Installation from Source Codeinstallation
This chapter describes the installation of
PostgreSQL using the source code
distribution. If you are installing a pre-packaged distribution,
such as an RPM or Debian package, ignore this chapter
and see instead.
If you are building PostgreSQL for Microsoft
Windows, read this chapter if you intend to build with MinGW or Cygwin;
but if you intend to build with Microsoft's Visual
C++, see instead.
Short Version
./configure
make
su
make install
adduser postgres
mkdir -p /usr/local/pgsql/data
chown postgres /usr/local/pgsql/data
su - postgres
/usr/local/pgsql/bin/initdb -D /usr/local/pgsql/data
/usr/local/pgsql/bin/pg_ctl -D /usr/local/pgsql/data -l logfile start
/usr/local/pgsql/bin/createdb test
/usr/local/pgsql/bin/psql test
The long version is the rest of this
chapter.
Requirements
In general, a modern Unix-compatible platform should be able to run
PostgreSQL.
The platforms that had received specific testing at the
time of release are described in
below.
The following software packages are required for building
PostgreSQL:
make
GNU make version 3.81 or newer is required; other
make programs or older GNU make versions will not work.
(GNU make is sometimes installed under
the name gmake.) To test for GNU
make enter:
make --version
You need an ISO/ANSI C compiler (at least
C99-compliant). Recent
versions of GCC are recommended, but
PostgreSQL is known to build using a wide variety
of compilers from different vendors.
tar is required to unpack the source
distribution, in addition to either
gzip or bzip2.
readlinelibedit
The GNU Readline library is used by
default. It allows psql (the
PostgreSQL command line SQL interpreter) to remember each
command you type, and allows you to use arrow keys to recall and
edit previous commands. This is very helpful and is strongly
recommended. If you don't want to use it then you must specify
the option to
configure. As an alternative, you can often use the
BSD-licensed libedit library, originally
developed on NetBSD. The
libedit library is
GNU Readline-compatible and is used if
libreadline is not found, or if
is used as an
option to configure. If you are using a package-based
Linux distribution, be aware that you need both the
readline and readline-devel packages, if
those are separate in your distribution.
zlib
The zlib compression library is
used by default. If you don't want to use it then you must
specify the option to
configure. Using this option disables
support for compressed archives in pg_dump and
pg_restore.
The following packages are optional. They are not required in the
default configuration, but they are needed when certain build
options are enabled, as explained below:
To build the server programming language
PL/Perl you need a full
Perl installation, including the
libperl library and the header files.
The minimum required version is Perl 5.8.3.
Since PL/Perl will be a shared
library, the libperllibperl library must be a shared library
also on most platforms. This appears to be the default in
recent Perl versions, but it was not
in earlier versions, and in any case it is the choice of whomever
installed Perl at your site. configure will fail
if building PL/Perl is selected but it cannot
find a shared libperl. In that case, you will have
to rebuild and install Perl manually to be
able to build PL/Perl. During the
configuration process for Perl, request a
shared library.
If you intend to make more than incidental use of
PL/Perl, you should ensure that the
Perl installation was built with the
usemultiplicity option enabled (perl -V
will show whether this is the case).
To build the PL/Python server programming
language, you need a Python
installation with the header files and
the sysconfig module. The minimum
required version is Python 3.2.
Since PL/Python will be a shared
library, the libpythonlibpython library must be a shared library
also on most platforms. This is not the case in a default
Python installation built from source, but a
shared library is available in many operating system
distributions. configure will fail if
building PL/Python is selected but it cannot
find a shared libpython. That might mean that you
either have to install additional packages or rebuild (part of) your
Python installation to provide this shared
library. When building from source, run Python's
configure with the --enable-shared flag.
To build the PL/Tcl
procedural language, you of course need a Tcl
installation. The minimum required version is
Tcl 8.4.
To enable Native Language Support (NLS), that
is, the ability to display a program's messages in a language
other than English, you need an implementation of the
Gettext API. Some operating
systems have this built-in (e.g., Linux, NetBSD,
Solaris), for other systems you
can download an add-on package from .
If you are using the Gettext implementation in
the GNU C library then you will additionally
need the GNU Gettext package for some
utility programs. For any of the other implementations you will
not need it.
You need OpenSSL, if you want to support
encrypted client connections. OpenSSL is
also required for random number generation on platforms that do not
have /dev/urandom (except Windows). The minimum
required version is 1.0.1.
You need Kerberos, OpenLDAP,
and/or PAM, if you want to support authentication
using those services.
You need LZ4, if you want to support
compression of data with that method; see
and
.
You need Zstandard, if you want to support
compression of data with that method; see
.
The minimum required version is 1.4.0.
To build the PostgreSQL documentation,
there is a separate set of requirements; see
.
If you are building from a Git tree instead of
using a released source package, or if you want to do server development,
you also need the following packages:
flexlexbisonyaccFlex and Bison
are needed to build from a Git checkout, or if you changed the actual
scanner and parser definition files. If you need them, be sure
to get Flex 2.5.31 or later and
Bison 1.875 or later. Other lex
and yacc programs cannot be used.
perlPerl 5.8.3 or later is needed to build from a Git checkout,
or if you changed the input files for any of the build steps that
use Perl scripts. If building on Windows you will need
Perl in any case. Perl is
also required to run some test suites.
If you need to get a GNU package, you can find
it at your local GNU mirror site (see
for a list) or at .
Also check that you have sufficient disk space. You will need about
350 MB for the source tree during compilation and about 60 MB for
the installation directory. An empty database cluster takes about
40 MB; databases take about five times the amount of space that a
flat text file with the same data would take. If you are going to
run the regression tests you will temporarily need up to an extra
300 MB. Use the df command to check free disk
space.
Getting the Source
The PostgreSQL source code for released versions
can be obtained from the download section of our website:
.
Download the
postgresql-version.tar.gz
or postgresql-version.tar.bz2
file you're interested in, then unpack it:
tar xf postgresql-version.tar.bz2
This will create a directory
postgresql-version under
the current directory with the PostgreSQL sources.
Change into that directory for the rest of the installation procedure.
Alternatively, you can use the Git version control system; see
for more information.
Installation ProcedureConfigurationconfigure
The first step of the installation procedure is to configure the
source tree for your system and choose the options you would like.
This is done by running the configure script. For a
default installation simply enter:
./configure
This script will run a number of tests to determine values for various
system dependent variables and detect any quirks of your
operating system, and finally will create several files in the
build tree to record what it found.
You can also run configure in a directory outside
the source tree, and then build there, if you want to keep the build
directory separate from the original source files. This procedure is
called a
VPATHVPATH
build. Here's how:
mkdir build_dircd build_dir/path/to/source/tree/configure [options go here]make
The default configuration will build the server and utilities, as
well as all client applications and interfaces that require only a
C compiler. All files will be installed under
/usr/local/pgsql by default.
You can customize the build and installation process by supplying one
or more command line options to configure.
Typically you would customize the install location, or the set of
optional features that are built. configure
has a large number of options, which are described in
.
Also, configure responds to certain environment
variables, as described in .
These provide additional ways to customize the configuration.
Build
To start the build, type either of:
makemake all
(Remember to use GNU make.)
The build will take a few minutes depending on your
hardware.
If you want to build everything that can be built, including the
documentation (HTML and man pages), and the additional modules
(contrib), type instead:
make world
If you want to build everything that can be built, including the
additional modules (contrib), but without
the documentation, type instead:
make world-bin
If you want to invoke the build from another makefile rather than
manually, you must unset MAKELEVEL or set it to zero,
for instance like this:
build-postgresql:
$(MAKE) -C postgresql MAKELEVEL=0 all
Failure to do that can lead to strange error messages, typically about
missing header files.
Regression Testsregression test
If you want to test the newly built server before you install it,
you can run the regression tests at this point. The regression
tests are a test suite to verify that PostgreSQL
runs on your machine in the way the developers expected it
to. Type:
make check
(This won't work as root; do it as an unprivileged user.)
See for
detailed information about interpreting the test results. You can
repeat this test at any later time by issuing the same command.
Installing the Files
If you are upgrading an existing system be sure to read
,
which has instructions about upgrading a
cluster.
To install PostgreSQL enter:
make install
This will install files into the directories that were specified
in . Make sure that you have appropriate
permissions to write into that area. Normally you need to do this
step as root. Alternatively, you can create the target
directories in advance and arrange for appropriate permissions to
be granted.
To install the documentation (HTML and man pages), enter:
make install-docs
If you built the world above, type instead:
make install-world
This also installs the documentation.
If you built the world without the documentation above, type instead:
make install-world-bin
You can use make install-strip instead of
make install to strip the executable files and
libraries as they are installed. This will save some space. If
you built with debugging support, stripping will effectively
remove the debugging support, so it should only be done if
debugging is no longer needed. install-strip
tries to do a reasonable job saving space, but it does not have
perfect knowledge of how to strip every unneeded byte from an
executable file, so if you want to save all the disk space you
possibly can, you will have to do manual work.
The standard installation provides all the header files needed for client
application development as well as for server-side program
development, such as custom functions or data types written in C.
Client-only installation:
If you want to install only the client applications and
interface libraries, then you can use these commands:
make -C src/bin installmake -C src/include installmake -C src/interfaces installmake -C doc installsrc/bin has a few binaries for server-only use,
but they are small.
Uninstallation:
To undo the installation use the command make
uninstall. However, this will not remove any created directories.
Cleaning:
After the installation you can free disk space by removing the built
files from the source tree with the command make
clean. This will preserve the files made by the configure
program, so that you can rebuild everything with make
later on. To reset the source tree to the state in which it was
distributed, use make distclean. If you are going to
build for several platforms within the same source tree you must do
this and re-configure for each platform. (Alternatively, use
a separate build tree for each platform, so that the source tree
remains unmodified.)
If you perform a build and then discover that your configure
options were wrong, or if you change anything that configure
investigates (for example, software upgrades), then it's a good
idea to do make distclean before reconfiguring and
rebuilding. Without this, your changes in configuration choices
might not propagate everywhere they need to.
configure Optionsconfigure optionsconfigure's command line options are explained below.
This list is not exhaustive (use ./configure --help
to get one that is). The options not covered here are meant for
advanced use-cases such as cross-compilation, and are documented in
the standard Autoconf documentation.
Installation Locations
These options control where make install will put
the files. The option is sufficient for
most cases. If you have special needs, you can customize the
installation subdirectories with the other options described in this
section. Beware however that changing the relative locations of the
different subdirectories may render the installation non-relocatable,
meaning you won't be able to move it after installation.
(The man and doc locations are
not affected by this restriction.) For relocatable installs, you
might want to use the --disable-rpath option
described later.
Install all files under the directory PREFIX
instead of /usr/local/pgsql. The actual
files will be installed into various subdirectories; no files
will ever be installed directly into the
PREFIX directory.
You can install architecture-dependent files under a
different prefix, EXEC-PREFIX, than what
PREFIX was set to. This can be useful to
share architecture-independent files between hosts. If you
omit this, then EXEC-PREFIX is set equal to
PREFIX and both architecture-dependent and
independent files will be installed under the same tree,
which is probably what you want.
Specifies the directory for executable programs. The default
is EXEC-PREFIX/bin, which
normally means /usr/local/pgsql/bin.
Sets the directory for various configuration files,
PREFIX/etc by default.
Sets the location to install libraries and dynamically loadable
modules. The default is
EXEC-PREFIX/lib.
Sets the directory for installing C and C++ header files. The
default is PREFIX/include.
Sets the root directory for various types of read-only data
files. This only sets the default for some of the following
options. The default is
PREFIX/share.
Sets the directory for read-only data files used by the
installed programs. The default is
DATAROOTDIR. Note that this has
nothing to do with where your database files will be placed.
Sets the directory for installing locale data, in particular
message translation catalog files. The default is
DATAROOTDIR/locale.
The man pages that come with PostgreSQL will be installed under
this directory, in their respective
manx subdirectories.
The default is DATAROOTDIR/man.
Sets the root directory for installing documentation files,
except man pages. This only sets the default for
the following options. The default value for this option is
DATAROOTDIR/doc/postgresql.
The HTML-formatted documentation for
PostgreSQL will be installed under
this directory. The default is
DATAROOTDIR.
Care has been taken to make it possible to install
PostgreSQL into shared installation locations
(such as /usr/local/include) without
interfering with the namespace of the rest of the system. First,
the string /postgresql is
automatically appended to datadir,
sysconfdir, and docdir,
unless the fully expanded directory name already contains the
string postgres or
pgsql. For example, if you choose
/usr/local as prefix, the documentation will
be installed in /usr/local/doc/postgresql,
but if the prefix is /opt/postgres, then it
will be in /opt/postgres/doc. The public C
header files of the client interfaces are installed into
includedir and are namespace-clean. The
internal header files and the server header files are installed
into private directories under includedir. See
the documentation of each interface for information about how to
access its header files. Finally, a private subdirectory will
also be created, if appropriate, under libdir
for dynamically loadable modules.
PostgreSQL Features
The options described in this section enable building of
various PostgreSQL features that are not
built by default. Most of these are non-default only because they
require additional software, as described in
.
Enables Native Language Support (NLS),
that is, the ability to display a program's messages in a
language other than English.
LANGUAGES is an optional space-separated
list of codes of the languages that you want supported, for
example --enable-nls='de fr'. (The intersection
between your list and the set of actually provided
translations will be computed automatically.) If you do not
specify a list, then all available translations are
installed.
To use this option, you will need an implementation of the
Gettext API.
Build the PL/Perl server-side language.
Build the PL/Python server-side language.
Build the PL/Tcl server-side language.
Tcl installs the file tclConfig.sh, which
contains configuration information needed to build modules
interfacing to Tcl. This file is normally found automatically
at a well-known location, but if you want to use a different
version of Tcl you can specify the directory in which to look
for tclConfig.sh.
Build with support for
the ICUICU
library, enabling use of ICU collation
features (see
).
This requires the ICU4C package
to be installed. The minimum required version
of ICU4C is currently 4.2.
By default,
pkg-configpkg-config
will be used to find the required compilation options. This is
supported for ICU4C version 4.6 and later.
For older versions, or if pkg-config is
not available, the variables ICU_CFLAGS
and ICU_LIBS can be specified
to configure, like in this example:
./configure ... --with-icu ICU_CFLAGS='-I/some/where/include' ICU_LIBS='-L/some/where/lib -licui18n -licuuc -licudata'
(If ICU4C is in the default search path
for the compiler, then you still need to specify nonempty strings in
order to avoid use of pkg-config, for
example, ICU_CFLAGS=' '.)
Build with support for LLVM based
JIT compilation (see ). This
requires the LLVM library to be installed.
The minimum required version of LLVM is
currently 3.9.
llvm-configllvm-config
will be used to find the required compilation options.
llvm-config, and then
llvm-config-$major-$minor for all supported
versions, will be searched for in your PATH. If
that would not yield the desired program,
use LLVM_CONFIG to specify a path to the
correct llvm-config. For example
./configure ... --with-llvm LLVM_CONFIG='/path/to/llvm/bin/llvm-config'
LLVM support requires a compatible
clang compiler (specified, if necessary, using the
CLANG environment variable), and a working C++
compiler (specified, if necessary, using the CXX
environment variable).
Build with LZ4 compression support.
Build with Zstandard compression support.
OpenSSLSSL
Build with support for SSL (encrypted)
connections. The only LIBRARY
supported is . This requires the
OpenSSL package to be installed.
configure will check for the required
header files and libraries to make sure that your
OpenSSL installation is sufficient
before proceeding.
Obsolete equivalent of --with-ssl=openssl.
Build with support for GSSAPI authentication. On many systems, the
GSSAPI system (usually a part of the Kerberos installation) is not
installed in a location
that is searched by default (e.g., /usr/include,
/usr/lib), so you must use the options
and in
addition to this option. configure will check
for the required header files and libraries to make sure that
your GSSAPI installation is sufficient before proceeding.
Build with LDAPLDAP
support for authentication and connection parameter lookup (see
and
for more information). On Unix,
this requires the OpenLDAP package to be
installed. On Windows, the default WinLDAP
library is used. configure will check for the required
header files and libraries to make sure that your
OpenLDAP installation is sufficient before
proceeding.
Build with PAMPAM
(Pluggable Authentication Modules) support.
Build with BSD Authentication support.
(The BSD Authentication framework is
currently only available on OpenBSD.)
Build with support
for systemdsystemd
service notifications. This improves integration if the server
is started under systemd but has no impact
otherwise; see for more
information. libsystemd and the
associated header files need to be installed to use this option.
Build with support for Bonjour automatic service discovery.
This requires Bonjour support in your operating system.
Recommended on macOS.
Build the module
(which provides functions to generate UUIDs), using the specified
UUID library.UUIDLIBRARY must be one of:
to use the UUID functions found in FreeBSD
and some other BSD-derived systems
to use the UUID library created by
the e2fsprogs project; this library is present in most
Linux systems and in macOS, and can be obtained for other
platforms as well
to use the OSSP UUID library
Obsolete equivalent of --with-uuid=ossp.
Build with libxml2, enabling SQL/XML support. Libxml2 version 2.6.23 or
later is required for this feature.
To detect the required compiler and linker options, PostgreSQL will
query pkg-config, if that is installed and knows
about libxml2. Otherwise the program xml2-config,
which is installed by libxml2, will be used if it is found. Use
of pkg-config is preferred, because it can deal
with multi-architecture installations better.
To use a libxml2 installation that is in an unusual location, you
can set pkg-config-related environment
variables (see its documentation), or set the environment variable
XML2_CONFIG to point to
the xml2-config program belonging to the libxml2
installation, or set the variables XML2_CFLAGS
and XML2_LIBS. (If pkg-config is
installed, then to override its idea of where libxml2 is you must
either set XML2_CONFIG or set
both XML2_CFLAGS and XML2_LIBS to
nonempty strings.)
Build with libxslt, enabling the
module to perform XSL transformations of XML.
must be specified as well.
Anti-Features
The options described in this section allow disabling
certain PostgreSQL features that are built
by default, but which might need to be turned off if the required
software or system features are not available. Using these options is
not recommended unless really necessary.
Prevents use of the Readline library
(and libedit as well). This option disables
command-line editing and history in
psql.
Favors the use of the BSD-licensed libedit library
rather than GPL-licensed Readline. This option
is significant only if you have both libraries installed; the
default in that case is to use Readline.
zlib
Prevents use of the Zlib library.
This disables
support for compressed archives in pg_dump
and pg_restore.
Allow the build to succeed even if PostgreSQL
has no CPU spinlock support for the platform. The lack of
spinlock support will result in very poor performance; therefore,
this option should only be used if the build aborts and
informs you that the platform lacks spinlock support. If this
option is required to build PostgreSQL on
your platform, please report the problem to the
PostgreSQL developers.
Disable use of CPU atomic operations. This option does nothing on
platforms that lack such operations. On platforms that do have
them, this will result in poor performance. This option is only
useful for debugging or making performance comparisons.
Disable the thread-safety of client libraries. This prevents
concurrent threads in libpq and
ECPG programs from safely controlling
their private connection handles. Use this only on platforms
with deficient threading support.
Build Process DetailsDIRECTORIES is a colon-separated list of
directories that will be added to the list the compiler
searches for header files. If you have optional packages
(such as GNU Readline) installed in a non-standard
location,
you have to use this option and probably also the corresponding
option.
Example: --with-includes=/opt/gnu/include:/usr/sup/include.
DIRECTORIES is a colon-separated list of
directories to search for libraries. You will probably have
to use this option (and the corresponding
option) if you have packages
installed in non-standard locations.
Example: --with-libraries=/opt/gnu/lib:/usr/sup/lib.
time zone dataPostgreSQL includes its own time zone database,
which it requires for date and time operations. This time zone
database is in fact compatible with the IANA time zone
database provided by many operating systems such as FreeBSD,
Linux, and Solaris, so it would be redundant to install it again.
When this option is used, the system-supplied time zone database
in DIRECTORY is used instead of the one
included in the PostgreSQL source distribution.
DIRECTORY must be specified as an
absolute path. /usr/share/zoneinfo is a
likely directory on some operating systems. Note that the
installation routine will not detect mismatching or erroneous time
zone data. If you use this option, you are advised to run the
regression tests to verify that the time zone data you have
pointed to works correctly with PostgreSQL.
cross compilation
This option is mainly aimed at binary package distributors
who know their target operating system well. The main
advantage of using this option is that the PostgreSQL package
won't need to be upgraded whenever any of the many local
daylight-saving time rules change. Another advantage is that
PostgreSQL can be cross-compiled more straightforwardly if the
time zone database files do not need to be built during the
installation.
Append STRING to the PostgreSQL version number. You
can use this, for example, to mark binaries built from unreleased Git
snapshots or containing custom patches with an extra version string,
such as a git describe identifier or a
distribution package release number.
Do not mark PostgreSQL's executables
to indicate that they should search for shared libraries in the
installation's library directory (see ).
On most platforms, this marking uses an absolute path to the
library directory, so that it will be unhelpful if you relocate
the installation later. However, you will then need to provide
some other way for the executables to find the shared libraries.
Typically this requires configuring the operating system's
dynamic linker to search the library directory; see
for more detail.
Miscellaneous
It's fairly common, particularly for test builds, to adjust the
default port number with .
The other options in this section are recommended only for advanced
users.
Set NUMBER as the default port number for
server and clients. The default is 5432. The port can always
be changed later on, but if you specify it here then both
server and clients will have the same default compiled in,
which can be very convenient. Usually the only good reason
to select a non-default value is if you intend to run multiple
PostgreSQL servers on the same machine.
The default name of the Kerberos service principal used
by GSSAPI.
postgres is the default. There's usually no
reason to change this unless you are building for a Windows
environment, in which case it must be set to upper case
POSTGRES.
Set the segment size, in gigabytes. Large tables are
divided into multiple operating-system files, each of size equal
to the segment size. This avoids problems with file size limits
that exist on many platforms. The default segment size, 1 gigabyte,
is safe on all supported platforms. If your operating system has
largefile support (which most do, nowadays), you can use
a larger segment size. This can be helpful to reduce the number of
file descriptors consumed when working with very large tables.
But be careful not to select a value larger than is supported
by your platform and the file systems you intend to use. Other
tools you might wish to use, such as tar, could
also set limits on the usable file size.
It is recommended, though not absolutely required, that this value
be a power of 2.
Note that changing this value breaks on-disk database compatibility,
meaning you cannot use pg_upgrade to upgrade to
a build with a different segment size.
Set the block size, in kilobytes. This is the unit
of storage and I/O within tables. The default, 8 kilobytes,
is suitable for most situations; but other values may be useful
in special cases.
The value must be a power of 2 between 1 and 32 (kilobytes).
Note that changing this value breaks on-disk database compatibility,
meaning you cannot use pg_upgrade to upgrade to
a build with a different block size.
Set the WAL block size, in kilobytes. This is the unit
of storage and I/O within the WAL log. The default, 8 kilobytes,
is suitable for most situations; but other values may be useful
in special cases.
The value must be a power of 2 between 1 and 64 (kilobytes).
Note that changing this value breaks on-disk database compatibility,
meaning you cannot use pg_upgrade to upgrade to
a build with a different WAL block size.
Developer Options
Most of the options in this section are only of interest for
developing or debugging PostgreSQL.
They are not recommended for production builds, except
for , which can be useful to enable
detailed bug reports in the unlucky event that you encounter a bug.
On platforms supporting DTrace,
may also be reasonable to use in production.
When building an installation that will be used to develop code inside
the server, it is recommended to use at least the
options
and .
Compiles all programs and libraries with debugging symbols.
This means that you can run the programs in a debugger
to analyze problems. This enlarges the size of the installed
executables considerably, and on non-GCC compilers it usually
also disables compiler optimization, causing slowdowns. However,
having the symbols available is extremely helpful for dealing
with any problems that might arise. Currently, this option is
recommended for production installations only if you use GCC.
But you should always have it on if you are doing development work
or running a beta version.
Enables assertion checks in the server, which test for
many cannot happen conditions. This is invaluable for
code development purposes, but the tests can slow down the
server significantly.
Also, having the tests turned on won't necessarily enhance the
stability of your server! The assertion checks are not categorized
for severity, and so what might be a relatively harmless bug will
still lead to server restarts if it triggers an assertion
failure. This option is not recommended for production use, but
you should have it on for development work or when running a beta
version.
Enable tests using the Perl TAP tools. This requires a Perl
installation and the Perl module IPC::Run.
See for more information.
Enables automatic dependency tracking. With this option, the
makefiles are set up so that all affected object files will
be rebuilt when any header file is changed. This is useful
if you are doing development work, but is just wasted overhead
if you intend only to compile once and install. At present,
this option only works with GCC.
If using GCC, all programs and libraries are compiled with
code coverage testing instrumentation. When run, they
generate files in the build directory with code coverage
metrics.
See
for more information. This option is for use only with GCC
and when doing development work.
If using GCC, all programs and libraries are compiled so they
can be profiled. On backend exit, a subdirectory will be created
that contains the gmon.out file containing
profile data.
This option is for use only with GCC and when doing development work.
DTrace
Compiles PostgreSQL with support for the
dynamic tracing tool DTrace.
See
for more information.
To point to the dtrace program, the
environment variable DTRACE can be set. This
will often be necessary because dtrace is
typically installed under /usr/sbin,
which might not be in your PATH.
Extra command-line options for the dtrace program
can be specified in the environment variable
DTRACEFLAGS. On Solaris,
to include DTrace support in a 64-bit binary, you must specify
DTRACEFLAGS="-64". For example,
using the GCC compiler:
./configure CC='gcc -m64' --enable-dtrace DTRACEFLAGS='-64' ...
Using Sun's compiler:
./configure CC='/opt/SUNWspro/bin/cc -xtarget=native64' --enable-dtrace DTRACEFLAGS='-64' ...
configure Environment Variablesconfigure environment variables
In addition to the ordinary command-line options described above,
configure responds to a number of environment
variables.
You can specify environment variables on the
configure command line, for example:
./configure CC=/opt/bin/gcc CFLAGS='-O2 -pipe'
In this usage an environment variable is little different from a
command-line option.
You can also set such variables beforehand:
export CC=/opt/bin/gccexport CFLAGS='-O2 -pipe'./configure
This usage can be convenient because many programs' configuration
scripts respond to these variables in similar ways.
The most commonly used of these environment variables are
CC and CFLAGS.
If you prefer a C compiler different from the one
configure picks, you can set the
variable CC to the program of your choice.
By default, configure will pick
gcc if available, else the platform's
default (usually cc). Similarly, you can override the
default compiler flags if needed with the CFLAGS variable.
Here is a list of the significant variables that can be set in
this manner:
BISON
Bison program
CC
C compiler
CFLAGS
options to pass to the C compiler
CLANG
path to clang program used to process source code
for inlining when compiling with --with-llvmCPP
C preprocessor
CPPFLAGS
options to pass to the C preprocessor
CXX
C++ compiler
CXXFLAGS
options to pass to the C++ compiler
DTRACE
location of the dtrace program
DTRACEFLAGS
options to pass to the dtrace program
FLEX
Flex program
LDFLAGS
options to use when linking either executables or shared libraries
LDFLAGS_EX
additional options for linking executables only
LDFLAGS_SL
additional options for linking shared libraries only
LLVM_CONFIGllvm-config program used to locate the
LLVM installation
MSGFMTmsgfmt program for native language support
PERL
Perl interpreter program. This will be used to determine the
dependencies for building PL/Perl. The default is
perl.
PYTHON
Python interpreter program. This will be used to determine the
dependencies for building PL/Python. If this is not set, the
following are probed in this order:
python3 python.
TCLSH
Tcl interpreter program. This will be used to
determine the dependencies for building PL/Tcl.
If this is not set, the following are probed in this
order: tclsh tcl tclsh8.6 tclsh86 tclsh8.5 tclsh85
tclsh8.4 tclsh84.
XML2_CONFIGxml2-config program used to locate the
libxml2 installation
Sometimes it is useful to add compiler flags after-the-fact to the set
that were chosen by configure. An important example is
that gcc's option cannot be included
in the CFLAGS passed to configure, because
it will break many of configure's built-in tests. To add
such flags, include them in the COPT environment variable
while running make. The contents of COPT
are added to both the CFLAGS and LDFLAGS
options set up by configure. For example, you could do
make COPT='-Werror'
or
export COPT='-Werror'make
If using GCC, it is best to build with an optimization level of
at least , because using no optimization
() disables some important compiler warnings (such
as the use of uninitialized variables). However, non-zero
optimization levels can complicate debugging because stepping
through compiled code will usually not match up one-to-one with
source code lines. If you get confused while trying to debug
optimized code, recompile the specific files of interest with
. An easy way to do this is by passing an option
to make: make PROFILE=-O0 file.o.
The COPT and PROFILE environment variables are
actually handled identically by the PostgreSQL
makefiles. Which to use is a matter of preference, but a common habit
among developers is to use PROFILE for one-time flag
adjustments, while COPT might be kept set all the time.
Post-Installation SetupShared Librariesshared library
On some systems with shared libraries
you need to tell the system how to find the newly installed
shared libraries. The systems on which this is
not necessary include
FreeBSD,
HP-UX,
Linux,
NetBSD, OpenBSD, and
Solaris.
The method to set the shared library search path varies between
platforms, but the most widely-used method is to set the
environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH like so: In Bourne
shells (sh, ksh, bash, zsh):
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/pgsql/lib
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH
or in csh or tcsh:
setenv LD_LIBRARY_PATH /usr/local/pgsql/lib
Replace /usr/local/pgsql/lib with whatever you set
to in .
You should put these commands into a shell start-up file such as
/etc/profile or ~/.bash_profile. Some
good information about the caveats associated with this method can
be found at .
On some systems it might be preferable to set the environment
variable LD_RUN_PATHbefore
building.
On Cygwin, put the library
directory in the PATH or move the
.dll files into the bin
directory.
If in doubt, refer to the manual pages of your system (perhaps
ld.so or rld). If you later
get a message like:
psql: error in loading shared libraries
libpq.so.2.1: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
then this step was necessary. Simply take care of it then.
ldconfig
If you are on Linux and you have root
access, you can run:
/sbin/ldconfig /usr/local/pgsql/lib
(or equivalent directory) after installation to enable the
run-time linker to find the shared libraries faster. Refer to the
manual page of ldconfig for more information. On
FreeBSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD the command is:
/sbin/ldconfig -m /usr/local/pgsql/lib
instead. Other systems are not known to have an equivalent
command.
Environment VariablesPATH
If you installed into /usr/local/pgsql or some other
location that is not searched for programs by default, you should
add /usr/local/pgsql/bin (or whatever you set
to in )
into your PATH. Strictly speaking, this is not
necessary, but it will make the use of PostgreSQL
much more convenient.
To do this, add the following to your shell start-up file, such as
~/.bash_profile (or /etc/profile, if you
want it to affect all users):
PATH=/usr/local/pgsql/bin:$PATH
export PATH
If you are using csh or tcsh, then use this command:
set path = ( /usr/local/pgsql/bin $path )
MANPATH
To enable your system to find the man
documentation, you need to add lines like the following to a
shell start-up file unless you installed into a location that is
searched by default:
MANPATH=/usr/local/pgsql/share/man:$MANPATH
export MANPATH
The environment variables PGHOST and PGPORT
specify to client applications the host and port of the database
server, overriding the compiled-in defaults. If you are going to
run client applications remotely then it is convenient if every
user that plans to use the database sets PGHOST. This
is not required, however; the settings can be communicated via command
line options to most client programs.
Supported Platforms
A platform (that is, a CPU architecture and operating system combination)
is considered supported by the PostgreSQL development
community if the code contains provisions to work on that platform and
it has recently been verified to build and pass its regression tests
on that platform. Currently, most testing of platform compatibility
is done automatically by test machines in the
PostgreSQL Build Farm.
If you are interested in using PostgreSQL on a platform
that is not represented in the build farm, but on which the code works
or can be made to work, you are strongly encouraged to set up a build
farm member machine so that continued compatibility can be assured.
In general, PostgreSQL can be expected to work on
these CPU architectures: x86, x86_64, IA64, PowerPC,
PowerPC 64, S/390, S/390x, Sparc, Sparc 64, ARM, MIPS, MIPSEL,
and PA-RISC. Code support exists for M68K, M32R, and VAX, but these
architectures are not known to have been tested recently. It is often
possible to build on an unsupported CPU type by configuring with
, but performance will be poor.
PostgreSQL can be expected to work on these operating
systems: Linux (all recent distributions), Windows (XP and later),
FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, macOS, AIX, HP/UX, and Solaris.
Other Unix-like systems may also work but are not currently
being tested. In most cases, all CPU architectures supported by
a given operating system will work. Look in
below to see if
there is information
specific to your operating system, particularly if using an older system.
If you have installation problems on a platform that is known
to be supported according to recent build farm results, please report
it to pgsql-bugs@lists.postgresql.org. If you are interested
in porting PostgreSQL to a new platform,
pgsql-hackers@lists.postgresql.org is the appropriate place
to discuss that.
Platform-Specific Notes
This section documents additional platform-specific issues
regarding the installation and setup of PostgreSQL. Be sure to
read the installation instructions, and in
particular as well. Also,
check regarding the
interpretation of regression test results.
Platforms that are not covered here have no known platform-specific
installation issues.
AIXAIXinstallation on
You can use GCC or the native IBM compiler xlc
to build PostgreSQL
on AIX.
AIX versions before 7.1 are no longer
tested nor supported by the PostgreSQL
community.
Memory Management
AIX can be somewhat peculiar with regards to the way it does
memory management. You can have a server with many multiples of
gigabytes of RAM free, but still get out of memory or address
space errors when running applications. One example
is loading of extensions failing with unusual errors.
For example, running as the owner of the PostgreSQL installation:
=# CREATE EXTENSION plperl;
ERROR: could not load library "/opt/dbs/pgsql/lib/plperl.so": A memory address is not in the address space for the process.
Running as a non-owner in the group possessing the PostgreSQL
installation:
=# CREATE EXTENSION plperl;
ERROR: could not load library "/opt/dbs/pgsql/lib/plperl.so": Bad address
Another example is out of memory errors in the PostgreSQL server
logs, with every memory allocation near or greater than 256 MB
failing.
The overall cause of all these problems is the default bittedness
and memory model used by the server process. By default, all
binaries built on AIX are 32-bit. This does not depend upon
hardware type or kernel in use. These 32-bit processes are
limited to 4 GB of memory laid out in 256 MB segments using one
of a few models. The default allows for less than 256 MB in the
heap as it shares a single segment with the stack.
In the case of the plperl example, above,
check your umask and the permissions of the binaries in your
PostgreSQL installation. The binaries involved in that example
were 32-bit and installed as mode 750 instead of 755. Due to the
permissions being set in this fashion, only the owner or a member
of the possessing group can load the library. Since it isn't
world-readable, the loader places the object into the process'
heap instead of the shared library segments where it would
otherwise be placed.
The ideal solution for this is to use a 64-bit
build of PostgreSQL, but that is not always practical, because
systems with 32-bit processors can build, but not run, 64-bit
binaries.
If a 32-bit binary is desired, set LDR_CNTRL to
MAXDATA=0xn0000000,
where 1 <= n <= 8, before starting the PostgreSQL server,
and try different values and postgresql.conf
settings to find a configuration that works satisfactorily. This
use of LDR_CNTRL tells AIX that you want the
server to have MAXDATA bytes set aside for the
heap, allocated in 256 MB segments. When you find a workable
configuration,
ldedit can be used to modify the binaries so
that they default to using the desired heap size. PostgreSQL can
also be rebuilt, passing configure
LDFLAGS="-Wl,-bmaxdata:0xn0000000"
to achieve the same effect.
For a 64-bit build, set OBJECT_MODE to 64 and
pass CC="gcc -maix64"
and LDFLAGS="-Wl,-bbigtoc"
to configure. (Options for
xlc might differ.) If you omit the export of
OBJECT_MODE, your build may fail with linker errors. When
OBJECT_MODE is set, it tells AIX's build utilities
such as ar, as, and ld what
type of objects to default to handling.
By default, overcommit of paging space can happen. While we have
not seen this occur, AIX will kill processes when it runs out of
memory and the overcommit is accessed. The closest to this that
we have seen is fork failing because the system decided that
there was not enough memory for another process. Like many other
parts of AIX, the paging space allocation method and
out-of-memory kill is configurable on a system- or process-wide
basis if this becomes a problem.
CygwinCygwininstallation on
PostgreSQL can be built using Cygwin, a Linux-like environment for
Windows, but that method is inferior to the native Windows build
(see ) and
running a server under Cygwin is no longer recommended.
When building from source, proceed according to the Unix-style
installation procedure (i.e., ./configure;
make; etc.), noting the following Cygwin-specific
differences:
Set your path to use the Cygwin bin directory before the
Windows utilities. This will help prevent problems with
compilation.
The adduser command is not supported; use
the appropriate user management application on Windows NT,
2000, or XP. Otherwise, skip this step.
The su command is not supported; use ssh to
simulate su on Windows NT, 2000, or XP. Otherwise, skip this
step.
OpenSSL is not supported.
Start cygserver for shared memory support.
To do this, enter the command /usr/sbin/cygserver
&. This program needs to be running anytime you
start the PostgreSQL server or initialize a database cluster
(initdb). The
default cygserver configuration may need to
be changed (e.g., increase SEMMNS) to prevent
PostgreSQL from failing due to a lack of system resources.
Building might fail on some systems where a locale other than
C is in use. To fix this, set the locale to C by doing
export LANG=C.utf8 before building, and then
setting it back to the previous setting after you have installed
PostgreSQL.
The parallel regression tests (make check)
can generate spurious regression test failures due to
overflowing the listen() backlog queue
which causes connection refused errors or hangs. You can limit
the number of connections using the make
variable MAX_CONNECTIONS thus:
make MAX_CONNECTIONS=5 check
(On some systems you can have up to about 10 simultaneous
connections.)
It is possible to install cygserver and the
PostgreSQL server as Windows NT services. For information on how
to do this, please refer to the README
document included with the PostgreSQL binary package on Cygwin.
It is installed in the
directory /usr/share/doc/Cygwin.
macOSmacOSinstallation on
To build PostgreSQL from source
on macOS, you will need to install Apple's
command line developer tools, which can be done by issuing
xcode-select --install
(note that this will pop up a GUI dialog window for confirmation).
You may or may not wish to also install Xcode.
On recent macOS releases, it's necessary to
embed the sysroot path in the include switches used to
find some system header files. This results in the outputs of
the configure script varying depending on
which SDK version was used during configure.
That shouldn't pose any problem in simple scenarios, but if you are
trying to do something like building an extension on a different machine
than the server code was built on, you may need to force use of a
different sysroot path. To do that, set PG_SYSROOT,
for example
make PG_SYSROOT=/desired/path all
To find out the appropriate path on your machine, run
xcrun --show-sdk-path
Note that building an extension using a different sysroot version than
was used to build the core server is not really recommended; in the
worst case it could result in hard-to-debug ABI inconsistencies.
You can also select a non-default sysroot path when configuring, by
specifying PG_SYSROOT
to configure:
./configure ... PG_SYSROOT=/desired/path
This would primarily be useful to cross-compile for some other
macOS version. There is no guarantee that the resulting executables
will run on the current host.
To suppress the options altogether, use
./configure ... PG_SYSROOT=none
(any nonexistent pathname will work). This might be useful if you wish
to build with a non-Apple compiler, but beware that that case is not
tested or supported by the PostgreSQL developers.
macOS's System Integrity
Protection (SIP) feature breaks make check,
because it prevents passing the needed setting
of DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH down to the executables being
tested. You can work around that by doing make
install before make check.
Most PostgreSQL developers just turn off SIP, though.
MinGW/Native WindowsMinGWinstallation on
PostgreSQL for Windows can be built using MinGW, a Unix-like build
environment for Microsoft operating systems, or using
Microsoft's Visual C++ compiler suite.
The MinGW build procedure uses the normal build system described in
this chapter; the Visual C++ build works completely differently
and is described in .
The native Windows port requires a 32 or 64-bit version of Windows
2000 or later. Earlier operating systems do
not have sufficient infrastructure (but Cygwin may be used on
those). MinGW, the Unix-like build tools, and MSYS, a collection
of Unix tools required to run shell scripts
like configure, can be downloaded
from . Neither is
required to run the resulting binaries; they are needed only for
creating the binaries.
To build 64 bit binaries using MinGW, install the 64 bit tool set
from , put its bin
directory in the PATH, and run
configure with the
--host=x86_64-w64-mingw32 option.
After you have everything installed, it is suggested that you
run psql
under CMD.EXE, as the MSYS console has
buffering issues.
Collecting Crash Dumps on Windows
If PostgreSQL on Windows crashes, it has the ability to generate
minidumps that can be used to track down the cause
for the crash, similar to core dumps on Unix. These dumps can be
read using the Windows Debugger Tools or using
Visual Studio. To enable the generation of dumps
on Windows, create a subdirectory named crashdumps
inside the cluster data directory. The dumps will then be written
into this directory with a unique name based on the identifier of
the crashing process and the current time of the crash.
SolarisSolarisinstallation on
PostgreSQL is well-supported on Solaris. The more up to date your
operating system, the fewer issues you will experience.
Required Tools
You can build with either GCC or Sun's compiler suite. For
better code optimization, Sun's compiler is strongly recommended
on the SPARC architecture. If
you are using Sun's compiler, be careful not to select
/usr/ucb/cc;
use /opt/SUNWspro/bin/cc.
You can download Sun Studio
from .
Many GNU tools are integrated into Solaris 10, or they are
present on the Solaris companion CD. If you need packages for
older versions of Solaris, you can find these tools
at .
If you prefer
sources, look
at .
configure Complains About a Failed Test Program
If configure complains about a failed test
program, this is probably a case of the run-time linker being
unable to find some library, probably libz, libreadline or some
other non-standard library such as libssl. To point it to the
right location, set the LDFLAGS environment
variable on the configure command line, e.g.,
configure ... LDFLAGS="-R /usr/sfw/lib:/opt/sfw/lib:/usr/local/lib"
See
the ld1
man page for more information.
Compiling for Optimal Performance
On the SPARC architecture, Sun Studio is strongly recommended for
compilation. Try using the optimization
flag to generate significantly faster binaries. Do not use any
flags that modify behavior of floating-point operations
and errno processing (e.g.,
).
If you do not have a reason to use 64-bit binaries on SPARC,
prefer the 32-bit version. The 64-bit operations are slower and
64-bit binaries are slower than the 32-bit variants. On the
other hand, 32-bit code on the AMD64 CPU family is not native,
so 32-bit code is significantly slower on that CPU family.
Using DTrace for Tracing PostgreSQL
Yes, using DTrace is possible. See for
further information.
If you see the linking of the postgres executable abort with an
error message like:
Undefined first referenced
symbol in file
AbortTransaction utils/probes.o
CommitTransaction utils/probes.o
ld: fatal: Symbol referencing errors. No output written to postgres
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
make: *** [postgres] Error 1
your DTrace installation is too old to handle probes in static
functions. You need Solaris 10u4 or newer to use DTrace.