How to thoroughly purge and reinstall postgresql on ubuntu? [closed]
Somehow I've managed to completely bugger the install of postgresql on Ubuntu karmic. I want to start over from scratch, but when I "purge" the package with apt-get it still leaves traces behind such that the reinstall configuration doesn't run properly.
After I've done:
apt-get purge postgresql
apt-get install postgresql
It said
Setting up postgresql-8.4 (8.4.3-0ubuntu9.10.1) ...
Configuring already existing cluster (configuration: /etc/postgresql/8.4/main, data: /var/lib/postgresql/8.4/main, owner: 108:112)
Error: move_conffile: required configuration file /var/lib/postgresql/8.4/main/postgresql.conf does not exist
Error: could not create default cluster. Please create it manually with
pg_createcluster 8.4 main --start
or a similar command (see 'man pg_createcluster').
update-alternatives: using /usr/share/postgresql/8.4/man/man1/postmaster.1.gz to provide /usr/share/man/man1/postmaster.1.gz (postmaster.1.gz) in auto mode.
Setting up postgresql (8.4.3-0ubuntu9.10.1) ...
I have a "/etc/postgresql" with nothing in it and "/etc/postgresql-common/" has a 'pg_upgradecluser.d' directory and root.crt and user_clusters files.
The /etc/passwd has a postgres user; the purge script doesn't appear to touch it. There's been a bunch of symptoms which I work through only to expose the next.
Right this second, when I run that command "pg_createcluster..." it complains that '/var/lib/postgresql/8.4/main/postgresql.conf does not exist', so I'll go find one of those but I'm sure that won't be the end of it.
Is there not some easy one-liner (or two) which will burn it completely and let me start over?
Solution 1:
Option A
If your install isn't already damaged, you can drop unwanted PostgreSQL servers ("clusters") using pg_dropcluster
. Use that in preference to a full purge and reinstall if you just want to restart with a fresh PostgreSQL instance.
$ pg_lsclusters
Ver Cluster Port Status Owner Data directory Log file
11 main 5432 online postgres /var/lib/postgresql/11/main /var/log/postgresql/postgresql-11-main.log
$ sudo systemctl stop postgresql@11-main
$ sudo pg_dropcluster --stop 11 main
$ sudo pg_createcluster --start 11 main
Option B
If you really need to do a full purge and reinstall, first make sure PostgreSQL isn't running. ps -C postgres
should show no results.
Now run:
apt-get --purge remove postgresql\*
to remove everything PostgreSQL from your system. Just purging the postgres
package isn't enough since it's just an empty meta-package.
Once all PostgreSQL packages have been removed, run:
rm -r /etc/postgresql/
rm -r /etc/postgresql-common/
rm -r /var/lib/postgresql/
userdel -r postgres
groupdel postgres
You should now be able to:
apt-get install postgresql
or for a complete install:
apt-get install postgresql-8.4 postgresql-contrib-8.4 postgresql-doc-8.4
Solution 2:
I had a similar situation: I needed to purge postgresql 9.1 on a debian wheezy ( I had previously migrated from 8.4 and I was getting errors ).
What I did:
First, I deleted config and database
$ sudo pg_dropcluster --stop 9.1 main
Then removed postgresql
$ sudo apt-get remove --purge postgresql postgresql-9.1
and then reinstalled
$ sudo apt-get install postgresql postgresql-9.1
In my case I noticed /etc/postgresql/9.1 was empty, and running service postgresql start
returned nothing
So, after more googling I got to this command:
$ sudo pg_createcluster 9.1 main
With that I could start the server, but now I was getting log-related errors. After more searching, I ended up changing permissions to the /var/log/postgresql directory
$ sudo chown root.postgres /var/log/postgresql
$ sudo chmod g+wx /var/log/postgresql
That fixed the issue, Hope this helps