11

I am trying to start the server and getting an error

Port 5432 is already in use

I have brew uninstall postgress

which postgres

gives me nothing.

Activity monitor has 14 postgres processes which I cannot kill. Force quit kill the process and restarts it with another pid. The same with sudo kill -9 PID it kills the process and restarts it with another PID.

7 Answers 7

28

If you are running into this problem on OSX, do the following:

  1. Find out what is running on that port:
    $ lsof -n -i4TCP:5432

    COMMAND     PID         USER   FD   TYPE             DEVICE SIZE/OFF NODE NAME
    python2.7 28687 afdasdfasd    3u  IPv4 0x2f18e1284963d3e3      0t0  TCP 127.0.0.1:54970->127.0.0.1:postgresql (CLOSE_WAIT)
  1. Kill it
    $ kill -9 28687
  1. Restart postgresapp
2
  • The command lsof -n -i4TCP:5432 did the trick for me, "netstat" didn't yield anything for port 5432 on OSX. Thanks!
    – leo
    Commented Jul 24, 2019 at 5:56
  • This one worked for me as well. In my case, I found out I was using DataGrip, and it seems it kept the port in use even when PostgreSQL was not running anymore. Commented Feb 5, 2020 at 21:29
23

Have you checked for a launch daemon? It controls the Postgres process when Postgres is installed with Homebrew, and it automatically restarts Postgres after it is killed. Try

sudo launchctl list

or

sudo launchctl list | fgrep postg

to find the name of the daemon. You can stop the daemon with sudo launchctl stop <name> where name depends on the result of the first command.

18

Askubuntu provided an answer that worked:

sudo pkill -u postgres

Source: Nicely stop all postgres processes

2
  • The OP runs Postgres under MacOS (the Activity Manager is a very subtle hint for that) from the Homebrew package. Homebrew uses launchctl to start and stop Postgres. If you stop Postgres with kill, it will be restarted by launchctl. The OP has already tried your solution without luck.
    – clemens
    Commented Aug 5, 2018 at 17:23
  • 1
    Alright, but I came to this question because I needed an answer and there is no explicit mention of homebrew. So for others that come to this question, my solution may be a better fit.
    – tread
    Commented Aug 5, 2018 at 21:31
11

$ brew services stop postgresql

This will kill all processes and let you start the server.

3

You can get the list of ports using:

sudo launchctl list

Then enter the application name, and using this command to get the port nunber:

sudo launchctl list | fgrep postg

In my case, the port is 83. Now use:

kill 83

then

sudo kill 5432
0

Run those commands

  • To check what is running on port 5432 - $ sudo lsof -i :5432
  • To kill Postgres - $ sudo pkill -u postgres
-1

Use this:

brew services stop postgresql

Good luck!

1
  • This solution is already provided in this existing answer. When answering old questions please ensure that your answer provides a distinct and valuable contribution to the Q&A. Commented Jul 17, 2022 at 9:22

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