Hi I am having trouble with postgres. I don't remember my postgres password and don't know how to change the password. I'm guessing I should change the md5 password settings I set a month ago, but I don't know how to find the file and open it using my terminal. Can someone help?
3 Answers
Another way I learned recently is to go to the terminal and type:
ps aux | grep postgres
which shows all the postgres processes running on your machine. From the list you should see one with the format ... -D ...
. E.G:
root 4155 0.0 0.0 2432908 68 ?? S 6May13 0:00.01 sudo su postgres -c /opt/local/lib/postgresql84/bin/postgres -D /opt/local/var/db/postgresql84/defaultdb -p 5432
the -D means directory. In the terminal, do a sudo su
and then cd to that directory, and you'll find the pg_hba.conf file.
And one more way:
Go to your terminal and type: locate pg_hba.conf
. There should be a few results.
-
1
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5In latest Postgres 9.x it will be found in /data/ directory like /Library/PostgreSQL/9.4/data/pg_hba.conf– UserBSS1Feb 1, 2016 at 15:04
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1In my MacBook Air 11.2.3 (2020) - Postgres 10 /Library/PostgreSQL/10/share/postgresql/pg_hba.conf.sample Feb 11, 2022 at 12:41
If you can connect, use SHOW hba_file;
.
If you cannot connect, you need to locate the data directory. That'll be shown as the -D
argument to the postgres
or pg_ctl
command that starts PostgreSQL, so you can generally find it with ps -ef | grep postgres
.
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8Example result on my Mountain Lion Mac with Postgres 9.2 installed by EnterpriseDB.com installer:
/Library/PostgreSQL/9.2/data/pg_hba.conf
. Feb 12, 2013 at 9:58 -
7
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Thanks @BasilBourque I found the data directory but cannot access that. Error of having no permission to read data content prompted. Sep 18, 2019 at 4:04
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1@SharkDeng For enhanced security, that directory is controlled by the user account created on your system when you installed Postgres. That user is likely called
postgres
unless you specified otherwise. Sep 18, 2019 at 5:23
For macOS 12, you can open the file using nano in your terminal. Example below is if Postgres 12 is installed.
`nano /Library/PostgreSQL/12/data/pg_hba.conf`
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1Different user can have different paths, find yours like this: sudo psql -U postgres -c 'show hba_file' Apr 14 at 11:19