On Tuesday 10 March 2009 4:36:36 pm Piotre Ugrumov wrote: > On 9 Mar, 02:22, t...@xxxxxxxxxxxxx (Tom Lane) wrote: > > John R Pierce <pie...@xxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > > Tom Lane wrote: > > >> A more accurate statement is that it's trustworthy to the extent that > > >> you trust the owner of the other machine to be running a non-broken > > >> identd daemon. Within a LAN it might be perfectly reasonable to use. > > > > > > you would have to extend that trust to any machine connected to any > > > network which can be routed to the server in question as he was > > > specifying a wildcard IP, and that includes anything that anyone could > > > plug into any network port. > > > > Agreed, it's pretty stupid to use IDENT with a wildcard IP that allows > > connections from untrusted networks. I was just objecting to the > > statement that it's unsafe in all cases. > > > > regards, tom lane > > > > -- > > Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-gene...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) > > To make changes to your > > subscription:http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general > > Hi, > I inserted the following line: > > host test angelo 0.0.0.0/0 md5 Did you pg_ctl reload to get the change noticed? > > and in pgAdmin I insert > > angelo as user > mypassword as password > test as service > > and I left blank the SSL field. > > Moreover I have executed the following commands (before try to > connect): > sudo -u angelo psql template1 > then > alter user angelo with encrypted password 'mypassword'; > > But I have the same problems. > Why? > What do I wrong? > Thanks, bye bye. -- Adrian Klaver aklaver@xxxxxxxxxxx -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general