Book Image

PostgreSQL 16 Administration Cookbook

By : Gianni Ciolli, Boriss Mejías, Jimmy Angelakos, Vibhor Kumar, Simon Riggs
5 (1)
Book Image

PostgreSQL 16 Administration Cookbook

5 (1)
By: Gianni Ciolli, Boriss Mejías, Jimmy Angelakos, Vibhor Kumar, Simon Riggs

Overview of this book

PostgreSQL has seen a huge increase in its customer base in the past few years and is becoming one of the go-to solutions for anyone who has a database-specific challenge. This PostgreSQL book touches on all the fundamentals of Database Administration in a problem-solution format. It is intended to be the perfect desk reference guide. This new edition focuses on recipes based on the new PostgreSQL 16 release. The additions include handling complex batch loading scenarios with the SQL MERGE statement, security improvements, running Postgres on Kubernetes or with TPA and Ansible, and more. This edition also focuses on certain performance gains, such as query optimization, and the acceleration of specific operations, such as sort. It will help you understand roles, ensuring high availability, concurrency, and replication. It also draws your attention to aspects like validating backups, recovery, monitoring, and scaling aspects. This book will act as a one-stop solution to all your real-world database administration challenges. By the end of this book, you will be able to manage, monitor, and replicate your PostgreSQL 16 database for efficient administration and maintenance with the best practices from experts.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
13
Other Books You May Enjoy
14
Index

Integrating with LDAP

This recipe shows you how to set up your PostgreSQL system so that it uses the LDAP for authentication.

Getting ready

Ensure that the usernames in the database and your LDAP server match, as this method works for user authentication checks of users who are already defined in the database.

How to do it…

In the pg_hba.conf PostgreSQL authentication file, we define some address ranges to use LDAP as an authentication method, and we configure the LDAP server for this address range:

host    all         all         10.10.0.1/16          ldap \
ldapserver=ldap.our.net ldapprefix="cn=" ldapsuffix=",
   dc=our,dc=net"

How it works…

This setup makes the PostgreSQL server check passwords from the configured LDAP server.

User rights are not queried from the LDAP server but have to be defined inside the database, using the ALTER USER, GRANT, and REVOKE commands.

There’s more…

We have...