Looks like you (Dave) and Josh were right.  There is another pg_hba.conf under 
/var/lib/pgsql.  Now I at least get a password error.  I've got to track down this 
error and make sure I only have one directory for postgre.

Thanks again for your help.

---------- Original Message ----------------------------------
From: Dave Page <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Sun, 27 Jan 2002 21:33:52 -0000

>
>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Leonardo Junquera [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
>> Sent: 26 January 2002 03:50
>> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> Subject: [pgadmin-support] help connecting to database using pgadmin
>> 
>> 
>> i've got pgadmin II v 1.2 and postgre 7.1.1 and I'm having 
>> trouble connecting to my database.  Pgamin is running on xp 
>> and postgre is running on a redhat linux box.
>> 
>> The error i'm getting happens when i'm trying to connect:
>> Number: -214721843
>> Description: No pg_hba.conf entry for host 192.168.0.2, user 
>> leoj, database sbm
>> 
>> There is a line in my pg_hba.conf that reads:
>> host         sbm         192.168.0.2   255.255.255.255    password 
>> leoj
>> 
>> I've tried it with with a number of combination including:
>> host   all   192.168.0.2   255.255.255.0    trust
>> host   sbm   192.168.0.2   255.255.255.255  ident  leoj
>> 
>> I've started postmaster with -i and I have tcpip_socket = 
>> true in postgresql.conf.
>> 
>> When i run "netstat -ta" i get:
>> tcp        0      0 *:postgres              *:*                    
>> LISTEN
>> 
>> When i run "ps -aux|grep postgre" i get:
>> postgres 22482  0.0  0.0  5052    0 ?        SW   22:48   0:00
>> [postmaster]
>> 
>
>Hmm, everything looks OK as you've described it. I assume 192.168.0.2 is the
>correct address for your XP box? You are obviously connecting to the server
>as you are getting that error message.
>
>I know it sounds odd, but are you sure you're editting the correct
>pg_hba.conf file? If you are running a hand compiled PostgreSQL on Redhat,
>it is possible that there is more than one PGDATA directory - the default
>from the Redhat RPM installation, and the one you're trying to use... Does
>that make any sense? :-)
>
>Regards, Dave.
>
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