2015-12-20 18:37 GMT+01:00 oleg yusim <olegyusim@xxxxxxxxx>:
Tom,I understand the idea that for external communication you rely on SSL. However, how about me opening psql prompt into the database directly from my Linux box, my db is installed at? I thought, it would be considered local connection and would not go through the SSL channels. If that is the case, here we would be dealing with Session IDs belonging to DB itself, not OpenSSL.
all necessary data are stored local in process memory. No session ID is required.
Pavel
Please, correct me if I'm wrong.Thanks,OlegOn Sun, Dec 20, 2015 at 11:28 AM, Tom Lane <tgl@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:oleg yusim <olegyusim@xxxxxxxxx> writes:
> Got it, thanks... Now, is it any protection in place currently against
> replacing Session ID (my understanding, it is kept in memory, belonging to
> the session process) or against guessing Session ID (i.e. is Session ID
> generated using FIPS 140-2 compliant algorithms, or anything of that sort)?
I don't think Postgres even has any concept that matches what you seem
to think a Session ID is.
If you're looking for communication security/integrity checking, that's
something we leave to other software such as SSL.
regards, tom lane