--- title: "`table_privileges`" id: infoschema-table-privileges pg_version: "20devel" --- ## 35.63. `table_privileges` The view `table_privileges` identifies all privileges granted on tables or views to a currently enabled role or by a currently enabled role. There is one row for each combination of table, grantor, and grantee. **table_privileges Columns** | Column Type | Description | | --- | --- | | `grantor` `sql_identifier` | Name of the role that granted the privilege | | `grantee` `sql_identifier` | Name of the role that the privilege was granted to | | `table_catalog` `sql_identifier` | Name of the database that contains the table (always the current database) | | `table_schema` `sql_identifier` | Name of the schema that contains the table | | `table_name` `sql_identifier` | Name of the table | | `privilege_type` `character_data` | Type of the privilege: `SELECT`, `INSERT`, `UPDATE`, `DELETE`, `TRUNCATE`, `REFERENCES`, or `TRIGGER` | | `is_grantable` `yes_or_no` | `YES` if the privilege is grantable, `NO` if not | | `with_hierarchy` `yes_or_no` | In the SQL standard, `WITH HIERARCHY OPTION` is a separate (sub-)privilege allowing certain operations on table inheritance hierarchies. In PostgreSQL, this is included in the `SELECT` privilege, so this column shows `YES` if the privilege is `SELECT`, else `NO`. |