My application uses the blazer gem for visualizing DB queries.
During the setup I've encountered the following error:
FATAL: no pg_hba.conf entry for host "111.22.33.44", user "blazer", database "my_db", SSL off
My application is hosted on EngineYard and uses PostgreSQL.
How can I find and modify the pg_hba.conf on EngineYard?
upd
I do have SSH access to EngineYard cloud.
Instance: General Purpose (M3) Large.
OS: EngineYard's Gentoo.
You can try the following steps. I've assumed that your DB name is my_db.
Connect to the instance via SSH (the link can be found on the EngineYard environment page)
Connect to the
database as superuser psql -U postgres -h localhost -d
my_db. If you don't have the password, check your database secrets here /data/my_db/current/config/database.yml
After connecting to DB identify location of hba file by typing SHOW
hba_file;
Quit psql by typing \q
Use previously identified path to open the hba_file file and add the missing user. E.g via vim sudo vim /db/postgresql/9.5/data/pg_hba.conf. Note the sudo command
The use should be added under # IPv4 postgres
user for 10.x with md5:
Connect to the database again
Reload the configuration via select pg_reload_conf(); command
After all steps are performed, Blazer queries should be accessible.
I'm running boot2docker on OSX 10.10. I have a database container set up so my databases don't get reset every time I start/stop a container. I would like to import a dump of a postgres database from heroku into my docker database. Is this possible to do?
I ended up finding this out with the help of a coworker. It's a little bit harder than just a regular old postgres database, but not much. This is based off this stackoverflow answer.
Generate your heroku database dump download url: heroku pgbackups:url
Start a bash shell on your postgres container. On my system this container was named pg: fig run db bash
Install curl: apt-get update && apt-get install curl
Download the database dump using curl: curl -o latest.dump [PASTE THE OUTPUT OF STEP 1 HERE]
Import the dump (note, database name and username can be found in fig.yml and database.yml respectively): pg_restore --verbose --clean --no-acl --no-owner -h [YOUR BOOT2DOCKER IP] -U [YOUR_USERNAME] -d [DATABASE_NAME] latest.dump
And there you have it!
If the last step fails with some kind of invalid database error, double check latest.dump with head latest.dump. If you feel like your database is not downloading correctly, you may want to manually download it via the web gui and upload it to another host, like drop box. Then you would substitute step 1 with whatever url your dump can be found at.
I have setup Laravel and trying to run the artisan migrate command however I am getting the error below
[PDOException] SQLSTATE[HY000] [2002] Connection refused.
I am not sure how db is setup in Homestead. So I got the below questions.
Is default database created automatically by artisan migrate or Homestead?
If it is, what is the name of it?
If its not created by default, should we create before running migration?
I tried logging in to MySQL db by connecting to Homestead VM using ssh and then running MySQL. However I get error Access denied for user.... for user name vagrant, Homestead and forge.
What is the default credentials?
I understand that creating MySQL db is out of the scope of Laravel tutorial; So it would be helpful if anyone can answer these questions and point me in right direction.
Homestead comes with a default database called homestead. Your app can either choose to hook into that database, or you will have to go and make a new database manually. You can either use a GUI (like Sequel Pro on Mac) or perform it via the command line through Vagrant.
// SSH into the box
vagrant ssh
// Connect to MySQL as the homestead user (password is: secret)
mysql -u homestead -p
// Create a new database in MySQL
CREATE DATABASE your_app_name;
// Leave MySQL
exit;
You can then migrate the database as usual, php artisan migrate.
If you need to do this with Postgres instead, it's pretty similar.
// Connect to Postgres (password is: secret)
psql -U homestead -h localhost
// Create a new database in Postgres
CREATE DATABASE your_app_name;
// Leave Postgres
\q
I'm a postgres novice.
I installed the postgres.app for mac. I was playing around with the psql commands and I accidentally dropped the postgres database. I don't know what was in it.
I'm currently working on a tutorial: http://www.rosslaird.com/blog/building-a-project-with-mezzanine/
And I'm stuck at sudo -u postgres psql postgres
ERROR MESSAGE: psql: FATAL: role "postgres" does not exist
$ which psql
/Applications/Postgres.app/Contents/MacOS/bin/psql
This is what prints out of psql -l
List of databases
Name | Owner | Encoding | Collate | Ctype | Access privileges
------------+------------+----------+---------+-------+---------------------------
user | user | UTF8 | en_US | en_US |
template0 | user | UTF8 | en_US | en_US | =c/user +
| | | | | user =CTc/user
template1 | user | UTF8 | en_US | en_US | =c/user +
| | | | | user =CTc/user
(3 rows)
So what are the steps I should take? Delete an everything related to psql and reinstall everything?
Thanks for the help guys!
NOTE: If you installed postgres using homebrew, see the comment from #user3402754 below.
Note that the error message does NOT talk about a missing database, it talks about a missing role. Later in the login process it might also stumble over the missing database.
But the first step is to check the missing role: What is the output within psql of the command \du ? On my Ubuntu system the relevant line looks like this:
List of roles
Role name | Attributes | Member of
-----------+-----------------------------------+-----------
postgres | Superuser, Create role, Create DB | {}
If there is not at least one role with superuser, then you have a problem :-)
If there is one, you can use that to login. And looking at the output of your \l command: The permissions for user on the template0 and template1 databases are the same as on my Ubuntu system for the superuser postgres. So I think your setup simple uses user as the superuser. So you could try this command to login:
sudo -u user psql user
If user is really the DB superuser you can create another DB superuser and a private, empty database for him:
CREATE USER postgres SUPERUSER;
CREATE DATABASE postgres WITH OWNER postgres;
But since your postgres.app setup does not seem to do this, you also should not. Simple adapt the tutorial.
For MAC:
Install Homebrew
brew install postgres
initdb /usr/local/var/postgres
/usr/local/Cellar/postgresql/<version>/bin/createuser -s postgres or /usr/local/opt/postgres/bin/createuser -s postgres which will just use the latest version.
start postgres server manually: pg_ctl -D /usr/local/var/postgres start
To start server at startup
mkdir -p ~/Library/LaunchAgents
ln -sfv /usr/local/opt/postgresql/*.plist ~/Library/LaunchAgents
launchctl load ~/Library/LaunchAgents/homebrew.mxcl.postgresql.plist
Now, it is set up, login using psql -U postgres -h localhost or use PgAdmin for GUI.
By default user postgres will not have any login password.
Check this site for more articles like this: https://medium.com/#Nithanaroy/installing-postgres-on-mac-18f017c5d3f7
The key is "I installed the postgres.app for mac." This application sets up the local PostgreSQL installation with a database superuser whose role name is the same as your login (short) name.
When Postgres.app first starts up, it creates the $USER database,
which is the default database for psql when none is specified. The
default user is $USER, with no password.
Some scripts (e.g., a database backup created with pgdump on a Linux systsem) and tutorials will assume the superuser has the traditional role name of postgres.
You can make your local install look a bit more traditional and avoid these problems by doing a one time:
/Applications/Postgres.app/Contents/Versions/9.*/bin/createuser -s postgres
which will make those FATAL: role "postgres" does not exist go away.
createuser postgres --interactive
or make a superuser postgresl just with
createuser postgres -s
And if you are here in 2023 and wondering what works with the latest Postgres on the latest macOS (macOS Monterey )
follow this:
brew install postgresql
createuser -s postgres
brew services restart postgresql
This happens when you run initdb with a user whose ID is not postgres, without specifying the postgres username with --username=postgres or -U postgres.
The database cluster is then created with the system's user account that you used to run initdb, and it is given superuser permissions.
To fix it, simply create a new user named postgres with the option --superuser using the createuser utility that comes with Postgres. The utility can be found in the Postgres' bin directory. e.g.
createuser --superuser postgres
If you have a custom hostname or port then be sure to set the appropriate options.
Don't forget to delete the other user account that was created for you by initdb.
If you installed postgres from brew, run this in your terminal :
/usr/local/opt/postgres/bin/createuser -s postgres
First you need create a user:
sudo -u postgres createuser --superuser $USER
After you create a database:
sudo -u postgres createdb $USER
Change $USER to your system username.
You can see the the complete solution here.
I needed to unset $PGUSER:
$ unset PGUSER
$ createuser -s postgres
For me, this code worked:
/Applications/Postgres.app/Contents/Versions/9.4/bin/createuser -s postgres
it came from here:
http://talk.growstuff.org/t/fatal-role-postgres-does-not-exist/216/4
If you installed postgres from Brew and are using an Apple Silicon (M1) mac, run this in your terminal:
/opt/homebrew/opt/postgresql/bin/createuser -s postgres
If you're using an Intel (x86) mac, run this in your terminal:
/usr/local/opt/postgres/bin/createuser -s postgres
Running this on the command line should fix it
/Applications/Postgres.app/Contents/Versions/9.4/bin/createdb <Mac OSX Username Here>
This article helped me to solve same issue psql: FATAL: role “postgres” does not exist.
I am using mac, so I entered this command in terminal:
createuser -s postgres
And it worked for me.
This worked for me
createuser -s postgres
note: I'm using mac catalina
If you're using docker, make sure you're NOT using POSTGRES_USER=something_else, as this variable is used by the standard image to know the name of the PostgreSQL admin user (default as postgres).
In my case, I was using this variable with the intent to set another user to my specific database, but it ended up of course changing the main PostgreSQL user.
We have a db named postgres after brew install postgresql and brew services start postgresql. So we can open psql like this by default.
psql postgres
And then we can add users with any name like this in that psql console.
CREATE USER postgres
And if we want a super user, then we can add SUPERUSER at the end.
For m1 chips, if you have not installed postgresql package by homebrew, install it in terminal with:
brew install postgre
then create a username manually by:
/opt/homebrew/bin/createuser -s <username>
your error is probably fixed; but if you occur the error
FATAL: database "databasename" does not exist
then you have to create your database manually by:
/opt/homebrew/bin/createdb -U <username> <databasename>
Dropping the postgres database doesn't really matter. This database is initially empty and its purpose is simply for the postgres user to have a kind of "home" to connect to, should it need one.
Still you may recreate it with the SQL command CREATE DATABASE postgres;
Note that the tutorial mentioned in the question is not written with postgres.app in mind.
Contrary to PostgreSQL for Unix in general, postgres.app tries to look like a normal application as opposed to a service that would be run by a dedicated postgres user having different privileges than your normal user. postgres.app is run and managed by your own account.
So instead of this command: sudo -u postgres psql -U postgres, it would be more in the spirit of postgres.app to just issue: psql, which automatically connects to a database matching your users's name, and with a db account of the same name that happens to be superuser, so it can do anything permissions-wise.
This is the only one that fixed it for me :
createuser -s -U $USER
For what it is worth, i have ubuntu and many packages installed and it went in conflict with it.
For me the right answer was:
sudo -i -u postgres-xc
psql
I've faced similar problem today, actually i was not sure what was the username. Here is the 2 thing, if you are under enterprise and don't have system admin access the postgres will create your enterprise username as the postgres admin username. If you install through Homebrew it will definitely happening. In that case simply run your psql service with brew and do an echo of the username
brew services start postgresql
then
echo $USER
You will see your username of the postgres user.
If you are experiencing this problem right after running a docker container try destroying the container and recreating it. That solved it for me:
docker-compose down
docker-compose up --force-recreate
This should recreate the db with postgresuser as default user
With a new mac (M1) and latest postgres (14.0) installed via homebrew, nothing helped me from this topic, but i just reinstalled postgres and it helped:
brew services stop postgresql
rm -rf /opt/homebrew/var/postgres/*
brew reinstall postgresql
initdb --locale=C -E UTF-8 /opt/homebrew/var/postgres
brew services restart postgresql
So, it's a miracle or something like that...
Then just:
psql -d postgres
If you are a MAC (M1) user and installed the Postgres using HomeBrew then follow these steps:
Check your Postgres location using which psql
then run the command /opt/homebrew/bin/createuser -s postgres if the output for the first command is /opt/homebrew/bin/psql
The idea is to create a user named 'postgres' using the Postgres installation location. So you may need to change the command based on the location of your Postgres.
On Ubuntu system, I purged the PostgreSQL and re-installed it. All the databases are restored.
This solved the problem for me.
Advice - Take the backup of the databases to be on the safer side.
Context
I am adding an answer for a case I have not seen here, which is an edge case if you have multiple users on the same machine and the user who is trying to use postgres services is not the user who installed postgres on the machine.
What I have tried
Among other similar commands, for me all these commands failed:
createuser -s [your username]
# createuser: error: connection to server on socket "/tmp/.s.PGSQL.5432" failed: FATAL: role "[your username]" does not exist
createuser -s postgres
# createuser: error: connection to server on socket "/tmp/.s.PGSQL.5432" failed: FATAL: role "[your username]" does not exist
sudo -u postgres createuser --superuser [your username]
# sudo: unknown user: postgres
# sudo: error initializing audit plugin sudoers_audit
psql -U postgres
# psql: error: connection to server on socket "/tmp/.s.PGSQL.5432" failed: FATAL: role "postgres" does not exist
Reason
The reason is because neither postgres role nor [your username] (aka whoami on your command line) are in postgres.
Solution
In such edge case I had to first login with the user who installed postgres:
sudo su - [username that installed postgres]
And then create a role for my new user:
createuser -s [your username]
On Mac, executing
createuser -s postgres
in a terminal worked.
I don't think that sudo is needed here because psql -l returns a list of databases. This tells me that initdb was run under the user's current user, not under the postgres user.
You can just:
psql
And continue the tutorial.
I would suggest A.H's general points of creating the postgres user and db because many applications may expect this to exist.
A brief explanation:
PostgreSQL will not run with administrative access to the operating system. Instead it runs with an ordinary user, and in order to support peer authentication (asking the OS who is trying to connect) it creates a user and db with the user that runs the initialization process. In this case it was your normal user.
I became stuck on this issue having executed brew services stop postgresql the day prior. The day following: brew services start postgresql would not work. This is because as is shown when you install using homebrew. postgresql uses a launchd ... which loads when your computer is powered on. resolution:brew services start postgresql Restart your computer.
The \du command return:
Role name = postgres#implicit_files
And that command postgres=# \password postgres return error:
ERROR: role "postgres" does not exist.
But that postgres=# \password postgres#implicit_files run fine.
Also after sudo -u postgres createuser -s postgres the first variant also work.