How To Install PostgreSQL 11 on Ubuntu 20.04
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Introduction
In this tutorial, we learn how to install PostgreSQL 11 on Ubuntu 20.04 (Focal Fossa).
PostgreSQL, or usually called Postgres, is an open-source object-relational database management system (ORDBMS) with an emphasis on extensibility and standards compliance.
PostgreSQL is ACID-compliant and transactional. It is developed by PostgreSQL Global Development Group (PGDG) that consists of many companies and individual contributors. PostgreSQL released under the terms of PostgreSQL license.
PostgreSQL 11 was released on 18 October 2018. Major enhancements in PostgreSQL 11 includes:
- Increased Robustness and Performance for Partitioning
- Transactions Supported in Stored Procedures
- Enhanced Capabilities for Query Parallelism
- Just-in-Time (JIT) Compilation for Expressions
- General User Experience Improvements
Prerequisites
This tutorial assume you already satisfy the following requirements:
- A machine with fresh install of Ubuntu Server 20.04. It can be A virtual machine locally using Virtualbox, VMWare workstation or VMWare Fusion, KVM, Xen, or a virtual machine in the cloud like DigitalOcean or Linode.
- A non-root user with sudo privileges or a root user access. If you’re using root user remove
sudo
from each command on this tutorial.
Step 1 — Update Base Systems
Since this is a fresh install of Ubuntu Server 20.04, before we install PostgreSQL 11, let’s update our system to the latest update.
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get -y upgrade
After we upgrade our base system, now it’s time to install PostgreSQL 11.
Since Ubuntu 20.04 doesn’t have PostgreSQL 11 in its repository, we need to add oficial PostgreSQL repository so we can install PostgreSQL 11.
Step 2 — Import Repository Signing Key
The PostgreSQL team is using GPG to sign downloadable packages from the PostgreSQL website.
We add PostgreSQL public GPG key so apt can verify that packages downloaded from PostgreSQL repository are not tampered or corrupt.
Add PostgreSQL GPG public key using the command below.
wget --quiet -O - https://www.postgresql.org/media/keys/ACCC4CF8.asc | sudo apt-key add -
You should get OK
output for command above.
If you got the different output, you need to fix the error first before continue to the next step.
Step 3 — Add PostgreSQL 11 repository
After adding PostgreSQL release keys, we create a new repository configuration for PostgreSQL using the command below.
echo "deb http://apt.postgresql.org/pub/repos/apt/ $(lsb_release -cs)-pgdg main" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/postgresql-pgdg.list > /dev/null
Refresh apt metadata using the command below.
sudo apt-get update
Step 4 — Install PostgreSQL 11
We’re ready to install PostgreSQL 11. Use the command below to install PostgreSQL 11 on Ubuntu 20.04.
sudo apt-get install postgresql-11
Alternative method to install PostgreSQL 11 on Ubuntu 20.04 is using apt command
sudo apt install postgresql-11
Only 4 steps needed to install PostgreSQL 11 on Ubuntu 20.04. We learn how to check and verify and managing PostgreSQL 11 installation in the next few sections.
Verify PostgreSQL 11 Installation on Ubuntu 20.04
We can check PostgreSQL 11 packages that already installed using the command below.
dpkg -l | grep postgresql
Check PostgreSQL 11 Listening Ports
By default, PostgreSQL listens on port 5432. We can use netstat to check whether there is a process listening on port 5432.
sudo netstat -naptu | grep 5432
Another method is to check whether there is a process named postgres
listening on a port.
sudo netstat -naptu | grep postgres
Alternative to netstat
, We can use ss
command below to check whether there is a process listen on PostgreSQL default port 5432.
sudo ss -atnp | grep 5432
We can also use ss
to check whether there is a process named postgres
listening on a port.
sudo ss -atp | grep postgres
The last output above shows there is also a connection to ephemeral UDP port from local. According to this thread on PostgreSQL mailing lists, this is PostgreSQL stats collector that use UDP to send and receive stats data locally.
Checking PostgreSQL Process
We can ue ps
command to check what processes currently running with name contain postgres.
ps -aux | grep postgres
Check PostgreSQL 11 resource usage like CPU and memory usingtop
command.
top -u postgres
Managing PostgreSQL 11 Services on Ubuntu 20.04
Check postgres
service status using command below.
sudo service postgresql status
We can also use systemctl
command to check PostgreSQL service status.
sudo systemctl status postgresql
Using both commands above you see active (exited)
on the Active:
line. This happens because systemd doesn’t know the status of each PostgreSQL cluster running on the instance. One instance / installation of PostgreSQL can run mutliple clusters od PostgreSQL.
We can check, list of PostgreSQL clusters running on our machine using the command below.
pg_lsclusters
There is one cluster running on our machine. The cluster named main
running PostgreSQL 11. To check this cluster service status, we can use the command below.
sudo service postgresql@11-main status
As an alternative to service, we can use systemctl to check this cluster status.
sudo systemctl status postgresql@11-main
Stop PostgreSQL service using the command below.
sudo systemctl stop postgresql
Start PostgreSQL service using the command below.
sudo systemctl start postgresql
Restart PostgreSQL service using the command below.
sudo systemctl restart postgresql
Reload PostgreSQL service using the command below.
sudo systemctl reload postgresql
Connect to PostgreSQL using psql
Now let’s connect to the PostgreSQL 11 server using psql
client application.
By default, postgres create system user named postgres
. There is also role in postgresql database named postgres
wth superuser permission.
Switch to postgresql
user.
sudo su - postgres
After switching to postgres user, we can connect using psql
command.
To list all databases in PostgreSQL we can use \l
command.
To list all users in PostgreSQL we can use \du
command.
To exit from psql
we can use \q
command.
To exit from postgres
user type exit
or CTRL+D
Change postgres User Password
Now we’re on our own linux user. Let’s try to login to localhost
or 127.0.0.1
.
$ psql -U postgres -W -h 127.0.0.1
Password for user postgres:
It prompts for a password. Since we haven’t set any password, let’s leave it empty. We get the error message below.
psql: fe_sendauth: no password supplied
Since we cannot login without providing password, we set new password for postgres
user. Change user to postgres
user like shown above and use psql to connect to PostreSQL.
After logging in, type \password
. Enter new password and confirmation password for user postgres
.
When we login again to localhost
or 127.0.0.1
and provide a password, we can log in successfully.
Uninstall PostgreSQL 11 from Ubuntu 20.04
In this section, we learn how to uninstall PostgreSQL 11 and its dependencies on Ubuntu 20.04 completely.
Please be careful when running steps in this section since this will stop your PostgreSQL database server.
Use the command below to uninstall all PostgreSQL 11 packages, both server, and client.
sudo apt-get remove postgresql-11 \
postgresql-client-11 \
postgresql-client-common \
postgresql-common
Remove the PostgreSQL data directory using the command below.
rm -rf /var/lib/postgresql/
Remove PostgreSQL 11 configuration directories using the command below.
rm -rf /etc/postgresql
rm -rf /etc/postgresql-common
PostgreSQL 11 References
You can follow the links below to learn more about PostgreSQL 11 from PostgreSQL official documentation.
Conclusion
In this tutorial, we learn how to install PostgreSQL 11 on ubuntu 20.04. We also learn managing PostgreSQL services, using tools like netstat
, ss
, ps
, and top
to check PostgreSQL service.
After that, we learn how to connect to PostgreSQL 11 server using psql client, changing postgres
superuser password, and in the end, we learn how to uninstall PostgreSQL 11. I hope this is useful for initiating your journey to PostgreSQL 11.