Edit your /etc/postgresql/9.3/main/postgresql.conf
, and change the lines as follows.
Note: If you didn't find the postgresql.conf
file, then just type $locate postgresql.conf
in a terminal
#log_directory = 'pg_log'
to log_directory = 'pg_log'
#log_filename = 'postgresql-%Y-%m-%d_%H%M%S.log'
to log_filename = 'postgresql-%Y-%m-%d_%H%M%S.log'
#log_statement = 'none'
to log_statement = 'all'
#logging_collector = off
to logging_collector = on
Optional: SELECT set_config('log_statement', 'all', true);
sudo /etc/init.d/postgresql restart
or sudo service postgresql restart
Fire query in postgresql select 2+2
Find current log in /var/lib/pgsql/9.2/data/pg_log/
The log files tend to grow a lot over a time, and might kill your machine. For your safety, write a bash script that'll delete logs and restart postgresql server.
Thanks @paul , @Jarret Hardie , @Zoltán , @Rix Beck , @Latif Premani
logging_collector = on
systemctl restart postgresql
may not actually restart PostgreSQL service you have configured (I don't understand why yet), so changes in the configuration file won't be applied. It is safer to usepg_ctl
(orpg_ctlcluster
on Debian).systemctl reload postgresql
,systemctl restart postgresql
,service postgresql reload
andservice postgresql restart
all render configuration changes effective.ALTER DATABASE
(as in this answer)