+----------------------------------------------------------------------- | Running ${PKGSTEM} on OpenBSD +----------------------------------------------------------------------- At least two different accounts are involved when working with PostgreSQL: One is an OpenBSD userid, '_postgresql', which is used as the userid of files that are part of PostgreSQL. The other, usually named 'postgres', is not an OpenBSD userid, i.e. you will not find it in /etc/passwd, but an account internal to the database system. The 'postgres' account is called the dba account (database administrator) and is created when a new database is initialized using the initdb command. If you are installing PostgreSQL for the first time, you have to create a default database first. In the following example we install a database in /var/postgresql/data with a dba account 'postgres' and scram-sha-256 authentication. We will be prompted for a password to protect the dba account: # su - _postgresql $ mkdir /var/postgresql/data $ initdb -D /var/postgresql/data -U postgres -A scram-sha-256 -E UTF8 -W It is strongly advised that you do not work with the postgres dba account other than creating more users and/or databases or for administrative tasks. Use the PostgreSQL permission system to make sure that a database is only accessed by programs/users that have the right to do so. Please consult the PostgreSQL website for more information, especially when you are upgrading an existing database installation. Network Connections =================== To allow connections over TCP (and other options) edit the file: /var/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf and also edit the pg_hba.conf (in the same directory) making the appropriate changes to allow connection from your network. To allow SSL connections, edit postgresql.conf and enable the 'ssl' keyword, and create keys and certificates: # su - _postgresql $ cd /var/postgresql/data $ umask 077 $ openssl genrsa -out server.key 2048 $ openssl req -new -key server.key -out server.csr Either take the CSR to a Certifying Authority (CA) to sign your certificate, or self-sign it: $ openssl x509 -req -days 365 -in server.csr \ -signkey server.key -out server.crt Restart PostgreSQL to allow these changes to take effect. Tuning for busy servers ======================= The default sizes in the GENERIC kernel for SysV semaphores are not large enough for PostgreSQL to use the default max_connections configuration value of 100, so PostgreSQL will use a smaller than default max_connections if you do not increase the limits. Adding the following in /etc/sysctl.conf will be reasonable for many systems: kern.seminfo.semmni=256 kern.seminfo.semmns=2048 You may also want to tune the max_connections value in the postgresql.conf file to increase the number of connections to the backend. By default, the _postgresql user, and so the postmaster and backend processes run in the login(1) class of "postgresql". On a busy server, it may be advisable to tune resources, such as more open file descriptors (used for network connections as well as files), possibly more memory, etc. The capability database file is located at /etc/login.conf.d/postgresql For more than about 250 connections, these numbers should be increased. Please report any changes and experiences to the package maintainers so that we can update this file for future versions. Upgrade Howto (for a major upgrade) =================================== If you didn't install PostgreSQL by following this README, you must adapt these instructions to your setup. Option 1: Dump and Restore -------------------------- This will work for any upgrade from any major version of PostgreSQL to the current version. 1) Backup all your data: # su _postgresql -c "cd /var/postgresql && \ pg_dumpall -U postgres > /var/postgresql/full.sqldump" 2) Shutdown the server: # rcctl stop postgresql 3) Upgrade your PostgreSQL package with pkg_add. # pkg_add -ui postgresql-server 4) Backup your old data directory and rename: # cd /var/postgresql && tar cf - data | gzip -1 > data.tar.gz # mv /var/postgresql/data /var/postgresql/data-${PREV_MAJOR} 5) Create a new data directory: # su _postgresql -c "mkdir /var/postgresql/data" # su _postgresql -c "cd /var/postgresql && \ initdb -D /var/postgresql/data -U postgres -A scram-sha-256 -E UTF8 -W" 6) Restore your old pg_hba.conf and (if used) SSL certificates # su _postgresql -c \ "cp /var/postgresql/data-${PREV_MAJOR}/pg_hba.conf /var/postgresql/data/" # su _postgresql -c \ "cp /var/postgresql/data-${PREV_MAJOR}/server.{crt,key} /var/postgresql/data/" Some postgresql.conf settings changed or disappeared in this version. Examine your old file for local changes and apply them to the new version (/var/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf). The following command may help identify them: # diff -wu ${LOCALBASE}/share/postgresql-${PREV_MAJOR}/postgresql.conf.sample \ /var/postgresql/data-${PREV_MAJOR}/postgresql.conf 7) Start PostgreSQL: # rcctl start postgresql 8) Restore your data: # su _postgresql -c "cd /var/postgresql && \ psql -U postgres < /var/postgresql/full.sqldump" Option 2: pg_upgrade -------------------- This will work for an upgrade from the previous major version of PostgreSQL supported by OpenBSD to the current version, and should be faster than a dump and reload, especially for large databases. 1) Shutdown the server: # rcctl stop postgresql 2) Upgrade your PostgreSQL package with pkg_add. # pkg_add postgresql-pg_upgrade 3) Backup your old data directory: # mv /var/postgresql/data /var/postgresql/data-${PREV_MAJOR} 4) Create a new data directory: # su _postgresql -c "mkdir /var/postgresql/data && cd /var/postgresql && \ initdb -D /var/postgresql/data -U postgres -A scram-sha-256 -E UTF8 -W" (The database environment defaults to UTF-8 if your terminal is already in a UTF-8 locale; if that is the case and you require an ASCII database environment, use "initdb --locale=C -D /var/postgresql/data [...]"). 5) Temporarily support connecting without a password for local users by editing pg_hba.conf to include "local all postgres trust" # vi /var/postgresql/data-${PREV_MAJOR}/pg_hba.conf 6) Restore your old pg_hba.conf and (if used) SSL certificates # cp -p /var/postgresql/data-${PREV_MAJOR}/pg_hba.conf /var/postgresql/data/ # cp -p /var/postgresql/data-${PREV_MAJOR}/server.{crt,key} /var/postgresql/data/ Some postgresql.conf settings changed or disappeared in this version. Examine your old file for local changes and apply them to the new version (/var/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf). The following command may help identify them: # diff -wu ${LOCALBASE}/share/postgresql-${PREV_MAJOR}/postgresql.conf.sample \ /var/postgresql/data-${PREV_MAJOR}/postgresql.conf 7) Run pg_upgrade: # su _postgresql -c "cd /var/postgresql && \ pg_upgrade -b /usr/local/bin/postgresql-${PREV_MAJOR}/ -B /usr/local/bin \ -U postgres -d /var/postgresql/data-${PREV_MAJOR}/ -D /var/postgresql/data" 8) Remove "local all postgres trust" line from pg_hba.conf # vi /var/postgresql/data/pg_hba.conf 9) Start PostgreSQL: # rcctl start postgresql Clients/Frontends ================= Many applications can use the PostgreSQL database right away. To facilitate administration of a PostgreSQL database, a client is notable: www/phppgadmin A web based user interface that uses PHP