315
votes

How can I call psql so that it doesn't prompt for a password?

This is what I have:

psql -Umyuser < myscript.sql

However, I couldn't find the argument that passes the password, and so psql always prompts for it.

16
I ended up going for the PGPASSWORD environment variable. This fitted my usecase perfectly. Simple and self-contained in the script.Axel Fontaine

16 Answers

379
votes

You may wish to read a summary of the ways to authenticate to PostgreSQL.

To answer your question, there are several ways provide a password for password-based authentication:

  1. Via the password prompt. Example:

    psql -h uta.biocommons.org -U foo
    Password for user foo: 
    
  2. In a pgpass file. See libpq-pgpass. Format:

    <host>:<port>:<database>:<user>:<password>
    
  3. With the PGPASSWORD environment variable. See libpq-envars. Example:

    export PGPASSWORD=yourpass
    psql ...
    
    # Or in one line for this invocation only:
    PGPASSWORD=yourpass psql ...
    
  4. In the connection string The password and other options may be specified in the connection string/URI. See app-psql. Example:

    psql postgresql://username:password@dbmaster:5433/mydb?sslmode=require
    
182
votes
PGPASSWORD=[your password] psql -Umyuser < myscript.sql
72
votes

You can add this command line at the begining of your script:

set PGPASSWORD=[your password]
54
votes

This might be an old question, but there's an alternate method you can use that no one has mentioned. It's possible to specify the password directly in the connection URI. The documentation can be found here, alternatively here.

You can provide your username and password directly in the connection URI provided to psql:

# postgresql://[user[:password]@][netloc][:port][/dbname][?param1=value1&...]
psql postgresql://username:password@localhost:5432/mydb
54
votes

If you intend on having multiple hosts/database connections, the ~/.pgpass file is the way to go.

Steps:

  1. Create the file using vim ~/.pgpass or similar. Input your information in the following format: hostname:port:database:username:password Do not add string quotes around your field values. You can also use * as a wildcard for your port/database fields.
  2. You must chmod 0600 ~/.pgpass in order for it to not be silently ignored by psql.
  3. Create an alias in your bash profile that runs your psql command for you. For example:alias postygresy='psql --host hostname database_name -U username' The values should match those that you inputted to the ~/.pgpass file.
  4. Source your bash profile with . ~/.bashrc or similar.
  5. Type your alias from the command line.

Note that if you have an export PGPASSWORD='' variable set, it will take precedence over the file.

14
votes

If you're having problems on windows like me (I'm using Windows 7 64-bit) and set PGPASSWORD=[Password] did not work.

Then, as Kavaklioglu said in one of the comments,

export PGPASSWORD=[password]

You will need to save this at the top of the file, or before any usage so its set before being called.

Certainly does work on windows :)

12
votes

You have to create a password file: see http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.0/interactive/libpq-pgpass.html for more info.

12
votes

An alternative to using PGPASSWORD environment variable is to use conninfo string according to the documentation

An alternative way to specify connection parameters is in a conninfo string or a URI, which is used instead of a database name. This mechanism give you very wide control over the connection.

$ psql "host=<server> port=5432 dbname=<db> user=<user> password=<password>"

postgres=>
8
votes

Given the security concerns about using the PGPASSWORD environment variable, I think the best overall solution is as follows:

  1. Write your own temporary pgpass file with the password you want to use.
  2. Use the PGPASSFILE environment variable to tell psql to use that file.
  3. Remove the temporary pgpass file

There are a couple points of note here. Step 1 is there to avoid mucking with the user's ~/.pgpass file that might exist. You also must make sure that the file has permissions 0600 or less.

Some have suggested leveraging bash to shortcut this as follows:

PGPASSFILE=<(echo myserver:5432:mydb:jdoe:password) psql -h myserver -U jdoe -p 5432 mydb

This uses the <() syntax to avoid needing to write the data to an actual file. But it doesn't work because psql checks what file is being used and will throw an error like this:

WARNING: password file "/dev/fd/63" is not a plain file
8
votes

It can be done simply using PGPASSWORD. I am using psql 9.5.10. In your case the solution would be

PGPASSWORD=password psql -U myuser < myscript.sql

5
votes

Building on mightybyte's answer for those who aren't comfortable with *nix shell scripting, here's a working script:

#!/bin/sh
PGPASSFILE=/tmp/pgpasswd$$
touch $PGPASSFILE
chmod 600 $PGPASSFILE
echo "myserver:5432:mydb:jdoe:password" > $PGPASSFILE
export PGPASSFILE
psql mydb
rm $PGPASSFILE

The double dollar sign ($$) in /tmp/pgpasswd$$ at line 2 appends the process ID number to the file name, so that this script can be run more than once, even simultaneously, without side effects.

Note the use of the chmod command at line 4 - just like the "not a plain file" error that mightybyte described, there's also a "permissions" error if this is not done.

At line 7, you won't have to use the -hmyserver, the -pmyport, or -Ujdoe flag if you use the defaults (localhost : 5432) and only have one database user. For multiple users, (but the default connection) change that line to

psql mydb jdoe

Don't forget to make the script executable with

chmod +x runpsql (or whatever you called the script file)

UPDATE:

I took RichVel's advice and made the file unreadable before putting the password into it. That closes a slight security hole. Thanks!

1
votes

8 years later...

On my mac, I had to put a line into the file ~/.pgpass like:

<IP>:<PORT>:<dbname>:<user>:<password>

Also see:
https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/libpq-pgpass.html
https://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/Pgpass

0
votes

This also works for other postgresql clis for example you can run pgbench in non-interactive mode.

export PGPASSWORD=yourpassword
/usr/pgsql-9.5/bin/pgbench -h $REMOTE_PG_HOST -p 5432 -U postgres -c 12 -j 4 -t 10000 example > pgbench.out 2>&1 &
-1
votes

I find, that psql show password prompt even you define PGPASSWORD variable, but you can specify -w option for psql to omit password prompt.

-6
votes

Use -w in the command: psql -h localhost -p 5432 -U user -w