Skip this section if you will run only Oracle.
OpenACS 5.4.2 will run with PostgreSQL 7.3.2, 7.3.3, and 7.3.4 and 7.4.x. 7.4.7 is the recommended version of PostgreSQL.
Special notes for Mac OS X. If you are running Mac OS X prior to 10.3, you should be able to install and use PostGreSQL 7.3.x. Mac OS X 10.3 requires PostGreSQL 7.4.
Debian stable user should install PostGreSQL from source as detailed below, or they should use the www.backports.org backport for Postgres to get a more current version. Debian unstable users: the following process has been known to work (but you should double-check that the version of PostGreSQL is 7.3 or above):
For Debian stable users, you can use backports, by adding this line to the /etc/apt/sources.list
deb http://www.backports.org/debian stable bison postgresql openssl openssh tcl8.4 courier debconf spamassassin tla diff patch neon chkrootkit
apt-get install postgresql postgresql-dev postgresql-doc
ln -s /usr/include/postgresql/ /usr/include/pgsql
ln -s /var/lib/postgres /usr/local/pgsql
ln -s /usr/include/pgsql /usr/local/pgsql/include
su postgres -c "/usr/lib/postgresql/bin/createlang plpgsql template1"
and proceed to Tune postgres. (OPTIONAL) or to the next section.
Special Notes for Red Hat. Red Hat users: If you install PostgreSQL 7.3.2 from the Red Hat 9 RPM, you can skip a few steps. These shell commands add some links for compatibility with the directories from a source-based install; start the service; create a new group for web service users, and modify the postgres user's environment (more information):
[root root]#ln -s /usr/lib/pgsql/ /var/lib/pgsql/lib
[root root]#ln -s /var/lib/pgsql /usr/local/pgsql
[root root]#ln -s /etc/init.d/postgresql /etc/init.d/postgres
[root root]#ln -s /usr/bin /usr/local/pgsql/bin
[root root]#service postgresql start
Initializing database: [ OK ] Starting postgresql service: [ OK ] [root root]#echo "export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/pgsql/lib" >> ~postgres/.bash_profile
[root root]#echo "export PATH=$PATH:/usr/local/pgsql/bin" >> ~postgres/.bash_profile
[root root]#groupadd web
[root root]#su - postgres
-bash-2.05b$ ln -s /usr/lib/pgsql/ /var/lib/pgsql/lib ln -s /var/lib/pgsql /usr/local/pgsql ln -s /usr/bin /usr/local/pgsql/bin service postgresql start echo "export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/pgsql/lib" >> ~postgres/.bash_profile echo "export PATH=$PATH:/usr/local/pgsql/bin" >> ~postgres/.bash_profile groupadd web su - postgres
... and then skip to 8. Something similar may work for other binary packages as well.
Safe approach: install from source
Unpack PostgreSQL 7.4.7. If you have not downloaded the postgresql tarball to
/var/tmp/postgresql-7.4.7.tar.gz
,
get it.
[root root]#cd /usr/local/src
[root src]#tar xzf /var/tmp/postgresql-7.4.7.tar.gz
[root src]# cd /usr/local/src tar xzf /var/tmp/postgresql-7.4.7.tar.gz
ALTERNATIVE: Unpack PostgreSQL 7.4.7. If you have not downloaded the postgresql tarball to
/var/tmp/postgresql-7.4.7.tar.bz2
,
get it.
[root root]#cd /usr/local/src
[root src]#tar xfj /var/tmp/postgresql-7.4.7.tar.bz2
[root src]# cd /usr/local/src tar xfj /var/tmp/postgresql-7.4.7.tar.bz2
Install Bison. Only do this if bison --version
is smaller than 1.875 and you install PostgreSQL 7.4 from cvs instead of tarball.
[root root]#cd /usr/local/src
[root src]#wget http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/bison/bison-1.875.tar.gz
[root src]#tar xfz bison-1.875.tar.gz
[root src]#cd bison-1.875
[root src]#./configure
[root src]#make install
Create the Postgres user. Create a user and group (if you haven't done so before) for PostgreSQL. This is the account that PostgreSQL will run as since it will not run as root. Since nobody will log in directly as that user, we'll leave the password blank.
Debian users should probably use adduser instead of
useradd. Type man adduser
[root src]#groupadd web
[root src]#useradd -g web -d /usr/local/pgsql postgres
[root src]#mkdir -p /usr/local/pgsql
[root src]#chown -R postgres.web /usr/local/pgsql /usr/local/src/postgresql-7.4.7
[root src]#chmod 750 /usr/local/pgsql
[root src]# groupadd web useradd -g web -d /usr/local/pgsql postgres mkdir -p /usr/local/pgsql chown -R postgres.web /usr/local/pgsql /usr/local/src/postgresql-7.4.7 chmod 750 /usr/local/pgsql
Mac OS X: Do instead: First make sure the gids and uids below are available (change them if they are not).To list taken uids and gids:
nireport / /groups name gid | grep "[0123456789][0123456789]"
nireport / /users name uid | grep "[0123456789][0123456789]"
Now you can install the users
sudo niutil -create / /groups/web
sudo niutil -createprop / /groups/web gid 201
sudo niutil -create / /users/postgres
sudo niutil -createprop / /users/postgres gid 201
sudo niutil -createprop / /users/postgres uid 502
sudo niutil -createprop / /users/postgres home /usr/local/pgsql
sudo niutil -create / /users/$OPENACS_SERVICE_NAME
sudo niutil -createprop / /users/$OPENACS_SERVICE_NAME gid 201
sudo niutil -createprop / /users/$OPENACS_SERVICE_NAME uid 201
mkdir -p /usr/local/pgsql
chown -R postgres:web /usr/local/pgsql /usr/local/src/postgresql-7.4.7
chmod 750 /usr/local/pgsql
FreeBSD users: need to add more parameters.
[root src]#mkdir -p /usr/local/pgsql
[root src]#pw groupadd -n web
[root src]#pw useradd -n postgres -g web -d /usr/local/pgsql -s /bin/bash
[root src]#chown -R postgres:web /usr/local/pgsql /usr/local/src/postgresql-7.4.7
[root src]#chmod -R 750 /usr/local/pgsql
[root src]# mkdir -p /usr/local/pgsql pw groupadd -n web pw useradd -n postgres -g web -d /usr/local/pgsql -s /bin/bash chown -R postgres:web /usr/local/pgsql /usr/local/src/postgresql-7.4.7 chmod -R 750 /usr/local/pgsql
Set up postgres's environment variables. They are necessary for the executable to find its supporting libraries. Put the following lines into the postgres user's environment.
[root src]#su - postgres
[postgres ~]emacs ~postgres/.bashrc
Paste this line into .bash_profile
:
source $HOME/.bashrc
Paste these lines into .bashrc
:
export PATH=/usr/local/bin/:$PATH:/usr/local/pgsql/bin export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/usr/local/pgsql/lib
Test this by logging in as
postgres
and checking the
paths; you should see /usr/local/pgsql/bin
somewhere in the output (the total output is system-dependent so yours may vary)
[root src]#su - postgres
[postgres pgsql]$env | grep PATH
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=:/usr/local/pgsql/lib PATH=/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/bin/X11:/usr/X11R6/bin:/root/bin:/usr/local/pgsql/bin:/usr/local/pgsql/bin [postgres pgsql]$exit
Don't continue unless you see correct output from
env | grep PATH
Compile and install PostgreSQL.
Change to the postgres user and run ./configure
to set the compilation options automatically. This is the point at which you can
configure PostgreSQL in various ways. For example, if you are installing on "OS X" add the flags --with-includes=/sw/include/ --with-libraries=/sw/lib
. If you want to see what the other possibilities are, run ./configure --help
.
On debian woody (stable, 3.0), do ./configure --without-readline --without-zlib
.
[root src]#su - postgres
[postgres pgsql]$cd /usr/local/src/postgresql-7.4.7
[postgres postgresql-7.4.7]$./configure
creating cache ./config.cache checking host system type... i686-pc-linux-gnu (many lines omitted> linking ./src/makefiles/Makefile.linux to src/Makefile.port linking ./src/backend/port/tas/dummy.s to src/backend/port/tas.s [postgres postgresql-7.4.7]$make all
make -C doc all make[1]: Entering directory `/usr/local/src/postgresql-7.4.7/doc' (many lines omitted) make[1]: Leaving directory `/usr/local/src/postgresql-7.4.7/src' All of PostgreSQL successfully made. Ready to install. [postgres postgresql-7.4.7]$make install
make -C doc install make[1]: Entering directory `/usr/local/src/postgresql-7.4.7/doc' (many lines omitted) Thank you for choosing PostgreSQL, the most advanced open source database engine. su - postgres cd /usr/local/src/postgresql-7.4.7 ./configure make all make install
Start PostgreSQL.
The initdb
command initializes the
database. pg_ctl
is used to start up
PostgreSQL. If PostgreSQL is unable to allocate enough memory, see section 11
Tuning PostgreSQL (below).
[postgres postgresql-7.4.7]$/usr/local/pgsql/bin/initdb -D /usr/local/pgsql/data
The files belonging to this database system will be owned by user "postgres". This user must also own the server process. (17 lines omitted) or /usr/local/pgsql/bin/pg_ctl -D /usr/local/pgsql/data -l logfile start [postgres postgresql-7.4.7]$/usr/local/pgsql/bin/pg_ctl -D /usr/local/pgsql/data -l /usr/local/pgsql/data/server.log start
postmaster successfully started [postgres postgresql-7.4.7]$ /usr/local/pgsql/bin/initdb -D /usr/local/pgsql/data /usr/local/pgsql/bin/pg_ctl -D /usr/local/pgsql/data -l /usr/local/pgsql/data/server.log start
PostgreSQL errors will be logged in
/usr/local/pgsql/data/server.log
Install Pl/pgSQL. Set up plpgsq and allow your user to have access. Plpgsql is a PL/SQL-like language. We add it to template1, which is the template from which all new databases are created. We can verify that it was created with the createlang command in list mode.
[postgres postgresql-7.4.7]$createlang plpgsql template1
[postgres pgsql]$createlang -l template1
Procedural languages Name | Trusted? ---------+---------- plpgsql | t (1 row) [postgres pgsql-7.4.7]$ createlang plpgsql template1 createlang -l template1
Test PostgreSQL (OPTIONAL). Create a database and try some simple commands. The output should be as shown.
[postgres pgsql]$createdb mytestdb
CREATE DATABASE [postgres pgsql]$psql mytestdb
Welcome to psql, the PostgreSQL interactive terminal. Type: \copyright for distribution terms \h for help with SQL commands \? for help on internal slash commands \g or terminate with semicolon to execute query \q to quit mytestdb=#select current_timestamp;
timestamptz ------------------------------- 2003-03-07 22:18:29.185413-08 (1 row) mytestdb=#create function test1() returns integer as 'begin return 1; end;' language 'plpgsql';
CREATE mytestdb=#select test1();
test1 ------- 1 (1 row) mytestdb=#\q
[postgres pgsql]$dropdb mytestdb
DROP DATABASE [postgres pgsql]$exit
logout [root src]#
Set PostgreSQL to start on boot. First, we copy the postgresql.txt init script, which automates startup and shutdown, to the distribution-specific init.d directory. Then we verify that it works. Then we automate it by setting up a bunch of symlinks that ensure that, when the operating system changes runlevels, postgresql goes to the appropriate state. Red Hat and Debian and SuSE each work a little differently. If you haven't untarred the OpenACS tarball, you will need to do so now to access the postgresql.txt file.
Red Hat RPM:
The init script is already installed; just turn it on for the appropriate run levels.
[root root]# chkconfig --level 345 postgresql on
[root root]#
Red Hat from source:
[root src]#cp /var/tmp/openacs-5.4.2/packages/acs-core-docs/www/files/postgresql.txt /etc/init.d/postgresql
[root src]#chown root.root /etc/rc.d/init.d/postgresql
[root src]#chmod 755 /etc/rc.d/init.d/postgresql
[root src]# cp /var/tmp/openacs-5.4.2/packages/acs-core-docs/www/files/postgresql.txt /etc/init.d/postgresql chown root.root /etc/rc.d/init.d/postgresql chmod 755 /etc/rc.d/init.d/postgresql
Test the script.
[root root]# service postgresql stop
Stopping PostgreSQL: ok
[root root]#
If PostgreSQL successfully stopped, then use the following command to make sure that the script is run appropriately at boot and shutdown. And turn it back on because we'll use it later.
[root root]#chkconfig --add postgresql
[root root]#chkconfig --level 345 postgresql on
[root root]#chkconfig --list postgresql
postgresql 0:off 1:off 2:on 3:on 4:on 5:on 6:off [root root]#service postgresql start
Starting PostgreSQL: ok [root root]# chkconfig --add postgresql chkconfig --level 345 postgresql on chkconfig --list postgresql service postgresql start
Debian:
[root ~]#cp /var/tmp/packages/acs-core-docs/www/files/postgresql.txt /etc/init.d/postgresql
[root ~]#chown root.root /etc/init.d/postgresql
[root ~]#chmod 755 /etc/init.d/postgresql
[root ~]# cp /var/tmp/openacs-5.4.2/packages/acs-core-docs/www/files/postgresql.txt /etc/init.d/postgresql chown root.root /etc/init.d/postgresql chmod 755 /etc/init.d/postgresql
Test the script
[root ~]# /etc/init.d/postgresql stop
Stopping PostgreSQL: ok
[root ~]#
If PostgreSQL successfully stopped, then use the following command to make sure that the script is run appropriately at boot and shutdown.
[root ~]#update-rc.d postgresql defaults
Adding system startup for /etc/init.d/postgresql ... /etc/rc0.d/K20postgresql -> ../init.d/postgresql /etc/rc1.d/K20postgresql -> ../init.d/postgresql /etc/rc6.d/K20postgresql -> ../init.d/postgresql /etc/rc2.d/S20postgresql -> ../init.d/postgresql /etc/rc3.d/S20postgresql -> ../init.d/postgresql /etc/rc4.d/S20postgresql -> ../init.d/postgresql /etc/rc5.d/S20postgresql -> ../init.d/postgresql [root ~]#/etc/init.d/postgresql start
Starting PostgreSQL: ok [root ~]#
FreeBSD:
[root ~]#cp /tmp/openacs-5.4.2/packages/acs-core-docs/www/files/postgresql.txt /usr/local/etc/rc.d/postgresql.sh
[root ~]#chown root:wheel /usr/local/etc/rc.d/postgresql.sh
[root ~]#chmod 755 /usr/local/etc/rc.d/postgresql.sh
[root ~]# cp /tmp/openacs-5.4.2/packages/acs-core-docs/www/files/postgresql.txt /usr/local/etc/rc.d/postgresql.sh chown root:wheel /usr/local/etc/rc.d/postgresql.sh chmod 755 /usr/local/etc/rc.d/postgresql.sh
Test the script
[root ~]# /usr/local/etc/rc.d/postgresql.sh stop
Stopping PostgreSQL: ok
[root ~]#
If PostgreSQL successfully stopped, then turn it back on because we'll use it later.
[root root]# /usr/local/etc/rc.d/postgresql.sh start
Starting PostgreSQL: ok
[root root]#
/usr/local/etc/rc.d/postgresql.sh start
SuSE:
I have received reports that SuSE 8.0 is different from
previous versions. Instead of installing the boot scripts in
/etc/rc.d/init.d/
, they should
be placed in /etc/init.d/
. If
you're using SuSE 8.0, delete the
rc.d/
part in each of the
following commands.
[root ~]#cp /var/tmp/openacs-5.4.2/packages/acs-core-docs/www/files/postgresql.txt /etc/rc.d/init.d/postgresql
[root ~]#chown root.root /etc/rc.d/init.d/postgresql
[root ~]#chmod 755 /etc/rc.d/init.d/postgresql
Test the script.
[root ~]# /etc/rc.d/init.d/postgresql stop
Stopping PostgreSQL: ok
If PostgreSQL successfully stopped, then use the following command to make sure that the script is run appropriately at boot and shutdown.
[root ~]#cd /etc/rc.d/init.d
root:/etc/rc.d/init.d#ln -s /etc/rc.d/init.d/postgresql K20postgresql
root:/etc/rc.d/init.d#ln -s /etc/rc.d/init.d/postgresql S20postgresql
root:/etc/rc.d/init.d#cp K20postgresql rc2.d
root:/etc/rc.d/init.d#cp S20postgresql rc2.d
root:/etc/rc.d/init.d#cp K20postgresql rc3.d
root:/etc/rc.d/init.d#cp S20postgresql rc3.d
root:/etc/rc.d/init.d#cp K20postgresql rc4.d
root:/etc/rc.d/init.d#cp S20postgresql rc4.d
root:/etc/rc.d/init.d#cp K20postgresql rc5.d
root:/etc/rc.d/init.d#cp S20postgresql rc5.d
root:/etc/rc.d/init.d#rm K20postgresql
root:/etc/rc.d/init.d#rm S20postgresql
root:/etc/rc.d/init.d#
Test configuration.
root:/etc/rc.d/init.d #cd
root:~ #/etc/rc.d/init.d/rc2.d/S20postgresql start
Starting PostgreSQL: ok root:~ #
Mac OS X 10.3:
Install the startup script:
cd /System/Library/StartupItems/
tar xfz /var/lib/aolserver/$OPENACS_SERVICE_NAME/packages/acs-core-docs/www/files/osx-postgres-startup-item.tgz
Mac OS X 10.4 can use Launchd:
Install the startup script:
cd /Library/LaunchDaemons
cp /var/lib/aolserver/$OPENACS_SERVICE_NAME/packages/acs-core-docs/www/files/osx-postgres-launchd-item.txt org.postgresql.PostgreSQL.plist
If postgres does not start automatically on reboot, see what error you get when manually starting it with:
$sudo launchctl load /Library/LaunchDaemons/org.postgresql.PostgreSQL.plist
$sudo launchctl start org.postgresql.PostgreSQL
From now on, PostgreSQL should start automatically each time you boot up and it should shutdown gracefully each time you shut down. (Note: Debian defaults to starting all services on runlevels 2-5. Red Hat defaults to starting services on 3-5. So, on Red Hat, PostgreSQL won't start on runlevel 2 unless you alter the above commands a little. This usually isn't a problem as Red Hat defaults to runlevel 3)
Tune postgres. (OPTIONAL). The default values for PostgreSQL are very conservative; we can safely change some of them and improve performance.
Change the kernel parameter for maximum shared memory segment size to 128Mb:
[root root]# echo 134217728 >/proc/sys/kernel/shmmax
[root root]#
Make that change permanent by editing
/etc/sysctl.conf
to
add these lines at the end:
# increase shared memory limit for postgres kernel.shmmax = 134217728
Edit the PostgreSQL config file, /usr/local/pgsql/data/postgresql.conf
, to use more memory. These values should improve performance in most cases. (more information)
# Shared Memory Size # shared_buffers = 15200 # 2*max_connections, min 16 # Non-shared Memory Sizes # sort_mem = 32168 # min 32 # Write-ahead log (WAL) # checkpoint_segments = 3 # in logfile segments (16MB each), min 1
Restart postgres (service postgresql
restart
) or
(/etc/init.d/postgres
restart
) so that the changes take effect.
FreeBSD users: See man syctl
, man 5 sysctl
and man 5 loader.conf
.
Performance tuning resources:
Managing Kernel Resources about PostgreSQL shared memory and semaphores with specific operating system notes.
Managing Kernel Resources (development version) This information may be experimental.