2 PostgreSQL Installation Instructions
4 This document describes the installation of PostgreSQL from the source code
7 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
16 mkdir /usr/local/pgsql/data
17 chown postgres /usr/local/pgsql/data
19 /usr/local/pgsql/bin/initdb -D /usr/local/pgsql/data
20 /usr/local/pgsql/bin/postmaster -D /usr/local/pgsql/data >logfile 2>&1 &
21 /usr/local/pgsql/bin/createdb test
22 /usr/local/pgsql/bin/psql test
24 The long version is the rest of this document.
26 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
30 In general, a modern Unix-compatible platform should be able to run PostgreSQL.
31 The platforms that had received specific testing at the time of release are
32 listed in the Section called Supported Platforms below. In the "doc"
33 subdirectory of the distribution there are several platform-specific FAQ
34 documents you might wish to consult if you are having trouble.
35 The following software packages are required for building PostgreSQL:
37 * GNU make is required; other make programs will *not* work. GNU make is
38 often installed under the name "gmake"; this document will always refer
39 to it by that name. (On some systems GNU make is the default tool with
40 the name "make".) To test for GNU make enter
44 It is recommended to use version 3.76.1 or later.
46 * You need an ISO/ANSI C compiler. Recent versions of GCC are
47 recommendable, but PostgreSQL is known to build with a wide variety of
48 compilers from different vendors.
50 * gzip is needed to unpack the distribution in the first place. If you are
51 reading this, you probably already got past that hurdle.
53 * The GNU Readline library (for comfortable line editing and command
54 history retrieval) will be used by default. If you don't want to use it
55 then you must specify the "--without-readline" option for "configure".
56 (On NetBSD, the "libedit" library is readline-compatible and is used if
57 "libreadline" is not found.)
59 * To build on Windows NT or Windows 2000 you need the Cygwin and cygipc
60 packages. See the file "doc/FAQ_MSWIN" for details.
62 The following packages are optional. They are not required in the default
63 configuration, but they are needed when certain build options are enabled, as
66 * To build the server programming language PL/Perl you need a full Perl
67 installation, including the "libperl" library and the header files. Since
68 PL/Perl will be a shared library, the "libperl" library must be a shared
69 library also on most platforms. This appears to be the default in recent
70 Perl versions, but it was not in earlier versions, and in general it is
71 the choice of whomever installed Perl at your site.
72 If you don't have the shared library but you need one, a message like
73 this will appear during the build to point out this fact:
75 *** Cannot build PL/Perl because libperl is not a shared library.
76 *** You might have to rebuild your Perl installation. Refer to
77 *** the documentation for details.
79 (If you don't follow the on-screen output you will merely notice that the
80 PL/Perl library object, "plperl.so" or similar, will not be installed.)
81 If you see this, you will have to rebuild and install Perl manually to be
82 able to build PL/Perl. During the configuration process for Perl, request
85 * To build the Python interface module or the PL/Python server programming
86 language, you need a Python installation, including the header files.
87 Since PL/Python will be a shared library, the "libpython" library must be
88 a shared library also on most platforms. This is not the case in a
89 default Python installation.
90 If after building and installing you have a file called "plpython.so"
91 (possibly a different extension), then everything went well. Otherwise
92 you should have seen a notice like this flying by:
94 *** Cannot build PL/Python because libpython is not a shared library.
95 *** You might have to rebuild your Python installation. Refer to
96 *** the documentation for details.
98 That means you have to rebuild (part of) your Python installation to
99 supply this shared library.
100 The catch is that the Python distribution or the Python maintainers do
101 not provide any direct way to do this. The closest thing we can offer you
102 is the information in Python FAQ 3.30. On some operating systems you
103 don't really have to build a shared library, but then you will have to
104 convince the PostgreSQL build system of this. Consult the "Makefile" in
105 the "src/pl/plpython" directory for details.
107 * If you want to build Tcl or Tk components (clients and the PL/Tcl
108 language) you of course need a Tcl installation.
110 * To build the JDBC driver, you need Ant 1.5 or higher and a JDK. Ant is a
111 special tool for building Java-based packages. It can be downloaded from
113 If you have several Java compilers installed, it depends on the Ant
114 configuration which one gets used. Precompiled Ant distributions are
115 typically set up to read a file ".antrc" in the current user's home
116 directory for configuration. For example, to use a different JDK than the
117 default, this may work:
119 JAVA_HOME=/usr/local/sun-jdk1.3
120 JAVACMD=$JAVA_HOME/bin/java
122 Note: Do not try to build the driver by calling "ant" or even
123 "javac" directly. This will not work. Run "gmake" normally as
126 * To enable Native Language Support (NLS), that is, the ability to display
127 a program's messages in a language other than English, you need an
128 implementation of the Gettext API. Some operating systems have this
129 built-in (e.g., Linux, NetBSD, Solaris), for other systems you can
130 download an add-on package from here: http://www.postgresql.org/~petere/
131 gettext.html. If you are using the gettext implementation in the GNU C
132 library then you will additionally need the GNU Gettext package for some
133 utility programs. For any of the other implementations you will not need
136 * Kerberos, OpenSSL, or PAM, if you want to support authentication using
139 If you are build from a CVS tree instead of using a released source package, or
140 if you want to do development, you also need the following packages:
142 * Flex and Bison are needed to build a CVS checkout or if you changed the
143 actual scanner and parser definition files. If you need them, be sure to
144 get Flex 2.5.4 or later and Bison 1.50 or later. Other yacc programs can
145 sometimes be used, but doing so requires extra effort and is not
146 recommended. Other lex programs will definitely not work.
148 If you need to get a GNU package, you can find it at your local GNU mirror site
149 (see http://www.gnu.org/order/ftp.html for a list) or at ftp://ftp.gnu.org/
151 Also check that you have sufficient disk space. You will need about 65 MB for
152 the source tree during compilation and about 15 MB for the installation
153 directory. An empty database cluster takes about 25 MB, databases take about
154 five times the amount of space that a flat text file with the same data would
155 take. If you are going to run the regression tests you will temporarily need up
156 to an extra 90 MB. Use the "df" command to check for disk space.
158 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
162 The internal data storage format changes with new releases of PostgreSQL.
163 Therefore, if you are upgrading an existing installation that does not have a
164 version number "7.3.x", you must back up and restore your data as shown here.
165 These instructions assume that your existing installation is under the "/usr/
166 local/pgsql" directory, and that the data area is in "/usr/local/pgsql/data".
167 Substitute your paths appropriately.
169 1. Make sure that your database is not updated during or after the backup.
170 This does not affect the integrity of the backup, but the changed data
171 would of course not be included. If necessary, edit the permissions in
172 the file "/usr/local/pgsql/data/pg_hba.conf" (or equivalent) to disallow
173 access from everyone except you.
175 2. To back up your database installation, type:
177 pg_dumpall > outputfile
179 If you need to preserve OIDs (such as when using them as foreign keys),
180 then use the "-o" option when running "pg_dumpall".
181 "pg_dumpall" does not save large objects. Check the Administrator's Guide
182 if you need to do this.
183 To make the backup, you can use the "pg_dumpall" command from the version
184 you are currently running. For best results, however, try to use the
185 "pg_dumpall" command from PostgreSQL 7.3, since this version contains
186 bug fixes and improvements over older versions. While this advice might
187 seem idiosyncratic since you haven't installed the new version yet, it is
188 advisable to follow it if you plan to install the new version in parallel
189 with the old version. In that case you can complete the installation
190 normally and transfer the data later. This will also decrease the
193 3. If you are installing the new version at the same location as the old one
194 then shut down the old server, at the latest before you install the new
197 kill -INT `cat /usr/local/pgsql/data/postmaster.pid`
199 Versions prior to 7.0 do not have this "postmaster.pid" file. If you are
200 using such a version you must find out the process id of the server
201 yourself, for example by typing "ps ax | grep postmaster", and supply it
202 to the "kill" command.
203 On systems that have PostgreSQL started at boot time, there is probably a
204 start-up file that will accomplish the same thing. For example, on a Red
205 Hat Linux system one might find that
207 /etc/rc.d/init.d/postgresql stop
209 works. Another possibility is "pg_ctl stop".
211 4. If you are installing in the same place as the old version then it is
212 also a good idea to move the old installation out of the way, in case you
213 have trouble and need to revert to it. Use a command like this:
215 mv /usr/local/pgsql /usr/local/pgsql.old
217 After you have installed PostgreSQL 7.3, create a new database directory and
218 start the new server. Remember that you must execute these commands while
219 logged in to the special database user account (which you already have if you
222 /usr/local/pgsql/bin/initdb -D /usr/local/pgsql/data
223 /usr/local/pgsql/bin/postmaster -D /usr/local/pgsql/data
225 Finally, restore your data with
227 /usr/local/pgsql/bin/psql -d template1 -f outputfile
229 using the *new* psql.
230 These topics are discussed at length in the Administrator's Guide, which you
231 are encouraged to read in any case.
233 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
235 Installation Procedure
238 The first step of the installation procedure is to configure the source
239 tree for your system and choose the options you would like. This is done
240 by running the "configure" script. For a default installation simply
245 This script will run a number of tests to guess values for various system
246 dependent variables and detect some quirks of your operating system, and
247 finally will create several files in the build tree to record what it
248 found. (You can also run "configure" in a directory outside the source
249 tree if you want to keep the build directory separate.)
250 The default configuration will build the server and utilities, as well as
251 all client applications and interfaces that require only a C compiler.
252 All files will be installed under "/usr/local/pgsql" by default.
253 You can customize the build and installation process by supplying one or
254 more of the following command line options to "configure":
258 Install all files under the directory "PREFIX" instead of "/usr/
259 local/pgsql". The actual files will be installed into various
260 subdirectories; no files will ever be installed directly into the
262 If you have special needs, you can also customize the individual
263 subdirectories with the following options.
265 --exec-prefix=EXEC-PREFIX
267 You can install architecture-dependent files under a different
268 prefix, "EXEC-PREFIX", than what "PREFIX" was set to. This can be
269 useful to share architecture-independent files between hosts. If
270 you omit this, then "EXEC-PREFIX" is set equal to "PREFIX" and both
271 architecture-dependent and independent files will be installed
272 under the same tree, which is probably what you want.
276 Specifies the directory for executable programs. The default is
277 "EXEC-PREFIX/bin", which normally means "/usr/local/pgsql/bin".
281 Sets the directory for read-only data files used by the installed
282 programs. The default is "PREFIX/share". Note that this has nothing
283 to do with where your database files will be placed.
285 --sysconfdir=DIRECTORY
287 The directory for various configuration files, "PREFIX/etc" by
292 The location to install libraries and dynamically loadable modules.
293 The default is "EXEC-PREFIX/lib".
295 --includedir=DIRECTORY
297 The directory for installing C and C++ header files. The default is
302 Documentation files, except "man" pages, will be installed into
303 this directory. The default is "PREFIX/doc".
307 The man pages that come with PostgreSQL will be installed under
308 this directory, in their respective "manx" subdirectories. The
309 default is "PREFIX/man".
310 Note: Care has been taken to make it possible to install
311 PostgreSQL into shared installation locations (such as "/usr/
312 local/include") without interfering with the namespace of the
313 rest of the system. First, the string "/postgresql" is
314 automatically appended to datadir, sysconfdir, and docdir,
315 unless the fully expanded directory name already contains the
316 string "postgres" or "pgsql". For example, if you choose "/usr/
317 local" as prefix, the documentation will be installed in "/usr/
318 local/doc/postgresql", but if the prefix is "/opt/postgres",
319 then it will be in "/opt/postgres/doc". The public C header
320 files of the client interfaces are installed into includedir
321 and are namespace-clean. The internal header files and the
322 server header files are installed into private directories
323 under includedir. See the Programmer's Guide for information
324 about how to get at the header files for each interface.
325 Finally, a private subdirectory will also be created, if
326 appropriate, under libdir for dynamically loadable modules.
328 --with-includes=DIRECTORIES
330 "DIRECTORIES" is a colon-separated list of directories that will be
331 added to the list the compiler searches for header files. If you
332 have optional packages (such as GNU Readline) installed in a non-
333 standard location, you have to use this option and probably also
334 the corresponding "--with-libraries" option.
335 Example: --with-includes=/opt/gnu/include:/usr/sup/include.
337 --with-libraries=DIRECTORIES
339 "DIRECTORIES" is a colon-separated list of directories to search
340 for libraries. You will probably have to use this option (and the
341 corresponding "--with-includes" option) if you have packages
342 installed in non-standard locations.
343 Example: --with-libraries=/opt/gnu/lib:/usr/sup/lib.
347 Enables single-byte character set recode support. See the
348 Administrator's Guide about this feature. Note that a more general
349 form of character set conversion is supported in the default
350 configuration; this feature is obsolete.
352 --enable-nls[=LANGUAGES]
354 Enables Native Language Support (NLS), that is, the ability to
355 display a program's messages in a language other than English.
356 "LANGUAGES" is a space separated list of codes of the languages
357 that you want supported, for example --enable-nls='de fr'. (The
358 intersection between your list and the set of actually provided
359 translations will be computed automatically.) If you do not specify
360 a list, then all available translations are installed.
361 To use this option, you will need an implementation of the gettext
366 Set "NUMBER" as the default port number for server and clients. The
367 default is 5432. The port can always be changed later on, but if
368 you specify it here then both server and clients will have the same
369 default compiled in, which can be very convenient. Usually the only
370 good reason to select a non-default value is if you intend to run
371 multiple PostgreSQL servers on the same machine.
375 Build the PL/Perl server-side language.
379 Build the Python interface module and the PL/Python server-side
380 language. You need to have root access to be able to install the
381 Python module at its default place ("/usr/lib/pythonx.y").
385 Build components that require Tcl/Tk, which are libpgtcl, pgtclsh,
386 pgtksh, and PL/Tcl. But see below about "--without-tk".
390 If you specify "--with-tcl" and this option, then the program that
391 requires Tk (pgtksh) will be excluded.
393 --with-tclconfig=DIRECTORY, --with-tkconfig=DIRECTORY
395 Tcl/Tk installs the files "tclConfig.sh" and "tkConfig.sh", which
396 contain configuration information needed to build modules
397 interfacing to Tcl or Tk. These files are normally found
398 automatically at their well-known locations, but if you want to use
399 a different version of Tcl or Tk you can specify the directory in
404 Build the JDBC driver and associated Java packages.
406 --with-krb4[=DIRECTORY], --with-krb5[=DIRECTORY]
408 Build with support for Kerberos authentication. You can use either
409 Kerberos version 4 or 5, but not both. The "DIRECTORY" argument
410 specifies the root directory of the Kerberos installation; "/usr/
411 athena" is assumed as default. If the relevant header files and
412 libraries are not under a common parent directory, then you must
413 use the "--with-includes" and "--with-libraries" options in
414 addition to this option. If, on the other hand, the required files
415 are in a location that is searched by default (e.g., "/usr/lib"),
416 then you can leave off the argument.
417 "configure" will check for the required header files and libraries
418 to make sure that your Kerberos installation is sufficient before
421 --with-krb-srvnam=NAME
423 The name of the Kerberos service principal. postgres is the
424 default. There's probably no reason to change this.
426 --with-openssl[=DIRECTORY]
428 Build with support for SSL (encrypted) connections. This requires
429 the OpenSSL package to be installed. The "DIRECTORY" argument
430 specifies the root directory of the OpenSSL installation; the
431 default is "/usr/local/ssl".
432 "configure" will check for the required header files and libraries
433 to make sure that your OpenSSL installation is sufficient before
438 Build with PAM (Pluggable Authentication Modules) support.
442 Prevents the use of the Readline library. This disables command-
443 line editing and history in psql, so it is not recommended.
447 Prevents the use of the Zlib library. This disables compression
448 support in pg_dump. This option is only intended for those rare
449 systems where this library is not available.
453 Compiles all programs and libraries with debugging symbols. This
454 means that you can run the programs through a debugger to analyze
455 problems. This enlarges the size of the installed executables
456 considerably, and on non-GCC compilers it usually also disables
457 compiler optimization, causing slowdowns. However, having the
458 symbols available is extremely helpful for dealing with any
459 problems that may arise. Currently, this option is recommended for
460 production installations only if you use GCC. But you should always
461 have it on if you are doing development work or running a beta
466 Enables assertion checks in the server, which test for many "can't
467 happen" conditions. This is invaluable for code development
468 purposes, but the tests slow things down a little. Also, having the
469 tests turned on won't necessarily enhance the stability of your
470 server! The assertion checks are not categorized for severity, and
471 so what might be a relatively harmless bug will still lead to
472 server restarts if it triggers an assertion failure. Currently,
473 this option is not recommended for production use, but you should
474 have it on for development work or when running a beta version.
478 Enables automatic dependency tracking. With this option, the
479 makefiles are set up so that all affected object files will be
480 rebuilt when any header file is changed. This is useful if you are
481 doing development work, but is just wasted overhead if you intend
482 only to compile once and install. At present, this option will work
485 If you prefer a C compiler different from the one "configure" picks then
486 you can set the environment variable CC to the program of your choice. By
487 default, "configure" will pick "gcc" unless this is inappropriate for the
488 platform. Similarly, you can override the default compiler flags with the
491 You can specify environment variables on the "configure" command line,
494 ./configure CC=/opt/bin/gcc CFLAGS='-O2 -pipe'
497 To start the build, type
501 (Remember to use GNU make.) The build may take anywhere from 5 minutes to
502 half an hour depending on your hardware. The last line displayed should
505 All of PostgreSQL is successfully made. Ready to install.
508 If you want to test the newly built server before you install it, you can
509 run the regression tests at this point. The regression tests are a test
510 suite to verify that PostgreSQL runs on your machine in the way the
511 developers expected it to. Type
515 (This won't work as root; do it as an unprivileged user.) It is possible
516 that some tests fail, due to differences in error message wording or
517 floating point results. The file "src/test/regress/README" and the
518 Administrator's Guide contain detailed information about interpreting the
519 test results. You can repeat this test at any later time by issuing the
522 4. Installing The Files
523 Note: If you are upgrading an existing system and are going to
524 install the new files over the old ones, then you should have
525 backed up your data and shut down the old server by now, as
526 explained in the Section called If You Are Upgrading above.
527 To install PostgreSQL enter
531 This will install files into the directories that were specified in step
532 1. Make sure that you have appropriate permissions to write into that
533 area. Normally you need to do this step as root. Alternatively, you could
534 create the target directories in advance and arrange for appropriate
535 permissions to be granted.
536 You can use gmake install-strip instead of gmake install to strip the
537 executable files and libraries as they are installed. This will save some
538 space. If you built with debugging support, stripping will effectively
539 remove the debugging support, so it should only be done if debugging is
540 no longer needed. install-strip tries to do a reasonable job saving
541 space, but it does not have perfect knowledge of how to strip every
542 unneeded byte from an executable file, so if you want to save all the
543 disk space you possibly can, you will have to do manual work.
544 If you built the Python interfaces and you were not the root user when
545 you executed the above command then that part of the installation
546 probably failed. In that case you should become the root user and then do
548 gmake -C src/interfaces/python install
550 If you do not have superuser access you are on your own: you can still
551 take the required files and place them in other directories where Python
552 can find them, but how to do that is left as an exercise.
553 The standard installation provides only the header files needed for
554 client application development. If you plan to do any server-side program
555 development (such as custom functions or data types written in C), then
556 you may want to install the entire PostgreSQL include tree into your
557 target include directory. To do that, enter
559 gmake install-all-headers
561 This adds a megabyte or two to the installation footprint, and is only
562 useful if you don't plan to keep the whole source tree around for
563 reference. (If you do, you can just use the source's include directory
564 when building server-side software.)
565 Client-only installation: If you want to install only the client
566 applications and interface libraries, then you can use these commands:
568 gmake -C src/bin install
569 gmake -C src/include install
570 gmake -C src/interfaces install
573 Uninstallation: To undo the installation use the command "gmake uninstall".
574 However, this will not remove any created directories.
575 Cleaning: After the installation you can make room by removing the built files
576 from the source tree with the command "gmake clean". This will preserve the
577 files made by the configure program, so that you can rebuild everything with
578 "gmake" later on. To reset the source tree to the state in which it was
579 distributed, use "gmake distclean". If you are going to build for several
580 platforms from the same source tree you must do this and re-configure for each
582 If you perform a build and then discover that your configure options were
583 wrong, or if you change anything that configure investigates (for example,
584 software upgrades), then it's a good idea to do "gmake distclean" before
585 reconfiguring and rebuilding. Without this, your changes in configuration
586 choices may not propagate everywhere they need to.
588 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
590 Post-Installation Setup
594 On some systems that have shared libraries (which most systems do) you need to
595 tell your system how to find the newly installed shared libraries. The systems
596 on which this is *not* necessary include BSD/OS, FreeBSD, HP-UX, IRIX, Linux,
597 NetBSD, OpenBSD, Tru64 UNIX (formerly Digital UNIX), and Solaris.
598 The method to set the shared library search path varies between platforms, but
599 the most widely usable method is to set the environment variable
600 LD_LIBRARY_PATH like so: In Bourne shells ("sh", "ksh", "bash", "zsh")
602 LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/pgsql/lib
603 export LD_LIBRARY_PATH
605 or in "csh" or "tcsh"
607 setenv LD_LIBRARY_PATH /usr/local/pgsql/lib
609 Replace /usr/local/pgsql/lib with whatever you set "--libdir" to in step 1. You
610 should put these commands into a shell start-up file such as "/etc/profile" or
611 "~/.bash_profile". Some good information about the caveats associated with this
612 method can be found at http://www.visi.com/~barr/ldpath.html.
613 On some systems it might be preferable to set the environment variable
614 LD_RUN_PATH *before* building.
615 On Cygwin, put the library directory in the PATH or move the ".dll" files into
616 the "bin/" directory.
617 If in doubt, refer to the manual pages of your system (perhaps "ld.so" or
618 "rld"). If you later on get a message like
620 psql: error in loading shared libraries
621 libpq.so.2.1: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
623 then this step was necessary. Simply take care of it then.
624 If you are on BSD/OS, Linux, or SunOS 4 and you have root access you can run
626 /sbin/ldconfig /usr/local/pgsql/lib
628 (or equivalent directory) after installation to enable the run-time linker to
629 find the shared libraries faster. Refer to the manual page of "ldconfig" for
630 more information. On FreeBSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD the command is
632 /sbin/ldconfig -m /usr/local/pgsql/lib
634 instead. Other systems are not known to have an equivalent command.
636 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
638 Environment Variables
640 If you installed into "/usr/local/pgsql" or some other location that is not
641 searched for programs by default, you should add "/usr/local/pgsql/bin" (or
642 whatever you set "--bindir" to in step 1) into your PATH. Strictly speaking,
643 this is not necessary, but it will make the use of PostgreSQL much more
645 To do this, add the following to your shell start-up file, such as
646 "~/.bash_profile" (or "/etc/profile", if you want it to affect every user):
648 PATH=/usr/local/pgsql/bin:$PATH
651 If you are using "csh" or "tcsh", then use this command:
653 set path = ( /usr/local/pgsql/bin $path )
655 To enable your system to find the man documentation, you need to add a line
656 like the following to a shell start-up file unless you installed into a
657 location that is searched by default.
659 MANPATH=/usr/local/pgsql/man:$MANPATH
662 The environment variables PGHOST and PGPORT specify to client applications the
663 host and port of the database server, overriding the compiled-in defaults. If
664 you are going to run client applications remotely then it is convenient if
665 every user that plans to use the database sets PGHOST. This is not required,
666 however: the settings can be communicated via command line options to most
669 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
673 The following is a quick summary of how to get PostgreSQL up and running once
674 installed. The Administrator's Guide contains more information.
676 1. Create a user account for the PostgreSQL server. This is the user the
677 server will run as. For production use you should create a separate,
678 unprivileged account ("postgres" is commonly used). If you do not have
679 root access or just want to play around, your own user account is enough,
680 but running the server as root is a security risk and will not work.
684 2. Create a database installation with the "initdb" command. To run "initdb"
685 you must be logged in to your PostgreSQL server account. It will not work
688 root# mkdir /usr/local/pgsql/data
689 root# chown postgres /usr/local/pgsql/data
691 postgres$ /usr/local/pgsql/bin/initdb -D /usr/local/pgsql/data
693 The "-D" option specifies the location where the data will be stored. You
694 can use any path you want, it does not have to be under the installation
695 directory. Just make sure that the server account can write to the
696 directory (or create it, if it doesn't already exist) before starting
697 "initdb", as illustrated here.
699 3. The previous step should have told you how to start up the database
700 server. Do so now. The command should look something like
702 /usr/local/pgsql/bin/postmaster -D /usr/local/pgsql/data
704 This will start the server in the foreground. To put the server in the
705 background use something like
707 nohup /usr/local/pgsql/bin/postmaster -D /usr/local/pgsql/data \
708 </dev/null >>server.log 2>&1 </dev/null &
710 To stop a server running in the background you can type
712 kill `cat /usr/local/pgsql/data/postmaster.pid`
714 In order to allow TCP/IP connections (rather than only Unix domain socket
715 ones) you need to pass the "-i" option to "postmaster".
717 4. Create a database:
725 to connect to that database. At the prompt you can enter SQL commands and
728 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
732 * The PostgreSQL distribution contains a comprehensive documentation set,
733 which you should read sometime. After installation, the documentation can
734 be accessed by pointing your browser to "/usr/local/pgsql/doc/html/
735 index.html", unless you changed the installation directories.
736 The Tutorial should be your first reading if you are completely new to
737 SQL databases. If you are familiar with database concepts then you want
738 to proceed with the Administrator's Guide, which contains information
739 about how to set up the database server, database users, and
742 * Usually, you will want to modify your computer so that it will
743 automatically start the database server whenever it boots. Some
744 suggestions for this are in the Administrator's Guide.
746 * Run the regression tests against the installed server (using the
747 sequential test method). If you didn't run the tests before installation,
748 you should definitely do it now. This is also explained in the
749 Administrator's Guide.
751 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
755 PostgreSQL has been verified by the developer community to work on the
756 platforms listed below. A supported platform generally means that PostgreSQL
757 builds and installs according to these instructions and that the regression
759 Note: If you are having problems with the installation on a supported
760 platform, please write to <pgsql-bugs@postgresql.org> or <pgsql-
761 ports@postgresql.org>, not to the people listed here.
762 ________________________________________________________________________________
763 |OS______|Processor__|Version|Reported_________________________|Remarks__________|
764 |AIX |RS6000 |7.3 |2002-11-12, Andreas Zeugswetter |see also doc/ |
765 |________|___________|_______|(<ZeugswetterA@spardat.at>)______|FAQ_AIX__________|
766 |BSD/OS |x86 |7.3 |2002-10-25, Bruce Momjian |4.2 |
767 |________|___________|_______|(<pgman@candle.pha.pa.us>)_______|_________________|
768 |FreeBSD |Alpha |7.3 |2002-11-13, Chris Kings-Lynne | |
769 |________|___________|_______|(<chriskl@familyhealth.com.au>)__|_________________|
770 |FreeBSD |x86 |7.3 |2002-10-29, 3.3, Nigel J. Andrews| |
771 | | | |(<nandrews@investsystems.co.uk>),| |
772 | | | |4.7, Larry Rosenman | |
773 | | | |(<ler@lerctr.org>), 5.0, Sean | |
774 | | | |Chittenden | |
775 |________|___________|_______|(<sean@chittenden.org>)__________|_________________|
776 |HP-UX |PA-RISC |7.3 |2002-10-28, 10.20 Tom Lane |gcc and cc; see |
777 | | | |(<tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>), 11.00, |also doc/FAQ_HPUX|
778 | | | |11.11, 32 & 64 bit, Giles Lean | |
779 |________|___________|_______|(<giles@nemeton.com.au>)_________|_________________|
780 |IRIX |MIPS |7.3 |2002-10-27, Ian Barwick |Irix64 Komma 6.5 |
781 |________|___________|_______|(<barwick@gmx.net>)______________|_________________|
782 |Linux |Alpha |7.3 |2002-10-28, Magnus Naeslund |2.4.19-pre6 |
783 |________|___________|_______|(<mag@fbab.net>)_________________|_________________|
784 |Linux |armv4l |7.2 |2001-12-10, Mark Knox |2.2.x |
785 |________|___________|_______|(<segfault@hardline.org>)________|_________________|
786 |Linux |MIPS |7.2 |2001-11-15, Hisao Shibuya |2.0.x; Cobalt |
787 |________|___________|_______|(<shibuya@alpha.or.jp>)__________|Qube2____________|
788 |Linux |PlayStation|7.2 |2001-12-12, Permaine Cheung |#undef |
789 | |2 | |<pcheung@redhat.com>) |HAS_TEST_AND_SET,|
790 |________|___________|_______|_________________________________|slock_t__________|
791 |Linux |PPC74xx |7.3 |2002-10-26, Tom Lane |bye 2.2.18; Apple|
792 |________|___________|_______|(<tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>)____________|G3_______________|
793 |Linux |S/390 |7.2 |2001-12-12, Permaine Cheung | |
794 |________|___________|_______|<pcheung@redhat.com>)____________|_________________|
795 |Linux |Sparc |7.3 |2002-10-26, Doug McNaught |3.0 |
796 |________|___________|_______|(<doug@mcnaught.org>)____________|_________________|
797 |Linux |x86 |7.3 |2002-10-26, Alvaro Herrera |2.4 |
798 |________|___________|_______|(<alvherre@dcc.uchile.cl>)_______|_________________|
799 |MacOS X |PPC |7.3 |2002-10-28, 10.1, Tom Lane | |
800 | | | |(<tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>), 10.2.1, | |
801 | | | |Adam Witney | |
802 |________|___________|_______|(<awitney@sghms.ac.uk>)__________|_________________|
803 |NetBSD |Alpha |7.2 |2001-11-20, Thomas Thai |1.5W |
804 |________|___________|_______|(<tom@minnesota.com>)____________|_________________|
805 |NetBSD |arm32 |7.3 |2002-11-19, Patrick Welche |1.6 |
806 |________|___________|_______|(<prlw1@newn.cam.ac.uk>)_________|_________________|
807 |NetBSD |m68k |7.0 |2000-04-10, Henry B. Hotz |Mac 8xx |
808 |________|___________|_______|(<hotz@jpl.nasa.gov>)____________|_________________|
809 |NetBSD |MIPS |7.2.1 |2002-06-13, Warwick Hunter |1.5.3 |
810 |________|___________|_______|(<whunter@agile.tv>)_____________|_________________|
811 |NetBSD |PPC |7.2 |2001-11-28, Bill Studenmund |1.5 |
812 |________|___________|_______|(<wrstuden@netbsd.org>)__________|_________________|
813 |NetBSD |Sparc |7.2 |2001-12-03, Matthew Green |32- and 64-bit |
814 |________|___________|_______|(<mrg@eterna.com.au>)____________|builds___________|
815 |NetBSD |VAX |7.1 |2001-03-30, Tom I. Helbekkmo |1.5 |
816 |________|___________|_______|(<tih@kpnQwest.no>)______________|_________________|
817 |NetBSD |x86 |7.3 |2002-11-14, Patrick Welche |1.6 |
818 |________|___________|_______|(<prlw1@newn.cam.ac.uk>)_________|_________________|
819 |OpenBSD |Sparc |7.3 |2002-11-17, Christopher Kings- |3.2 |
821 |________|___________|_______|(<chriskl@familyhealth.com.au>)__|_________________|
822 |OpenBSD |x86 |7.3 |2002-11-14, 3.1 Magnus Naeslund | |
823 | | | |(<mag@fbab.net>), 3.2 Christopher| |
824 | | | |Kings-Lynne | |
825 |________|___________|_______|(<chriskl@familyhealth.com.au>)__|_________________|
826 |Solaris |Sparc |7.3 |2002-10-28, Andrew Sullivan |Solaris 7 & 8; |
827 | | | |(<andrew@libertyrms.info>) |see also doc/ |
828 |________|___________|_______|_________________________________|FAQ_Solaris______|
829 |Solaris |x86 |7.2 |2001-11-28, Martin Renters |2.8; see also |
830 |________|___________|_______|(<martin@datafax.com>)___________|doc/FAQ_Solaris__|
831 |SunOS 4 |Sparc |7.2 |2001-12-04, Tatsuo Ishii (<t- | |
832 |________|___________|_______|ishii@sra.co.jp>)________________|_________________|
833 |Tru64 |Alpha |7.3 |2002-11-05, Alessio Bragadini | |
834 |UNIX____|___________|_______|(<alessio@albourne.com>)_________|_________________|
835 |UnixWare|x86 |7.3 |2002-11-01, 7.1.3 Larry Rosenman |see also doc/ |
836 | | | |(<ler@lerctr.org>), 7.1.1 and |FAQ_SCO |
837 | | | |7.1.2(8.0.0) Olivier Prenant | |
838 |________|___________|_______|(<ohp@pyrenet.fr>)_______________|_________________|
839 |Windows |x86 |7.3 |2002-10-29, Dave Page |with Cygwin; see |
840 | | | |(<dpage@vale-housing.co.uk>), |doc/FAQ_MSWIN |
841 | | | |Jason Tishler | |
842 |________|___________|_______|(<jason@tishler.net>)____________|_________________|
843 |Windows |x86 |7.3 |2002-11-05, Dave Page |native is client-|
844 | | | |(<dpage@vale-housing.co.uk>) |side only; see |
845 | | | | |Administrator's |
846 |________|___________|_______|_________________________________|Guide____________|
848 Unsupported Platforms: The following platforms are either known not to work, or
849 they used to work in a previous release and we did not receive explicit
850 confirmation of a successful test with version 7.3 at the time this list was
851 compiled. We include these here to let you know that these platforms *could* be
852 supported if given some attention.
853 _____________________________________________________________________________
854 |OS__________|Processor|Version|Reported_______________________|Remarks_______|
855 |BeOS |x86 |7.2 |2001-11-29, Cyril Velter |needs updates |
856 | | | |(<cyril.velter@libertysurf.fr>)|to semaphore |
857 |____________|_________|_______|_______________________________|code__________|
858 |DG/UX |m88k |6.3 |1998-03-01, Brian E Gallew |no recent |
859 |5.4R4.11____|_________|_______|(<geek+@cmu.edu>)______________|reports_______|
860 |MkLinux DR1 |PPC750 |7.0 |2001-04-03, Tatsuo Ishii (<t- |7.1 needs OS |
861 |____________|_________|_______|ishii@sra.co.jp>)______________|update?_______|
862 |NeXTSTEP |x86 |6.x |1998-03-01, David Wetzel |bit rot |
863 |____________|_________|_______|(<dave@turbocat.de>)___________|suspected_____|
864 |QNX 4 RTOS |x86 |7.2 |2001-12-10, Bernd Tegge |needs updates |
865 | | | |(<tegge@repas-aeg.de>) |to semaphore |
866 | | | | |code; see also|
867 |____________|_________|_______|_______________________________|doc/FAQ_QNX4__|
868 |QNX RTOS v6 |x86 |7.2 |2001-11-20, Igor Kovalenko |patches |
869 | | | |(<Igor.Kovalenko@motorola.com>)|available in |
870 | | | | |archives, but |
871 | | | | |too late for |
872 |____________|_________|_______|_______________________________|7.2___________|
873 |SCO |x86 |6.5 |1999-05-25, Andrew Merrill |7.2 should |
874 |OpenServer 5| | |(<andrew@compclass.com>) |work, but no |
875 | | | | |reports; see |
877 |____________|_________|_______|_______________________________|FAQ_SCO_______|
878 |System V R4 |m88k |6.2.1 |1998-03-01, Doug Winterburn |needs new TAS |
879 |____________|_________|_______|(<dlw@seavme.xroads.com>)______|spinlock_code_|
880 |System V R4 |MIPS |6.4 |1998-10-28, Frank Ridderbusch |no recent |
881 |____________|_________|_______|(<ridderbusch.pad@sni.de>)_____|reports_______|
882 |Ultrix |MIPS |7.1 |2001-03-26 |TAS spinlock |
884 |____________|_________|_______|_______________________________|detected______|
885 |Ultrix______|VAX______|6.x____|1998-03-01_____________________|______________|