On 22-04-2017 06:40, Magnus Hagander wrote:
On Sat, Apr 22, 2017 at 3:05 AM, Cat <c...@zip.com.au
<mailto:c...@zip.com.au>> wrote:
On Fri, Apr 21, 2017 at 08:20:38PM -0300, Edson Lidorio wrote:
> Ls -la /var/lib/pgsql/9.6/data
>
> drwx------. 20 postgres postgres 4096 Abr 21 17:52 .
> drwx------. 4 root root 51 Abr 21 06:33 ..
Ensure that the user 'postgres' has permissions to get to
this dir from / up. This may either mean changing permissions
on some directories or changing ownership.
More than likely / /var /lib are a permissions thing (likely
need to be u+rwx,g+rx,o+rx) and /var/lib/pgsql/ and up is an
ownership thing (postgres:postgres) but this is not guaranteed
so take care.
Since this is CentOS, I would also look into if it's selinux things
that are incorrect. The easiest way is to turn it off and see if that
fixes it -- if it does, then read up on the selinux docs for how to
figure out what is wrong and probably use restorecon to get things
back in order.
--
Magnus Hagander
Me: https://www.hagander.net/ <http://www.hagander.net/>
Work: https://www.redpill-linpro.com/ <http://www.redpill-linpro.com/>
Friends,
The problem, was the selinux of CentOS, I disabled the selinux and
applied the pemissions again and PostgreSQL started normally.
Used Commands:
# sudo /usr/sbin/setenforce 0
# sudo chown postgres /var/lib/pgsql/9.6/
# sudo chown postgres:postgres /var/lib/pgsql/9.6/data
# chmod 700 /var/lib/pgsql/9.6/
# sudo systemctl start postgresql-9.6
Thank you all
Note: Looking at google, I noticed that there is more people with this
problem.It's a problem with CentOS and PostgreSQL, which does not go
down very well.