ktaranov/sqlserver-kit

Add Security Audit Report

jzabroski opened this issue · 1 comments

http://stackoverflow.com/a/7059579/1387418

Script source found at : http://stackoverflow.com/a/7059579/1387418

Security Audit Report
1) List all access provisioned to a sql user or windows user/group directly 
2) List all access provisioned to a sql user or windows user/group through a database or application role
3) List all access provisioned to the public role



Columns Returned:
UserName         : SQL or Windows/Active Directory user account.  This could also be an Active Directory group.
UserType         : Value will be either 'SQL User' or 'Windows User'.  This reflects the type of user defined for the 
                  SQL Server user account.
PrinciaplUserName: if UserName is not blank, then UserName else DatabaseUserName
PrincipalType    : Possible values are 'SQL User', 'Windows User', 'Database Role', 'Windows Group'
DatabaseUserName : Name of the associated user as defined in the database user account.  The database user may not be the
                   same as the server user.
Role             : The role name.  This will be null if the associated permissions to the object are defined at directly
                   on the user account, otherwise this will be the name of the role that the user is a member of.
PermissionType   : Type of permissions the user/role has on an object. Examples could include CONNECT, EXECUTE, SELECT
                   DELETE, INSERT, ALTER, CONTROL, TAKE OWNERSHIP, VIEW DEFINITION, etc.
                   This value may not be populated for all roles.  Some built in roles have implicit permission
                   definitions.
PermissionState  : Reflects the state of the permission type, examples could include GRANT, DENY, etc.
                   This value may not be populated for all roles.  Some built in roles have implicit permission
                   definitions.
ObjectType       : Type of object the user/role is assigned permissions on.  Examples could include USER_TABLE, 
                   SQL_SCALAR_FUNCTION, SQL_INLINE_TABLE_VALUED_FUNCTION, SQL_STORED_PROCEDURE, VIEW, etc.   
                   This value may not be populated for all roles.  Some built in roles have implicit permission
                   definitions.          
ObjectName       : Name of the object that the user/role is assigned permissions on.  
                   This value may not be populated for all roles.  Some built in roles have implicit permission
                   definitions.
ColumnName       : Name of the column of the object that the user/role is assigned permissions on. This value
                   is only populated if the object is a table, view or a table value function.

Hi, @jzabroski

Thanks for this script, added via 5fe69ed
Also I highly recommend for audit user use awesome Kenneth Fisher stored procedure:

Also added my answer for this stackoverflow thread https://stackoverflow.com/a/52333785/2298061

Be free to add new issues or pull requests at any time.