When I start my postgresql server I get 11 messages reporting that "password
authentication failed for user 'postgres'" spaced about ~.5sec apart.
I increased the logging level to INFO, and added the application name to the
message format (after the pid) which resulted in:

  2018-05-21 23:04:44.395 MDT [20232][[unknown]] [unknown]@[unknown] LOG:  
connection received: host=[local]
  2018-05-21 23:04:44.395 MDT [20232][[unknown]] postgres@postgres FATAL:  password 
authentication failed for user "postgres"
  2018-05-21 23:04:44.395 MDT [20232][[unknown]] postgres@postgres DETAIL:  Password does 
not match for user "postgres".
        Connection matched pg_hba.conf line 90: "local   all   all   md5"

This is on a Ububuntu-18.04 machine with postgresql-10.3 from Ubuntu.  As 
distributed
the pg_hba.conf line mentioned used "peer" authentication method, I have 
changed to
"md5".  When I change back to "peer" the error messages go away.  The processes 
are
too short-lived for me to catch with ps.  Successful connect message example:

  2018-05-21 23:25:13.577 MDT [21080][[unknown]] [unknown]@[unknown] LOG:  
connection received: host=[local]
  2018-05-21 23:25:13.578 MDT [21080][[unknown]] postgres@postgres LOG:  
connection authorized: user=postgres database=postgres
  2018-05-21 23:25:13.579 MDT [21080][psql] postgres@postgres LOG:  
disconnection: session time: 0:00:00.002 user=postgres database=postgres 
host=[local]

My question is, how can I find out where the connections are coming from so I 
can
modify them to provide passwords (so I can go back to "md5")?  Are there 
startup-
time connections made by postgresql itself or is this likely from some Ubuntu-
specific configuration?

Thanks.

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