On Wed, 2006-11-08 at 09:18 -0200, Andrew And wrote: > > > All nodes has only path to master and master has path to all node.
Which means that any node has a path to any other node through the master. You don't actually have the security that you think your model gives you. If you comprise a node, you can access the master. From their, compromise any other node. > > > 2006/11/8, Andrew Sullivan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > On Tue, Nov 07, 2006 at 07:58:41PM -0200, Andrew And wrote: > > Because my slaves are of the companys differents, and one > slave can“t have > > access to another. The slaves only has access in the master. > > How are you doing that anyway? All the nodes need to have > some > possible path to one another, in a manner of speaking. > > A > > > -- > Andrew Sullivan | [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Users never remark, "Wow, this software may be buggy and hard > to use, but at least there is a lot of code underneath." > --Damien Katz > _______________________________________________ > Slony1-general mailing list > [email protected] > http://gborg.postgresql.org/mailman/listinfo/slony1-general > > _______________________________________________ > Slony1-general mailing list > [email protected] > http://gborg.postgresql.org/mailman/listinfo/slony1-general -- Brad Nicholson 416-673-4106 Database Administrator, Afilias Canada Corp. _______________________________________________ Slony1-general mailing list [email protected] http://gborg.postgresql.org/mailman/listinfo/slony1-general
