Craig Ringer wrote:
> On 13/08/2010 9:31 PM, Bruce Momjian wrote:
> > Karl Denninger wrote:
> >> I may be blind - I don't see a way to enable this.  OpenSSL "kinda"
> >> supports this - does Postgres' SSL connectivity allow it to be
> >> supported/enabled?
> >
> > What are you asking, exactly?
> 
> As far as I can tell they're asking for transport-level compression, 
> using gzip or similar, in much the same way as SSL/TLS currently 
> provides transport-level encryption. Compression at the postgresql 
> protocol level or above, so it's invisible at the level of the libpq 
> APIs for executing statements and processing results, and doesn't change 
> SQL processing.
> 
> Since remote access is often combined with SSL, which is already 
> supported by libpq, using SSL-integrated compression seems pretty 
> promising if it's viable in practice. It'd avoid the pain of having to 
> add compression to the Pg protocol by putting it "outside" the current 
> protocol, in the SSL layer. Even better, compressing results before 
> encrypting them makes the encrypted traffic *much* stronger against 
> known-plaintext and pattern-based attacks. And, of course, compressing 
> the content costs CPU time but reduces the amount of data that must then 
> be compressed.
> 
> OpenSSL does provide some transparent crypto support. See:
>    http://www.openssl.org/docs/ssl/SSL_COMP_add_compression_method.html

I thought all SSL traffic was compressed, unless you turned that off. 
It is just SSH that is always compressed?

-- 
  Bruce Momjian  <br...@momjian.us>        http://momjian.us
  EnterpriseDB                             http://enterprisedb.com

  + It's impossible for everything to be true. +

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