LightDB provides various methods for authenticating users:
Trust authentication, which simply trusts that users are who they say they are.
Password authentication, which requires that users send a password.
Ident authentication, which relies on an “Identification Protocol” (RFC 1413) service on the client's machine. (On local Unix-socket connections, this is treated as peer authentication.)
Peer authentication, which relies on operating system facilities to identify the process at the other end of a local connection. This is not supported for remote connections.
Certificate authentication, which requires an SSL connection and authenticates users by checking the SSL certificate they send.
PAM authentication, which relies on a PAM (Pluggable Authentication Modules) library.
BSD authentication, which relies on the BSD Authentication framework (currently available only on OpenBSD).
Peer authentication is usually recommendable for local connections, though trust authentication might be sufficient in some circumstances. Password authentication is the easiest choice for remote connections. All the other options require some kind of external security infrastructure (usually an authentication server or a certificate authority for issuing SSL certificates), or are platform-specific.
The following sections describe each of these authentication methods in more detail.