When trust
authentication is specified,
PostgreSQL assumes that anyone who can
connect to the server is authorized to access the database with
whatever database user name they specify (even superuser names).
Of course, restrictions made in the database
and
user
columns still apply.
This method should only be used when there is adequate
operating-system-level protection on connections to the server.
trust
authentication is appropriate and very
convenient for local connections on a single-user workstation. It
is usually not appropriate by itself on a multiuser
machine. However, you might be able to use trust
even
on a multiuser machine, if you restrict access to the server's
Unix-domain socket file using file-system permissions. To do this, set the
unix_socket_permissions
(and possibly
unix_socket_group
) configuration parameters as
described in Section 19.3. Or you
could set the unix_socket_directories
configuration parameter to place the socket file in a suitably
restricted directory.
Setting file-system permissions only helps for Unix-socket connections.
Local TCP/IP connections are not restricted by file-system permissions.
Therefore, if you want to use file-system permissions for local security,
remove the host ... 127.0.0.1 ...
line from
pg_hba.conf
, or change it to a
non-trust
authentication method.
trust
authentication is only suitable for TCP/IP connections
if you trust every user on every machine that is allowed to connect
to the server by the pg_hba.conf
lines that specify
trust
. It is seldom reasonable to use trust
for any TCP/IP connections other than those from localhost (127.0.0.1).