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I want to install postgresql for use as the backend to a Windows application.

This seems to be no problem if postgresql is not already installed on the system.

If postgresql is already installed then unless the command line parameters contain the superpassword etc of the existing installation then the install fails. As I will likely never know the superpassword or other account details of any pre-existing postgresql instances and the machine owners may not either it seems that this will frustrate any attempt to install postgresql in such a situation.

I believe it is possible to install completely independent instances of sql server but is this possible for postgresql?

BTW: If the command line does contain the correct superpassword then the install just seems to overwrite the existing install and ignores parameters like --prefix etc . I used init db to create a new database cluster before doing a second install but this new cluster was ignored?

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  • If you think there's a bug in the EnterpriseDB's One-click Installer (that's the installer you're using, right?) then it's better to ask in their support forum. Jun 5, 2011 at 9:45
  • @Milen I have no reason to think that there's a bug. I just think that maybe independent instances of postgresql may not be possible but I hope I am wrong, but I will look in their forum, thanks for the info
    – jjb
    Jun 5, 2011 at 9:51
  • According to your description (I'm currently trying to reproduce the behaviour) it sounds like a bug - the installer should not ignore your "--prefix" argument. Jun 5, 2011 at 10:00

3 Answers 3

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In general you can have multiple independent instances of PostgreSQL. Strictly speaking it's database cluster with separate:

  • data directory
  • configuration (e.g. postgresql.conf, pg_hba.conf)
  • listening TCP/UDP port (default 5432+)
  • owner user and superuser role
  • locale and default encoding
  • log file
  • postmaster server process (on Windows postgres.exe)

Perfect well-done example is Debian with easy to use postgresql-common infrastructure (pg_ctlcluster, pg_lsclusters, pg_createcluster, pg_dropcluster, included SSL, log rotation and so on).

EDIT:

I found it's rather easy to install second, third, etc. instance of same versioned PostgreSQL under Windows with EnterpriseDB's installer, no need to use initdb and pg_ctl (assuming 64-bit installation, probably you need to use Program Files (x86) for 32-bit installation):

  1. Open cmd with admin privileges (Run as Administrator)
  2. Execute: cd "C:\Program Files\PostgreSQL\9.0\installer\server"
  3. Create new database cluster (press Enter on every step): initcluster.vbs postgres postgres 12345 "C:\Program Files\PostgreSQL\9.0" "C:\Program Files\PostgreSQL\9.0\data2" 5433 DEFAULT
  4. Register as Windows Service: startupcfg.vbs 9.0 postgres 12345 "C:\Program Files\PostgreSQL\9.0" "C:\Program Files\PostgreSQL\9.0\data2" postgresql-x64-9.0-2
  5. Run newly created service postgresql-x64-9.0-2 using services.msc and you have second server

Change 12345 to your password specified during PostgreSQL installation. You don't have to use data2 directory, use whatever you like (but of course not existing data directory).

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  • 5
    perfect add true in the end of script in step 3. That's ACL check added in newer postgres version. Nov 10, 2014 at 12:19
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    After step 4 it doesn't show up for me in services list Sep 2, 2015 at 13:18
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    @ValentinKuzub: I had to use "NT Authority\NetworkService" as user name (with empty password) in step 4, then the new instance did show up in the list of services.
    – Martijn
    Jun 17, 2016 at 9:19
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On Windows 7 I had success following these steps. You'll need the PsExec.exe utility available in the Sysinternals Suite. I assume here that the path to the Sysinternals Suite and the path to the bin folder of your existing PostgreSQL installation are in your PATH environment variable.

  1. Open a cmd.exe window and enter the following command to open a prompt as the Network Service account.

    psexec -i -u "nt authority\network service" cmd.exe

  2. The Network Service account won't have access to your PATH, so cd 'C:\PostgreSQL\9.3\bin' and then enter the following command to initialize a data directory for your new instance. I've called mine "data2". It doesn't have to be in the postgres directory, but that's where the default data directory goes, so it's a reasonable choice.

    initdb "C:\PostgreSQL\9.3\data2"

  3. Edit C:\PostgreSQL\9.3\data2\postgresql.conf so that port = 5433 (the default instance uses 5432, and you shouldn't have two instances on the same port)

  4. Leave the Network Service cmd prompt and in your standard prompt enter the following command to register the new service. Here I've named my new instance "pg_test"

    pg_ctl register -N pg_test -U "nt authority\network service" -D "C:\PostgreSQL\9.3\data2"

  5. Run the following command to start the service.

    net start pg_test

  6. The database owner role will be 'YOURMACHINENAME$'. If you want to change this to the standard 'postgres', you have to first create a new super user role that can rename the owner. From the command prompt, enter the following to create this super user.

    createuser -s -r -l -i -P -h localhost -p 5433 -U YOURMACHINENAME$ mysuperuser

  7. Finally, connect to the server with psql (psql -U mysuperuser -h localhost -p 5433 postgres) and enter the following commands to rename your database owner and add a password.

    ALTER USER "YOURMACHINENAME$" RENAME TO postgres;

    ALTER USER postgres WITH PASSWORD 'yourpassword';

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Something like this should work (if not it's probably bug):

postgresql-9.0.4-1-windows_x64.exe ^
  --mode unattended ^
  --prefix c:\postgres\9.0-second ^
  --servicename postgresql-x64-9.0-second ^
  --serviceaccount postgres2 ^
  --servicepassword <password> ^
  --serverport 5433 ^
  --superaccount postgres ^
  --superpassword <password>

EDIT: after a couple of tests I believe it's not possible to create different Postgres instances of the same version using the One-click installer. Sorry.

OTOH you could always play with initdb and pg_ctl and use the existing installation to create a new instance. It would not be as easy as just starting the installer but it's doable.

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  • Hi Milen, it works as in it doesn't give an error on install but no folder as specified in the --prefix is created and no service of that name is running according to the services tab in windows task manager. So even though an install happens as evidenced by progress bars nothing is changed
    – jjb
    Jun 5, 2011 at 10:41
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    Unfortunately yes, I observed the same thing - if there's an existing installation of the same version the installer will just ignore any options. Jun 5, 2011 at 10:46
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    I am prepared to learn how to use initdb etc but the main issue for me is I believe that knowledge of a pre-existing superpassword seems to be required. This will not be available to me and may not be known to customers. I was hoping it might be possible to create an independent install with its own superpassword purely for our application. I think maybe SQL-server express may be a better bet because of this. I believe it allows completely independent instances to be installed
    – jjb
    Jun 5, 2011 at 11:18

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