Server Setup and Operation
This chapter discusses how to set up and run the database server,
and its interactions with the operating system.
The directions in this chapter assume that you are working with
plain PostgreSQL without any additional
infrastructure, for example a copy that you built from source
according to the directions in the preceding chapters.
If you are working with a pre-packaged or vendor-supplied
version of PostgreSQL, it is likely that
the packager has made special provisions for installing and starting
the database server according to your system's conventions.
Consult the package-level documentation for details.
The PostgreSQL User Accountpostgres user
As with any server daemon that is accessible to the outside world,
it is advisable to run PostgreSQL under a
separate user account. This user account should only own the data
that is managed by the server, and should not be shared with other
daemons. (For example, using the user nobody is a bad
idea.) In particular, it is advisable that this user account not own
the PostgreSQL executable files, to ensure
that a compromised server process could not modify those executables.
Pre-packaged versions of PostgreSQL will
typically create a suitable user account automatically during
package installation.
To add a Unix user account to your system, look for a command
useradd or adduser. The user
name postgres is often used, and is assumed
throughout this book, but you can use another name if you like.
Creating a Database Clusterdatabase clusterdata areadatabase cluster
Before you can do anything, you must initialize a database storage
area on disk. We call this a database cluster.
(The SQL standard uses the term catalog cluster.) A
database cluster is a collection of databases that is managed by a
single instance of a running database server. After initialization, a
database cluster will contain a database named postgres,
which is meant as a default database for use by utilities, users and third
party applications. The database server itself does not require the
postgres database to exist, but many external utility
programs assume it exists. Another database created within each cluster
during initialization is called
template1. As the name suggests, this will be used
as a template for subsequently created databases; it should not be
used for actual work. (See for
information about creating new databases within a cluster.)
In file system terms, a database cluster is a single directory
under which all data will be stored. We call this the data
directory or data area. It is
completely up to you where you choose to store your data. There is no
default, although locations such as
/usr/local/pgsql/data or
/var/lib/pgsql/data are popular.
The data directory must be initialized before being used, using the program
initdb
which is installed with PostgreSQL.
If you are using a pre-packaged version
of PostgreSQL, it may well have a specific
convention for where to place the data directory, and it may also
provide a script for creating the data directory. In that case you
should use that script in preference to
running initdb directly.
Consult the package-level documentation for details.
To initialize a database cluster manually,
run initdb and specify the desired
file system location of the database cluster with the
option, for example:
$initdb -D /usr/local/pgsql/data
Note that you must execute this command while logged into the
PostgreSQL user account, which is
described in the previous section.
As an alternative to the option, you can set
the environment variable PGDATA.
PGDATA
Alternatively, you can run initdb via
the
programpg_ctl like so:
$pg_ctl -D /usr/local/pgsql/data initdb
This may be more intuitive if you are
using pg_ctl for starting and stopping the
server (see ), so
that pg_ctl would be the sole command you use
for managing the database server instance.
initdb will attempt to create the directory you
specify if it does not already exist. Of course, this will fail if
initdb does not have permissions to write in the
parent directory. It's generally recommendable that the
PostgreSQL user own not just the data
directory but its parent directory as well, so that this should not
be a problem. If the desired parent directory doesn't exist either,
you will need to create it first, using root privileges if the
grandparent directory isn't writable. So the process might look
like this:
root# mkdir /usr/local/pgsql
root# chown postgres /usr/local/pgsql
root# su postgres
postgres$ initdb -D /usr/local/pgsql/datainitdb will refuse to run if the data directory
exists and already contains files; this is to prevent accidentally
overwriting an existing installation.
Because the data directory contains all the data stored in the
database, it is essential that it be secured from unauthorized
access. initdb therefore revokes access
permissions from everyone but the
PostgreSQL user, and optionally, group.
Group access, when enabled, is read-only. This allows an unprivileged
user in the same group as the cluster owner to take a backup of the
cluster data or perform other operations that only require read access.
Note that enabling or disabling group access on an existing cluster requires
the cluster to be shut down and the appropriate mode to be set on all
directories and files before restarting
PostgreSQL. Otherwise, a mix of modes might
exist in the data directory. For clusters that allow access only by the
owner, the appropriate modes are 0700 for directories
and 0600 for files. For clusters that also allow
reads by the group, the appropriate modes are 0750
for directories and 0640 for files.
However, while the directory contents are secure, the default
client authentication setup allows any local user to connect to the
database and even become the database superuser. If you do not
trust other local users, we recommend you use one of
initdb's ,
or options to assign a password to the
database superuser.passwordof the superuser
Also, specify or
so that the default trust authentication
mode is not used; or modify the generated pg_hba.conf
file after running initdb, but
before you start the server for the first time. (Other
reasonable approaches include using peer authentication
or file system permissions to restrict connections. See for more information.)
initdb also initializes the default
localelocale for the database cluster.
Normally, it will just take the locale settings in the environment
and apply them to the initialized database. It is possible to
specify a different locale for the database; more information about
that can be found in . The default sort order used
within the particular database cluster is set by
initdb, and while you can create new databases using
different sort order, the order used in the template databases that initdb
creates cannot be changed without dropping and recreating them.
There is also a performance impact for using locales
other than C or POSIX. Therefore, it is
important to make this choice correctly the first time.
initdb also sets the default character set encoding
for the database cluster. Normally this should be chosen to match the
locale setting. For details see .
Non-C and non-POSIX locales rely on the
operating system's collation library for character set ordering.
This controls the ordering of keys stored in indexes. For this reason,
a cluster cannot switch to an incompatible collation library version,
either through snapshot restore, binary streaming replication, a
different operating system, or an operating system upgrade.
Use of Secondary File Systemsfile system mount points
Many installations create their database clusters on file systems
(volumes) other than the machine's root volume. If you
choose to do this, it is not advisable to try to use the secondary
volume's topmost directory (mount point) as the data directory.
Best practice is to create a directory within the mount-point
directory that is owned by the PostgreSQL
user, and then create the data directory within that. This avoids
permissions problems, particularly for operations such
as pg_upgrade, and it also ensures clean failures if
the secondary volume is taken offline.
File Systems
Generally, any file system with POSIX semantics can be used for
PostgreSQL. Users prefer different file systems for a variety of reasons,
including vendor support, performance, and familiarity. Experience
suggests that, all other things being equal, one should not expect major
performance or behavior changes merely from switching file systems or
making minor file system configuration changes.
NFSNFS
It is possible to use an NFS file system for storing
the PostgreSQL data directory.
PostgreSQL does nothing special for
NFS file systems, meaning it assumes
NFS behaves exactly like locally-connected drives.
PostgreSQL does not use any functionality that
is known to have nonstandard behavior on NFS, such as
file locking.
The only firm requirement for using NFS with
PostgreSQL is that the file system is mounted
using the hard option. With the
hard option, processes can hang
indefinitely if there are network problems, so this configuration will
require a careful monitoring setup. The soft option
will interrupt system calls in case of network problems, but
PostgreSQL will not repeat system calls
interrupted in this way, so any such interruption will result in an I/O
error being reported.
It is not necessary to use the sync mount option. The
behavior of the async option is sufficient, since
PostgreSQL issues fsync
calls at appropriate times to flush the write caches. (This is analogous
to how it works on a local file system.) However, it is strongly
recommended to use the sync export option on the NFS
server on systems where it exists (mainly Linux).
Otherwise, an fsync or equivalent on the NFS client is
not actually guaranteed to reach permanent storage on the server, which
could cause corruption similar to running with the parameter off. The defaults of these mount and export
options differ between vendors and versions, so it is recommended to
check and perhaps specify them explicitly in any case to avoid any
ambiguity.
In some cases, an external storage product can be accessed either via NFS
or a lower-level protocol such as iSCSI. In the latter case, the storage
appears as a block device and any available file system can be created on
it. That approach might relieve the DBA from having to deal with some of
the idiosyncrasies of NFS, but of course the complexity of managing
remote storage then happens at other levels.
Starting the Database Server
Before anyone can access the database, you must start the database
server. The database server program is called
postgres.postgres
If you are using a pre-packaged version
of PostgreSQL, it almost certainly includes
provisions for running the server as a background task according to the
conventions of your operating system. Using the package's
infrastructure to start the server will be much less work than figuring
out how to do this yourself. Consult the package-level documentation
for details.
The bare-bones way to start the server manually is just to invoke
postgres directly, specifying the location of the
data directory with the option, for example:
$ postgres -D /usr/local/pgsql/data
which will leave the server running in the foreground. This must be
done while logged into the PostgreSQL user
account. Without , the server will try to use
the data directory named by the environment variable PGDATA.
If that variable is not provided either, it will fail.
Normally it is better to start postgres in the
background. For this, use the usual Unix shell syntax:
$ postgres -D /usr/local/pgsql/data >logfile 2>&1 &
It is important to store the server's stdout and
stderr output somewhere, as shown above. It will help
for auditing purposes and to diagnose problems. (See for a more thorough discussion of log
file handling.)
The postgres program also takes a number of other
command-line options. For more information, see the
reference page
and below.
This shell syntax can get tedious quickly. Therefore the wrapper
program
pg_ctl
is provided to simplify some tasks. For example:
pg_ctl start -l logfile
will start the server in the background and put the output into the
named log file. The option has the same meaning
here as for postgres. pg_ctl
is also capable of stopping the server.
Normally, you will want to start the database server when the
computer boots.bootingstarting the server during
Autostart scripts are operating-system-specific.
There are a few example scripts distributed with
PostgreSQL in the
contrib/start-scripts directory. Installing one will require
root privileges.
Different systems have different conventions for starting up daemons
at boot time. Many systems have a file
/etc/rc.local or
/etc/rc.d/rc.local. Others use init.d or
rc.d directories. Whatever you do, the server must be
run by the PostgreSQL user account
and not by root or any other user. Therefore you
probably should form your commands using
su postgres -c '...'. For example:
su postgres -c 'pg_ctl start -D /usr/local/pgsql/data -l serverlog'
Here are a few more operating-system-specific suggestions. (In each
case be sure to use the proper installation directory and user
name where we show generic values.)
For FreeBSD, look at the file
contrib/start-scripts/freebsd in the
PostgreSQL source distribution.
FreeBSDstart script
On OpenBSD, add the following lines
to the file /etc/rc.local:
OpenBSDstart script
if [ -x /usr/local/pgsql/bin/pg_ctl -a -x /usr/local/pgsql/bin/postgres ]; then
su -l postgres -c '/usr/local/pgsql/bin/pg_ctl start -s -l /var/postgresql/log -D /usr/local/pgsql/data'
echo -n ' postgresql'
fi
On Linux systems either add
Linuxstart script
/usr/local/pgsql/bin/pg_ctl start -l logfile -D /usr/local/pgsql/data
to /etc/rc.d/rc.local
or /etc/rc.local or look at the file
contrib/start-scripts/linux in the
PostgreSQL source distribution.
When using systemd, you can use the following
service unit file (e.g.,
at /etc/systemd/system/postgresql.service):systemd
[Unit]
Description=PostgreSQL database server
Documentation=man:postgres(1)
[Service]
Type=notify
User=postgres
ExecStart=/usr/local/pgsql/bin/postgres -D /usr/local/pgsql/data
ExecReload=/bin/kill -HUP $MAINPID
KillMode=mixed
KillSignal=SIGINT
TimeoutSec=0
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
Using Type=notify requires that the server binary was
built with configure --with-systemd.
Consider carefully the timeout
setting. systemd has a default timeout of 90
seconds as of this writing and will kill a process that does not notify
readiness within that time. But a PostgreSQL
server that might have to perform crash recovery at startup could take
much longer to become ready. The suggested value of 0 disables the
timeout logic.
On NetBSD, use either the
FreeBSD or
Linux start scripts, depending on
preference.
NetBSDstart script
On Solaris, create a file called
/etc/init.d/postgresql that contains
the following line:
Solarisstart script
su - postgres -c "/usr/local/pgsql/bin/pg_ctl start -l logfile -D /usr/local/pgsql/data"
Then, create a symbolic link to it in /etc/rc3.d as
S99postgresql.
While the server is running, its
PID is stored in the file
postmaster.pid in the data directory. This is
used to prevent multiple server instances from
running in the same data directory and can also be used for
shutting down the server.
Server Start-up Failures
There are several common reasons the server might fail to
start. Check the server's log file, or start it by hand (without
redirecting standard output or standard error) and see what error
messages appear. Below we explain some of the most common error
messages in more detail.
LOG: could not bind IPv4 address "127.0.0.1": Address already in use
HINT: Is another postmaster already running on port 5432? If not, wait a few seconds and retry.
FATAL: could not create any TCP/IP sockets
This usually means just what it suggests: you tried to start
another server on the same port where one is already running.
However, if the kernel error message is not Address
already in use or some variant of that, there might
be a different problem. For example, trying to start a server
on a reserved port number might draw something like:
$ postgres -p 666
LOG: could not bind IPv4 address "127.0.0.1": Permission denied
HINT: Is another postmaster already running on port 666? If not, wait a few seconds and retry.
FATAL: could not create any TCP/IP sockets
A message like:
FATAL: could not create shared memory segment: Invalid argument
DETAIL: Failed system call was shmget(key=5440001, size=4011376640, 03600).
probably means your kernel's limit on the size of shared memory is
smaller than the work area PostgreSQL
is trying to create (4011376640 bytes in this example).
This is only likely to happen if you have set shared_memory_type
to sysv. In that case, you
can try starting the server with a smaller-than-normal number of
buffers (), or
reconfigure your kernel to increase the allowed shared memory
size. You might also see this message when trying to start multiple
servers on the same machine, if their total space requested
exceeds the kernel limit.
An error like:
FATAL: could not create semaphores: No space left on device
DETAIL: Failed system call was semget(5440126, 17, 03600).
does not mean you've run out of disk
space. It means your kernel's limit on the number of System V semaphores is smaller than the number
PostgreSQL wants to create. As above,
you might be able to work around the problem by starting the
server with a reduced number of allowed connections
(), but you'll eventually want to
increase the kernel limit.
Details about configuring System V
IPC facilities are given in .
Client Connection Problems
Although the error conditions possible on the client side are quite
varied and application-dependent, a few of them might be directly
related to how the server was started. Conditions other than
those shown below should be documented with the respective client
application.
psql: could not connect to server: Connection refused
Is the server running on host "server.joe.com" and accepting
TCP/IP connections on port 5432?
This is the generic I couldn't find a server to talk
to failure. It looks like the above when TCP/IP
communication is attempted. A common mistake is to forget to
configure the server to allow TCP/IP connections.
Alternatively, you'll get this when attempting Unix-domain socket
communication to a local server:
psql: could not connect to server: No such file or directory
Is the server running locally and accepting
connections on Unix domain socket "/tmp/.s.PGSQL.5432"?
The last line is useful in verifying that the client is trying to
connect to the right place. If there is in fact no server
running there, the kernel error message will typically be either
Connection refused or
No such file or directory, as
illustrated. (It is important to realize that
Connection refused in this context
does not mean that the server got your
connection request and rejected it. That case will produce a
different message, as shown in .) Other error messages
such as Connection timed out might
indicate more fundamental problems, like lack of network
connectivity.
Managing Kernel ResourcesPostgreSQL can sometimes exhaust various operating system
resource limits, especially when multiple copies of the server are running
on the same system, or in very large installations. This section explains
the kernel resources used by PostgreSQL and the steps you
can take to resolve problems related to kernel resource consumption.
Shared Memory and Semaphoresshared memorysemaphoresPostgreSQL requires the operating system to provide
inter-process communication (IPC) features, specifically
shared memory and semaphores. Unix-derived systems typically provide
System V IPC,
POSIX IPC, or both.
Windows has its own implementation of
these features and is not discussed here.
By default, PostgreSQL allocates
a very small amount of System V shared memory, as well as a much larger
amount of anonymous mmap shared memory.
Alternatively, a single large System V shared memory region can be used
(see ).
In addition a significant number of semaphores, which can be either
System V or POSIX style, are created at server startup. Currently,
POSIX semaphores are used on Linux and FreeBSD systems while other
platforms use System V semaphores.
System V IPC features are typically constrained by
system-wide allocation limits.
When PostgreSQL exceeds one of these limits,
the server will refuse to start and
should leave an instructive error message describing the problem
and what to do about it. (See also .) The relevant kernel
parameters are named consistently across different systems; gives an overview. The methods to set
them, however, vary. Suggestions for some platforms are given below.
System V IPC ParametersNameDescriptionValues needed to run one PostgreSQL instanceSHMMAXMaximum size of shared memory segment (bytes)at least 1kB, but the default is usually much higherSHMMINMinimum size of shared memory segment (bytes)1SHMALLTotal amount of shared memory available (bytes or pages)same as SHMMAX if bytes,
or ceil(SHMMAX/PAGE_SIZE) if pages,
plus room for other applicationsSHMSEGMaximum number of shared memory segments per processonly 1 segment is needed, but the default is much higherSHMMNIMaximum number of shared memory segments system-widelike SHMSEG plus room for other applicationsSEMMNIMaximum number of semaphore identifiers (i.e., sets)at least ceil((max_connections + autovacuum_max_workers + max_wal_senders + max_worker_processes + 5) / 16) plus room for other applicationsSEMMNSMaximum number of semaphores system-wideceil((max_connections + autovacuum_max_workers + max_wal_senders + max_worker_processes + 5) / 16) * 17 plus room for other applicationsSEMMSLMaximum number of semaphores per setat least 17SEMMAPNumber of entries in semaphore mapsee textSEMVMXMaximum value of semaphoreat least 1000 (The default is often 32767; do not change unless necessary)
PostgreSQL requires a few bytes of System V shared memory
(typically 48 bytes, on 64-bit platforms) for each copy of the server.
On most modern operating systems, this amount can easily be allocated.
However, if you are running many copies of the server or you explicitly
configure the server to use large amounts of System V shared memory (see
and ), it may be necessary to
increase SHMALL, which is the total amount of System V shared
memory system-wide. Note that SHMALL is measured in pages
rather than bytes on many systems.
Less likely to cause problems is the minimum size for shared
memory segments (SHMMIN), which should be at most
approximately 32 bytes for PostgreSQL (it is
usually just 1). The maximum number of segments system-wide
(SHMMNI) or per-process (SHMSEG) are unlikely
to cause a problem unless your system has them set to zero.
When using System V semaphores,
PostgreSQL uses one semaphore per allowed connection
(), allowed autovacuum worker process
() and allowed background
process (), in sets of 16.
Each such set will
also contain a 17th semaphore which contains a magic
number, to detect collision with semaphore sets used by
other applications. The maximum number of semaphores in the system
is set by SEMMNS, which consequently must be at least
as high as max_connections plus
autovacuum_max_workers plus max_wal_senders,
plus max_worker_processes, plus one extra for each 16
allowed connections plus workers (see the formula in ). The parameter SEMMNI
determines the limit on the number of semaphore sets that can
exist on the system at one time. Hence this parameter must be at
least ceil((max_connections + autovacuum_max_workers + max_wal_senders + max_worker_processes + 5) / 16).
Lowering the number
of allowed connections is a temporary workaround for failures,
which are usually confusingly worded No space
left on device, from the function semget.
In some cases it might also be necessary to increase
SEMMAP to be at least on the order of
SEMMNS. If the system has this parameter
(many do not), it defines the size of the semaphore
resource map, in which each contiguous block of available semaphores
needs an entry. When a semaphore set is freed it is either added to
an existing entry that is adjacent to the freed block or it is
registered under a new map entry. If the map is full, the freed
semaphores get lost (until reboot). Fragmentation of the semaphore
space could over time lead to fewer available semaphores than there
should be.
Various other settings related to semaphore undo, such as
SEMMNU and SEMUME, do not affect
PostgreSQL.
When using POSIX semaphores, the number of semaphores needed is the
same as for System V, that is one semaphore per allowed connection
(), allowed autovacuum worker process
() and allowed background
process ().
On the platforms where this option is preferred, there is no specific
kernel limit on the number of POSIX semaphores.
AIXAIXIPC configuration
It should not be necessary to do
any special configuration for such parameters as
SHMMAX, as it appears this is configured to
allow all memory to be used as shared memory. That is the
sort of configuration commonly used for other databases such
as DB/2. It might, however, be necessary to modify the global
ulimit information in
/etc/security/limits, as the default hard
limits for file sizes (fsize) and numbers of
files (nofiles) might be too low.
FreeBSDFreeBSDIPC configuration
The default shared memory settings are usually good enough, unless
you have set shared_memory_type to sysv.
System V semaphores are not used on this platform.
The default IPC settings can be changed using
the sysctl or
loader interfaces. The following
parameters can be set using sysctl:
#sysctl kern.ipc.shmall=32768#sysctl kern.ipc.shmmax=134217728
To make these settings persist over reboots, modify
/etc/sysctl.conf.
If you have set shared_memory_type to
sysv, you might also want to configure your kernel
to lock System V shared memory into RAM and prevent it from being paged
out to swap. This can be accomplished using the sysctl
setting kern.ipc.shm_use_phys.
If running in a FreeBSD jail, you should set its
sysvshm parameter to new, so that
it has its own separate System V shared memory namespace.
(Before FreeBSD 11.0, it was necessary to enable shared access to
the host's IPC namespace from jails, and take measures to avoid
collisions.)
NetBSDNetBSDIPC configuration
The default shared memory settings are usually good enough, unless
you have set shared_memory_type to sysv.
You will usually want to increase kern.ipc.semmni
and kern.ipc.semmns,
as NetBSD's default settings
for these are uncomfortably small.
IPC parameters can be adjusted using sysctl,
for example:
#sysctl -w kern.ipc.semmni=100
To make these settings persist over reboots, modify
/etc/sysctl.conf.
If you have set shared_memory_type to
sysv, you might also want to configure your kernel
to lock System V shared memory into RAM and prevent it from being paged
out to swap. This can be accomplished using the sysctl
setting kern.ipc.shm_use_phys.
OpenBSDOpenBSDIPC configuration
The default shared memory settings are usually good enough, unless
you have set shared_memory_type to sysv.
You will usually want to
increase kern.seminfo.semmni
and kern.seminfo.semmns,
as OpenBSD's default settings
for these are uncomfortably small.
IPC parameters can be adjusted using sysctl,
for example:
#sysctl kern.seminfo.semmni=100
To make these settings persist over reboots, modify
/etc/sysctl.conf.
HP-UXHP-UXIPC configuration
The default settings tend to suffice for normal installations.
IPC parameters can be set in the System
Administration Manager (SAM) under
Kernel
ConfigurationConfigurable Parameters. Choose
Create A New Kernel when you're done.
LinuxLinuxIPC configuration
The default shared memory settings are usually good enough, unless
you have set shared_memory_type to sysv,
and even then only on older kernel versions that shipped with low defaults.
System V semaphores are not used on this platform.
The shared memory size settings can be changed via the
sysctl interface. For example, to allow 16 GB:
$sysctl -w kernel.shmmax=17179869184$sysctl -w kernel.shmall=4194304
To make these settings persist over reboots, see
/etc/sysctl.conf.
macOSmacOSIPC configuration
The default shared memory and semaphore settings are usually good enough, unless
you have set shared_memory_type to sysv.
The recommended method for configuring shared memory in macOS
is to create a file named /etc/sysctl.conf,
containing variable assignments such as:
kern.sysv.shmmax=4194304
kern.sysv.shmmin=1
kern.sysv.shmmni=32
kern.sysv.shmseg=8
kern.sysv.shmall=1024
Note that in some macOS versions,
all five shared-memory parameters must be set in
/etc/sysctl.conf, else the values will be ignored.
SHMMAX can only be set to a multiple of 4096.
SHMALL is measured in 4 kB pages on this platform.
It is possible to change all but SHMMNI on the fly, using
sysctl. But it's still best to set up your preferred
values via /etc/sysctl.conf, so that the values will be
kept across reboots.
Solarisillumos
The default shared memory and semaphore settings are usually good enough for most
PostgreSQL applications. Solaris defaults
to a SHMMAX of one-quarter of system RAM.
To further adjust this setting, use a project setting associated
with the postgres user. For example, run the
following as root:
projadd -c "PostgreSQL DB User" -K "project.max-shm-memory=(privileged,8GB,deny)" -U postgres -G postgres user.postgres
This command adds the user.postgres project and
sets the shared memory maximum for the postgres
user to 8GB, and takes effect the next time that user logs
in, or when you restart PostgreSQL (not reload).
The above assumes that PostgreSQL is run by
the postgres user in the postgres
group. No server reboot is required.
Other recommended kernel setting changes for database servers which will
have a large number of connections are:
project.max-shm-ids=(priv,32768,deny)
project.max-sem-ids=(priv,4096,deny)
project.max-msg-ids=(priv,4096,deny)
Additionally, if you are running PostgreSQL
inside a zone, you may need to raise the zone resource usage
limits as well. See "Chapter2: Projects and Tasks" in the
System Administrator's Guide for more
information on projects and prctl.
systemd RemoveIPCsystemdRemoveIPC
If systemd is in use, some care must be taken
that IPC resources (including shared memory) are not prematurely
removed by the operating system. This is especially of concern when
installing PostgreSQL from source. Users of distribution packages of
PostgreSQL are less likely to be affected, as
the postgres user is then normally created as a system
user.
The setting RemoveIPC
in logind.conf controls whether IPC objects are
removed when a user fully logs out. System users are exempt. This
setting defaults to on in stock systemd, but
some operating system distributions default it to off.
A typical observed effect when this setting is on is that shared memory
objects used for parallel query execution are removed at apparently random
times, leading to errors and warnings while attempting to open and remove
them, like
WARNING: could not remove shared memory segment "/PostgreSQL.1450751626": No such file or directory
Different types of IPC objects (shared memory vs. semaphores, System V
vs. POSIX) are treated slightly differently
by systemd, so one might observe that some IPC
resources are not removed in the same way as others. But it is not
advisable to rely on these subtle differences.
A user logging out might happen as part of a maintenance
job or manually when an administrator logs in as
the postgres user or something similar, so it is hard
to prevent in general.
What is a system user is determined
at systemd compile time from
the SYS_UID_MAX setting
in /etc/login.defs.
Packaging and deployment scripts should be careful to create
the postgres user as a system user by
using useradd -r, adduser --system,
or equivalent.
Alternatively, if the user account was created incorrectly or cannot be
changed, it is recommended to set
RemoveIPC=no
in /etc/systemd/logind.conf or another appropriate
configuration file.
At least one of these two things has to be ensured, or the PostgreSQL
server will be very unreliable.
Resource Limits
Unix-like operating systems enforce various kinds of resource limits
that might interfere with the operation of your
PostgreSQL server. Of particular
importance are limits on the number of processes per user, the
number of open files per process, and the amount of memory available
to each process. Each of these have a hard and a
soft limit. The soft limit is what actually counts
but it can be changed by the user up to the hard limit. The hard
limit can only be changed by the root user. The system call
setrlimit is responsible for setting these
parameters. The shell's built-in command ulimit
(Bourne shells) or limit (csh) is
used to control the resource limits from the command line. On
BSD-derived systems the file /etc/login.conf
controls the various resource limits set during login. See the
operating system documentation for details. The relevant
parameters are maxproc,
openfiles, and datasize. For
example:
default:\
...
:datasize-cur=256M:\
:maxproc-cur=256:\
:openfiles-cur=256:\
...
(-cur is the soft limit. Append
-max to set the hard limit.)
Kernels can also have system-wide limits on some resources.
On Linux/proc/sys/fs/file-max determines the
maximum number of open files that the kernel will support. It can
be changed by writing a different number into the file or by
adding an assignment in /etc/sysctl.conf.
The maximum limit of files per process is fixed at the time the
kernel is compiled; see
/usr/src/linux/Documentation/proc.txt for
more information.
The PostgreSQL server uses one process
per connection so you should provide for at least as many processes
as allowed connections, in addition to what you need for the rest
of your system. This is usually not a problem but if you run
several servers on one machine things might get tight.
The factory default limit on open files is often set to
socially friendly values that allow many users to
coexist on a machine without using an inappropriate fraction of
the system resources. If you run many servers on a machine this
is perhaps what you want, but on dedicated servers you might want to
raise this limit.
On the other side of the coin, some systems allow individual
processes to open large numbers of files; if more than a few
processes do so then the system-wide limit can easily be exceeded.
If you find this happening, and you do not want to alter the
system-wide limit, you can set PostgreSQL's configuration parameter to
limit the consumption of open files.
Linux Memory Overcommitmemory overcommitOOMovercommit
The default virtual memory behavior on Linux is not
optimal for PostgreSQL. Because of the
way that the kernel implements memory overcommit, the kernel might
terminate the PostgreSQL postmaster (the
master server process) if the memory demands of either
PostgreSQL or another process cause the
system to run out of virtual memory.
If this happens, you will see a kernel message that looks like
this (consult your system documentation and configuration on where
to look for such a message):
Out of Memory: Killed process 12345 (postgres).
This indicates that the postgres process
has been terminated due to memory pressure.
Although existing database connections will continue to function
normally, no new connections will be accepted. To recover,
PostgreSQL will need to be restarted.
One way to avoid this problem is to run
PostgreSQL on a machine where you can
be sure that other processes will not run the machine out of
memory. If memory is tight, increasing the swap space of the
operating system can help avoid the problem, because the
out-of-memory (OOM) killer is invoked only when physical memory and
swap space are exhausted.
If PostgreSQL itself is the cause of the
system running out of memory, you can avoid the problem by changing
your configuration. In some cases, it may help to lower memory-related
configuration parameters, particularly
shared_buffers,
work_mem, and
hash_mem_multiplier.
In other cases, the problem may be caused by allowing too many
connections to the database server itself. In many cases, it may
be better to reduce
max_connections
and instead make use of external connection-pooling software.
It is possible to modify the
kernel's behavior so that it will not overcommit memory.
Although this setting will not prevent the OOM killer from being invoked
altogether, it will lower the chances significantly and will therefore
lead to more robust system behavior. This is done by selecting strict
overcommit mode via sysctl:
sysctl -w vm.overcommit_memory=2
or placing an equivalent entry in /etc/sysctl.conf.
You might also wish to modify the related setting
vm.overcommit_ratio. For details see the kernel documentation
file .
Another approach, which can be used with or without altering
vm.overcommit_memory, is to set the process-specific
OOM score adjustment value for the postmaster process to
-1000, thereby guaranteeing it will not be targeted by the OOM
killer. The simplest way to do this is to execute
echo -1000 > /proc/self/oom_score_adj
in the postmaster's startup script just before invoking the postmaster.
Note that this action must be done as root, or it will have no effect;
so a root-owned startup script is the easiest place to do it. If you
do this, you should also set these environment variables in the startup
script before invoking the postmaster:
export PG_OOM_ADJUST_FILE=/proc/self/oom_score_adj
export PG_OOM_ADJUST_VALUE=0
These settings will cause postmaster child processes to run with the
normal OOM score adjustment of zero, so that the OOM killer can still
target them at need. You could use some other value for
PG_OOM_ADJUST_VALUE if you want the child processes to run
with some other OOM score adjustment. (PG_OOM_ADJUST_VALUE
can also be omitted, in which case it defaults to zero.) If you do not
set PG_OOM_ADJUST_FILE, the child processes will run with the
same OOM score adjustment as the postmaster, which is unwise since the
whole point is to ensure that the postmaster has a preferential setting.
Linux Huge Pages
Using huge pages reduces overhead when using large contiguous chunks of
memory, as PostgreSQL does, particularly when
using large values of . To use this
feature in PostgreSQL you need a kernel
with CONFIG_HUGETLBFS=y and
CONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE=y. You will also have to adjust
the kernel setting vm.nr_hugepages. To estimate the
number of huge pages needed, start PostgreSQL
without huge pages enabled and check the
postmaster's anonymous shared memory segment size, as well as the system's
huge page size, using the /proc file system. This might
look like:
$ head -1 $PGDATA/postmaster.pid
4170
$ pmap 4170 | awk '/rw-s/ && /zero/ {print $2}'
6490428K
$ grep ^Hugepagesize /proc/meminfo
Hugepagesize: 2048 kB
6490428 / 2048 gives approximately
3169.154, so in this example we need at
least 3170 huge pages, which we can set with:
$ sysctl -w vm.nr_hugepages=3170
A larger setting would be appropriate if other programs on the machine
also need huge pages. Don't forget to add this setting
to /etc/sysctl.conf so that it will be reapplied
after reboots.
Sometimes the kernel is not able to allocate the desired number of huge
pages immediately, so it might be necessary to repeat the command or to
reboot. (Immediately after a reboot, most of the machine's memory
should be available to convert into huge pages.) To verify the huge
page allocation situation, use:
$ grep Huge /proc/meminfo
It may also be necessary to give the database server's operating system
user permission to use huge pages by setting
vm.hugetlb_shm_group via sysctl, and/or
give permission to lock memory with ulimit -l.
The default behavior for huge pages in
PostgreSQL is to use them when possible and
to fall back to normal pages when failing. To enforce the use of huge
pages, you can set
to on in postgresql.conf.
Note that with this setting PostgreSQL will fail to
start if not enough huge pages are available.
For a detailed description of the Linux huge
pages feature have a look
at .
Shutting Down the Servershutdown
There are several ways to shut down the database server.
Under the hood, they all reduce to sending a signal to the supervisor
postgres process.
If you are using a pre-packaged version
of PostgreSQL, and you used its provisions
for starting the server, then you should also use its provisions for
stopping the server. Consult the package-level documentation for
details.
When managing the server directly, you can control the type of shutdown
by sending different signals to the postgres
process:
SIGTERMSIGTERM
This is the Smart Shutdown mode.
After receiving SIGTERM, the server
disallows new connections, but lets existing sessions end their
work normally. It shuts down only after all of the sessions terminate.
If the server is in online backup mode, it additionally waits
until online backup mode is no longer active. While backup mode is
active, new connections will still be allowed, but only to superusers
(this exception allows a superuser to connect to terminate
online backup mode). If the server is in recovery when a smart
shutdown is requested, recovery and streaming replication will be
stopped only after all regular sessions have terminated.
SIGINTSIGINT
This is the Fast Shutdown mode.
The server disallows new connections and sends all existing
server processes SIGTERM, which will cause them
to abort their current transactions and exit promptly. It then
waits for all server processes to exit and finally shuts down.
If the server is in online backup mode, backup mode will be
terminated, rendering the backup useless.
SIGQUITSIGQUIT
This is the Immediate Shutdown mode.
The server will send SIGQUIT to all child
processes and wait for them to terminate. If any do not terminate
within 5 seconds, they will be sent SIGKILL.
The master server process exits as soon as all child processes have
exited, without doing normal database shutdown processing.
This will lead to recovery (by
replaying the WAL log) upon next start-up. This is recommended
only in emergencies.
The program provides a convenient
interface for sending these signals to shut down the server.
Alternatively, you can send the signal directly using kill
on non-Windows systems.
The PID of the postgres process can be
found using the ps program, or from the file
postmaster.pid in the data directory. For
example, to do a fast shutdown:
$ kill -INT `head -1 /usr/local/pgsql/data/postmaster.pid`
It is best not to use SIGKILL to shut down the
server. Doing so will prevent the server from releasing shared memory and
semaphores. Furthermore, SIGKILL kills
the postgres process without letting it relay the
signal to its subprocesses, so it might be necessary to kill the
individual subprocesses by hand as well.
To terminate an individual session while allowing other sessions to
continue, use pg_terminate_backend() (see ) or send a
SIGTERM signal to the child process associated with
the session.
Upgrading a PostgreSQL Clusterupgradingversioncompatibility
This section discusses how to upgrade your database data from one
PostgreSQL release to a newer one.
Current PostgreSQL version numbers consist of a
major and a minor version number. For example, in the version number 10.1,
the 10 is the major version number and the 1 is the minor version number,
meaning this would be the first minor release of the major release 10. For
releases before PostgreSQL version 10.0, version
numbers consist of three numbers, for example, 9.5.3. In those cases, the
major version consists of the first two digit groups of the version number,
e.g., 9.5, and the minor version is the third number, e.g., 3, meaning this
would be the third minor release of the major release 9.5.
Minor releases never change the internal storage format and are always
compatible with earlier and later minor releases of the same major version
number. For example, version 10.1 is compatible with version 10.0 and
version 10.6. Similarly, for example, 9.5.3 is compatible with 9.5.0,
9.5.1, and 9.5.6. To update between compatible versions, you simply
replace the executables while the server is down and restart the server.
The data directory remains unchanged — minor upgrades are that
simple.
For major releases of PostgreSQL, the
internal data storage format is subject to change, thus complicating
upgrades. The traditional method for moving data to a new major version
is to dump and reload the database, though this can be slow. A
faster method is . Replication methods are
also available, as discussed below.
(If you are using a pre-packaged version
of PostgreSQL, it may provide scripts to
assist with major version upgrades. Consult the package-level
documentation for details.)
New major versions also typically introduce some user-visible
incompatibilities, so application programming changes might be required.
All user-visible changes are listed in the release notes (); pay particular attention to the section
labeled "Migration". Though you can upgrade from one major version
to another without upgrading to intervening versions, you should read
the major release notes of all intervening versions.
Cautious users will want to test their client applications on the new
version before switching over fully; therefore, it's often a good idea to
set up concurrent installations of old and new versions. When
testing a PostgreSQL major upgrade, consider the
following categories of possible changes:
Administration
The capabilities available for administrators to monitor and control
the server often change and improve in each major release.
SQL
Typically this includes new SQL command capabilities and not changes
in behavior, unless specifically mentioned in the release notes.
Library API
Typically libraries like libpq only add new
functionality, again unless mentioned in the release notes.
System Catalogs
System catalog changes usually only affect database management tools.
Server C-language API
This involves changes in the backend function API, which is written
in the C programming language. Such changes affect code that
references backend functions deep inside the server.
Upgrading Data via pg_dumpall
One upgrade method is to dump data from one major version of
PostgreSQL and reload it in another — to do
this, you must use a logical backup tool like
pg_dumpall; file system
level backup methods will not work. (There are checks in place that prevent
you from using a data directory with an incompatible version of
PostgreSQL, so no great harm can be done by
trying to start the wrong server version on a data directory.)
It is recommended that you use the pg_dump and
pg_dumpall programs from the newer
version of
PostgreSQL, to take advantage of enhancements
that might have been made in these programs. Current releases of the
dump programs can read data from any server version back to 7.0.
These instructions assume that your existing installation is under the
/usr/local/pgsql directory, and that the data area is in
/usr/local/pgsql/data. Substitute your paths
appropriately.
If making a backup, make sure that your database is not being updated.
This does not affect the integrity of the backup, but the changed
data would of course not be included. If necessary, edit the
permissions in the file /usr/local/pgsql/data/pg_hba.conf
(or equivalent) to disallow access from everyone except you.
See for additional information on
access control.
pg_dumpalluse during upgrade
To back up your database installation, type:
pg_dumpall > outputfile
To make the backup, you can use the pg_dumpall
command from the version you are currently running; see for more details. For best
results, however, try to use the pg_dumpall
command from PostgreSQL &version;,
since this version contains bug fixes and improvements over older
versions. While this advice might seem idiosyncratic since you
haven't installed the new version yet, it is advisable to follow
it if you plan to install the new version in parallel with the
old version. In that case you can complete the installation
normally and transfer the data later. This will also decrease
the downtime.
Shut down the old server:
pg_ctl stop
On systems that have PostgreSQL started at boot time,
there is probably a start-up file that will accomplish the same thing. For
example, on a Red Hat Linux system one
might find that this works:
/etc/rc.d/init.d/postgresql stop
See for details about starting and
stopping the server.
If restoring from backup, rename or delete the old installation
directory if it is not version-specific. It is a good idea to
rename the directory, rather than
delete it, in case you have trouble and need to revert to it. Keep
in mind the directory might consume significant disk space. To rename
the directory, use a command like this:
mv /usr/local/pgsql /usr/local/pgsql.old
(Be sure to move the directory as a single unit so relative paths
remain unchanged.)
Install the new version of PostgreSQL as
outlined in .
Create a new database cluster if needed. Remember that you must
execute these commands while logged in to the special database user
account (which you already have if you are upgrading).
/usr/local/pgsql/bin/initdb -D /usr/local/pgsql/data
Restore your previous pg_hba.conf and any
postgresql.conf modifications.
Start the database server, again using the special database user
account:
/usr/local/pgsql/bin/postgres -D /usr/local/pgsql/data
Finally, restore your data from backup with:
/usr/local/pgsql/bin/psql -d postgres -f outputfile
using the newpsql.
The least downtime can be achieved by installing the new server in
a different directory and running both the old and the new servers
in parallel, on different ports. Then you can use something like:
pg_dumpall -p 5432 | psql -d postgres -p 5433
to transfer your data.
Upgrading Data via pg_upgrade
The module allows an installation to
be migrated in-place from one major PostgreSQL
version to another. Upgrades can be performed in minutes,
particularly with mode. It requires steps similar to
pg_dumpall above, e.g., starting/stopping the server,
running initdb. The pg_upgrade documentation outlines the necessary steps.
Upgrading Data via Replication
It is also possible to use logical replication methods to create a standby
server with the updated version of PostgreSQL.
This is possible because logical replication supports
replication between different major versions of
PostgreSQL. The standby can be on the same computer or
a different computer. Once it has synced up with the master server
(running the older version of PostgreSQL), you can
switch masters and make the standby the master and shut down the older
database instance. Such a switch-over results in only several seconds
of downtime for an upgrade.
This method of upgrading can be performed using the built-in logical
replication facilities as well as using external logical replication
systems such as pglogical,
Slony, Londiste, and
Bucardo.
Preventing Server Spoofingserver spoofing
While the server is running, it is not possible for a malicious user
to take the place of the normal database server. However, when the
server is down, it is possible for a local user to spoof the normal
server by starting their own server. The spoof server could read
passwords and queries sent by clients, but could not return any data
because the PGDATA directory would still be secure because
of directory permissions. Spoofing is possible because any user can
start a database server; a client cannot identify an invalid server
unless it is specially configured.
One way to prevent spoofing of local
connections is to use a Unix domain socket directory () that has write permission only
for a trusted local user. This prevents a malicious user from creating
their own socket file in that directory. If you are concerned that
some applications might still reference /tmp for the
socket file and hence be vulnerable to spoofing, during operating system
startup create a symbolic link /tmp/.s.PGSQL.5432 that points
to the relocated socket file. You also might need to modify your
/tmp cleanup script to prevent removal of the symbolic link.
Another option for local connections is for clients to use
requirepeer
to specify the required owner of the server process connected to
the socket.
To prevent spoofing on TCP connections, either use
SSL certificates and make sure that clients check the server's certificate,
or use GSSAPI encryption (or both, if they're on separate connections).
To prevent spoofing with SSL, the server
must be configured to accept only hostssl connections () and have SSL key and certificate files
(). The TCP client must connect using
sslmode=verify-ca or
verify-full and have the appropriate root certificate
file installed ().
To prevent spoofing with GSSAPI, the server must be configured to accept
only hostgssenc connections
() and use gss
authentication with them. The TCP client must connect
using gssencmode=require.
Encryption OptionsencryptionPostgreSQL offers encryption at several
levels, and provides flexibility in protecting data from disclosure
due to database server theft, unscrupulous administrators, and
insecure networks. Encryption might also be required to secure
sensitive data such as medical records or financial transactions.
Password Encryption
Database user passwords are stored as hashes (determined by the setting
), so the administrator cannot
determine the actual password assigned to the user. If SCRAM or MD5
encryption is used for client authentication, the unencrypted password is
never even temporarily present on the server because the client encrypts
it before being sent across the network. SCRAM is preferred, because it
is an Internet standard and is more secure than the PostgreSQL-specific
MD5 authentication protocol.
Encryption For Specific Columns
The module allows certain fields to be
stored encrypted.
This is useful if only some of the data is sensitive.
The client supplies the decryption key and the data is decrypted
on the server and then sent to the client.
The decrypted data and the decryption key are present on the
server for a brief time while it is being decrypted and
communicated between the client and server. This presents a brief
moment where the data and keys can be intercepted by someone with
complete access to the database server, such as the system
administrator.
Data Partition Encryption
Storage encryption can be performed at the file system level or the
block level. Linux file system encryption options include eCryptfs
and EncFS, while FreeBSD uses PEFS. Block level or full disk
encryption options include dm-crypt + LUKS on Linux and GEOM
modules geli and gbde on FreeBSD. Many other operating systems
support this functionality, including Windows.
This mechanism prevents unencrypted data from being read from the
drives if the drives or the entire computer is stolen. This does
not protect against attacks while the file system is mounted,
because when mounted, the operating system provides an unencrypted
view of the data. However, to mount the file system, you need some
way for the encryption key to be passed to the operating system,
and sometimes the key is stored somewhere on the host that mounts
the disk.
Encrypting Data Across A Network
SSL connections encrypt all data sent across the network: the
password, the queries, and the data returned. The
pg_hba.conf file allows administrators to specify
which hosts can use non-encrypted connections (host)
and which require SSL-encrypted connections
(hostssl). Also, clients can specify that they
connect to servers only via SSL.
GSSAPI-encrypted connections encrypt all data sent across the network,
including queries and data returned. (No password is sent across the
network.) The pg_hba.conf file allows
administrators to specify which hosts can use non-encrypted connections
(host) and which require GSSAPI-encrypted connections
(hostgssenc). Also, clients can specify that they
connect to servers only on GSSAPI-encrypted connections
(gssencmode=require).
Stunnel or
SSH can also be used to encrypt
transmissions.
SSL Host Authentication
It is possible for both the client and server to provide SSL
certificates to each other. It takes some extra configuration
on each side, but this provides stronger verification of identity
than the mere use of passwords. It prevents a computer from
pretending to be the server just long enough to read the password
sent by the client. It also helps prevent man in the middle
attacks where a computer between the client and server pretends to
be the server and reads and passes all data between the client and
server.
Client-Side Encryption
If the system administrator for the server's machine cannot be trusted,
it is necessary
for the client to encrypt the data; this way, unencrypted data
never appears on the database server. Data is encrypted on the
client before being sent to the server, and database results have
to be decrypted on the client before being used.
Secure TCP/IP Connections with SSLSSLPostgreSQL has native support for using
SSL connections to encrypt client/server communications
for increased security. This requires that
OpenSSL is installed on both client and
server systems and that support in PostgreSQL is
enabled at build time (see ).
Basic Setup
With SSL support compiled in, the
PostgreSQL server can be started with
SSL enabled by setting the parameter
to on in
postgresql.conf. The server will listen for both normal
and SSL connections on the same TCP port, and will negotiate
with any connecting client on whether to use SSL. By
default, this is at the client's option; see about how to set up the server to require
use of SSL for some or all connections.
To start in SSL mode, files containing the server certificate
and private key must exist. By default, these files are expected to be
named server.crt and server.key, respectively, in
the server's data directory, but other names and locations can be specified
using the configuration parameters
and .
On Unix systems, the permissions on server.key must
disallow any access to world or group; achieve this by the command
chmod 0600 server.key. Alternatively, the file can be
owned by root and have group read access (that is, 0640
permissions). That setup is intended for installations where certificate
and key files are managed by the operating system. The user under which
the PostgreSQL server runs should then be made a
member of the group that has access to those certificate and key files.
If the data directory allows group read access then certificate files may
need to be located outside of the data directory in order to conform to the
security requirements outlined above. Generally, group access is enabled
to allow an unprivileged user to backup the database, and in that case the
backup software will not be able to read the certificate files and will
likely error.
If the private key is protected with a passphrase, the
server will prompt for the passphrase and will not start until it has
been entered.
Using a passphrase by default disables the ability to change the server's
SSL configuration without a server restart, but see .
Furthermore, passphrase-protected private keys cannot be used at all
on Windows.
The first certificate in server.crt must be the
server's certificate because it must match the server's private key.
The certificates of intermediate certificate authorities
can also be appended to the file. Doing this avoids the necessity of
storing intermediate certificates on clients, assuming the root and
intermediate certificates were created with v3_ca
extensions. (This sets the certificate's basic constraint of
CA to true.)
This allows easier expiration of intermediate certificates.
It is not necessary to add the root certificate to
server.crt. Instead, clients must have the root
certificate of the server's certificate chain.
OpenSSL ConfigurationPostgreSQL reads the system-wide
OpenSSL configuration file. By default, this
file is named openssl.cnf and is located in the
directory reported by openssl version -d.
This default can be overridden by setting environment variable
OPENSSL_CONF to the name of the desired configuration file.
OpenSSL supports a wide range of ciphers
and authentication algorithms, of varying strength. While a list of
ciphers can be specified in the OpenSSL
configuration file, you can specify ciphers specifically for use by
the database server by modifying in
postgresql.conf.
It is possible to have authentication without encryption overhead by
using NULL-SHA or NULL-MD5 ciphers. However,
a man-in-the-middle could read and pass communications between client
and server. Also, encryption overhead is minimal compared to the
overhead of authentication. For these reasons NULL ciphers are not
recommended.
Using Client Certificates
To require the client to supply a trusted certificate,
place certificates of the root certificate authorities
(CAs) you trust in a file in the data
directory, set the parameter in
postgresql.conf to the new file name, and add the
authentication option clientcert=verify-ca or
clientcert=verify-full to the appropriate
hostssl line(s) in pg_hba.conf.
A certificate will then be requested from the client during SSL
connection startup. (See for a description
of how to set up certificates on the client.)
For a hostssl entry with
clientcert=verify-ca, the server will verify
that the client's certificate is signed by one of the trusted
certificate authorities. If clientcert=verify-full
is specified, the server will not only verify the certificate
chain, but it will also check whether the username or its mapping
matches the cn (Common Name) of the provided certificate.
Note that certificate chain validation is always ensured when the
cert authentication method is used
(see ).
Intermediate certificates that chain up to existing root certificates
can also appear in the file if
you wish to avoid storing them on clients (assuming the root and
intermediate certificates were created with v3_ca
extensions). Certificate Revocation List (CRL) entries are also
checked if the parameter is set.
The clientcert authentication option is available for
all authentication methods, but only in pg_hba.conf lines
specified as hostssl. When clientcert is
not specified or is set to no-verify, the server will still
verify any presented client certificates against its CA file, if one is
configured — but it will not insist that a client certificate be presented.
There are two approaches to enforce that users provide a certificate during login.
The first approach makes use of the cert authentication
method for hostssl entries in pg_hba.conf,
such that the certificate itself is used for authentication while also
providing ssl connection security. See for details.
(It is not necessary to specify any clientcert options
explicitly when using the cert authentication method.)
In this case, the cn (Common Name) provided in
the certificate is checked against the user name or an applicable mapping.
The second approach combines any authentication method for hostssl
entries with the verification of client certificates by setting the
clientcert authentication option to verify-ca
or verify-full. The former option only enforces that
the certificate is valid, while the latter also ensures that the
cn (Common Name) in the certificate matches
the user name or an applicable mapping.
SSL Server File Usage summarizes the files that are
relevant to the SSL setup on the server. (The shown file names are default
names. The locally configured names could be different.)
SSL Server File UsageFileContentsEffect ($PGDATA/server.crt)server certificatesent to client to indicate server's identity ($PGDATA/server.key)server private keyproves server certificate was sent by the owner; does not indicate
certificate owner is trustworthytrusted certificate authoritieschecks that client certificate is
signed by a trusted certificate authoritycertificates revoked by certificate authoritiesclient certificate must not be on this list
The server reads these files at server start and whenever the server
configuration is reloaded. On Windows
systems, they are also re-read whenever a new backend process is spawned
for a new client connection.
If an error in these files is detected at server start, the server will
refuse to start. But if an error is detected during a configuration
reload, the files are ignored and the old SSL configuration continues to
be used. On Windows systems, if an error in
these files is detected at backend start, that backend will be unable to
establish an SSL connection. In all these cases, the error condition is
reported in the server log.
Creating Certificates
To create a simple self-signed certificate for the server, valid for 365
days, use the following OpenSSL command,
replacing dbhost.yourdomain.com with the
server's host name:
openssl req -new -x509 -days 365 -nodes -text -out server.crt \
-keyout server.key -subj "/CN=dbhost.yourdomain.com"
Then do:
chmod og-rwx server.key
because the server will reject the file if its permissions are more
liberal than this.
For more details on how to create your server private key and
certificate, refer to the OpenSSL documentation.
While a self-signed certificate can be used for testing, a certificate
signed by a certificate authority (CA) (usually an
enterprise-wide root CA) should be used in production.
To create a server certificate whose identity can be validated
by clients, first create a certificate signing request
(CSR) and a public/private key file:
openssl req -new -nodes -text -out root.csr \
-keyout root.key -subj "/CN=root.yourdomain.com"
chmod og-rwx root.key
Then, sign the request with the key to create a root certificate
authority (using the default OpenSSL
configuration file location on Linux):
openssl x509 -req -in root.csr -text -days 3650 \
-extfile /etc/ssl/openssl.cnf -extensions v3_ca \
-signkey root.key -out root.crt
Finally, create a server certificate signed by the new root certificate
authority:
openssl req -new -nodes -text -out server.csr \
-keyout server.key -subj "/CN=dbhost.yourdomain.com"
chmod og-rwx server.key
openssl x509 -req -in server.csr -text -days 365 \
-CA root.crt -CAkey root.key -CAcreateserial \
-out server.crt
server.crt and server.key
should be stored on the server, and root.crt should
be stored on the client so the client can verify that the server's leaf
certificate was signed by its trusted root certificate.
root.key should be stored offline for use in
creating future certificates.
It is also possible to create a chain of trust that includes
intermediate certificates:
# root
openssl req -new -nodes -text -out root.csr \
-keyout root.key -subj "/CN=root.yourdomain.com"
chmod og-rwx root.key
openssl x509 -req -in root.csr -text -days 3650 \
-extfile /etc/ssl/openssl.cnf -extensions v3_ca \
-signkey root.key -out root.crt
# intermediate
openssl req -new -nodes -text -out intermediate.csr \
-keyout intermediate.key -subj "/CN=intermediate.yourdomain.com"
chmod og-rwx intermediate.key
openssl x509 -req -in intermediate.csr -text -days 1825 \
-extfile /etc/ssl/openssl.cnf -extensions v3_ca \
-CA root.crt -CAkey root.key -CAcreateserial \
-out intermediate.crt
# leaf
openssl req -new -nodes -text -out server.csr \
-keyout server.key -subj "/CN=dbhost.yourdomain.com"
chmod og-rwx server.key
openssl x509 -req -in server.csr -text -days 365 \
-CA intermediate.crt -CAkey intermediate.key -CAcreateserial \
-out server.crt
server.crt and
intermediate.crt should be concatenated
into a certificate file bundle and stored on the server.
server.key should also be stored on the server.
root.crt should be stored on the client so
the client can verify that the server's leaf certificate was signed
by a chain of certificates linked to its trusted root certificate.
root.key and intermediate.key
should be stored offline for use in creating future certificates.
Secure TCP/IP Connections with GSSAPI EncryptiongssapiPostgreSQL also has native support for
using GSSAPI to encrypt client/server communications for
increased security. Support requires that a GSSAPI
implementation (such as MIT Kerberos) is installed on both client and server
systems, and that support in PostgreSQL is
enabled at build time (see ).
Basic Setup
The PostgreSQL server will listen for both
normal and GSSAPI-encrypted connections on the same TCP
port, and will negotiate with any connecting client whether to
use GSSAPI for encryption (and for authentication). By
default, this decision is up to the client (which means it can be
downgraded by an attacker); see about
setting up the server to require the use of GSSAPI for
some or all connections.
When using GSSAPI for encryption, it is common to
use GSSAPI for authentication as well, since the
underlying mechanism will determine both client and server identities
(according to the GSSAPI implementation) in any
case. But this is not required;
another PostgreSQL authentication method
can be chosen to perform additional verification.
Other than configuration of the negotiation
behavior, GSSAPI encryption requires no setup beyond
that which is necessary for GSSAPI authentication. (For more information
on configuring that, see .)
Secure TCP/IP Connections with SSH Tunnelsssh
It is possible to use SSH to encrypt the network
connection between clients and a
PostgreSQL server. Done properly, this
provides an adequately secure network connection, even for non-SSL-capable
clients.
First make sure that an SSH server is
running properly on the same machine as the
PostgreSQL server and that you can log in using
ssh as some user; you then can establish a
secure tunnel to the remote server. A secure tunnel listens on a
local port and forwards all traffic to a port on the remote machine.
Traffic sent to the remote port can arrive on its
localhost address, or different bind
address if desired; it does not appear as coming from your
local machine. This command creates a secure tunnel from the client
machine to the remote machine foo.com:
ssh -L 63333:localhost:5432 joe@foo.com
The first number in the argument, 63333, is the
local port number of the tunnel; it can be any unused port. (IANA
reserves ports 49152 through 65535 for private use.) The name or IP
address after this is the remote bind address you are connecting to,
i.e., localhost, which is the default. The second
number, 5432, is the remote end of the tunnel, e.g., the port number
your database server is using. In order to connect to the database
server using this tunnel, you connect to port 63333 on the local
machine:
psql -h localhost -p 63333 postgres
To the database server it will then look as though you are
user joe on host foo.com
connecting to the localhost bind address, and it
will use whatever authentication procedure was configured for
connections by that user to that bind address. Note that the server will not
think the connection is SSL-encrypted, since in fact it is not
encrypted between the
SSH server and the
PostgreSQL server. This should not pose any
extra security risk because they are on the same machine.
In order for the
tunnel setup to succeed you must be allowed to connect via
ssh as joe@foo.com, just
as if you had attempted to use ssh to create a
terminal session.
You could also have set up port forwarding as
ssh -L 63333:foo.com:5432 joe@foo.com
but then the database server will see the connection as coming in
on its foo.com bind address, which is not opened by
the default setting listen_addresses =
'localhost'. This is usually not what you want.
If you have to hop to the database server via some
login host, one possible setup could look like this:
ssh -L 63333:db.foo.com:5432 joe@shell.foo.com
Note that this way the connection
from shell.foo.com
to db.foo.com will not be encrypted by the SSH
tunnel.
SSH offers quite a few configuration possibilities when the network
is restricted in various ways. Please refer to the SSH
documentation for details.
Several other applications exist that can provide secure tunnels using
a procedure similar in concept to the one just described.
Registering Event Log on Windowsevent logevent log
To register a Windowsevent log library with the operating system,
issue this command:
regsvr32 pgsql_library_directory/pgevent.dll
This creates registry entries used by the event viewer, under the default
event source named PostgreSQL.
To specify a different event source name (see
), use the /n
and /i options:
regsvr32 /n /i:event_source_namepgsql_library_directory/pgevent.dll
To unregister the event log library from
the operating system, issue this command:
regsvr32 /u [/i:event_source_name] pgsql_library_directory/pgevent.dll
To enable event logging in the database server, modify
to include
eventlog in postgresql.conf.