On 03/29/2017 06:36 AM, Tom Lane wrote:
Karsten Hilbert <karsten.hilb...@gmx.net> writes:
Being able to create foreign keys may allow to indirectly
discover whether certain values exists in a table which I
don't otherwise have access to (by means of failure or
success to create a judiciously crafted FK).

Aside from that, an FK can easily be used to cause effective
denial-of-service, for example preventing rows from being deleted
within a table, or adding enormous overhead to such a deletion.

Thank you both for taking a look! I agree those are both worthwhile concerns. It still seems a little strange it is not just part of the CREATE permission (for example). I understand why not everyone can create a foreign key, I just have trouble imagining a use case where it is helpful to separate it from other DDL commands. Anyway, I didn't write the article to nitpick details like that, but sometimes by asking "why" you learn new things. I really appreciate your offering your thoughts!

Paul


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