508
votes

I'm a postgres novice.

I installed the postgres.app for mac. I was playing around with the psql commands and I accidentally dropped the postgres database. I don't know what was in it.

I'm currently working on a tutorial: http://www.rosslaird.com/blog/building-a-project-with-mezzanine/

And I'm stuck at sudo -u postgres psql postgres

ERROR MESSAGE: psql: FATAL: role "postgres" does not exist

$ which psql

/Applications/Postgres.app/Contents/MacOS/bin/psql

This is what prints out of psql -l

                                List of databases
    Name    |   Owner    | Encoding | Collate | Ctype |     Access privileges     
------------+------------+----------+---------+-------+---------------------------
 user       | user       | UTF8     | en_US   | en_US | 
 template0  | user       | UTF8     | en_US   | en_US | =c/user                  +
            |            |          |         |       | user      =CTc/user      
 template1  | user       | UTF8     | en_US   | en_US | =c/user                  +
            |            |          |         |       | user      =CTc/user      
(3 rows)

So what are the steps I should take? Delete an everything related to psql and reinstall everything?

Thanks for the help guys!

20
Restarting Computer. Ensures Launchd from brew services start postresql is executed.Michael Dimmitt

20 Answers

506
votes

NOTE: If you installed postgres using homebrew, see the comment from @user3402754 below.

Note that the error message does NOT talk about a missing database, it talks about a missing role. Later in the login process it might also stumble over the missing database.

But the first step is to check the missing role: What is the output within psql of the command \du ? On my Ubuntu system the relevant line looks like this:

                              List of roles
 Role name |            Attributes             | Member of 
-----------+-----------------------------------+-----------
 postgres  | Superuser, Create role, Create DB | {}        

If there is not at least one role with superuser, then you have a problem :-)

If there is one, you can use that to login. And looking at the output of your \l command: The permissions for user on the template0 and template1 databases are the same as on my Ubuntu system for the superuser postgres. So I think your setup simple uses user as the superuser. So you could try this command to login:

sudo -u user psql user

If user is really the DB superuser you can create another DB superuser and a private, empty database for him:

CREATE USER postgres SUPERUSER;
CREATE DATABASE postgres WITH OWNER postgres;

But since your postgres.app setup does not seem to do this, you also should not. Simple adapt the tutorial.

279
votes

The key is "I installed the postgres.app for mac." This application sets up the local PostgreSQL installation with a database superuser whose role name is the same as your login (short) name.

When Postgres.app first starts up, it creates the $USER database, which is the default database for psql when none is specified. The default user is $USER, with no password.

Some scripts (e.g., a database backup created with pgdump on a Linux systsem) and tutorials will assume the superuser has the traditional role name of postgres.

You can make your local install look a bit more traditional and avoid these problems by doing a one time:

/Applications/Postgres.app/Contents/Versions/9.*/bin/createuser -s postgres

which will make those FATAL: role "postgres" does not exist go away.

267
votes

For MAC:

  1. Install Homebrew
  2. brew install postgres
  3. initdb /usr/local/var/postgres
  4. /usr/local/Cellar/postgresql/<version>/bin/createuser -s postgres or /usr/local/opt/postgres/bin/createuser -s postgres which will just use the latest version.
  5. start postgres server manually: pg_ctl -D /usr/local/var/postgres start

To start server at startup

  • mkdir -p ~/Library/LaunchAgents
  • ln -sfv /usr/local/opt/postgresql/*.plist ~/Library/LaunchAgents
  • launchctl load ~/Library/LaunchAgents/homebrew.mxcl.postgresql.plist

Now, it is set up, login using psql -U postgres -h localhost or use PgAdmin for GUI.

By default user postgres will not have any login password.

Check this site for more articles like this: https://medium.com/@Nithanaroy/installing-postgres-on-mac-18f017c5d3f7

60
votes
createuser postgres --interactive

or make a superuser postgresl just with

createuser postgres -s
40
votes

This happens when you run initdb with a user whose ID is not postgres, without specifying the postgres username with --username=postgres or -U postgres.

The database cluster is then created with the system's user account that you used to run initdb, and it is given superuser permissions.

To fix it, simply create a new user named postgres with the option --superuser using the createuser utility that comes with Postgres. The utility can be found in the Postgres' bin directory. e.g.

createuser --superuser postgres

If you have a custom hostname or port then be sure to set the appropriate options.

Don't forget to delete the other user account that was created for you by initdb.

37
votes

If you installed postgres from brew, run this in your terminal :

/usr/local/opt/postgres/bin/createuser -s postgres
18
votes

First you need create a user:

sudo -u postgres createuser --superuser $USER

After you create a database:

sudo -u postgres createdb $USER

Change $USER to your system username.

You can see the the complete solution here.

18
votes

I needed to unset $PGUSER:

$ unset PGUSER
$ createuser -s postgres
17
votes

For me, this code worked:

/Applications/Postgres.app/Contents/Versions/9.4/bin/createuser -s postgres

it came from here: http://talk.growstuff.org/t/fatal-role-postgres-does-not-exist/216/4

9
votes

Running this on the command line should fix it

/Applications/Postgres.app/Contents/Versions/9.4/bin/createdb <Mac OSX Username Here>

7
votes

If you're using docker, make sure you're NOT using POSTGRES_USER=something_else, as this variable is used by the standard image to know the name of the PostgreSQL admin user (default as postgres).

In my case, I was using this variable with the intent to set another user to my specific database, but it ended up of course changing the main PostgreSQL user.

6
votes

If you installed postgres from Brew and are using an Apple Silicon (M1) mac, run this in your terminal:

/opt/homebrew/opt/postgresql/bin/createuser -s postgres

If you're using an Intel (x86) mac, run this in your terminal:

/usr/local/opt/postgres/bin/createuser -s postgres
5
votes

This is the only one that fixed it for me :

createuser -s -U $USER
4
votes

Dropping the postgres database doesn't really matter. This database is initially empty and its purpose is simply for the postgres user to have a kind of "home" to connect to, should it need one.

Still you may recreate it with the SQL command CREATE DATABASE postgres;

Note that the tutorial mentioned in the question is not written with postgres.app in mind. Contrary to PostgreSQL for Unix in general, postgres.app tries to look like a normal application as opposed to a service that would be run by a dedicated postgres user having different privileges than your normal user. postgres.app is run and managed by your own account.

So instead of this command: sudo -u postgres psql -U postgres, it would be more in the spirit of postgres.app to just issue: psql, which automatically connects to a database matching your users's name, and with a db account of the same name that happens to be superuser, so it can do anything permissions-wise.

4
votes

For what it is worth, i have ubuntu and many packages installed and it went in conflict with it.

For me the right answer was:

sudo -i -u postgres-xc
psql
3
votes

This article helped me to solve same issue psql: FATAL: role “postgres” does not exist.

I am using mac, so I entered this command in terminal:

createuser -s postgres

And it worked for me.

1
votes

I don't think that sudo is needed here because psql -l returns a list of databases. This tells me that initdb was run under the user's current user, not under the postgres user.

You can just:

psql

And continue the tutorial.

I would suggest A.H's general points of creating the postgres user and db because many applications may expect this to exist.

A brief explanation:

PostgreSQL will not run with administrative access to the operating system. Instead it runs with an ordinary user, and in order to support peer authentication (asking the OS who is trying to connect) it creates a user and db with the user that runs the initialization process. In this case it was your normal user.

1
votes

On Ubuntu system, I purged the PostgreSQL and re-installed it. All the databases are restored. This solved the problem for me.

Advice - Take the backup of the databases to be on the safer side.

0
votes

I became stuck on this issue having executed brew services stop postgresql the day prior.
The day following: brew services start postgresql would not work. This is because as is shown when you install using homebrew. postgresql uses a launchd ... which loads when your computer is powered on.

resolution:
brew services start postgresql
Restart your computer.

0
votes

The \du command return:

Role name = postgres@implicit_files

And that command postgres=# \password postgres return error:

ERROR: role "postgres" does not exist.

But that postgres=# \password postgres@implicit_files run fine.

Also after sudo -u postgres createuser -s postgres the first variant also work.