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- Updated documentation about how-to connect geonetwork to a postgres database, avoiding references to localhost. Only two use cases are presented:
- connecting to an existing external database instance (using dns)
- connecting to a postgres container by name (full reproducible example is presented)

doublebyte1 8 lat temu
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8e9fed3c07
1 zmienionych plików z 5 dodań i 4 usunięć
  1. 5 4
      geonetwork/variant-postgres.md

+ 5 - 4
geonetwork/variant-postgres.md

@@ -10,15 +10,16 @@ If your postgres instance is listening on a non-standard port, you must also set
 
 ### Connecting to a postgres database
 
-If you want to connect to a postgres server, you need to pass an extra environment variable, containing the IP address for this server (which could be localhost, if you are running it locally). - `POSTGRES_DB_HOST`: IP address of your database server
+If you want to connect to a postgres server, you need to pass an extra environment variable, `POSTGRES_DB_HOST`,
+containing the address of this server.
 
-For instance, if the server is running on `192.168.1.10`, on port `5434`, the username is `postgres` and the password is `mysecretpassword`:
+If you want to connect to an **external database server**, you can use either the IP address or the DNS as `POSTGRES_DB_HOST`. For instance, if the server is running on `mydns.net`, on port `5434`, the username is `postgres` and the password is `mysecretpassword`:
 
 ```console
-$ docker run --name geonetwork -d -p 8080:8080 -e POSTGRES_DB_HOST=192.168.1.10 -e POSTGRES_DB_PORT=5434 -e POSTGRES_DB_USERNAME=postgres -e POSTGRES_DB_PASSWORD=mysecretpassword geonetwork:postgres
+$ docker run --name geonetwork -d -p 8080:8080 -e POSTGRES_DB_HOST=mydns.net -e POSTGRES_DB_PORT=5434 -e POSTGRES_DB_USERNAME=postgres -e POSTGRES_DB_PASSWORD=mysecretpassword geonetwork:postgres
 ```
 
-If you want to use the container name as `POSTGRES_DB_HOST`, just make sure that containers can discover each other, by **running them in the same user-defined network**. For instance, you can create a bridge network:
+If are want to **run postgres on a container**, you can use the container name as `POSTGRES_DB_HOST`: just make sure that containers can discover each other, by **running them in the same user-defined network**. For instance, you can create a bridge network:
 
 ```console
 $ docker network create --driver bridge mynet