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POSTGRESQL-RELAY(8)	    General Commands Manual	   POSTGRESQL-RELAY(8)

NAME
       postgresql-relay	- multiplex all	your databases to one point of origin

SYNOPSIS
       postgresql-relay	[options]

DESCRIPTION
       postgresql-relay	 can  be  used	to as a	single point of	origin for all
       your databases. Instead of having to remember (or  modify  in  case  of
       changes)	 all  the  names  of  your databases, on which machines	and on
       which ports they	are running, you only need to remember one machine and
       the name	of the database. The postgresql-relay will  then  forward  the
       connection  to  the  proper  database  on the proper port of the	proper
       server. No more changes in the hundreds of clients and scripts!

       Options are:

       -c configurationfile
	       Use this	configuration  file  instead  of  /usr/local/etc/post-
	       gresql-relay.conf.

       -f      Stay  in	 the  foreground, don't	daemonize. The logging will be
	       printed to stdout too.

       -q      Be quiet, don't log anything

       -v      Be verbose, log a lot.

CONFIGURATION FILE
       Each line in the	configuration  file  has  five	fields,	 seperated  by
       colons:

       The  first field	is the incoming	port for clients. For the easiest con-
       figuration on the client-side, keep this	all the	same (say port 5432 as
       the standard postgresql port).

       The second field	is the name of the database the	client wants  to  con-
       nect to.	This doesn't have to be	the name of the	database on the	server
       connecting to.

       The third field is the name of the host the database is located on.

       The fourth field	is the port the	database is listening on.

       The fifth field is the name of the database to connect to.

       CONFIGURATION FILE EXAMPLES

       Say you have two	databases, one named mail on the local machine on port
       5444  and one named users on the	machine	foo on port 5445. The configu-
       ration file would then be:

	5432:mail:localhost:5444:mail
	5432:users:foo:5445:users

       With this configuration,	Postgresql-relay will listen on	port 5432  and
       forward connections to the mail and users databases.

EXAMPLES
       Start  the  relay with a	non-standard configuration file	and keep it in
       the foreground:

	postgresql-relay -c /usr/local/etc/postgresql-relay.conf.test -f

       Now, in a different terminal, connect to	to mail	database:

	psql -h	dbserver -p 5432 -U root mail

FILES
       postgresql-relay.conf, most likely in /usr/local/etc.

SECURITY
       Postgresql-relay	supports tcpwrappers. For access  to  postgresql-relay
       the daemon is called postgresql.	For access to a	database the daemon is
       called postgresql-dbname.

       In  the following example, the localhost	and the	hosts in the 10/8 net-
       work have access	to postgresql-relay, while only	the localhost and  the
       10.10.10.0/8 network have access	to the database	'fdc':

	postgresql : 10.0.0.0/255.0.0.0	: allow
	postgresql : 127.0.0.1 : allow
	postgresql : ALL : deny

	postgresql-mail	: 10.10.10.0/255.255.255.0 : deny
	postgresql-mail	: 127.0.0.1 : allow
	postgresql-mail	: ALL :	deny

LOGGING
       Logging goes to syslog, to the facility daemon.

NOTES
       It  would  be  best  practise if	the name of the	machine	on which post-
       gresql-relay is running would have an alias in DNS, so that even	if the
       machine on which	postgresql-relay is running changes, the scripts don't
       have to be updated. A recommended name is dbrelay.

BUGS
       If the communication protocol version is	unknown, it should fail	 prop-
       erly but	this hasn't been tested.

AUTHOR
       Edwin Groothuis,	edwin@mavetju.org (http://www.mavetju.org)

SEE ALSO
       psql(1)

November 22, 2004	       November	22, 2004	   POSTGRESQL-RELAY(8)

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