I'm trying to set up Postgres for the first time, and I need to create a user with permissions to read and create databases. However, when I use:
createuser username
in my terminal I get the following message:
createuser: could not connect to database postgres: FATAL: role "tom" does not exist
Tom is my Ubuntu user account that I'm logged into right now. I'm trying to create a username of "postgres" then do a psql -U psql template1
so I can create a database and assign an owner to it for my Rails app.
You mentioned Ubuntu so I'm going to guess you installed the PostgreSQL packages from Ubuntu through apt.
If so, the postgres
PostgreSQL user account already exists and is configured to be accessible via peer
authentication for unix sockets in pg_hba.conf
. You get to it by running commands as the postgres
unix user, eg:
sudo -u postgres createuser owning_user
sudo -u postgres createdb -O owning_user dbname
This is all in the Ubuntu PostgreSQL documentation that's the first Google hit for "Ubuntu PostgreSQL" and is covered in numerous Stack Overflow questions.
(You've made this question a lot harder to answer by omitting details like the OS and version you're on, how you installed PostgreSQL, etc.)
See git gist with instructions here
Run this:
sudo -u postgres psql
OR
psql -U postgres
in your terminal to get into postgres
NB: If you're on a Mac and both of the commands above failed jump to the section about Mac below
postgres=#
Run
CREATE USER new_username;
Note: Replace new_username with the user you want to create, in your case that will be tom.
postgres=# CREATE USER new_username;
CREATE ROLE
Since you want that user to be able to create a DB, you need to alter the role to superuser
postgres=# ALTER USER new_username SUPERUSER CREATEDB;
ALTER ROLE
To confirm, everything was successful,
postgres=# \du
List of roles
Role name | Attributes | Member of
-----------+------------------------------------------------+-----------
new_username | Superuser, Create DB | {}
postgres | Superuser, Create role, Create DB, Replication | {}
root | Superuser, Create role, Create DB | {}
postgres=#
Update/Modification (For Mac):
I recently encountered a similar error on my Mac:
psql: FATAL: role "postgres" does not exist
This was because my installation was setup with a database superuser whose role name is the same as your login (short) name.
But some linux scripts assume the superuser has the traditional role name of postgres
How did I resolve this?
If you installed with homebrew
run:
/usr/local/opt/postgres/bin/createuser -s postgres
If you're using a specific version of postgres, say 10.5 then run:
/usr/local/Cellar/postgresql/10.5/bin/createuser -s postgres
OR:
/usr/local/Cellar/postgresql/10.5/bin/createuser -s new_username
OR:
/usr/local/opt/postgresql@11/bin/createuser -s postgres
If you installed with postgres.app for Mac run:
/Applications/Postgres.app/Contents/Versions/10.5/bin/createuser -s postgres
P.S: replace 10.5 with your PostgreSQL version
psql -U postgres
sudo -u postgres createuser -s tom
this should help you as this will happen if the administrator has not created a PostgreSQL user account for you. It could also be that you were assigned a PostgreSQL user name that is different from your operating system user name, in that case you need to use the -U switch.
Your error is posted in the official documentation. You can read this article.
I have copied the reason for you (and hyperlinked the URLs) from that article:
This will happen if the administrator has not created a PostgreSQL user account for you. (PostgreSQL user accounts are distinct from operating system user accounts.) If you are the administrator, see Chapter 20 for help creating accounts. You will need to become the operating system user under which PostgreSQL was installed (usually postgres) to create the first user account. It could also be that you were assigned a PostgreSQL user name that is different from your operating system user name; in that case you need to use the -U switch or set the PGUSER environment variable to specify your PostgreSQL user name
For your purposes, you can do:
1) Create a PostgreSQL user account:
sudo -u postgres createuser tom -d -P
(the -P
option to set a password; the -d
option for allowing the creation of database for your username 'tom'. Note that 'tom' is your operating system username. That way, you can execute PostgreSQL commands without sudo
ing.)
2) Now you should be able to execute createdb
and other PostgreSQL commands.
1- Login as default PostgreSQL user (postgres)
sudo -u postgres -i
2- As postgres user. Add a new database user using the createuser
command
[postgres]$ createuser --interactive
3-exit
[postgres]$ exit
I had the same issue, i just do this
sudo su - postgres
createuser odoo -U postgres -dRSP #P for password (odoo or user name that you want o give the postgres access)
On Windows use:
C:\PostgreSQL\pg10\bin>createuser -U postgres --pwprompt <USER>
Add --superuser
or --createdb
as appropriate.
See https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/app-createuser.html for further options.
If you don't want to change the authentication method (ident) and mess with pg_hba.conf use this:
First login as the default user
sudo su - postgres
then access psql and create a user with the same name as the one you are login in
postgres=# CREATE USER userOS WITH PASSWORD 'garbage' CREATEDB;
you can verify your user with the corresponding roles with
postgres=# \du
Afer this you can create your database and verify it with
psql -d dbName
\l
\q
You need to first run initdb. It will create the database cluster and the initial setup
See How to configure postgresql for the first time? and http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.4/static/app-initdb.html
initdb
they wouldn't have a database server running and accepting connections in order to produce the error message reported. Please remove this misleading answer. (BTW, in future, please link to /docs/current/static/ to avoid stale links accumulating)
Success story sharing
pg_hba.conf
to usemd5
auth for that user (see the manual); (b) Create an OS user by the same name and keep on usingpeer
auth; or (c) more advanced, create apg_ident.conf
mapping to allow your OS user to log in as the new user.