Adding and Deleting Users
createuser enables specific users to access
Postgres.
destroyuser removes users and
prevents them from accessing Postgres.
These commands only affect users with respect to
Postgres;
they have no effect on a user's other privileges or status with regards
to the underlying operating system.
Disk Management
Alternate Locations
It is possible to create a database in a location other than the default
location for the installation. Remember that all database access actually
occurs through the database backend, so that any location specified must
be accessible by the backend.
Alternate database locations are created and referenced by an environment variable
which gives the absolute path to the intended storage location.
This environment variable must have been defined before the backend was started
and must be writable by the postgres administrator account.
Any valid environment variable name may be used to reference an alternate
location, although using variable name with a prefix of PGDATA is recommended
to avoid confusion and conflict with other variables.
In previous versions of Postgres,
it was also permissable to use an absolute path name
to specify an alternate storage location.
The environment variable style of specification
is to be preferred since it allows the site administrator more flexibility in
managing disk storage.
If you prefer using absolute paths, you may do so by defining
"ALLOW_ABSOLUTE_DBPATHS" and recompiling Postgres
To do this, either add this line
#define ALLOW_ABSOLUTE_DBPATHS 1
to the file src/include/config.h, or by specifying
CFLAGS+= -DALLOW_ABSOLUTE_DBPATHS
in your Makefile.custom.
Remember that database creation is actually performed by the database backend.
Therefore, any environment variable specifying an alternate location must have
been defined before the backend was started. To define an alternate location
PGDATA2 pointing to /home/postgres/data, first type
% setenv PGDATA2 /home/postgres/data
to define the environment variable to be used with subsequent commands.
Usually, you will want to define this variable in the
Postgres superuser's
.profile
or
.cshrc
initialization file to ensure that it is defined upon system startup.
Any environment variable can be used to reference alternate location,
although it is preferred that the variables be prefixed with "PGDATA"
to eliminate confusion and the possibility of conflicting with or
overwriting other variables.
To create a data storage area in PGDATA2, ensure
that /home/postgres already exists and is writable
by the postgres administrator.
Then from the command line, type
% setenv PGDATA2 /home/postgres/data
% initlocation $PGDATA2
Creating Postgres database system directory /home/postgres/data
Creating Postgres database system directory /home/postgres/data/base
To test the new location, create a database test by typing
% createdb -D PGDATA2 test
% destroydb test