On our development server (SQL 2008 R2) we want local dbo's to be able to add existing logins on the server to the database. The problem is they can't view them, they can only see themselves in the list. I know this was a security change in later versions of SQL Server to separate/restrict permissions more, but in our development environment it is just a pain.
I came across a post that suggested giving access to several server metadata views to the public role. As this would make things more like SQL 2000. (http://www.sqlteam.com/forums/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=104997 which internally references http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/cc161026.aspx)
GRANT VIEW ANY DEFINITION TO public
GRANT VIEW SERVER STATE TO public
But this seems like giving too much permissions over to the public role. I just want to give the dbo's just enough rights to the system metadata views to allow them to browse for the existing logins on the server. That way they can select who they need to add without having to message the server admins each time.
Does anyone know the minimum set of views that should be granted permissions in order to allow this?
Thanks!