Redshift
Learn how to add Redshift as a datasource in StrongDM.
Overview
This guide outlines the configuration steps for adding Redshift as a datasource in StrongDM.
When the resource is added, StrongDM proxies client connections through a node (gateway, relay, or proxy cluster). This enables centralized access control, credential management, and audit logging. StrongDM supports Redshift clusters accessible via standard PostgreSQL-compatible clients.
Use this guide to complete all necessary preparations for adding Redshift as a resource to your StrongDM environment; input the correct properties in the Admin UI, CLI, SDKs, or Terraform provider; and test for a successful connection. Once complete, you’ll be able to use the StrongDM Desktop application or CLI to connect.
For general information about how to add a database as a resource in StrongDM, see our main guide, Add a Datasource.
Supported Versions and Clients
StrongDM supports Amazon Redshift clusters via clients that are PostgreSQL-compatible.
Supported clients include:
psqland other CLI tools supporting the PostgreSQL wire protocolJDBC/ODBC drivers for PostgreSQL/Redshift
BI/SQL tools such as SQL Workbench and DataGrip
Prerequisites
To add your resource in StrongDM, you need to meet several technical and configuration prerequisites. Please ensure that the following requirements are met.
In StrongDM, you must have the following:
Administrator permission level
At least one operational StrongDM node (gateway, relay, or proxy cluster) that can reach the Redshift cluster’s hostname and port (
5439)If using secrets management tools for storing your database credentials, a Secret Store configured in StrongDM
On the Redshiftt side, you must have the following:
Running Amazon Redshift cluster with a valid endpoint and accessible port (
5439by default)Redshift database name configured that you will connect to
Database user account with the appropriate permissions (for example, SELECT for read-only, or CREATE/UPDATE/DELETE for admin use)
Correct username and password credentials for that account
Security groups, subnet groups, and VPC firewall rules that allow inbound connections from your StrongDM nodes
TLS configured if you intend to enable
tls_requiredin StrongDM
Resource Management in StrongDM
After all prerequisites and prep work is done, you are ready to add the resource to StrongDM. This section provides instructions for adding the resource in either the StrongDM Admin UI, CLI, Terraform provider, or SDKs.
Set up and Manage With the Admin UI
If using the Admin UI to add Redshift as a resource to StrongDM, use the following steps.
Log in to the StrongDM Admin UI.
Go to Resources > Datasources.
Click Add datasource.
For Datasource Type, select Redshift.
Complete all required configuration properties for your selected datasource type.
Click Create to save the resource.
Click the resource name to view status, diagnostic information, and setting details.
Configuration Properties
The following configuration properties are required to define a Redshift datasource in StrongDM. These settings control how StrongDM connects to the database, authenticates the connection, and optionally uses encryption or secret management. Each property must be correctly configured to ensure connectivity and access enforcement through StrongDM.
Display Name
Required
Meaningful name to display the resource throughout StrongDM; exclude special characters like quotes (") or angle brackets (< or >)
Datasource Type
Required
Redshift
Proxy Cluster
Required
Defaults to "None (use gateways)"; if using proxy clusters, select the appropriate cluster to proxy traffic to this resource
Port
Required
Port to use when connecting to Redshift; default port value is 5439
Connectivity Mode
Required
Select either Virtual Networking Mode, which lets users connect to the resource with a software-defined, IP-based network; or Loopback Mode, which allows users to connect to the resource using the local loopback adapter in their operating system; this field is shown if Virtual Networking Mode enabled for your organization
IP Address
Optional
If Virtual Networking Mode is the selected connectivity mode, an IP address value in the configured Virtual Networking Mode subnet in the organization network settings; if Loopback Mode is the selected connectivity mode, an IP address value in the configured Loopback IP range in the organization network settings (by default, 127.0.0.1); if not specified, an available IP address in the configured IP address space for the selected connectivity mode will be automatically assigned; this field is shown if Virtual Networking Mode and/or multi-loopback mode is enabled for your organization
Port Override
Optional
If Virtual Networking Mode is the selected connectivity mode, a port value between 1 and 65535 that is not already in use by another resource with the same IP address; if Loopback Mode is the selected connectivity mode, a port value between 1024 to 64999 that is not already in use by another resource with the same IP address; when left empty with Virtual Networking Mode, the system assigns the default port to this resource; when left empty for Loopback Mode, an available port that is not already in use by another resource is assigned; preferred port also can be modified later from the Port Overrides settings
DNS
Optional
If Virtual Networking Mode is the selected connectivity mode, a unique hostname alias for this resource; when set, causes the desktop app to display this resource's human-readable DNS name (for example, k8s.my-organization-name) instead of the bind address that includes IP address and port (for example, 100.64.100.100:5432)
Database
Required
Name of the database you will be connecting to with this datasource
Secret Store
Optional
Credential store location; defaults to Strong Vault; learn more about Secret Store options
Username
Optional
Explicit username to utilize when connecting to this resource (introduced by Redis 6+); displays when Secret Store integration is not configured for your organization or when StrongDM serves as the Secret Store type
Password
Optional
Password for the user connecting to this datasource; displays when Secret Store integration is not configured for your organization or when StrongDM serves as the Secret Store type
Username (path)
Required
Path to the secret in your Secret Store location (for example, path/to/credential?key=optionalKeyName where key argument is optional); required when using a non-StrongDM Secret Store type
Password (path)
Required
Path to the secret in your Secret Store location (for example, path/to/credential?key=optionalKeyName where key argument is optional); required when using a non-StrongDM Secret Store type
Restrict Database
Optional
When selected, limits all connections to the configured database
Resource Tags
Optional
Resource Tags consisting of key-value pairs <KEY>=<VALUE> (for example, env=dev)
Secret Store options
By default, datasource credentials are stored in StrongDM. However, these credentials can also be saved in a secrets management tool.
Non-StrongDM options appear in the Secret Store dropdown if they are created under Network > Secret Stores. When you select another Secret Store type, its unique properties display. For more details, see Configure Secret Store Integrations.
Resource status
After a resource is created, the Admin UI displays that resource as unhealthy until the healthchecks run successfully. When the resource is ready, the Health icon indicates a positive, green status.
When the resource does not display a positive status, click the resource name to go to the Diagnostics tab and check for errors.
Test the Connection
After you have added your resource in StrongDM, follow these steps to verify that it’s working correctly.
Assign yourself access by ensuring that your user or role has access to the resource. In the StrongDM Admin UI, go to Access > Roles, and verify that the resource is attached to a role you’re in.
In the CLI, run
sdm statusto list the available datasources. Confirm that the resource is available.Start a session. For example:
sdm connect redshift-prodConnect using a PostgreSQL-compatible client (for example,
psqlor a SQL GUI) using the configured credentials, database, hostname, and port. For example:psql -h localhost -p <LOCAL_PORT_OR_OVERRIDE> -d analyticsdb -U sdm_userIn the StrongDM Admin UI, check Logs > Queries (and Logs > Connections) to verify your session and query was captured.
When these steps succeed, you’re ready to connect to your resource through StrongDM.
Help
If you encounter issues, please consult the StrongDM Help Center.
Be prepared to provide the following information to StrongDM Support, so that they can inspect logs and confirm node and resource health:
Resource name or ID
CLI error output or logs
Node name and region
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