Grant Method (StoredProcedure, UserDefinedFunction)
Cette fonctionnalité sera supprimée dans une prochaine version de Microsoft SQL Server. Évitez d'utiliser cette fonctionnalité dans de nouveaux travaux de développement, et prévoyez de modifier les applications qui utilisent actuellement cette fonctionnalité.
The Grant method assigns a stored procedure permission or a list of permissions to one or more Microsoft SQL Server users or roles.
Syntaxe
object
.Grant(
Privilege
,
GranteeNames
, [ GrantGrant ] , [ AsRole ] )
Parts
- object
Expression that evaluates to an object in the Applies To list.
- Privilege
Long integer that specifies one or more stored procedure permissions as described in Settings.
- GranteeNames
SQL Distributed Management Objects (SQL-DMO) multistring listing users or roles.
- GrantGrant
When TRUE, the grantee(s) specified are granted the ability to execute the GRANT statement referencing the stored procedure. When FALSE (default), the ability to extend permission is not granted.
- AsRole
String that identifies a role to which the connected user belongs as described in Remarks.
Prototype (C/C++)
HRESULT Grant(
SQLDMO_PRIVILEGE_TYPE iPrivileges,
SQLDMO_LPCSTR GranteeNames,
BOOL GrantGrant = FALSE,
SQLDMO_LPCSTR AsRole = NULL);
Settings
Set Privilege using these SQLDMO_PRIVILEGE_TYPE values.
Constant | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
SQLDMOPriv_AllObjectPrivs |
63 |
Grant all applicable object permissions. |
SQLDMOPriv_Execute |
16 |
Grant the execute permission on the referenced stored procedure. |
Notes
When a user is a member of more than a single role, the user can have permission to grant access to a stored procedure under one role and not under another. In this case, SQL Server security mechanisms prevent execution of the Grant method on the StoredProcedure object that references that stored procedure. Use the AsRole argument to specify the role under which permission to execute the grant exists.
Remarque : |
---|
Granting permissions to database users and roles using the Grant method of the StoredProcedure object requires appropriate permissions. The SQL Server login used for SQLServer object connection must be granted the ability to execute GRANT that references the stored procedure, the owner of the stored procedure, or a member of a role with greater permissions. |
For more information about setting multistring parameters, see Using SQL-DMO Multistrings.