Hi Ray,

Thanks for your help. I forgot to tell you that I have done that. See below the 
hosts I put in pg_hba.conf file:

host rftDatabase "globus" "138.250.104.229" 255.255.255.255 md5
host rftDatabase "globus" "138.250.104.225" 255.255.255.255 md5
host rftDatabase "globus" "138.250.104.226" 255.255.255.255 md5
host rftDatabase "globus" "138.250.104.227" 255.255.255.255 md5
host rftDatabase "globus" "138.250.104.228" 255.255.255.255 md5
host rftDatabase "globus" "138.250.104.230" 255.255.255.255 md5
host rftDatabase "globus" "138.250.104.231" 255.255.255.255 md5
host rftDatabase "globus" "138.250.104.232" 255.255.255.255 md5

I have also put all host in the /etc/hosts.allow file. I have read the client 
authentication of PostgreSQL. I am using port 5432 (default) for postgres to 
connect. It works fine for local servers but not for remote servers.

Any help is highly appreciated.

Kind regards
Gokop

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Error connecting to the server: FATAL:  no pg_hba.conf entry
> for host "138.250.104.229", user "globus", database
> "rftDatabase", SSL off
>
> 138.250.104.229 is the IP for the local server, 138.250.104.232
> is the IP of the remote server, but is not showing it in the
> error.

There's your problem - you need to give 138.250.104.229 permission to
connect to the remote server by adding a suitable entry to pg_hba.conf -
look up "Client authentication" in the PostgreSQL docs.


Ray.




http://www.iol.ie


       
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