NAME¶
pg_createcluster - create a new PostgreSQL cluster
SYNOPSIS¶
pg_createcluster [
options]
version name [
--
initdb options]
DESCRIPTION¶
pg_createcluster creates a new PostgreSQL server cluster (i. e. a
collection of databases served by a
postgres(1) instance) and
integrates it into the multi-version/multi-cluster architecture of the
postgresql-common package.
Every cluster is uniquely identified by its version and name. The name can be
arbitrary. The default cluster that is created on installation of a server
package is main. However, you might wish to create other clusters for testing,
with other superusers, a cluster for each user on a shared server, etc.
pg_createcluster will abort with an error if you try to create a cluster with
a name that already exists for that version.
For compatibility with
systemd service units, the cluster name should not
contain any dashes (
-).
pg_ctlcluster will warn about the
problem, but succeed with the operation.
Given a major PostgreSQL
version (like "8.2" or
"8.3") and a cluster
name, it creates the necessary
configuration files in /etc/postgresql/
version/
name/; in
particular these are postgresql.conf, pg_ident.conf, pg_hba.conf, a
postgresql-common specific configuration file start.conf (see
STARTUP
CONTROL below), pg_ctl.conf, and a symbolic link log which points to the
log file (by default, /var/log/postgresql/postgresql-
version-
name.log).
postgresql.conf is automatically adapted to use the next available port, i. e.
the first port (starting from 5432) which is not yet used by an already
existing cluster.
If the data directory does not yet exist, PostgreSQL's
initdb(1) command
is used to generate a new cluster structure. If the data directory already
exists, it is integrated into the
postgresql-common structure by moving
the configuration file and setting the data_directory option. Please note that
this
only works for data directories which were created directly with
initdb, i. e. all the configuration files (postgresql.conf etc.) must
be present in the data directory.
If a custom socket directory is given and it does not exist, it is created.
If the log file does not exist, it is created. In any case the permissions are
adjusted to allow write access to the cluster owner. Please note that
postgresql.conf can be customized to specify log_directory and/or
log_filename; if at least one of these options is present, then the symbolic
link log in the cluster configuration directory is ignored.
If the default snakeoil SSL certificate exists
(/etc/ssl/certs/ssl-cert-snakeoil.pem and
/etc/ssl/private/ssl-cert-snakeoil.key), and the postgres user is in the
ssl-cert Unix group,
pg_createcluster configures the cluster to use
this certificate, and enables SSL. Therefore all clusters will use the same
SSL certificate by default. For versions up to 9.1, symlinks in the data
directory will be created (server.crt and server.key); for 9.2 and later, the
appropriate postgresql.conf options will be set (ssl_cert_file and
ssl_key_file). Of course you can replace this with a cluster specific
certificate. Similarly for /etc/postgresql-common/root.crt and
/etc/postgresql-common/root.crl, these files will be configured as client
certificate CA and revocation list, when present. (root.crt is initially a
placeholder that will only be used if real certificates are added to the
file.)
OPTIONS¶
- -u user, --user=user
- Set the user who owns the cluster and becomes the database superuser to
the given name or uid. By default, this is the user postgres. A
cluster must not be owned by root.
- -g group, --group=group
- Change the group of the cluster related data files. By default this will
be the primary group of the database owner.
- -d dir, --datadir=dir
- Explicitly set the data directory path, which is used to store all the
actual databases and tables. This will become quite big (easily in the
order of five times the amount of actual data stored in the cluster).
Defaults to /var/lib/postgresql/ version/cluster.
- -s dir, --socketdir=dir
- Explicitly set the directory where the postgres(1) server stores
the Unix socket for local connections. Defaults to /var/run/postgresql/
for clusters owned by the user postgres, and /tmp for clusters
owned by other users. Please be aware that /tmp is an unsafe directory
since everybody can create a socket there and impersonate the database
server. If the given directory does not exist, it is created with
appropriate permissions.
- -l path, --logfile=path
- Explicitly set the path for the postgres(1) server log file.
Defaults to /var/log/postgresql/postgresql-
version-cluster.log.
- --locale=locale
- Set the default locale for the database cluster. If this option is not
specified, the locale is inherited from the environment that
pg_createcluster runs in.
- --lc-collate=locale
- --lc-ctype=locale
- --lc-messages=locale
- --lc-monetary=locale
- --lc-numeric=locale
- --lc-time=locale
- Like --locale, but only sets the locale in the specified
category.
- -e encoding, --encoding=encoding
- Select the encoding of the template database. This will also be the
default encoding of any database you create later, unless you override it
there. The default is derived from the locale, or SQL_ASCII if that does
not work. The character sets supported by the PostgreSQL server are
described in the documentation.
Note: It is not recommended to set this option directly! Set the
locale instead.
- -p port, --port=port
- Select the port the new cluster listens on (for the Unix socket and the
TCP port); this must be a number between 1024 and 65535, since PostgreSQL
does not run as root and thus needs an unprivileged port number. By
default the next free port starting from 5432 is assigned.
- --start
- Immediately start a server for the cluster after creating it (i. e. call
pg_ctlcluster version cluster start on it). By default, the cluster
is not started.
- --start-conf=auto|manual|disabled
- Set the initial value in the start.conf configuration file. See
STARTUP CONTROL below. By default, auto is used,
which means that the cluster is handled by /etc/init.d/postgresql, i. e.
starts and stops automatically on system boot.
- -o guc=value, --pgoption
guc= value
- Configuration option to set in the new postgresql.conf file.
- --createclusterconf=file
- Alternative createcluster.conf file to use. Default is
/etc/postgresql-common/createcluster.conf (or
$PGSYSCONFDIR/createcluster.conf).
- --environment=file
- Alternative default environment file to use. Default is
/etc/postgresql-common/environment (or $PGSYSCONFDIR/environment). If the
file is missing, a placeholder string is used. %v and %c are replaced; see
DEFAULT VALUES below.
- -- initdb options
- Options passed directly to initdb(1).
Per default, pg_createcluster will update the pg_hba.conf file
generated by initdb to use peer authentication on local (unix)
connections, and md5 on TCP (host) connections. If explicit authentication
config is included here ( -A, --auth, --auth-host,
--auth-local), the pg_hba.conf file will be left untouched.
STARTUP CONTROL¶
The start.conf file in the cluster configuration directory controls the
start/stop behavior of that cluster's postgres process. The file can contain
comment lines (started with '#'), empty lines, and must have exactly one line
with one of the following keywords:
- auto
- The postgres process is started/stopped automatically in the init script.
When running from systemd, the cluster is started/stopped when
postgresql.service is started/stopped. This is also the default if
the file is missing.
- manual
- The postgres process is not handled by the init script, but manually
controlling the cluster with pg_ctlcluster(1) is permitted.
When running from systemd, the cluster is not started automatically
when postgresql.service is started. However, stopping/restarting
postgresql.service will stop/restart the cluster. The cluster can
be started using systemctl start
postgresql@version-cluster.
- disabled
- Neither the init script, pg_ctlcluster(1), nor
postgresql@.service are permitted to start/stop the cluster. Please
be aware that this will not stop the cluster owner from calling lower
level tools to control the postgres process; this option is only meant to
prevent accidents during maintenance, not more.
When running from
systemd, invoke
systemctl daemon-reload after
editing start.conf.
The pg_ctl.conf file in the cluster configuration directory can contain
additional options passed to
pg_ctl of that cluster.
DEFAULT VALUES¶
Some default values used by
pg_createcluster can be modified in
/etc/postgresql-common/createcluster.conf. Occurrences of
%v are replaced by the major version number, and
%c by the cluster name. Use
%% for a literal
%.
- create_main_cluster (Default: true)
- Create a main cluster when a new postgresql-x.y server package is
installed.
- start_conf (Default: auto)
- Default start.conf value to use.
- data_directory (Default: /var/lib/postgresql/%v/%c)
- Default data directory.
- xlogdir (Default: unset)
- Default directory for transaction logs. When used, initdb will
create a symlink from pg_xlog in the data directory to this location.
Unset by default, i.e. pg_xlog is remains in the data directory.
- initdb_options (Default: unset)
- Other options to pass to initdb.
- Other options
- All other options listed are copied into the new cluster's
postgresql.conf, e.g.:
listen_addresses = '*'
log_line_prefix = '%%t '
Some postgresql.conf options are treated specially:
- ssl
- Only added to postgresql.conf if the default snakeoil certificates exist
and are readable for the cluster owner as detailed above.
- stats_temp_directory
- Only added to postgresql.conf if existing, and writable for the cluster
owner, or else if the parent directory is writable.
- Include files
- include
- include_if_exists
- include_dir
- createcluster.conf supports the same include directives as
postgresql.conf.
- add_include
- add_include_if_exists
- add_include_dir
- To add include directives to the new postgresql.conf file, use the
add_* directives. The add_ prefix is removed.
SEE ALSO¶
initdb(1),
pg_ctlcluster(8),
pg_lsclusters(1),
pg_wrapper(1)
AUTHORS¶
Martin Pitt <mpitt@debian.org>, Christoph Berg
<myon@debian.org>