PostgreSQL 7.4.8 Documentation | ||||
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initdb creates a new PostgreSQL database cluster. A database cluster is a collection of databases that are managed by a single server instance.
Creating a database cluster consists of creating the directories in which the database data will live, generating the shared catalog tables (tables that belong to the whole cluster rather than to any particular database), and creating the template1 database. When you later create a new database, everything in the template1 database is copied. It contains catalog tables filled in for things like the built-in types.
initdb initializes the database cluster's default locale and character set encoding. Some locale categories are fixed for the lifetime of the cluster, so it is important to make the right choice when running initdb. Other locale categories can be changed later when the server is started. initdb will write those locale settings into the postgresql.conf configuration file so they are the default, but they can be changed by editing that file. To set the locale that initdb uses, see the description of the --locale option. The character set encoding can be set separately for each database as it is created. initdb determines the encoding for the template1 database, which will serve as the default for all other databases. To alter the default encoding use the --encoding option.
initdb must be run as the user that will own the server process, because the server needs to have access to the files and directories that initdb creates. Since the server may not be run as root, you must not run initdb as root either. (It will in fact refuse to do so.)
Although initdb will attempt to create the specified data directory, often it won't have permission to do so, since the parent of the desired data directory is often a root-owned directory. To set up an arrangement like this, create an empty data directory as root, then use chown to hand over ownership of that directory to the database user account, then su to become the database user, and finally run initdb as the database user.
This option specifies the directory where the database cluster should be stored. This is the only information required by initdb, but you can avoid writing it by setting the PGDATA environment variable, which can be convenient since the database server (postmaster) can find the database directory later by the same variable.
Selects the encoding of the template database. This will also be the default encoding of any database you create later, unless you override it there. The default is SQL_ASCII.
Sets the default locale for the database cluster. If this option is not specified, the locale is inherited from the environment that initdb runs in.
Like --locale, but only sets the locale in the specified category.
Selects the user name of the database superuser. This defaults to the name of the effective user running initdb. It is really not important what the superuser's name is, but one might choose to keep the customary name postgres, even if the operating system user's name is different.
Makes initdb prompt for a password to give the database superuser. If you don't plan on using password authentication, this is not important. Otherwise you won't be able to use password authentication until you have a password set up.
Other, less commonly used, parameters are also available:
Print debugging output from the bootstrap backend and a few other messages of lesser interest for the general public. The bootstrap backend is the program initdb uses to create the catalog tables. This option generates a tremendous amount of extremely boring output.
Specifies where initdb should find its input files to initialize the database cluster. This is normally not necessary. You will be told if you need to specify their location explicitly.
By default, when initdb determines that an error prevented it from completely creating the database cluster, it removes any files it may have created before discovering that it can't finish the job. This option inhibits tidying-up and is thus useful for debugging.