On 06/16/2012 08:36 PM, Christian Ullrich wrote:
* Peter Cheung wrote:
I’m new to PostgreSQL. I installed PostgreSQL on a Windows Server
2008
R2 server. I have created a database and an user in Windows Active
Directory. How can I configure that user to access that database?
The one-click installer (assuming you used that) left you with
PostgreSQL running under a local account named "postgres". First, you
have to change that, because SSPI requires that the service uses a
domain account:
That's a great explanation. I didn't see anything equivalent in the docs
- am I just blind?
If not documented anywhere I'd like to add that to the wiki.
1. Create a user account in your domain.
2. Change the ownership of the data directory and everything within it
to the new account, and grant it full control.
3. Change the service log on credentials so the service uses your
domain account.
4. Start the service to see if everything works. Try logging on as
before, create a database, drop some tables, call pg_switch_xlog().
If you can log on at all, just about anything that goes wrong later
indicates missing permissions on the data files.
Now, you have to tell Active Directory that your service account is
running the database. For that, you add a Service Principal Name to
your service account. You can do that with a command line tool named
setspn.exe, of which I cannot remember the command line. You can also
just change the attribute (servicePrincipalName) directly using either
the "Users and Computers" MMC, or whatever 2008R2's replacement for
that is, or ADSIedit. Anyway, your new SPN is
POSTGRES/fully.qualified.host.name
In my experience (which may be incomplete), you also have to make sure
that all your clients use the full host name, because otherwise they
may not get service tickets. Adding a second SPN with just the host
name without the domain may help with that, but using the full name is
better anyway.
The last step is to allow SSPI logon to the database. For that, you
need to create some login roles that have the same name as your domain
users, and an entry in pg_hba.conf with authentication method "sspi".
Remember that only the first entry in pg_hba.conf that matches
database, client address, and claimed user name is used.
--
Christian
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