Oh, I also tryed some of these:

 (echo "user\n"; echo "password\n") | pg_dump.....
 echo "user\npassword\n" | .....


 It doesn't seem to work, though...

Raul Miguel Pinheiro de Carvalho
ISR - Instituto de Sistemas e Robotica, Porto
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

On Mon, 17 Apr 2000, Raul Carvalho wrote:

> 
>  that is exactly my point!
>  
>  It gives this error: (database: demo, user: demo, password: demo)
> 
>  $ echo "demo\ndemo" | pg_dump -u demo > r.dump
>  Connection to database 'demo' failed.
>  fe_sendauth: no password supplied
> 
>  Very strange...
> 
> Raul Miguel Pinheiro de Carvalho
> ISR - Instituto de Sistemas e Robotica, Porto
> e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
> On Mon, 17 Apr 2000, Maarten Boekhold wrote:
> 
> > 
> > 
> > Raul Carvalho wrote:
> > > 
> > >  Hello all,
> > > 
> > >  I am having a problem regarding maintenance of my databases. I have four
> > > small db's and clients must use password autentication.
> > > 
> > >  The problem is that when I try to pg_dump any of them, I don't know how
> > > can I pass username and password. Shouldn't there be a command line option
> > > to do this? Environment variables are very unconvenient...
> > 
> > echo "username\npassword" | pg_dump -u ....
> >  
> > >  The same problem regarding restoring the database. "cat xpto.dump | psql
> > > -e dbname" also asks for passwd...
> > 
> > echo "username\npassword" | psql -u -f xpto.dump ....
> > 
> > btw. if executing this from a script I find environment variables more
> > convenient.
> > 
> > Maarten
> > 
> > -- 
> > 
> > Maarten Boekhold, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > TIBCO Finance Technology Inc.
> > "Sevilla" Building
> > Entrada 308
> > 1096 ED Amsterdam, The Netherlands
> > tel: +31 20 6601000 (direct: +31 20 6601066)
> > fax: +31 20 6601005
> > http://www.tibcofinance.com
> > 
> 
> 

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