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author | Silvino Silva <silvino@bk.ru> | 2016-09-29 06:01:03 +0100 |
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committer | Silvino Silva <silvino@bk.ru> | 2016-09-29 06:01:03 +0100 |
commit | dc2392c0420d3e25771a4bc1967ae97cba16194d (patch) | |
tree | c97d58b4c6b960162b58d079295c8266a2d25f51 /tools/conf/srv/pgsql | |
parent | 06cdcb2394536ef134907e658dc1d558a09a277e (diff) | |
parent | 81d7c7820c25cdca723bbe7c13a3657174904b70 (diff) | |
download | doc-dc2392c0420d3e25771a4bc1967ae97cba16194d.tar.gz |
Merge branch 'f-postgres' into develop
Diffstat (limited to 'tools/conf/srv/pgsql')
-rw-r--r-- | tools/conf/srv/pgsql/data/pg_hba.conf | 96 |
1 files changed, 96 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/tools/conf/srv/pgsql/data/pg_hba.conf b/tools/conf/srv/pgsql/data/pg_hba.conf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..34587d4 --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/conf/srv/pgsql/data/pg_hba.conf @@ -0,0 +1,96 @@ +# PostgreSQL Client Authentication Configuration File +# =================================================== +# +# Refer to the "Client Authentication" section in the PostgreSQL +# documentation for a complete description of this file. A short +# synopsis follows. +# +# This file controls: which hosts are allowed to connect, how clients +# are authenticated, which PostgreSQL user names they can use, which +# databases they can access. Records take one of these forms: +# +# local DATABASE USER METHOD [OPTIONS] +# host DATABASE USER ADDRESS METHOD [OPTIONS] +# hostssl DATABASE USER ADDRESS METHOD [OPTIONS] +# hostnossl DATABASE USER ADDRESS METHOD [OPTIONS] +# +# (The uppercase items must be replaced by actual values.) +# +# The first field is the connection type: "local" is a Unix-domain +# socket, "host" is either a plain or SSL-encrypted TCP/IP socket, +# "hostssl" is an SSL-encrypted TCP/IP socket, and "hostnossl" is a +# plain TCP/IP socket. +# +# DATABASE can be "all", "sameuser", "samerole", "replication", a +# database name, or a comma-separated list thereof. The "all" +# keyword does not match "replication". Access to replication +# must be enabled in a separate record (see example below). +# +# USER can be "all", a user name, a group name prefixed with "+", or a +# comma-separated list thereof. In both the DATABASE and USER fields +# you can also write a file name prefixed with "@" to include names +# from a separate file. +# +# ADDRESS specifies the set of hosts the record matches. It can be a +# host name, or it is made up of an IP address and a CIDR mask that is +# an integer (between 0 and 32 (IPv4) or 128 (IPv6) inclusive) that +# specifies the number of significant bits in the mask. A host name +# that starts with a dot (.) matches a suffix of the actual host name. +# Alternatively, you can write an IP address and netmask in separate +# columns to specify the set of hosts. Instead of a CIDR-address, you +# can write "samehost" to match any of the server's own IP addresses, +# or "samenet" to match any address in any subnet that the server is +# directly connected to. +# +# METHOD can be "trust", "reject", "md5", "password", "gss", "sspi", +# "ident", "peer", "pam", "ldap", "radius" or "cert". Note that +# "password" sends passwords in clear text; "md5" is preferred since +# it sends encrypted passwords. +# +# OPTIONS are a set of options for the authentication in the format +# NAME=VALUE. The available options depend on the different +# authentication methods -- refer to the "Client Authentication" +# section in the documentation for a list of which options are +# available for which authentication methods. +# +# Database and user names containing spaces, commas, quotes and other +# special characters must be quoted. Quoting one of the keywords +# "all", "sameuser", "samerole" or "replication" makes the name lose +# its special character, and just match a database or username with +# that name. +# +# This file is read on server startup and when the postmaster receives +# a SIGHUP signal. If you edit the file on a running system, you have +# to SIGHUP the postmaster for the changes to take effect. You can +# use "pg_ctl reload" to do that. + +# Put your actual configuration here +# ---------------------------------- +# +# If you want to allow non-local connections, you need to add more +# "host" records. In that case you will also need to make PostgreSQL +# listen on a non-local interface via the listen_addresses +# configuration parameter, or via the -i or -h command line switches. + +# CAUTION: Configuring the system for local "trust" authentication +# allows any local user to connect as any PostgreSQL user, including +# the database superuser. If you do not trust all your local users, +# use another authentication method. + + +# TYPE DATABASE USER ADDRESS METHOD + +# "local" is for Unix domain socket connections only +#local all all trust +local all postgres ident +# IPv4 local connections: +#host all all 127.0.0.1/32 trust +hostssl all all 127.0.0.1/32 md5 + +# IPv6 local connections: +#host all all ::1/128 trust +# Allow replication connections from localhost, by a user with the +# replication privilege. +#local replication postgres trust +#host replication postgres 127.0.0.1/32 trust +#host replication postgres ::1/128 trust |