GRANT (procedure)
Grants privileges on a stored procedure or external procedure to a user or role.
	Grants privileges on a stored procedure or external procedure to a user or role.
Important
External procedures that you create with CREATE PROCEDURE (external) are always run with Linux dbadmin privileges. If a dbadmin or pseudosuperuser grants a non-dbadmin permission to run a procedure using GRANT (procedure), be aware that the non-dbadmin user runs the procedure with full Linux dbadmin privileges.Syntax
GRANT { EXECUTE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
   ON PROCEDURE [[database.]schema.]procedure( [arg-list] )[,...]
   TO grantee[,...]
   [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]
Parameters
- EXECUTE
- Enables grantees to run the specified procedure.
- ALL [PRIVILEGES]
- Grants all procedure privileges that also belong to the grantor. Grantors cannot grant privileges that they themselves lack.
The optional keyword PRIVILEGESconforms with the SQL standard.
- [- database- .]- schema
- Database and schema. The default schema is - public. If you specify a database, it must be the current database.
- procedure
- The target procedure.
- arg-list
- A comma-delimited list of procedure arguments, where each argument is specified as follows:
[ argname ] argtypeIf the procedure is defined with no arguments, supply an empty argument list. 
- grantee
- Who is granted privileges, one of the following: 
- WITH GRANT OPTION
- Allows the grantee to grant and revoke the same privileges to other users or roles. For details, see Granting privileges. 
Privileges
Non-superuser, one of the following:
- 
Owner 
- 
Privileges grantee given the option ( WITH GRANT OPTION) of granting privileges to other users or roles
Examples
Grant EXECUTE privileges on the tokenize procedure to users Bob and Jules, and to the role Operator:
=> GRANT EXECUTE ON PROCEDURE tokenize(varchar) TO Bob, Jules, Operator;