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I have a database, and I need to know the default encoding for the database. I want to get it from the command line.

7 Answers 7

235

From the command line:

psql my_database -c 'SHOW SERVER_ENCODING'

From within psql, an SQL IDE or an API:

SHOW SERVER_ENCODING;
2
  • 1
    Isn't that the server-level setting (the default used for newly created databases) rather than the database/catalog-level setting asked for in the Question? Jul 26, 2017 at 3:58
  • 7
    Note that from within psql, there needs to be a semicolon at the end. i.e. SHOW SERVER_ENCODING; Nov 27, 2018 at 15:50
64

Method 1:

If you're already logged in to the db server, just copy and paste this.

SHOW SERVER_ENCODING;

Result:

  server_encoding 
-----------------  
UTF8

For Client encoding :

 SHOW CLIENT_ENCODING;

Method 2:

Again if you are already logged in, use this to get the list based result

\l 
50

A programmatic solution:

SELECT pg_encoding_to_char(encoding) FROM pg_database WHERE datname = 'yourdb';
34

If you want to get database encodings:

psql  -U postgres -h somehost --list

You'll see something like:

List of databases
           Name         |  Owner   | Encoding
------------------------+----------+----------
db1                     | postgres | UTF8
14

tl;dr

SELECT character_set_name 
FROM information_schema.character_sets 
;

Standard way: information_schema

From the SQL-standard schema information_schema present in every database/catalog, use the defined view named character_sets. This approach should be portable across all standard database systems.

SELECT * 
FROM information_schema.character_sets 
;

Despite the name being plural, it shows only a single row, reporting on the current database/catalog.

screenshot of pgAdmin 4 with results of query shown above

The third column is character_set_name:

Name of the character set, currently implemented as showing the name of the database encoding

13

Because there's more than one way to skin a cat:

psql -l

Shows all the database names, encoding, and more.

2

Another way of getting the server encoding (described at https://pgpedia.info/s/server_encoding.html):

 SELECT current_setting('server_encoding');

One can also use a similar select to get other settings, e.g. 'client_encoding'.

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