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postgres accepts the following command line arguments:
dbname
The optional argument
dbname
specifies the name of the database to be accessed.
dbname
defaults to the value of the
USER
environment variable.
-B nBuffers
If the backend is running under the
postmaster,
nBuffers
is the number of shared-memory buffers that the
postmaster
has allocated for the backend server processes that it starts. If the
backend is running standalone, this specifies the number of buffers to
allocate. This value defaults to 64 buffers, where each buffer is 8k bytes
(or whatever BLCKSZ is set to in config.h).
-C
Do not show the server version number.
-D DataDir
Specifies the directory to use as the root of the tree of database
directories. If -D is not given, the default data directory name is
the value of the environment variable
PGDATA.
If PGDATA is not set, then the directory used is
$POSTGRESHOME/data.
If neither environment variable is set and this command-line
option is not specified, the default directory that was
set at compile-time is used.
-E
Echo all queries.
-F
Disable an automatic fsync() call after each transaction.
This option improves performance, but an operating system crash
while a transaction is in progress may cause the loss of
the most recently entered data. Without the fsync() call
the data is buffered by the operating system, and written to disk sometime later.
-O
Override restrictions, so system table structures can be modified.
These tables are typically those with a leading
"pg_" in the table name.
-P
Ignore system indexes to scan/update system
tuples. REINDEX for system tables/indexes
requires this option. System tables are
typically those with a leading "pg_" in the
table name.
-Q
Specifies "quiet" mode.
-S SortSize
Specifies the amount of memory to be used by internal sorts and hashes
before resorting to temporary disk files. The value is specified in
kilobytes, and defaults to 512 kilobytes. Note that for a complex query,
several sorts and/or hashes might be running in parallel, and each one
will be allowed to use as much as
SortSize kilobytes
before it starts to put data into temporary files.
-d [ DebugLevel ]
The optional argument DebugLevel
determines the amount of debugging output the backend servers will
produce.
If DebugLevel
is one, the postmaster will trace all connection traffic,
and nothing else.
For levels two and higher,
debugging is turned on in the backend process and the postmaster
displays more information,
including the backend environment and process traffic.
Note that if no file is specified for backend servers to
send their debugging output then this output will appear on the
controlling tty of their parent postmaster.
-e
This option controls how dates are interpreted upon
input to and output from the database.
If the -e
option is supplied, then dates passed to and from the frontend
processes will be assumed to be in "European"
format (DD-MM-YYYY),
otherwise dates are assumed to be in
"American" format (MM-DD-YYYY).
Dates are accepted by the backend in a wide variety of formats,
and for input dates this switch mostly affects the interpretation
for ambiguous cases.
See the PostgreSQL User's Guide
for more information.
-o OutputFile
Sends all debugging and error output to
OutputFile.
If the backend is running under the postmaster,
error messages are still sent to the frontend process as well as to
OutputFile,
but debugging output is sent to the controlling tty of the
postmaster
(since only one file descriptor can be sent to an actual file).
-s
Print time information and other statistics at the end of each query.
This is useful for benchmarking or for use in tuning the number of
buffers.
-v protocol
Specifies the number of the frontend/backend protocol to be used for this
particular session.
There are several other options that may be specified, used mainly
for debugging purposes. These are listed here only for the use by
Postgres system developers.
Use of any of these options is highly discouraged.
Furthermore, any of these options may disappear or change at any time.
These special-case options are:
-A n|r|b|Q\fIn\fP|X\fIn\fP
This option generates a tremendous amount of output.
-L
Turns off the locking system.
-N
Disables use of newline as a query delimiter.
-f [ s | i | m | n | h ]
Forbids the use of particular scan and join methods:
s and i
disable sequential and index scans respectively, while
n, m, and h
disable nested-loop, merge and hash joins respectively.
Note: Neither sequential scans nor nested-loop joins can be disabled completely;
the -fs and -fn
options simply discourage the optimizer from using those
plan types if it has any other alternative.
-i
Prevents query execution, but shows the plan tree.
-p dbname
Indicates to the backend server that it has been started by a
postmaster
and make different assumptions about buffer pool management, file
descriptors, etc. Switches following -p are restricted to those
considered "secure".
-t pa[rser] | pl[anner] | e[xecutor]
Print timing statistics for each query relating to each of the major
system modules. This option cannot be used with -s.
Outputs
Of the nigh-infinite number of error messages you may see when you
execute the backend server directly, the most common will probably be:
semget: No space left on device
If you see this message, you should run the
ipcclean
command. After doing this, try starting
postmaster
again. If this still doesn't work, you probably need to configure
your kernel for shared memory and semaphores as described in the
installation notes. If you have a kernel with particularly small shared memory
and/or semaphore limits, you may have to reconfigure your kernel to increase
its shared memory or semaphore parameters.
Tip: You may be able to postpone
reconfiguring your kernel by decreasing -B to reduce
Postgres' shared memory
consumption.
Description
The Postgres backend server can be executed directly from the user shell.
This should be done only while debugging by the DBA, and should not be
done while other Postgres backends are being managed by a
postmaster
on this set of databases.
Some of the switches explained here can be passed to the backend
through the "database options" field of a connection request, and thus can be
set for a particular backend without going to the trouble of restarting the
postmaster. This is particularly handy for debugging-related switches.
The optional argument dbname
specifies the name of the database to be accessed.
dbname
defaults to the value of the
USER environment variable.
Notes
Useful utilities for dealing with shared memory problems include
ipcs(1),
ipcrm(1), and
ipcclean(1).
See also postmaster.