I experienced this issue when working with PostgreSQL on Ubuntu 18.04.
I checked my PostgreSQL
status and realized that it was running fine using:
sudo systemctl status postgresql
I also tried restarting the PotgreSQL
server on the machine using:
sudo systemctl restart postgresql
but the issue persisted:
psql: could not connect to server: No such file or directory
Is the server running locally and accepting
connections on Unix domain socket "/var/run/postgresql/.s.PGSQL.5432"?
Following Noushad’ answer I did the following:
List all the Postgres clusters running on your device:
pg_lsclusters
this gave me this output in red colour, showing that they were all down and the status also showed down:
Ver Cluster Port Status Owner Data directory Log file
10 main 5432 down postgres /var/lib/postgresql/10/main /var/log/postgresql/postgresql-10-main.log
11 main 5433 down postgres /var/lib/postgresql/11/main /var/log/postgresql/postgresql-11-main.log
12 main 5434 down postgres /var/lib/postgresql/12/main /var/log/postgresql/postgresql-12-main.log
Restart the pg_ctlcluster for one of the server clusters. For me I restarted PG 10:
sudo pg_ctlcluster 10 main start
It however threw the error below, and the same error occurred when I tried restarting other PG clusters:
Job for postgresql@10-main.service failed because the service did not take the steps required by its unit configuration.
See "systemctl status postgresql@10-main.service" and "journalctl -xe" for details.
Check the log for errors, in this case mine is PG 10:
sudo nano /var/log/postgresql/postgresql-10-main.log
I saw the following error:
2020-09-29 02:27:06.445 WAT [25041] FATAL: data directory "/var/lib/postgresql/10/main" has group or world access
2020-09-29 02:27:06.445 WAT [25041] DETAIL: Permissions should be u=rwx (0700).
pg_ctl: could not start server
Examine the log output.
This was caused because I made changes to the file permissions for the PostgreSQL data directory.
I fixed it by running the command below. I ran the command for the 3 PG clusters on my machine:
sudo chmod -R 0700 /var/lib/postgresql/10/main
sudo chmod -R 0700 /var/lib/postgresql/11/main
sudo chmod -R 0700 /var/lib/postgresql/12/main
Afterwhich I restarted each of the PG clusters:
sudo pg_ctlcluster 10 main start
sudo pg_ctlcluster 11 main start
sudo pg_ctlcluster 12 main start
And then finally I checked the health of clusters again:
pg_lsclusters
this time around everything was fine again as the status showed online:
Ver Cluster Port Status Owner Data directory Log file
10 main 5432 online postgres /var/lib/postgresql/10/main /var/log/postgresql/postgresql-10-main.log
11 main 5433 online postgres /var/lib/postgresql/11/main /var/log/postgresql/postgresql-11-main.log
12 main 5434 online postgres /var/lib/postgresql/12/main /var/log/postgresql/postgresql-12-main.log
That’s all.
I hope this helps
I have struggled with this when trying to remotely connect to a new PostgreSQL installation on my Raspberry Pi. Here’s the full breakdown of what I did to resolve this issue:
First, open the PostgreSQL configuration file and make sure that the service is going to listen outside of localhost.
sudo [editor] /etc/postgresql/[version]/main/postgresql.conf
I used nano
, but you can use the editor of your choice, and while I have version 9.1
installed, that directory will be for whichever version you have installed.
Search down to the section titled ‘Connections and Authentication’. The first setting should be 'listen_addresses'
, and might look like this:
#listen_addresses = 'localhost' # what IP address(es) to listen on;
The comments to the right give good instructions on how to change this field, and using the suggested '*'
for all will work well.
Please note that this field is commented out with #. Per the comments, it will default to ‘localhost’, so just changing the value to '*'
isn’t enough, you also need to uncomment the setting by removing the leading #
.
It should now look like this:
listen_addresses = '*' # what IP address(es) to listen on;
You can also check the next setting, ‘port’, to make sure that you’re connecting correctly. 5432 is the default, and is the port that psql will try to connect to if you don’t specify one.
Save and close the file, then open the Client Authentication config file, which is in the same directory:
sudo [editor] /etc/postgresql/[version]/main/pg_hba.conf
I recommend reading the file if you want to restrict access, but for basic open connections you’ll jump to the bottom of the file and add a line like this:
host all all all md5
You can press tab instead of space to line the fields up with the existing columns if you like.
Personally, I instead added a row that looked like this:
host [database_name] pi 192.168.1.0/24 md5
This restricts the connection to just the one user and just the one database on the local area network subnet.
Once you’ve saved changes to the file you will need to restart the service to implement the changes.
sudo service postgresql restart
Now you can check to make sure that the service is openly listening on the correct port by using the following command:
sudo netstat -ltpn
If you don’t run it as elevated (using sudo
) it doesn’t tell you the names of the processes listening on those ports.
One of the processes should be Postgres, and the Local Address should be open (0.0.0.0) and not restricted to local traffic only (127.0.0.1). If it isn’t open, then you’ll need to double check your config files and restart the service. You can again confirm that the service is listening on the correct port (default is 5432
, but your configuration could be different).
Finally you’ll be able to successfully connect from a remote computer using the command:
psql -h [server ip address] -p [port number, optional if 5432] -U [postgres user name] [database name]
Actually, I installed PostgreSQL 9.4 (with postGIS extension), and when installed, everything used to work fine.
As said on many tuts, I’ve set the /data folder, checked configuration files, and so on. Worked on other projects so I did not work on psql for a while But when installation was done, it used to work correctly, I made a test database, initialized postgres user, etc.
Now, I try to start psql (with «default» postgres user) and cannot connect! Start/stop/restart service do not change anything…
Result of «psql» command (with postgres user) :
psql: could not connect to server: No such file or directory
Is the server running locally and accepting connections on Unix domain socket "/var/run/postgresql/.s.PGSQL.5432"?
When I check service status, I get this :
postgresql.service - PostgreSQL RDBMS
Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/postgresql.service; enabled)
Active: active (exited) since tue 2016-05-24 09:24:13 CEST; 3s ago
Process: 5658 ExecStart=/bin/true (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
Main PID: 5658 (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
Starting/Stopping/Restarting service with command
sudo service postgresql start (or restart or stop)
Does not change anything to actual system behaviour..
Log says:
DETAIL: Permissions should be u=rwx (0700).
FATAL: data directory "/var/lib/postgresql/9.4/main" has group or world access
This issue comes from installing the postgres
package without a version number. Although postgres
will be installed and it will be the correct version, the script to setup the cluster will not run correctly; it’s a packaging issue.
If you’re comfortable with postgres
there is a script you can run to create this cluster and get postgres
running. However, there’s an easier way.
First purge the old postgres install, which will remove everything of the old installation, including databases, so back up your databases first.. The issue currently lies with 9.1 so I will assume that’s what you have installed
sudo apt-get remove --purge postgresql-9.1
Now simply reinstall
sudo apt-get install postgresql-9.1
Note the package name with the version number. HTH.
Thomas Ward♦
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answered Aug 19, 2013 at 23:54
StewartStewart
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3
The error message refers to a Unix-domain socket, so you need to tweak your netstat
invocation to not exclude them. So try it without the option -t
:
netstat -nlp | grep 5432
I would guess that the server is actually listening on the socket /tmp/.s.PGSQL.5432
rather than the /var/run/postgresql/.s.PGSQL.5432
that your client is attempting to connect to. This is a typical problem when using hand-compiled or third-party PostgreSQL packages on Debian or Ubuntu, because the source default for the Unix-domain socket directory is /tmp
but the Debian packaging changes it to /var/run/postgresql
.
Possible workarounds:
- Use the clients supplied by your third-party package (call
/opt/djangostack-1.3-0/postgresql/bin/psql
). Possibly uninstall the Ubuntu-supplied packages altogether (might be difficult because of other reverse dependencies). - Fix the socket directory of the third-party package to be compatible with Debian/Ubuntu.
- Use
-H localhost
to connect via TCP/IP instead. - Use
-h /tmp
or equivalentPGHOST
setting to point to the right directory. - Don’t use third-party packages.
answered Jun 27, 2011 at 17:41
3
This works for me:
Edit: postgresql.conf
sudo nano /etc/postgresql/9.3/main/postgresql.conf
Enable or add:
listen_addresses = '*'
Restart the database engine:
sudo service postgresql restart
Also, you can check the file pg_hba.conf
sudo nano /etc/postgresql/9.3/main/pg_hba.conf
And add your network or host address:
host all all 192.168.1.0/24 md5
Zanna♦
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answered Oct 9, 2014 at 13:17
angelousangelous
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6
You can use psql -U postgres -h localhost
to force the connection to happen over TCP instead of UNIX domain sockets; your netstat
output shows that the PostgreSQL server is listening on localhost’s port 5432.
You can find out which local UNIX socket is used by the PostgrSQL server by using a different invocavtion of netstat:
netstat -lp --protocol=unix | grep postgres
At any rate, the interfaces on which the PostgreSQL server listens to are configured in postgresql.conf
.
answered Jun 26, 2011 at 12:51
Riccardo MurriRiccardo Murri
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0
Just create a softlink like this :
ln -s /tmp/.s.PGSQL.5432 /var/run/postgresql/.s.PGSQL.5432
answered Jul 9, 2012 at 1:35
UrielUriel
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4
I make it work by doing this:
dpkg-reconfigure locales
Choose your preferred locales then run
pg_createcluster 9.5 main --start
(9.5 is my version of postgresql)
/etc/init.d/postgresql start
and then it works!
sudo su - postgres
psql
Zanna♦
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answered Sep 13, 2016 at 9:05
mymusisemymusise
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2
I had to compile PostgreSQL 8.1 on Debian Squeeze because I am using Project Open, which is based on OpenACS and will not run on more recent versions of PostgreSQL.
The default compile configuration puts the unix_socket
in /tmp
, but Project Open, which relies on PostgreSQL, would not work because it looks for the unix_socket
at /var/run/postgresql
.
There is a setting in postgresql.conf
to set the location of the socket. My problem was that either I could set for /tmp
and psql
worked, but not project open, or I could set it for /var/run/postgresql
and psql
would not work but project open did.
One resolution to the issue is to set the socket for /var/run/postgresql
and then run psql
, based on Peter’s suggestion, as:
psql -h /var/run/postgresql
This runs locally using local permissions. The only drawback is that it is more typing than simply «psql».
The other suggestion that someone made was to create a symbolic link between the two locations. This also worked, but, the link disappeared upon reboot. It maybe easier to just use the -h argument, however, I created the symbolic link from within the PostgreSQL script in /etc/init.d
. I placed the symbolic link create command in the «start» section. Of course, when I issue a stop and start or restart command, it will try to recreate an existing symbolic link, but other than warning message, there is probably no harm in that.
In my case, instead of:
ln -s /tmp/.s.PGSQL.5432 /var/run/postgresql/.s.PGSQL.5432
I have
ln -s /var/run/postgresql/.s.PGSQL.5432 /tmp/.s.PGSQL.5432
and have explicitly set the unix_socket to /var/run/postgresql/.s.PGSQL.5432
in postgresql.conf
.
Peachy
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answered Nov 6, 2012 at 3:22
JoeJoe
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1
If your Postgres service is up and running without any error or there is no error in starting the Postgres service and still you are getting the mentioned error, follow these steps
Step1: Running pg_lsclusters
will list all the postgres clusters running on your device
eg:
Ver Cluster Port Status Owner Data directory Log file
9.6 main 5432 online postgres /var/lib/postgresql/9.6/main /var/log/postgresql/postgresql-9.6-main.log
most probably the status will be down in your case and postgres service
Step 2: Restart the pg_ctlcluster
#format is pg_ctlcluster <version> <cluster> <action>
sudo pg_ctlcluster 9.6 main start
#restart postgresql service
sudo service postgresql restart
Step 3: Step 2 failed and threw error
If this process is not successful it will throw an error. You can see the error log on /var/log/postgresql/postgresql-9.6-main.log
My error was:
FATAL: could not access private key file "/etc/ssl/private/ssl-cert-snakeoil.key": Permission denied
Try adding `postgres` user to the group `ssl-cert`
Step 4: check ownership of postgres
Make sure that postgres
is the owner of /var/lib/postgresql/version_no/main
If not, run
sudo chown postgres -R /var/lib/postgresql/9.6/main/
Step 5: Check postgres user belongs to ssl-cert user group
It turned out that I had erroneously removed the Postgres user from the ssl-cert
group. Run the below code to fix the user group issue and fix the permissions
#set user to group back with
sudo gpasswd -a postgres ssl-cert
# Fix ownership and mode
sudo chown root:ssl-cert /etc/ssl/private/ssl-cert-snakeoil.key
sudo chmod 740 /etc/ssl/private/ssl-cert-snakeoil.key
# now postgresql starts! (and install command doesn't fail anymore)
sudo service postgresql restart
answered Apr 16, 2018 at 14:44
NoushadNoushad
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1
I found uninstalling Postgres sounds unconvincing.
This helps to solve my problem:
-
Start the postgres server:
sudo systemctl start postgresql
-
Make sure that the server starts on boot:
sudo systemctl enable postgresql
Detail information can be found on DigitalOcean site Here.
answered Feb 1, 2018 at 15:45
parladparlad
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Solution:
Do this
export LC_ALL="en_US.UTF-8"
and this. (9.3 is my current PostgreSQL version. Write your version!)
sudo pg_createcluster 9.3 main --start
answered Feb 23, 2016 at 21:47
1
In my case it was caused by a typo I made while editing /etc/postgresql/9.5/main/pg_hba.conf
I changed:
# Database administrative login by Unix domain socket
local all postgres peer
to:
# Database administrative login by Unix domain socket
local all postgres MD5
But MD5
had to be lowercase md5
:
# Database administrative login by Unix domain socket
local all postgres md5
answered Nov 29, 2016 at 10:15
1
I failed to solve this problem with my postgres-9.5 server. After 3 days of zero progress trying every permutation of fix on this and other sites I decided to re-install the server and lose 5 days worth of work. But, I did replicate the issue on the new instance. This might provide some perspective on how to fix it before you take the catastrophic approach I did.
First, disable all logging settings in postgresql.conf. This is the section:
# ERROR REPORTING AND LOGGING
Comment out everything in that section. Then restart the service.
When restarting, use /etc/init.d/postgresql start
or restart
I found it helpful to be in superuser mode while restarting. I had a x-window open just for that operation. You can establish that superuser mode with sudo -i
.
Verify that the server can be reached with this simple command: psql -l -U postgres
If that doesn’t fix it, then consider this:
I was changing the ownership on many folders while trying to find a solution. I knew that I’d probably be trying to revert those folder ownerships and chmod
s for 2 more days. If you have already messed with those folder ownerships and don’t want to completely purge your server, then start tracking the settings for all impacted folders to bring them back to the original state. You might want to try to do a parallel install on another system and systematically check the ownership and settings of all folders. Tedious, but you may be able to get access to your data.
Once you do gain access, systematically change each relevant line in the # ERROR REPORTING AND LOGGING
section of the postgresql.conf
file. Restart and test. I found that the default folder for the logs was causing a failure. I specifically commented out log_directory
. The default folder the system drops the logs into is then /var/log/postgresql
.
Zanna♦
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answered Jan 19, 2017 at 1:34
Possibly it could have happened because you changed the permissions of the /var/lib/postgresql/9.3/main
folder.
Try changing it to 700 using the command below:
sudo chmod 700 main
Zanna♦
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answered Nov 6, 2014 at 13:01
This is not exactly related to the question since I’m using Flask, but this was the exact error I was getting and this was the most relevant thread to get ideas.
My setup: Windows Subsystem for Linux, Docker-compose w/ makefile w/ dockerfile, Flask, Postgresql (using a schema consisting of tables)
To connect to postgres, setup your connection string like this:
from flask import Flask
app = Flask(__name__)
app.config['SQLALCHEMY_DATABASE_URI'] = "postgresql+psycopg2://<user>:<password>@<container_name_in_docker-compose.yml>/<database_name>"
NOTE: I never got any IP (e.g. localhost, 127.0.0.1) to work using any method in this thread. Idea for using the container name instead of localhost came from here: https://github.com/docker-library/postgres/issues/297
Set your schema:
from sqlalchemy import MetaData
db = SQLAlchemy(app, metadata=MetaData(schema="<schema_name>"))
Set your search path for your functions when you setup your session:
db.session.execute("SET search_path TO <schema_name>")
answered Mar 29, 2019 at 21:30
The most upvoted answer isn’t even remotely correct because you can see in the question the server is running on the expected port (he shows this with netstat).
While the OP did not mark the other answer as chosen, they commented that the other answer (which makes sense and works) was sufficient,
But for these reasons that solution is poor and insecure even if it the server wasn’t running on port 5432:
What you’re doing here when you say --purge
is you’re deleting the configuration file for PostgreSQL ((as well as all of the data with the database. You or may not even see a warning about this, but here is the warning just to show you now,
Removing the PostgreSQL server package will leave existing database clusters intact, i.e. their configuration, data, and log directories will not be removed. On purging the package, the directories can optionally be removed. Remove PostgreSQL directories when package is purged? [prompt for yes or no]
When you add it again PostgreSQL is reinstalling it to a port number that’s not taken (which may be the port number you expect). Before you even try this solution, you need to answer a few questions along the same line:
- Do I want multiple versions of PostgreSQL on my machine?
- Do I want an older version of PostgreSQL?
- What do I want to happen when I
dist-upgrade
and there is a newer version?
Currently when you dist-upgrade
on Ubuntu (and any Debian variant), the new version of PostgreSQL is installed alongside the old copy and the port number on the new copy is the port number of the old copy + 1. So you can just start it up, increment the port number in your client and you’ve got a new install! And you have the old install to fall back on — it’s safe!
However, if you only one want version of PostgreSQL purging to change the configuration is still not the right option because it will destroy your database. The only time this could even be acceptable is you want to destroy everything related to PostgreSQL. You’re better off ensuring your database is correct and then merely editing the configuration file so the new install runs on the old port number
#!/bin/bash
# We can find the version number of the newest PostgreSQL with this
VERSION=$(dpkg-query -W -f "\${Version}" 'postgresql' | sed -e's/+.*//')
PGCONF="/etc/postgresql/${VERSION}/main/postgresql.conf"
# Then we can update the port.
sudo sed -ie '/port = /s/.*/port = 5432/' "$PGCONF"
sudo systemctl restart postgresql
Do not install a specific version of PostgreSQL. Only ever install postgresql
. If you install a specific version then when you dist-upgrade
your version will simply remain on your computer forever without upgrades. The repo will no longer have the security patches for the old version (which they don’t support). This must always be suboptimal to getting a newer version that they do support, running on a different port number.
answered Aug 4, 2021 at 18:30
Evan CarrollEvan Carroll
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I had the exact same problem Peter Eisentraut described. Using the netstat -nlp | grep 5432
command, I could see the server was listening on socket /tmp/.s.PGSQL.5432
.
To fix this, just edit your postgresql.conf
file and change the following lines:
listen_addresses = '*'
unix_socket_directories = '/var/run/postgresql'
Now run service postgresql-9.4 restart
(Replace 9-4 with your version), and remote connections should be working now.
Now to allow local connections, simply create a symbolic link to the /var/run/postgresql
directory.
ln -s /var/run/postgresql/.s.PGSQL.5432 /tmp/.s.PGSQL.5432
Don’t forget to make sure your pg_hba.conf
is correctly configured too.
answered Nov 20, 2015 at 16:44
In my case, all i had to do was this:
sudo service postgresql restart
and then
sudo -u postgres psql
This worked just fine.
Hope it helps.
Cheers .
answered Jun 29, 2017 at 17:21
Find your file:
sudo find /tmp/ -name .s.PGSQL.5432
Result:
/tmp/.s.PGSQL.5432
Login as postgres user:
su postgres
psql -h /tmp/ yourdatabase
Zanna♦
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answered Jan 30, 2017 at 15:18
I had the same problem (on Ubuntu 15.10 (wily)). sudo find / -name 'pg_hba.conf' -print
or sudo find / -name 'postgresql.conf' -print
turned up empty. Before that it seemed that multiple instances of postgresql were installed.
You might have similar when you see as installed, or dependency problems listing
.../postgresql
.../postgresql-9.x
and so on.
In that case you must sudo apt-get autoremove
each package 1 by 1.
Then following this to the letter and you will be fine. Especially when it comes to key importing and adding to source list FIRST
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get -y install python-software-properties && wget --quiet -O - https://www.postgresql.org/media/keys/ACCC4CF8.asc | sudo apt-key add -
If not using wily, replace wily
with your release, i.e with the output of lsb_release -cs
sudo sh -c 'echo "deb http://apt.postgresql.org/pub/repos/apt/ wily-pgdg main" >> /etc/apt/sources.list.d/postgresql.list'
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install postgresql-9.3 pgadmin3
And then you should be fine and be able to connect and create users.
Expected output:
Creating new cluster 9.3/main ...
config /etc/postgresql/9.3/main
data /var/lib/postgresql/9.3/main
locale en_US.UTF-8
socket /var/run/postgresql
port 5432
Source of my solutions (credits)
Zanna♦
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answered Feb 5, 2016 at 16:43
While having the same issue I tried something different:
Starting the postgresql daemon manually I got:
FATAL: could not create shared memory segment ...
To reduce the request size (currently 57237504 bytes), reduce PostgreSQL's
shared memory usage, perhaps by reducing shared_buffers or max_connections.
So what I did was to set a lower limit for shared_buffers
and max_connections
into postgresql.conf
and restart
the service.
This fixed the problem!
Here’s the full error log:
$ sudo service postgresql start
* Starting PostgreSQL 9.1 database server * The PostgreSQL server failed to start. Please check the log output:
2013-06-26 15:05:11 CEST FATAL: could not create shared memory segment: Invalid argument
2013-06-26 15:05:11 CEST DETAIL: Failed system call was shmget(key=5432001, size=57237504, 03600).
2013-06-26 15:05:11 CEST HINT: This error usually means that PostgreSQL's request for a shared memory segment exceeded your kernel's SHMMAX parameter. You can either reduce the request size or reconfigure the kernel with larger SHMMAX. To reduce the request size (currently 57237504 bytes), reduce PostgreSQL's shared memory usage, perhaps by reducing shared_buffers or max_connections.
If the request size is already small, it's possible that it is less than your kernel's SHMMIN parameter, in which case raising the request size or reconfiguring SHMMIN is called for.
The PostgreSQL documentation contains more information about shared memory configuration.
Zanna♦
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answered Jun 26, 2013 at 13:29
After many exhausting attempts, I found the solution based on other posts!
dpkg -l | grep postgres
apt-get --purge remove <package-founded-1> <package-founded-2>
whereis postgres
whereis postgresql
sudo rm -rf <paths-founded>
sudo userdel -f postgres
Kevin Bowen
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answered Apr 22, 2019 at 23:46
1
-
Check the status of
postgresql
:service postgresql status
If it shows online, proceed to step no 3 else execute step no 2.
-
To make
postgresql
online, execute the following command:sudo service postgresql start
Now check the status by running the command of the previous step. It should show online.
-
To start
psql
session, execute the following command:sudo su postreg
-
Finally, check if it’s working or not by executing:
psql
answered May 29, 2021 at 12:21
Restart postgresql by using the command
sudo /opt/bitnami/ctlscript.sh restart postgresql
answered Apr 26, 2022 at 9:41
This error could mean a lot of different things.
In my case, I was running PostgreSQL 12
on a virtual machine.
I had changed the shared_buffer
config and apparently, the system administrator edited the memory config for the virtual machine reducing the RAM allocation from where it was to below what I had set for the shared_buffer
.
I figured that out by looking at the log in
/var/log/postgresql/postgresql-12-main.log
and after that I restarted the service using
sudo systemctl restart postgresql.service
that’s how it worked
answered Jun 30, 2022 at 9:47
Create postgresql directory inside run and then run the following command.
ln -s /tmp/.s.PGSQL.5432 /var/run/postgresql/.s.PGSQL.5432
answered Apr 26, 2019 at 5:35
1
Simply add /tmp unix_socket_directories
postgresql.conf
unix_socket_directories = '/var/run/postgresql,/tmp'
answered Jun 17, 2019 at 1:00
2
I had this problem with another port. The problem was, that I had a system variable in /etc/environments
with the following value:
PGPORT=54420
As I removed it (and restarted), psql was able to connect.
answered Jul 18, 2021 at 14:46
BevorBevor
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Сейчас столкнулся с тем же самым и стал гуглить, нашел этот вопрос. Потом вспомнил, что часом ранее редактировал файл start.conf, который находится в /etc/postgresql/дальше сами найдете)
В общем, я хотел, чтобы постгрес не запускался при старте машины, чтобы я мог запускать его через сервис пострес старт и поменял в том файле auto на manual, перезагрузил, смотрю — пострес не запустился, отлично. Но потом случился сабж. Потом поменял обратно на авто, опять перезагрузка, и проблема решилась. Возможно, кроме запуска сервиса нужно еще что-то запустить, чтобы все хорошо работало, этого уж я не знаю, не лютый линуксоид)
Обновление 17.07.2019
После перезагрузки компа столкнулся с тем же самым. Залез в логи, там прямым текстом написано
2019-07-17 15:12:07.950 MSK [547] ВАЖНО: для каталога данных «/var/lib/postgresql/11/main» установлены неправильные права доступа
2019-07-17 15:12:07.950 MSK [547] ПОДРОБНОСТИ: Маска прав должна быть u=rwx (0700) или u=rwx,g=rx (0750).
pg_ctl: не удалось запустить сервер
Изучите протокол выполнения.
Зачмодил каталог, и все заработало.