Hi Andrew,

Interesting!  Thanks for the detail.

George
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Andrew Gould 
  To: George Weaver 
  Cc: pgsql-general 
  Sent: Friday, May 08, 2009 9:57 AM
  Subject: Re: [GENERAL] Remote access


  On Fri, May 8, 2009 at 9:37 AM, George Weaver <gwea...@shaw.ca> wrote:

    Andrew Gould  in reponse to George Weaver wrote:


        Hi Andrew,



            Hi,



            I have a client with a main office and a branch office about 90 
miles
            away.



            They have a server at the main office but it is not a web server.



            What would be the best solution for them to access a PostgreSQL 
database
            located at the main office from the branch office?



            I am not "network savvy", but if I get pointed in the right 
direction I
            should be able to fill in the blanks.



            Thanks in advance!



          The best solution will depend upon the type of activity the branch 
office

    needs to perform with the database server.


        The application is an inventory management system.  Their current 
solution

    is an MS Access based system and they use Microsoft Terminal Services to
    enable the branch office to access the main office server.  They are
    considering a move to an application that I provide which utilizes
    PostgreSQL.


          Also, what operating system(s) are they running at the branch office?



        Everything is Windows based.



        George



      Hi George,



      MS Access can access PostgreSQL servers via ODBC links.  There is an SSL
      Mode configuration option in the PostgreSQL ODBC driver for security.



    Hi Andrew,

    I have clients with web-based servers which utilize my application 
connecting via the internet.  I guess where my ignorance manifests itself is 
how to connect when the server is not a web server and doesn't have a fixed IP 
address.  Is it necessary for them to set the server up with a fixed address, 
or is there some other alternative?

    Thanks for your time.

    George


  You should either get a static IP address or use a service that maps your 
changing IP address to a server name.

  I use DynDNS.com and a perl application called ddclient.  DynDNS manages my 
domain name in their DNS.  ddclient monitors my home internet IP address and 
sends an update to DynDNS automatically whenever the IP address changes.  When 
I try to access my domain name, the domain name is mapped to my home IP address 
and my home router forwards the allowed ports to the appropriate computer.

  DynDNS is not the only provider of this kind of service.  ddclient is not the 
only (free) application that performs this function.  They have worked for me; 
but there are many options available to you.

  Andrew

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