> I explain myself about running PostGre as admin. > > In fact I don't want specifically run PostGre as admin. The problem is, on > the computers the application including PostGre will run, I'm not sure > that > the user won't have any admin or power user rights. Furthermore, I've > noticed that on certain domains, any user created is automatically added > to > a default group having power user rights (that is actually happening to > me).
To be honest, the fact that Postgres forces you to run as a non-admin user has given me nothing but headaches. (yes, I know, the problem is defaulting everyone to admin rights is the problem. But that's where I am). I have been kicking around the idea of posting a change to allow you to run as admin, but in the meanwhile if you can build Postgres on your machine, the fix is very easy. Go into src/backend/main/main.c and find the line if (pgwin32_is_admin()) and change it to if (false && pgwin32_is_admin()) Mike Pollard SUPRA Server SQL Engineering and Support Cincom Systems, Inc ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 2: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster