Not sure this is the right answer: in older version you could enable
it via the postgresql.conf file, modifing the variable log_statement
and setting that to true. Also, you should check the syslog level
variable in the same file.

Regards
Marco

On 6/17/06, Mark Constable <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Sunday 18 June 2006 02:33, Tom Lane wrote:
> > uid is an email address stored in the passwd table as [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > and this construct allows an incoming username such as "user.domain.com"
> > to be compared to the stored "[EMAIL PROTECTED]".

> But, if you're not wedded to that particular way, why not use replace()?

I only decided to ditch MySQL tonight so I'm within the first
1/2 dozen hours of using pgsql for almost the first time. I've
lost a fair amount of hair with the basics of db and user setup
and close to burnout.

> SELECT wpath FROM passwd WHERE uid="\L" OR replace(uid, '@', '.')="\L"

Excellent. Just the double quotes needed to be changed to single
quotes to avoid this error and replace() indeed works for my needs.

 ERROR:  column "user.domain.com" does not exist

Another anti-burnout question, how would I turn on the ability
to view any SQL requests in the logfile ?

No doubt there is an answer in the list archives somewhere but
my first few searches brought up nothing useful.

--markc

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--
Marco Bizzarri
http://notenotturne.blogspot.com/

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