It really depends on what you want to achieve.
Shared database between hosts
Do you want the application on both computers to use the same database, so that changes made by one are seen on the other? If so, you need to configure each copy of the application to connect to the same database instance on one of the machines. This is usually done by changing the JDBC URL. You'll need to configure PostgreSQL on the machine that'll be the database server so it allows connections from the other hosts, ensure they can talk to each other over TCP/IP, etc.
Fresh DB on each host
Do you want each install to have a separate instance of the database, so changes made on one have no effect on the other, and where each instance starts out with a blank, empty database (or one with only static contents like lookup tables)? If so, you should generally define the database using SQL scripts, then have the application run the SQL scripts when first installed on a machine. If you've defined the database by hand so far, you can use pg_dump
to create a SQL script that you can use as the basis for this, but I really advise you to look into tools like Liquibase for schema management instead.
"Fork" current state
Do you want each instance of the application on a machine to have an independent database, so changes made on one have no effect on other instances on other machines, but where the starting state of an install is what was in the database on the other host? If so, you need to dump and reload the database alongside the application, using pg_dump -Fc
and pg_restore
. You can automate this within your application / build system using tools like ProcessBuilder
, or do it manually.
There's no generic, canned way to do this. It'll require you to define an application deployment procedure, maybe produce an installer, etc.