On 02/14/2017 08:47 PM, Shawn Thomas wrote:
No it doesn’t matter if run with sudo, postgres or even root.  Debian
actually wraps the command and executes some some initial scripts with
different privileges but ends up making sure that Postgres ends up
running under the postgres user.  I get the same output if run with sudo:

sudo systemctl status postgresql@9.4-main.service
<mailto:postgresql@9.4-main.service> -l
   Error: could not exec   start -D /var/lib/postgresql/9.4/main -l
/var/log/postgresql/postgresql-9.4-main.log -s -o  -c
config_file="/etc/postgresql/9.4/main/postgresql.conf”



So you are talking about:

/etc/init.d/postgresql

which then calls:

/usr/share/postgresql-common/init.d-functions

Or is there another setup on your system?

Any relevant information in the system logs?

Thanks, though.

-Shawn


--
Adrian Klaver
adrian.kla...@aklaver.com


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