PostgreSQL, often simply "Postgres", is an object-relational database management system (ORDBMS) with an emphasis on extensibility and standards-compliance. As a database server, its primary function is to store data, securely and supporting best practices, and retrieve it later, as requested by other software applications, be it those on the same computer or those running on another computer across a network (including the Internet). It can handle workloads ranging from small single-machine applications to large Internet-facing applications with many concurrent users. Recent versions also provide replication of the database itself for security and scalability.
PostgreSQL implements the majority of the SQL:2011 standard, is ACID-compliant and transactional (including most DDL statements) avoiding locking issues using multiversion concurrency control (MVCC), provides immunity to dirty reads and full serializability; handles complex SQL queries using many indexing methods that are not available in other databases; has updateable views and materialized views, triggers, foreign keys; supports functions and stored procedures, and other expandability, and has a large number of extensions written by third parties. In addition to the possibility of working with the major proprietary and open source databases, PostgreSQL supports migration from them, by its extensive standard SQL support and available migration tools. And if proprietary extensions had been used, by its extensibility that can emulate many through some built-in and third-party open source compatibility extensions, such as for Oracle.
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docker run --name some-postgres -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=mysecretpassword -d postgres
This image includes EXPOSE 5432 (the postgres port), so standard container
linking will make it automatically available to the linked containers. The
default postgres user and database are created in the entrypoint with
initdb.
The postgres database is a default database meant for use by users, utilities and third party applications. postgresql.org/docs
docker run --name some-app --link some-postgres:postgres -d application-that-uses-postgres
psqldocker run -it --link some-postgres:postgres --rm postgres sh -c 'exec psql -h "$POSTGRES_PORT_5432_TCP_ADDR" -p "$POSTGRES_PORT_5432_TCP_PORT" -U postgres'
The PostgreSQL image uses several environment variables which are easy to miss. While none of the variables are required, they may significantly aid you in using the image.
POSTGRES_PASSWORDThis environment variable is recommend for you to use the PostgreSQL image. This
environment variable sets the superuser password for PostgreSQL. The default
superuser is defined by the POSTGRES_USER environment variable. In the above
example, it is being set to "mysecretpassword".
POSTGRES_USERThis optional environment variable is used in conjunction with
POSTGRES_PASSWORD to set a user and its password. This variable will create the
specified user with superuser power and a database with the same name. If it is
not specified, then the default user of postgres will be used.
If you would like to do additional initialization in an image derived from this
one, add a *.sh script under /docker-entrypoint-initdb.d (creating the
directory if necessary). After the entrypoint calls initdb to create the
default postgres user and database, it will source any *.sh script found in
that directory to do further initialization before starting the service. If you
need to execute SQL commands as part of your initialization, the use of
Postgres'' single user
mode is
highly recommended.
If there is no database when postgres starts in a container, then postgres will
create the default database for you. While this is the expected behavior of
postgres, this means that it will not accept incoming connections during that
time. This may cause issues when using automation tools, such as fig, that
start several containers simultaneously.