Adrian, David, Thank you so much for the quick response.
What would be the point of storing the encrypted password instead of the plaintext one? As per our organization security policies, we can 't keep any passwords in plain text format. I am working on postgres + pgbouncer setup, tested pgbouncer 1.14 where we have support to use encrypted password in userlist,txt file. I am surprised why pgpass is not supporting encrypted passwords. On Mon, Jun 22, 2020 at 5:04 PM David G. Johnston < david.g.johns...@gmail.com> wrote: > Please don't cross-post. > > On Mon, Jun 22, 2020 at 1:35 PM Pavan Kumar <pavan.db...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> scram-sha-256 encrypted passwords are supported in .pgpass file ? If yes >> kindly provide us an example. >> >> I am using below format and it is not working for me >> >> *pglnx1*:*5432*:pgbouncer:*pgadmin*:"SCRAM-SHA-256$4096:6IDsjfedwsdpymp0Za7jaMew==$rzSoYL4ZYsW1WJAj7Lt3JtNLNR73AVY7sfsauikweblk][=:Hxx/juPXJZHy5djPctI=*"* >> >> The documentation doesn't say so one way or the other so I would go with > no. The password in the pgpass file has to be the plaintext password. The > client, upon speaking with the server, will decide whether to send the > plaintext password to the server or encrypt it prior to transmission. > > What would be the point of storing the encrypted password instead of the > plaintext one? > > David J. > > -- *Regards,#! Pavan Kumar----------------------------------------------*- *Sr. Database Administrator..!* *NEXT GENERATION PROFESSIONALS, LLC* *Cell # 267-799-3182 # pavan.dba27 (Gtalk) * *India # 9000459083* *Take Risks; if you win, you will be very happy. If you lose you will be Wise *