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POSTGRES(1) PostgreSQL 15.4 Documentation POSTGRES(1)
NAME
postgres - PostgreSQL database server
SYNOPSIS
postgres [option...]
DESCRIPTION
postgres is the PostgreSQL database server. In order for a client
application to access a database it connects (over a network or
locally) to a running postgres instance. The postgres instance then
starts a separate server process to handle the connection.
One postgres instance always manages the data of exactly one database
cluster. A database cluster is a collection of databases that is stored
at a common file system location (the "data area"). More than one
postgres instance can run on a system at one time, so long as they use
different data areas and different communication ports (see below).
When postgres starts it needs to know the location of the data area.
The location must be specified by the -D option or the PGDATA
environment variable; there is no default. Typically, -D or PGDATA
points directly to the data area directory created by initdb(1). Other
possible file layouts are discussed in Section 20.2.
By default postgres starts in the foreground and prints log messages to
the standard error stream. In practical applications postgres should be
started as a background process, perhaps at boot time.
The postgres command can also be called in single-user mode. The
primary use for this mode is during bootstrapping by initdb(1).
Sometimes it is used for debugging or disaster recovery; note that
running a single-user server is not truly suitable for debugging the
server, since no realistic interprocess communication and locking will
happen. When invoked in single-user mode from the shell, the user can
enter queries and the results will be printed to the screen, but in a
form that is more useful for developers than end users. In the
single-user mode, the session user will be set to the user with ID 1,
and implicit superuser powers are granted to this user. This user does
not actually have to exist, so the single-user mode can be used to
manually recover from certain kinds of accidental damage to the system
catalogs.
OPTIONS
postgres accepts the following command-line arguments. For a detailed
discussion of the options consult Chapter 20. You can save typing most
of these options by setting up a configuration file. Some (safe)
options can also be set from the connecting client in an
application-dependent way to apply only for that session. For example,
if the environment variable PGOPTIONS is set, then libpq-based clients
will pass that string to the server, which will interpret it as
postgres command-line options.
General Purpose
-B nbuffers
Sets the number of shared buffers for use by the server processes.
The default value of this parameter is chosen automatically by
initdb. Specifying this option is equivalent to setting the
shared_buffers configuration parameter.
-C name
Prints the value of the named run-time parameter, and exits. (See
the -c option above for details.) This returns values from
postgresql.conf, modified by any parameters supplied in this
invocation. It does not reflect parameters supplied when the
cluster was started.
This can be used on a running server for most parameters. However,
the server must be shut down for some runtime-computed parameters
(e.g., shared_memory_size, shared_memory_size_in_huge_pages, and
wal_segment_size).
This option is meant for other programs that interact with a server
instance, such as pg_ctl(1), to query configuration parameter
values. User-facing applications should instead use SHOW or the
pg_settings view.
-d debug-level
Sets the debug level. The higher this value is set, the more
debugging output is written to the server log. Values are from 1 to
5. It is also possible to pass -d 0 for a specific session, which
will prevent the server log level of the parent postgres process
from being propagated to this session.
-D datadir
Specifies the file system location of the database configuration
files. See Section 20.2 for details.
-e
Sets the default date style to "European", that is DMY ordering of
input date fields. This also causes the day to be printed before
the month in certain date output formats. See Section 8.5 for more
information.
-F
Disables fsync calls for improved performance, at the risk of data
corruption in the event of a system crash. Specifying this option
is equivalent to disabling the fsync configuration parameter. Read
the detailed documentation before using this!
-h hostname
Specifies the IP host name or address on which postgres is to
listen for TCP/IP connections from client applications. The value
can also be a comma-separated list of addresses, or * to specify
listening on all available interfaces. An empty value specifies not
listening on any IP addresses, in which case only Unix-domain
sockets can be used to connect to the server. Defaults to listening
only on localhost. Specifying this option is equivalent to setting
the listen_addresses configuration parameter.
-i
Allows remote clients to connect via TCP/IP (Internet domain)
connections. Without this option, only local connections are
accepted. This option is equivalent to setting listen_addresses to
* in postgresql.conf or via -h.
This option is deprecated since it does not allow access to the
full functionality of listen_addresses. It's usually better to set
only TCP/IP sockets can be used to connect to the server. The
default value is normally /tmp, but that can be changed at build
time. Specifying this option is equivalent to setting the
unix_socket_directories configuration parameter.
-l
Enables secure connections using SSL. PostgreSQL must have been
compiled with support for SSL for this option to be available. For
more information on using SSL, refer to Section 19.9.
-N max-connections
Sets the maximum number of client connections that this server will
accept. The default value of this parameter is chosen automatically
by initdb. Specifying this option is equivalent to setting the
max_connections configuration parameter.
-p port
Specifies the TCP/IP port or local Unix domain socket file
extension on which postgres is to listen for connections from
client applications. Defaults to the value of the PGPORT
environment variable, or if PGPORT is not set, then defaults to the
value established during compilation (normally 5432). If you
specify a port other than the default port, then all client
applications must specify the same port using either command-line
options or PGPORT.
-s
Print time information and other statistics at the end of each
command. This is useful for benchmarking or for use in tuning the
number of buffers.
-S work-mem
Specifies the base amount of memory to be used by sorts and hash
tables before resorting to temporary disk files. See the
description of the work_mem configuration parameter in
Section 20.4.1.
-V
--version
Print the postgres version and exit.
--name=value
Sets a named run-time parameter; a shorter form of -c.
--describe-config
This option dumps out the server's internal configuration
variables, descriptions, and defaults in tab-delimited COPY format.
It is designed primarily for use by administration tools.
-?
--help
Show help about postgres command line arguments, and exit.
Semi-Internal Options
The options described here are used mainly for debugging purposes, and
in some cases to assist with recovery of severely damaged databases.
There should be no reason to use them in a production database setup.
They are listed here only for use by PostgreSQL system developers.
Furthermore, these options might change or be removed in a future
respectively.
Neither sequential scans nor nested-loop joins can be disabled
completely; the -fs and -fn options simply discourage the optimizer
from using those plan types if it has any other alternative.
-n
This option is for debugging problems that cause a server process
to die abnormally. The ordinary strategy in this situation is to
notify all other server processes that they must terminate and then
reinitialize the shared memory and semaphores. This is because an
errant server process could have corrupted some shared state before
terminating. This option specifies that postgres will not
reinitialize shared data structures. A knowledgeable system
programmer can then use a debugger to examine shared memory and
semaphore state.
-O
Allows the structure of system tables to be modified. This is used
by initdb.
-P
Ignore system indexes when reading system tables, but still update
the indexes when modifying the tables. This is useful when
recovering from damaged system indexes.
-t pa[rser] | pl[anner] | e[xecutor]
Print timing statistics for each query relating to each of the
major system modules. This option cannot be used together with the
-s option.
-T
This option is for debugging problems that cause a server process
to die abnormally. The ordinary strategy in this situation is to
notify all other server processes that they must terminate and then
reinitialize the shared memory and semaphores. This is because an
errant server process could have corrupted some shared state before
terminating. This option specifies that postgres will stop all
other server processes by sending the signal SIGSTOP, but will not
cause them to terminate. This permits system programmers to collect
core dumps from all server processes by hand.
-v protocol
Specifies the version number of the frontend/backend protocol to be
used for a particular session. This option is for internal use
only.
-W seconds
A delay of this many seconds occurs when a new server process is
started, after it conducts the authentication procedure. This is
intended to give an opportunity to attach to the server process
with a debugger.
Options for Single-User Mode
The following options only apply to the single-user mode (see Single-
User Mode below).
--single
Selects the single-user mode. This must be the first argument on
-E
Echo all commands to standard output before executing them.
-j
Use semicolon followed by two newlines, rather than just newline,
as the command entry terminator.
-r filename
Send all server log output to filename. This option is only honored
when supplied as a command-line option.
ENVIRONMENT
PGCLIENTENCODING
Default character encoding used by clients. (The clients can
override this individually.) This value can also be set in the
configuration file.
PGDATA
Default data directory location
PGDATESTYLE
Default value of the DateStyle run-time parameter. (The use of this
environment variable is deprecated.)
PGPORT
Default port number (preferably set in the configuration file)
DIAGNOSTICS
A failure message mentioning semget or shmget probably indicates you
need to configure your kernel to provide adequate shared memory and
semaphores. For more discussion see Section 19.4. You might be able to
postpone reconfiguring your kernel by decreasing shared_buffers to
reduce the shared memory consumption of PostgreSQL, and/or by reducing
max_connections to reduce the semaphore consumption.
A failure message suggesting that another server is already running
should be checked carefully, for example by using the command
$ ps ax | grep postgres
or
$ ps -ef | grep postgres
depending on your system. If you are certain that no conflicting server
is running, you can remove the lock file mentioned in the message and
try again.
A failure message indicating inability to bind to a port might indicate
that that port is already in use by some non-PostgreSQL process. You
might also get this error if you terminate postgres and immediately
restart it using the same port; in this case, you must simply wait a
few seconds until the operating system closes the port before trying
again. Finally, you might get this error if you specify a port number
that your operating system considers to be reserved. For example, many
versions of Unix consider port numbers under 1024 to be "trusted" and
only permit the Unix superuser to access them.
NOTES
run.
To terminate the postgres server normally, the signals SIGTERM, SIGINT,
or SIGQUIT can be used. The first will wait for all clients to
terminate before quitting, the second will forcefully disconnect all
clients, and the third will quit immediately without proper shutdown,
resulting in a recovery run during restart.
The SIGHUP signal will reload the server configuration files. It is
also possible to send SIGHUP to an individual server process, but that
is usually not sensible.
To cancel a running query, send the SIGINT signal to the process
running that command. To terminate a backend process cleanly, send
SIGTERM to that process. See also pg_cancel_backend and
pg_terminate_backend in Section 9.27.2 for the SQL-callable equivalents
of these two actions.
The postgres server uses SIGQUIT to tell subordinate server processes
to terminate without normal cleanup. This signal should not be used by
users. It is also unwise to send SIGKILL to a server process -- the
main postgres process will interpret this as a crash and will force all
the sibling processes to quit as part of its standard crash-recovery
procedure.
BUGS
The -- options will not work on FreeBSD or OpenBSD. Use -c instead.
This is a bug in the affected operating systems; a future release of
PostgreSQL will provide a workaround if this is not fixed.
SINGLE-USER MODE
To start a single-user mode server, use a command like
postgres --single -D /usr/local/pgsql/data other-options my_database
Provide the correct path to the database directory with -D, or make
sure that the environment variable PGDATA is set. Also specify the name
of the particular database you want to work in.
Normally, the single-user mode server treats newline as the command
entry terminator; there is no intelligence about semicolons, as there
is in psql. To continue a command across multiple lines, you must type
backslash just before each newline except the last one. The backslash
and adjacent newline are both dropped from the input command. Note that
this will happen even when within a string literal or comment.
But if you use the -j command line switch, a single newline does not
terminate command entry; instead, the sequence
semicolon-newline-newline does. That is, type a semicolon immediately
followed by a completely empty line. Backslash-newline is not treated
specially in this mode. Again, there is no intelligence about such a
sequence appearing within a string literal or comment.
In either input mode, if you type a semicolon that is not just before
or part of a command entry terminator, it is considered a command
separator. When you do type a command entry terminator, the multiple
statements you've entered will be executed as a single transaction.
To quit the session, type EOF (Control+D, usually). If you've entered
checkpoints or replication.
EXAMPLES
To start postgres in the background using default values, type:
$ nohup postgres >logfile 2>&1 </dev/null &
To start postgres with a specific port, e.g., 1234:
$ postgres -p 1234
To connect to this server using psql, specify this port with the -p
option:
$ psql -p 1234
or set the environment variable PGPORT:
$ export PGPORT=1234
$ psql
Named run-time parameters can be set in either of these styles:
$ postgres -c work_mem=1234
$ postgres --work-mem=1234
Either form overrides whatever setting might exist for work_mem in
postgresql.conf. Notice that underscores in parameter names can be
written as either underscore or dash on the command line. Except for
short-term experiments, it's probably better practice to edit the
setting in postgresql.conf than to rely on a command-line switch to set
a parameter.
SEE ALSO
initdb(1), pg_ctl(1)
PostgreSQL 15.4 2023 POSTGRES(1)