Hi,
Thanks your suggestion got me going. It does make sense not to grant access
by default. This probably has saved me some painful scenario once into
production ;)
Max
On 21 August 2013 13:46, Chris Travers wrote:
>
>
>
> On Wed, Aug 21, 2013 at 4:17 AM, Max van Biezen wrote:
>
>> hi,
>>
>>
On Wed, Aug 21, 2013 at 4:17 AM, Max van Biezen wrote:
> hi,
>
> I have created in 1.3.33 a DB with a little bit of data. I have two valid
> admin users. Every part of the user credentials is visible and can be
> edited.
>
> Now I copy this DB, logged on with postgres super-user role, in setup a
hi,
I have created in 1.3.33 a DB with a little bit of data. I have two valid
admin users. Every part of the user credentials is visible and can be
edited.
Now I copy this DB, logged on with postgres super-user role, in setup and
I copy DB to DB2.
When I log into DB2 the users are there but the