Peter Eisentraut wrote:
Bruce Momjian wrote:
The fundamental problem is that because we don't require root, any user's
postmaster or pretend postmaster is as legitimate as anyone else's.  SSL
certificates add legitimacy checks for TCP, but not for unix domain
sockets.

Wouldn't SSL work over Unix-domain sockets as well? The API only deals with file descriptors.


But we don't check the SSL cert's credentials in the client, AFAIK. That means that postmaster spoofer could just as easily spoof SSL. Communications between the client and the endpoint will be protected, but there is no protection from a man in the middle attack, which is what this is.

cheers

andrew

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