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Access control

Learn how to configure access control on Tableland.


Access control is a critical component of any database. Tableland provides a flexible access control system that allows you to configure access control on a per-table basis. This means that you can configure access control for each table in your database such that different users have different permissions on different tables, and the rules can be dynamic in nature.

Overview

There are two ways to configure access control on Tableland:

  • Smart contract rules & controllers.
  • SQL GRANT/REVOKE statements.

The first method is more flexible and allows you to configure access control based on onchain definitions. The second method is more limited in scope, but is easier to use and is more familiar to SQL developers. Both methods can be used in conjunction with each other.

A controller contract can make assertions about a user's permissions—such as balances, roles, or ownership—before returning permissions for INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE operations along with attached WHERE and WITH CHECK clauses.

With pure SQL, GRANT/REVOKE statements only allow for simple INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE permissions to be granted to a user. These permissions are not dynamic and cannot be based on onchain definitions, so they're more rigid in nature (e.g., granting a specific address with INSERT permissions).

How it works

Across the various Tableland clients, you can either write GRANT/REVOKE statements as a mutating query, or you can deploy a controller contract and set it as the controller for a table. The following sections are where these operations can be performed:

GRANT/REVOKE statements

Assuming you have ownership permissions on a table, you can pass GRANT/REVOKE statements as mutating queries:

  • SQL guide: here
  • SDK with executing statements: here
  • CLI with write command: here
  • Smart contracts with mutate method: here

Setting controllers

The prerequisites for setting a controller is to deploy a controller smart contract. Then, you can call methods that set the controller for a table:

  • Creating smart contract controllers: here
  • SDK with Registry methods: here
  • CLI with controller command: here
  • Smart contracts with setController method: here