answer for the question! it is only for those who may be useful)
Solution 5:[5]
Here is a generic solution using plpgsql:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION create_role_if_not_exists(rolename NAME) RETURNS TEXT AS
$$
BEGIN
IF NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM pg_roles WHERE rolname = rolename) THEN
EXECUTE format('CREATE ROLE %I', rolename);
RETURN 'CREATE ROLE';
ELSE
RETURN format('ROLE ''%I'' ALREADY EXISTS', rolename);
END IF;
END;
$$
LANGUAGE plpgsql;
Usage:
posgres=# SELECT create_role_if_not_exists('ri');
create_role_if_not_exists
---------------------------
CREATE ROLE
(1 row)
posgres=# SELECT create_role_if_not_exists('ri');
create_role_if_not_exists
---------------------------
ROLE 'ri' ALREADY EXISTS
(1 row)
Solution 6:[6]
My team was hitting a situation with multiple databases on one server, depending on which database you connected to, the ROLE in question was not returned by SELECT * FROM pg_catalog.pg_user
, as proposed by @erwin-brandstetter and @a_horse_with_no_name. The conditional block executed, and we hit role "my_user" already exists
.
Unfortunately we aren't sure of exact conditions, but this solution works around the problem:
DO
$body$
BEGIN
CREATE ROLE my_user LOGIN PASSWORD 'my_password';
EXCEPTION WHEN others THEN
RAISE NOTICE 'my_user role exists, not re-creating';
END
$body$
It could probably be made more specific to rule out other exceptions.
Solution 7:[7]
The same solution as for Simulate CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS for PostgreSQL? should work - send a CREATE USER …
to \gexec
.
Workaround from within psql
SELECT 'CREATE USER my_user'
WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT FROM pg_catalog.pg_roles WHERE rolname = 'my_user')\gexec
Workaround from the shell
echo "SELECT 'CREATE USER my_user' WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT FROM pg_catalog.pg_roles WHERE rolname = 'my_user')\gexec" | psql
See accepted answer there for more details.
Solution 8:[8]
As you are on 9.x, you can wrap that into a DO statement:
do
$body$
declare
num_users integer;
begin
SELECT count(*)
into num_users
FROM pg_user
WHERE usename = 'my_user';
IF num_users = 0 THEN
CREATE ROLE my_user LOGIN PASSWORD 'my_password';
END IF;
end
$body$
;
Solution 9:[9]
Building off of the other answers here, I wanted the ability to execute psql
once against a .sql
file to have it perform a set of initialization operations. I also wanted the ability to inject the password at the time of execution to support CI/CD scenarios.
-- init.sql
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION pg_temp.create_myuser(theUsername text, thePassword text)
RETURNS void AS
$BODY$
DECLARE
duplicate_object_message text;
BEGIN
BEGIN
EXECUTE format(
'CREATE USER %I WITH PASSWORD %L',
theUsername,
thePassword
);
EXCEPTION WHEN duplicate_object THEN
GET STACKED DIAGNOSTICS duplicate_object_message = MESSAGE_TEXT;
RAISE NOTICE '%, skipping', duplicate_object_message;
END;
END;
$BODY$
LANGUAGE 'plpgsql';
SELECT pg_temp.create_myuser(:'vUsername', :'vPassword');
Invoking with psql
:
NEW_USERNAME="my_new_user"
NEW_PASSWORD="password with 'special' characters"
psql --no-psqlrc --single-transaction --pset=pager=off \
--tuples-only \
--set=ON_ERROR_STOP=1 \
--set=vUsername="$NEW_USERNAME" \
--set=vPassword="$NEW_PASSWORD" \
-f init.sql
This will allow init.sql
to be run either locally or by the CI/CD pipeline.
Notes:
- I did not find a way to reference a file variable (
:vPassword
) directly in aDO
anonymous function, hence the fullFUNCTION
to pass the arg. (see @Clodoaldo Neto's answer) - @Erwin Brandstetter's answer explains why we must use an
EXECUTE
and cannot useCREATE USER
directly. - @Pali's answer explains the need for the
EXCEPTION
to prevent race conditions (which is why the\gexec
approach is not recommended). - The function must be invoked in a
SELECT
statement. Use the-t
/--tuples-only
attribute in thepsql
command to clean up log output, as pointed out in @villy393's answer. - The function is created in a temporary schema, so it will be deleted automatically.
- Quoting is handled properly, so no special character in password can cause errors or worse, security vulnerability.
Solution 10:[10]
You can do it in your batch file by parsing the output of:
SELECT * FROM pg_user WHERE usename = 'my_user'
and then running psql.exe
once again if the role does not exist.
Solution 11:[11]
If you have access to a shell, you can do this.
psql -tc "SELECT 1 FROM pg_user WHERE usename = 'some_use'" | grep -q 1 || psql -c "CREATE USER some_user"
For those of you who would like an explanation:
-c = run command in database session, command is given in string
-t = skip header and footer
-q = silent mode for grep
|| = logical OR, if grep fails to find match run the subsequent command
Sources
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