Samuel Thoraval <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I have been trying this example not executing the GRANT UPDATE statement 
> at first to check that user b doesn't have the right to update. The 
> problem is that even though B was not granted the update privilege, it 
> worked anyway. In other words, simply executing " GRANT SELECT ON 
> b.document TO b;" is sufficient for user b to be able to update the 
> view, and thus the public.document table for DocumentType = Z.

> Anybody has an explanation to this ?

What PG version are you running?  This item from the 7.3.6 release notes
seems relevant:

     Revert erroneous changes in rule permissions checking

     A patch applied in 7.3.3 to fix a corner case in rule permissions
     checks turns out to have disabled rule-related permissions checks
     in many not-so-corner cases. This would for example allow users to
     insert into views they weren't supposed to have permission to
     insert into. We have therefore reverted the 7.3.3 patch. The
     original bug will be fixed in 8.0.

The first couple of 7.4.x releases had the bug too.

                        regards, tom lane

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