Please check below command which I had run:
C:\Windows\system32>psql -U root
Password for user root:
psql: FATAL: database "root" does not exist
If you don't explicitly specify which database you want to connect to, psql will use the database with the same name as the database user.
Since you specified database user root, psql tries to connect to a database of that name, but the database doesn't exist.
Try specifying an existing database:
psql -U root -d mydb
In case you don't know which database to use, or if you never created a database, you can always use the postgres database.
I'm a newbie to PostgreSQL and I'm trying to create a user/role on Postgres 11 (running on CentOS7) which is named (e.g.) "json_docs_admin" (same for password) that I can use under the OS user (e.g.) "app_user" to connect locally to the DB.
I have tried connecting to Postgres using "postgres" user and the command "psql -d template1" and ran the following commands:
template1=# create role json_docs_admin with login password 'json_docs_admin';
CREATE ROLE
template1=# create database json_docs owner=json_docs_admin;
CREATE DATABASE
template1=# GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON DATABASE json_docs TO json_docs_admin;
GRANT
I have changed the /var/lib/pgsql/11/data/pg_hba.conf so that local connections can be established on the server, and I've restarted the postgresql service.
Then, back under "app_user" user, when I try to connect to the database, I get the following errors:
$psql -d json_docs -U json_docs_admin
Password for user json_docs_admin:
psql: FATAL: database "json_docs" does not exist
Could anybody let me know what am I doing wrong?
Thanks.
I am pretty much confused about root user,super user,user and permissions! I am not able to create a database inside user "athleticu". Following are the commands I used:-
athleticu#ip-172-30-4-103:/home/ubuntu$ createdb -T template0 simple_db1
createdb: database creation failed: ERROR: permission denied to create database
athleticu#ip-172-30-4-103:/home/ubuntu$ sudo createdb -T template0 simple_db1
sudo: unable to resolve host ip-172-30-4-103
createdb: could not connect to database template1: FATAL: role "root" does not exist
Please somebody clarify my doubts and tell me what should I write!
Hey I have already solved this. What you have to do is to first login as postgres user as follows:
$ su postgres
$ psql
postgres=# alter user athleticu createdb;
ALTER ROLE
Hope it helps you :)
Type \du in psql and you will see a list of all the registered users and what type of privileges each one has.
In order to grant privileges to the user which is logged in (eg 'user1'), I had to sign out and log in using one of the superuser roles in that list (eg. 'user2'), using the following command:
psql -U 'user2' -h localhost 'database2'
where 'database2' is the name of the one that specific superuser 'user2' has privileges to.
Once you are logged in as a superuser, you can grant privileges to 'user1' by:
ALTER ROLE user1 WITH CREATEDB
or
ALTER ROLE user1 WITH SUPERUSER
Then sign in again as user1, who is now a superuser.
This blog was helpful as well as this link.
Currently, this worked for me:
sudo su postgres
psql
ALTER USER username WITH CREATEDB;
\q
exit
The root user is an account on the system independent from Postgres. There is only one root user.
A superuser is an account in Postgres with access to everything. There may be many superusers.
System accounts and Postgres accounts are different things, although unless you specify a Postgres username when you connect to the database (through utilities like psql, createdb, dropdb, or otherwise), it will use the current system user's name in hopes that there is a corresponding Postgres account with the same name. The root user does not, by default, have a corresponding account in Postgres.
When you install Postgres on *nix, it creates both a superuser named postgres and a system user named postgres.
Therefore, when you need to do something with Postgres as the built-in superuser, you have two options:
You may sudo su - postgres to become the postgres system user and execute your command (createdb, psql, etc). Because the system user has the same name as the database superuser, your command will connect as the appropriate account.
You may specify the username to execute as with the -U switch, eg psql -U postgres ....
Depending on your Postgres server's authentication settings, you may be required to enter a password with either or both connection methods.
What you can do when you have fresh installation of PostgreSQL is create your user with some rights (see createuser documentation):
my-user> sudo su - postgres -c "createuser <my-user> --createdb"
This will allow my-user to create DBs just like so:
my-user> createdb <my-db>
If you want the my-user to be able to do anything just use the --superuser flag instead:
my-user> sudo su - postgres -c "createuser <my-user> --superuser"
I got the same error and I found out that the reason was that I was trying to create a database outside of psql as a user which did not exist for postgresql. I found out about it and solved it by taking the following steps:
In my terminal I logged in as postgres user (the root user by default for postgresql) by typing sudo -u postgres psql
While inside the psql I typed \du to see all users and their privileges. I found out that I had only one user (the postgres one) and I had to create another superuser which had the same username as my Linux user (george)
I typed (still inside psql) CREATE USER george SUPERUSER; and this way I created a new super user called george.
I exited psql (by typing \q) and I was now able from outside psql, meaning from my terminal, to run created db <database name> with no issues at all.
Error ? You are trying to perform database actions( Creating Database, creating Roles) using a user that doesn't have the permission for those types of actions you are trying to perform.
solution ? Simply login to your database on the command line, i.e for PostgreSQL one will use "sudo -u postgres psql", then confirm that users specific assigned roles using the command "\du", most probably he/she doesn't have the necessary permissions to perform the actions you wanted. Then simply assign the roles you want the user to perform ,i.e create Database or simply make user "Superuser" by following along(https://chartio.com/resources/tutorials/how-to-change-a-user-to-superuser-in-postgresql/)
First of all, I am new to PostgreSQL.
So am I right thinking that one cannot run most of the psql util commands nor non-db-specified sql commands if there isn't a db with same name of the current user's?
That is saying e.g., if I run psql "show databases;" as user postgres while there isn't a db called "postgres", I won't be able to run the command.
Question is that in this case, one cannot find the list of the dbs before knowing any of db exits, is that how it works?
You have to connect to a database. By default, the databases "template1" and "postgres" will exist and will accept connections.
If your PostgreSQL admin has changed things in such a way that you can't connect to either of those databases, you'll have to do one of two things.
Ask the PostgreSQL admin what database you're supposed to connect to.
Create a database, then connect to it. There's more than one way to do this.
If you have CREATEDB privileges, you can create a database on the psql command line. For example, I have CREATEDB privileges here, so I can do this, which creates the database "mike" and exits.
$ psql -h localhost -p 5435 -U mike -c "create database mike"
Now I can connect to "mike" by either taking advantage of the default database name, or by specifying it.
$ psql -h localhost -p 5435 -U mike
$ psql -h localhost -p 5435 -U mike mike
You can. If you connect (with proper user, usually postgres) to the postgres database there are several tables on the pg_catalog (PostgreSQL) among those is pg_database table a simple select * from pg_database will show all databases.
Here is an image showing that on pgAdmin III Tool
There is no way of doing exactly what you want without, at least, knowing the database catalog. The postgres database is default and will exist in all installed instances (unless someone had droped it). All RDBMs is the same they all have the catalog (also named information_schema, or other names depending on vendor) which holds all information about the databases, tables, constraints, etc.
I know two methods of copying a postgres database, but both of them require you to have exclusive access to the database, something you do not have while trying to copy a database from production in order to use it for testing something, like a software upgrade/migration.
psql>create database mydb_test with template mydb owner dbuser;
ERROR: source database "mydb" is being accessed by other users
>createdb -O dbuser -T mydb mydb_test
createdb: database creation failed: ERROR: source database "mydb" is being accessed by other users
That worked:
psql
create database mydb_test owner dbuser;
\q
pg_dump mydb|psql -d mydb_test