Any server setting that you succeed in changing with psql will only last as long as your session. To make the change persist, you have to edit postgresql.conf, either with your favorite text editor (vim, emacs, etc.) or with a utility program (sed, awk, etc.). Everything that follows assumes that you have suitable privileges to edit postgresql.conf.
Your first job is to find it. Different Linux distributions store it in different places. In Ubuntu, it's in
/etc/postgresql/9.4/main
^^^
Note the version number. Different for each version of PostgreSQL, of course. If I wanted to change a setting, I'd do this after putting the file under version control.
$ sudoedit /etc/postgresql/9.4/main/postgresql.conf
[sudo] password for mike:
Then find the setting and change it. Here's what the relevant section of postgresql.conf looks like here.
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# VERSION/PLATFORM COMPATIBILITY
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# - Previous PostgreSQL Versions -
#array_nulls = on
I'd change the setting to
array_nulls = off # array_nulls = on
This kind of change usually requires either a reload or a restart of the PostgreSQL dbms.