pgsql: For Kerberos testing, disable reverse DNS lookup

2023-04-07 Thread Stephen Frost
For Kerberos testing, disable reverse DNS lookup In our Kerberos test suite, there isn't much need to worry about the normal canonicalization that Kerberos provides by looking up the reverse DNS for the IP address connected to, and in some cases it can actively cause problems (eg: a captive

pgsql: For Kerberos testing, disable reverse DNS lookup

2023-04-07 Thread Stephen Frost
For Kerberos testing, disable reverse DNS lookup In our Kerberos test suite, there isn't much need to worry about the normal canonicalization that Kerberos provides by looking up the reverse DNS for the IP address connected to, and in some cases it can actively cause problems (eg: a captive

pgsql: For Kerberos testing, disable reverse DNS lookup

2023-04-07 Thread Stephen Frost
For Kerberos testing, disable reverse DNS lookup In our Kerberos test suite, there isn't much need to worry about the normal canonicalization that Kerberos provides by looking up the reverse DNS for the IP address connected to, and in some cases it can actively cause problems (eg: a captive

pgsql: For Kerberos testing, disable reverse DNS lookup

2023-04-07 Thread Stephen Frost
For Kerberos testing, disable reverse DNS lookup In our Kerberos test suite, there isn't much need to worry about the normal canonicalization that Kerberos provides by looking up the reverse DNS for the IP address connected to, and in some cases it can actively cause problems (eg: a captive

pgsql: For Kerberos testing, disable reverse DNS lookup

2023-04-07 Thread Stephen Frost
For Kerberos testing, disable reverse DNS lookup In our Kerberos test suite, there isn't much need to worry about the normal canonicalization that Kerberos provides by looking up the reverse DNS for the IP address connected to, and in some cases it can actively cause problems (eg: a captive

pgsql: For Kerberos testing, disable reverse DNS lookup

2023-03-09 Thread Stephen Frost
For Kerberos testing, disable reverse DNS lookup In our Kerberos test suite, there isn't much need to worry about the normal canonicalization that Kerberos provides by looking up the reverse DNS for the IP address connected to, and in some cases it can actively cause problems (eg: a captive