Thanks, works. Sent from my iPhone
> On Apr 3, 2021, at 11:02, Joe Conway <m...@joeconway.com> wrote: > > On 4/2/21 7:06 PM, A. Reichstadt wrote: >> Hello, >> I try to deny access to all databases on my server if the user “postgres" >> tries to connect from a non-local host. Here is what I did in pg_hba.conf: >> # TYPE DATABASE USER ADDRESS METHOD >> # "local" is for Unix domain socket connections only >> local all all md5 >> # IPv4 local connections: >> host all all 127.0.0.1/32 md5 >> # IPv6 local connections: >> host all all ::1/128 md5 >> # Allow replication connections from localhost, by a user with the >> # replication privilege. >> local replication all md5 >> host replication all 127.0.0.1/32 md5 >> host replication all ::1/128 md5 >> host all all 0.0.0.0/0 md5 >> local all postgres trust >> host all postgres 0.0.0.0/0 reject >> But it continues to allow for Postgres to connect from anywhere through >> PGAdmin but also as a direct connection to port 5432. I also relaunched the >> server. This is version 12. >> What else do I have to do? >> Thanks for any help. > > See: > https://www.postgresql.org/docs/13/auth-pg-hba-conf.html > > In particular: > > "Each record specifies a connection type, a client IP > address range (if relevant for the connection type), > a database name, a user name, and the authentication > method to be used for connections matching these > parameters. The first record with a matching > connection type, client address, requested database, > and user name is used to perform authentication." > > So your reject line is never being reached. > > HTH, > > Joe > > -- > Crunchy Data - http://crunchydata.com > PostgreSQL Support for Secure Enterprises > Consulting, Training, & Open Source Development