Subscription Policy Access Types
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Write policies are only available to select accounts. Contact your Immuta representative to enable this feature.
Immuta offers two types of subscription policies to manage read and write access in a single system:
Read access policies manage who can read data.
Write access policies manage who can modify data.
Both of these access types can be enforced at any of the restriction levels outlined in the Subscription policies reference guide.
The table below illustrates the access types supported by each integration.
Integration | Read access policies | Write access policies |
---|---|---|
Support coming soon | ||
To create a read or write access policy, see the Author a subscription policy guide.
Policy enforcement
Once a read or write access policy is enforced on an Immuta data source, it translates to the relevant privileges on the table, view, or object in the remote platform. The sections below detail how these access types are enforced for each integration.
Granting Snowflake privileges
The Snowflake integration supports read and write access subscription policies. However, when applying read and write access policies to Snowflake data sources, the privileges granted by Immuta vary depending on the object type. For example, users can register Snowflake views as Immuta data sources and apply read and write policies to them, but when a write policy is applied to a view only the SELECT privilege will take effect in Snowflake, as views are read-only objects.
Users can register any object stored in Snowflake’s information_schema.tables
view as an Immuta data source. The table below outlines the Snowflake privileges Immuta issues when read and write policies are applied to various object types in Snowflake. Beyond the privileges listed, Immuta always grants the USAGE privilege on the parent schema and database for any object that access is granted to for a particular user.
Snowflake object | Read policy applied | Write policy applied |
---|---|---|
Table | SELECT | SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, TRUNCATE |
View | SELECT | |
Materialized view | SELECT | |
External table | SELECT | |
Event table | SELECT | |
Dynamic table | SELECT | |
Iceberg table | SELECT | |
Data object from an incoming Data Share |
Granting Databricks Unity Catalog privileges
The Databricks Unity Catalog integration supports read and write access subscription policies. When users create a subscription policy in Immuta, Immuta uses the Unity Catalog API to issue GRANTS or REVOKES against the catalog, schema, or table in Databricks for every user affected by that subscription policy.
Users can register any object stored in Databricks Unity Catalog’s information_schema.tables
view as an Immuta data source. However, when applying read and write access policies to these data sources, the privileges granted by Immuta vary depending on the object type. For example, users can register federated tables as Immuta data sources and apply read and write policies to them, but only a read policy will take effect in Databricks and allow users to SELECT those tables. If a write policy is applied, Immuta will not issue SELECT or MODIFY privileges in Databricks.
The table below outlines the Databricks privileges Immuta issues when read and write policies are applied to various object types in Databricks Unity Catalog. Beyond the privileges listed, Immuta always grants the USAGE privilege on the parent schema and catalog for any object that access is granted to for a particular user.
Databricks Unity Catalog object | Read policy applied | Write policy applied |
---|---|---|
Table | SELECT | SELECT, MODIFY |
View | ||
Materialized view | ||
External table | SELECT | SELECT, MODIFY |
Streaming table | SELECT | SELECT, MODIFY |
Foreign table ( | SELECT | |
Data object from incoming Delta Share |
Granting Databricks Spark privileges
The Databricks Spark integration supports read access subscription policies. When a read access policy is applied to a data source, Immuta modifies the logical plan that Spark builds when a user queries data to enforce policies that apply that user. If the user is subscribed to the data source, the user is granted SELECT
on the object in Databricks. If the user does not have read access to the object, they are denied access.
Granting Starburst (Trino) privileges
The Starburst (Trino) integration supports read and write access subscription policies. In the Starburst (Trino) integration's default configuration, the following access values grant read and write access to Starburst (Trino) data when a user is granted access through a subscription policy:
READ
: When a user is granted read access to a data source, they canSELECT
on tables or views andSHOW
on tables, views, or columns in Starburst (Trino). This setting in enabled by default when you configure the Starburst (Trino) integration.WRITE
: In its default setting, the Starburst (Trino) integration's write access value controls the authorization of SQL operations that perform data modification (such asINSERT
,UPDATE
,DELETE
,MERGE
, andTRUNCATE
). When users are granted write access to a data source through a subscription policy, they canINSERT
,UPDATE
,DELETE
,MERGE
, andTRUNCATE
on tables andREFRESH
on materialized views. This setting is enabled by default when you configure the Starburst (Trino) integration.
Administrators can customize write access configuration to grant additional Starburst (Trino) table modification privileges. See the Custom configuration section below for an overview and example configurations.
Custom configuration
Because Starburst (Trino) can govern certain table modification operations (like ALTER
) separately from data modification operations (like INSERT
), Immuta allows users to specify what modification operations are permitted on data in Starburst (Trino). Administrators can allow table modification operations (such as ALTER
and DROP
tables) to be authorized as write operations through advanced configuration in the Immuta web service or Starburst (Trino) cluster with the following access values:
OWN
: When mapped via advanced configuration to Immuta write policies, users who are granted write access to Starburst (Trino) data canALTER
andDROP
tables andSET
comments and properties on a data source.CREATE
: When this privilege is granted on Starburst (Trino) data, an Immuta user can create catalogs, schemas, tables, or views on a Starburst (Trino) cluster.CREATE
is a Starburst (Trino) privilege that is not controlled by Immuta policies, and this property can only be set in theaccess-control.properties
file on the Starburst (Trino) cluster.
Administrators can customize table and data modification settings in one or both of the following places; however, the access-control.properties
overrides the settings configured in the Immuta web service:
Immuta web service: Configuring write policies in the Immuta web service allows all Starburst (Trino) clusters targeting that Immuta tenant to receive the same write policy configuration for Immuta data sources. This configuration only affects tables or views registered as Immuta data sources. Use the option below to control how unregistered data is affected.
Starburst (Trino) cluster: Configuring write policies using the
access-control.properties
file on a Starburst or Trino cluster allows access to be broadly customized for Immuta users on that cluster. This configuration file takes precedence over write policies passed from the Immuta web service. Use this option if all Immuta users should have the same level of access to data regardless of the configuration in the Immuta web service.
Immuta web service access grants mapping
Customizing read and write access in the Immuta web service affects operations on all Starburst (Trino) data registered as Immuta data sources in that Immuta tenant. This configuration method should be used when all Starburst (Trino) data source operations should be affected identically across Starburst (Trino) clusters connected to the Immuta web service. Example configurations are provided below. Contact your Immuta representative to customize the mapping of read or write access policies for your Immuta tenant.
Default configuration
The default setting shown below maps WRITE
to READ
and WRITE
permissions and maps READ
to READ
. Both the READ
and WRITE
permission should always include READ
.
In this example, if a user is granted write access to a data source through a subscription policy, that user can perform data modification operations (INSERT
, UPDATE
, MERGE
, etc.) on the data.
Starburst (Trino) cluster access grants mapping
The Starburst (Trino) integration can also be configured to allow read and write policies to apply to any data source (registered or unregistered in Immuta) on a specific Starburst (Trino) cluster.
Two properties customize the behavior of read or write access for all Immuta users on that Starburst (Trino) cluster:
immuta.allowed.immuta.datasource.operations
: This property governs objects (catalogs, schemas, tables, etc.) that are registered as data sources in Immuta. For these permissions to apply, the user must be subscribed in Immuta and not be an administrator (who gets all permissions).immuta.allowed.non.immuta.datasource.operations
: This property governs objects (catalogs, schemas, tables, etc.) that are not registered as data sources in Immuta. This is the only property that allows theCREATE
permission, sinceCREATE
is enforced on new objects that do not exist in Starburst (Trino) or Immuta yet (such as a new table being created withCREATE TABLE
).
The default configuration and an example of a custom configuration are provided below. See the Customize read and write access policies in Starburst (Trino) page for guidance on configuring these properties in your Starburst (Trino) cluster.
Default configuration
By default, Immuta allows READ
and WRITE
operations to be authorized on data registered in Immuta, while all operations are permitted for data sources that are not registered in Immuta.
Granting Redshift privileges
The Redshift integration supports read access subscription policies. Immuta grants the SELECT
Redshift privilege to the PUBLIC
role when the integration is configured, which allows all users who meet the conditions of a subscription policy to access the Immuta-managed view. When a data source is created, Immuta creates a corresponding dynamic view of the table with a join to a secure view that contains all Immuta users, their entitlements, their projects, and a list of the tables they have access to. When a read policy is created or updated (or when a user's entitlements change, they switch projects, or when their data source access is approved or revoked), Immuta updates the secure view to grant or revoke users' access to the data source. If a user is granted access to the data source, they can access the view. If a user does not have read access to the view, zero rows are returned when they attempt to query the view.
Granting Azure Synapse Analytics privileges
The Azure Synapse Analytics integration supports read access subscription policies. Immuta grants the SELECT
privilege to the PUBLIC
role when the integration is configured, which allows all users who meet the conditions of a subscription policy to access the Immuta-managed view. When a read policy is created or removed (or when a user's entitlements change, they switch projects, or when their data source access is approved or revoked), Immuta updates the view that contains the users' entitlements, projects, and a list of tables they have access to grant or revoke their access to the dynamic view. Users' read access is enforced through an access check function in each individual view. If a user is granted access to the data source, they can access the view. If a user does not have read access to the view, they receive an Access denied: you are not subscribed to the data source
error when they attempt to query the view.
Granting Google BigQuery privileges
The Google BigQuery integration supports read access subscription policies. In this integration, Immuta creates views that contain all policy logic. Each view has a 1-to-1 relationship with the original table, and read access controls are applied in the view. After data sources are registered, Immuta uses the custom user and role, created before the integration is enabled, to push the Immuta data sources as views into a mirrored dataset of the original table. Immuta manages grants on the created view to ensure only users subscribed to the Immuta data source will see the data.
Granting Amazon S3 privileges
Immuta's Amazon S3 integration allows users to apply read access policies to data in S3 to restrict what prefixes, buckets, or objects users can access. To enforce access controls on this data, Immuta creates S3 grants that are administered by S3 Access Grants, an AWS feature that defines access permissions to data in S3. To query a data source they are subscribed to, users request temporary credentials from their Access Grants instance. These just-in-time access credentials provide access to a prefix, bucket, or object with a permission level of READ
in S3. When a user or application requests temporary credentials to access S3 data, the S3 Access Grants instance evaluates the request against the grants Immuta has created for that user. If a matching grant exists, S3 Access Grants assumes the IAM role associated with the location of the matching grant and scopes the permissions of the IAM session to the S3 prefix, bucket, or object specified by the grant and vends these temporary credentials to the requester. If the grant does not exist for the user, they receive an Access denied
error.
Write access policy limitations
With the exception of the Starburst (Trino) integration v2.0, users can only modify existing data when they are granted write access to data; they cannot create new tables or delete tables.
Write actions are not currently captured in audit logs.
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