Grant Select on all Tables Owned By Specific User

tables + views + error reporting

SET SERVEROUT ON
DECLARE
  o_type VARCHAR2(60) := '';
  o_name VARCHAR2(60) := '';
  o_owner VARCHAR2(60) := '';
  l_error_message VARCHAR2(500) := '';
BEGIN
  FOR R IN (SELECT owner, object_type, object_name
            FROM all_objects 
            WHERE owner='SCHEMANAME'
            AND object_type IN ('TABLE','VIEW')
            ORDER BY 1,2,3) LOOP
    BEGIN
    o_type := r.object_type;
    o_owner := r.owner;
    o_name := r.object_name;
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(o_type||' '||o_owner||'.'||o_name);
    EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'grant select on '||o_owner||'.'||o_name||' to USERNAME';
    EXCEPTION
      WHEN OTHERS THEN
        l_error_message := sqlerrm;
        DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('Error with '||o_type||' '||o_owner||'.'||o_name||': '|| l_error_message);
        CONTINUE;
    END;
  END LOOP;
END;
/

yes, its possible, run this command:

lets say you have user called thoko

grant select any table, insert any table, delete any table, update any table to thoko;

note: worked on oracle database


Well, it's not a single statement, but it's about as close as you can get with oracle:

BEGIN
   FOR R IN (SELECT owner, table_name FROM all_tables WHERE owner='TheOwner') LOOP
      EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'grant select on '||R.owner||'.'||R.table_name||' to TheUser';
   END LOOP;
END; 

Tags:

Oracle