On Wed, Oct 25, 2023 at 03:44:04PM +0000, PG Doc comments form wrote: > The following documentation comment has been logged on the website: > > Page: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/16/ssl-tcp.html > Description: > > There is no mention of key lengths on the manual page about SSL/TLS > connections even though there are restrictions. It probably depends on the > build which is why it's been omitted, but I think to help new people it > would be great to have a Note box that covers key lengths restrictions. It > came up on reddit today and while the following is in the error log.. > > FATAL: could not load server certificate file > "/etc/postgresql/16/main/server.crt": ee key too small > > It is amongst a chain of other messages and has a long line such that it > could be missed as it's truncated (though it should still have been spotted > of course). Regardless, I like the idea of all the things you need to do/be > mindful of being in the manual. It could be something like.. > > Note > Some builds of PostgreSQL specify a minimum key length for certificates to > enforce best-practices. If the key you use is does not meet or exceed this > minimum length PostgreSQL will fail to start. It's common practice to > require a key of at least length 2048.
I think this is based on the SSL/TLS library in use which is why we don't mention it in our docs, e.g.: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/61626206/what-could-cause-dh-key-too-small-error -- Bruce Momjian <br...@momjian.us> https://momjian.us EDB https://enterprisedb.com Only you can decide what is important to you.