You can still see which process is doing what using a single user, though, since the system tables provide you with process name (foo.exe) and ip address for each transaction.
I have the feeling that users are only worth the management cost if you're in a big corporation with a bunch of developers and lots of users connecting to the database. Then you would use roles and privileges appropriately (with a DBA taking care of this, not the developers). But that's just a feeling really, since I've never been in such a scenario.
Em qui, 23 de jun de 2016 às 05:30, Tim Ward tdw@telensa.com [firebird-support] <firebird-support@yahoogroups.com> escreveu:
On 23/06/2016 03:17, 'Daniel Miller' dmiller@amfes.com [firebird-support] wrote:
Separate from security theories and considerations of "good practice", what, if any, benefits accrue from using multiple users when accessing a Firebird database?
We have different processes using different users. This means that poking around in the database to see what's going on (performance, long-lived transactions, etc) is a bit easier - we can instantly see which process is doing what, as the users are named after the processes.
-- Tim Ward
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Posted by: Gabriel Frones <grfrones@gmail.com>
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++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Visit http://www.firebirdsql.org and click the Documentation item
on the main (top) menu. Try FAQ and other links from the left-side menu there.
Also search the knowledgebases at http://www.ibphoenix.com/resources/documents/
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Visit http://www.firebirdsql.org and click the Documentation item
on the main (top) menu. Try FAQ and other links from the left-side menu there.
Also search the knowledgebases at http://www.ibphoenix.com/resources/documents/
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