> On Dec 5, 2016, at 5:15 PM, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
>
> "dennisr@visi.com" <dennisr@visi.com> writes:
>> Thanks for the quick reply. Here’s some details on how we have things configured.
>> We are using RHEL 7.3, the DNS names below have been changed to protect the innocent or not so innocent depending
onyour point of view.
>
>> If I do a nslookup on the database host against the following CNAME some-cname-host.example.com
<http://some-cname-host.example.com/>I get:
>
>> $> nslookup some-cname-host.example.com <http://some-cname-host.example.com/>
>> Server: 10.97.40.215
>> Address: 10.97.40.215#53
>
>> some-cname-host.example.com canonical name = canonical-host-name.example.com.
>> Name: canonical-host-name.example.com
>> Address: 10.65.160.213
>
>> When I do the reverse lookup on the IP address return above I get the following:
>
>> $> nslookup 10.65.160.213
>> Server: 10.97.40.215
>> Address: 10.97.40.215#53
>
>> 213.160.65.10.in-addr.arpa name = canonical-host-name.example.com.
>
> Given that, what you would have to put in pg_hba.conf is
> canonical-host-name.example.com (and that needs to forward-resolve to
> 10.65.160.213, and possibly other addresses as well). This cross-check
> is meant to prevent getting into a PG server by means of a faked
> reverse-DNS entry.
>
> (If you're wondering why we don't simply accept anything that
> some-cname-host.example.com forward-maps to, it's for performance reasons:
> that would require resolving every DNS name in pg_hba.conf to see if it
> matches, which could be pretty awful with long pg_hba.conf files.)
>
> regards, tom lane
>
OK thanks, sadly not the answer I was hoping for though.
My preference is to use a network address for this stuff but I was over ruled and needed to use a host specific name or
addressin the config file. I wanted to use a CNAME in place of the A or PTR records so as in the event we ever have to
rebuilda new WAL receiver, I would only need to repoint the CNAME in the DNS system and avoid the possibility of
updatinga few hundred pg_hba.conf’s with a new IP address or hostname (this is a private cloud environment I am working
withso I don’t have a lot of control over hostnames of the nodes they give me or even the networks the node is placed
in.)
Dennis