This authentication method operates similarly to
      password except that it uses PAM (Pluggable
      Authentication Modules) as the authentication mechanism. The
      default PAM service name is postgresql.
      PAM is used only to validate user name/password pairs and optionally the
      connected remote host name or IP address. Therefore the user must already
      exist in the database before PAM can be used for authentication. For more
      information about PAM, please read the
      
        Linux-PAM Page.
    
The following configuration options are supported for PAM:
pamservicePAM service name.
pam_use_hostname
            Determines whether the remote IP address or the host name is provided
            to PAM modules through the PAM_RHOST item. By
            default, the IP address is used. Set this option to 1 to use the
            resolved host name instead. Host name resolution can lead to login
            delays. (Most PAM configurations don't use this information, so it is
            only necessary to consider this setting if a PAM configuration was
            specifically created to make use of it.)
          
        If PAM is set up to read /etc/shadow, authentication
        will fail because the PostgreSQL server is started by a non-root
        user. However, this is not an issue when PAM is configured to use
        LDAP or other authentication methods.