On 6 Feb 2015 4:21 PM, Jerry Sievers wrote:
David G Johnston <[email protected]> writes:On Fri, Feb 6, 2015 at 2:29 PM, Felipe Gasper [via PostgreSQL] <[hidden email]> wrote: On 6 Feb 2015 3:15 PM, David G Johnston wrote: > Felipe Gasper wrote >> Hello, >> >> Is there a way to temporarily suspend a user account? >> >> I would prefer not to revoke login privileges since that will break >> things that mine pg_users and pg_shadow. >> >> I also am trying to find something that is completely reversible, so >> something like setting connection limit to 0, which would lose a >> potentially customized connection limit, doesn’t work. >> >> We do this in MySQL by reversing the password hash then running FLUSH >> PRIVILEGES; however, that doesn’t seem to work in PostgreSQL/pg_authid >> as some sort of cache prevents this from taking effect. >> >> Has anyone else solved this issue? Thank you! > > Personally untested: > > ALTER ROLE role_name VALID UNTIL 'timestamp' --i.e., set that to sometime in > the past > This doesn’t work, either, because it will clobber any custom expiration time for the role … -FG ​Since everything about a role can be customized, and there is no simple "enabled" boolean, you need to take a known value, cache it somewhere, make your change, then restore the cached value; or just edit pg_hba.conf and add reject entries for the role in question.Here we go... disable: update pg_authid set rolpassword = rolpassword || '.disabled' where rolname = 'foo'; enable: update pg_authid set rolpassword = rtrim(rolpassword, 'disabled') where rolname = 'foo';
This does appear to work. It didn’t work earlier when I mangled the format such that it no longer began with “md5”, though.
Weird. Anyway, thank you! :) -FG -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list ([email protected]) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general
