Gilles Darold <gil...@migops.com> writes: > Now that the security policy is getting stronger, it is not uncommon to > create users with a password expiration date (VALID UNTIL).
TBH, I thought people were starting to realize that forced password rotations are a net security negative. It's true that a lot of places haven't gotten the word yet. > I'm wondering if we might be interested in having this feature in psql? This proposal kind of seems like a hack, because (1) not everybody uses psql (2) psql can't really tell whether rolvaliduntil is relevant. (It can see whether the server demanded a password, but maybe that went to LDAP or some other auth method.) That leads me to wonder about server-side solutions. It's easy enough for the server to see that it's used a password with an expiration N days away, but how could that be reported to the client? The only idea that comes to mind that doesn't seem like a protocol break is to issue a NOTICE message, which doesn't seem like it squares with your desire to only do this interactively. (Although I'm not sure I believe that's a great idea. If your application breaks at 2AM because its password expired, you won't be any happier than if your interactive sessions start to fail. Maybe a message that would leave a trail in the server log would be best after all.) > Default value is 0 like today no warning at all. Off-by-default is pretty much guaranteed to not help most people. regards, tom lane