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Forced RLS (FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY) examples

These examples show how Forced RLS (FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY) problems ship in real apps — and what fixes actually work when tested via direct API access.

Why Forced RLS (FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY) examples matter

Without forcing, owner-like scripts or migrations can read or write rows without ever hitting a policy, creating inconsistent security models.

Examples about Forced RLS (FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY)

ExampleSummaryURL
Migration creates a table without forced RLSA new table shipped with RLS enabled but not forced, leaving a small public surface./examples/force-row-level-security/migration-creates-table-without-forced-rls
Owner script bypasses non-forced RLSOwner-like scripts bypassed unforced RLS by running with elevated privileges./examples/force-row-level-security/owner-script-bypasses-non-forced-rls

Root cause → fix pattern analysis for Forced RLS (FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY)

Examples are most useful when you can translate them into a repeatable fix pattern. This table highlights the “why” behind each fix:

ExampleRoot causeFix patternURL
Migration creates a table without forced RLSClient credentials could reach the table because its RLS settings were incomplete when it landed in production.Treat every new table as security-critical: enable and force RLS, revoke anon/authenticated grants, and expose operations through backend endpoints./examples/force-row-level-security/migration-creates-table-without-forced-rls
Owner script bypasses non-forced RLSRLS was not forced, so the script skipped the policies and mutated rows across tenants.Force RLS on sensitive tables, route operational jobs through tenant-scoped backend logic, and add regression checks for RLS being forced./examples/force-row-level-security/owner-script-bypasses-non-forced-rls

How Forced RLS (FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY) failures typically happen

  • Enabling RLS but leaving it unforced for convenience.
  • Running scripts with owner privileges and forgetting to force afterwards.
  • Assuming ENABLE ROW LEVEL SECURITY alone blocks all bypasses.

Fix patterns that tend to work for Forced RLS (FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY)

Across these examples, the highest-leverage fixes share a theme: remove direct client access and make verification repeatable.

  • Backend-only access for sensitive operations (server endpoints enforce authorization).
  • Least-privilege grants: revoke broad privileges from anon/authenticated.
  • Small, testable policies if you intentionally keep client access — avoid complex conditions.
  • A verification step that proves direct access fails (not just that the UI hides data).

How to spot Forced RLS (FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY) in your own project (signals)

  • A direct API call returns rows/files even when the UI is supposed to restrict them.
  • RLS/policies exist, but access still succeeds (often because RLS is disabled or policies are too broad).
  • Permissions depend on the client behaving “nicely” (UI checks) rather than the database enforcing access.
  • After a migration, access behavior changes unexpectedly (drift).

How to use these examples to fix your own app

  1. Match the scenario to your table/bucket/function setup.
  2. Identify the root cause (not just the symptom).
  3. Apply the relevant template or conversion guide.
  4. Verify direct access fails for client credentials.
  5. Document the rule so it doesn’t regress.

Verification checklist for Forced RLS (FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY) fixes

  1. Reproduce the issue once using direct API access (anon/authenticated) so you know it’s real.
  2. Apply the fix pattern (backend-only access + least privilege) using a template.
  3. Repeat the same direct access call and confirm it now fails.
  4. Confirm the app still works via backend endpoints for authorized users.
  5. Re-scan after the fix and add a drift guard for the next migration.

Preventing Forced RLS (FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY) regressions (drift guard)

  • Re-run the same direct access test after every migration that touches auth, policies, grants, Storage, or functions.
  • Keep a short inventory of sensitive resources and treat them as server-only by default.
  • Review new tables/buckets/functions in code review with an access-control checklist.
  • If you intentionally allow client access, document the policy rationale and add tests for it.

Optional SQL checks for Forced RLS (FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY) (extra confidence)

If you like having a repeatable “proof”, add a small set of SQL checks to your process.

  • Confirm RLS status for tables involved (enabled/forced where appropriate).
  • List policies and read them as plain language: who can do what under what condition?
  • Audit grants to anon/authenticated and PUBLIC for tables, views, and functions tied to this topic.
  • If Storage/RPC is involved, explicitly audit bucket settings and EXECUTE grants.

These checks complement (not replace) the direct access tests shown in the examples.

Decision guide for Forced RLS (FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY): template vs conversion vs integration

If you’re here because you found this topic in a scan, the fastest path depends on whether the fix is a small config change or a workflow change.

  • Choose a template when you need a copy/paste change plus verification (tighten a policy/grant/bucket setting).
  • Choose a conversion when you need to change an access model end-to-end (unsafe → backend-only) with example transformations.
  • Choose an integration when the fix is a workflow pattern you’ll repeat (signed URLs, server-only RPC, backend endpoints).

If you’re unsure, start with the smallest template that removes direct client access, then add integrations for durability.

Evidence to keep after fixing Forced RLS (FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY) (makes reviews faster)

Teams often “fix” a topic but can’t prove it later. Save a few small artifacts so you can re-verify after migrations:

  • The direct access request you used before the fix (and the expected denial after).
  • A short boundary statement (who can access what, through which server endpoint).
  • The change you applied (policy/grant/bucket setting/EXECUTE revoke) and why.
  • The drift guard you’ll run after migrations (scan, checklist query, or release checklist item).

Related pages

  • Glossary: Forced RLS (FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY)/glossary/force-row-level-security
  • Template: Lock down a public table (backend-only access)/templates/access-control/lock-down-public-table

What to do after you fix one example (so it stays fixed)

One fixed example is great — but the real win is preventing drift.

  • Write a one-sentence boundary statement (who can access what, through which server path).
  • Keep the one direct access test you used before the fix (and expect it to fail after).
  • Re-run the same test after migrations that touch policies, grants, buckets, or functions.

If you can re-run the test and it still fails, you’ve turned a one-time fix into a durable control.

FAQ

What’s the fastest fix pattern when Forced RLS (FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY) shows up in a scan?

Prefer backend-only access and remove direct client privileges. Then add verification checks that prove direct access fails.

Can I fix Forced RLS (FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY) with policies alone?

Sometimes, but it’s easy to get subtly wrong. Use these examples to learn the failure modes, and verify with direct API tests.

How do I choose between examples, templates, and conversions?

Examples explain the pattern, templates show concrete implementation, and conversions describe the whole transformation from unsafe to safe.

Next step

Want to know if your project matches any of these scenarios? Run a Mockly scan and compare your findings to the examples here.

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