How to customize the configuration file of the official PostgreSQL Docker image?

PostgresqlDocker

Postgresql Problem Overview


I'm using the official Postgres Docker image trying to customize its configuration. For this purpose, I use the command sed to change max_connections for example:

sed -i -e"s/^max_connections = 100.*$/max_connections = 1000/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf

I tried two methods to apply this configuration. The first is by adding the commands to a script and copying it within the init folder "/docker-entrypoint-initdb.d". The second method is by running them directly within my Dockerfile with "RUN" command (this method worked fine with a non-official Postgresql image with a different path to the configuration file "/etc/postgres/..."). In both cases the changes fail because the configuration file is missing (I think it's not created yet).

How should I change the configuration?

Edit 1:

Here is the Dockerfile used to create the image:

# Database (http://www.cs3c.ma/)

FROM postgres:9.4
MAINTAINER Sabbane <[email protected]>

ENV TERM=xterm

RUN apt-get update
RUN apt-get install -y nano

ADD scripts /scripts
# ADD scripts/setup-my-schema.sh /docker-entrypoint-initdb.d/

# Allow connections from anywhere.
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#listen_addresses =.*$/listen_addresses = '*'/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN echo "host    all    all    0.0.0.0/0    md5" >> /var/lib/postgresql/data/pg_hba.conf

# Configure logs
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#logging_collector = off.*$/logging_collector = on/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#log_directory = 'pg_log'.*$/log_directory = '\/var\/log\/postgresql'/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#log_filename = 'postgresql-\%Y-\%m-\%d_\%H\%M\%S.log'.*$/log_filename = 'postgresql_\%a.log'/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#log_file_mode = 0600.*$/log_file_mode = 0644/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#log_truncate_on_rotation = off.*$/log_truncate_on_rotation = on/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#log_rotation_age = 1d.*$/log_rotation_age = 1d/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#log_min_duration_statement = -1.*$/log_min_duration_statement = 0/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#log_checkpoints = off.*$/log_checkpoints = on/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#log_connections = off.*$/log_connections = on/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#log_disconnections = off.*$/log_disconnections = on/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^log_line_prefix = '\%t \[\%p-\%l\] \%q\%u@\%d '.*$/log_line_prefix = '\%t \[\%p\]: \[\%l-1\] user=\%u,db=\%d'/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#log_lock_waits = off.*$/log_lock_waits = on/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#log_temp_files = -1.*$/log_temp_files = 0/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#statement_timeout = 0.*$/statement_timeout = 1800000        # in milliseconds, 0 is disabled (current 30min)/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^lc_messages = 'en_US.UTF-8'.*$/lc_messages = 'C'/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf

# Performance Tuning
RUN sed -i -e"s/^max_connections = 100.*$/max_connections = 1000/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^shared_buffers =.*$/shared_buffers = 16GB/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#effective_cache_size = 128MB.*$/effective_cache_size = 48GB/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#work_mem = 1MB.*$/work_mem = 16MB/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#maintenance_work_mem = 16MB.*$/maintenance_work_mem = 2GB/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#checkpoint_segments = .*$/checkpoint_segments = 32/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#checkpoint_completion_target = 0.5.*$/checkpoint_completion_target = 0.7/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#wal_buffers =.*$/wal_buffers = 16MB/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf
RUN sed -i -e"s/^#default_statistics_target = 100.*$/default_statistics_target = 100/" /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf


VOLUME ["/var/lib/postgresql/data", "/var/log/postgresql"]

CMD ["postgres"]

With this Dockerfile the build process shows the error: sed: can't read /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf: No such file or directory

Postgresql Solutions


Solution 1 - Postgresql

With Docker Compose

When working with Docker Compose, you can use command: postgres -c option=value in your docker-compose.yml to configure Postgres.

For example, this makes Postgres log to a file:

command: postgres -c logging_collector=on -c log_destination=stderr -c log_directory=/logs

Adapting Vojtech Vitek's answer, you can use

command: postgres -c config_file=/etc/postgresql.conf

to change the config file Postgres will use. You'd mount your custom config file with a volume:

volumes:
   - ./customPostgresql.conf:/etc/postgresql.conf

Here's the docker-compose.yml of my application, showing how to configure Postgres:

# Start the app using docker-compose pull && docker-compose up to make sure you have the latest image
version: '2.1'
services:
  myApp:
    image: registry.gitlab.com/bullbytes/myApp:latest
    networks:
      - myApp-network
  db:
     image: postgres:9.6.1
     # Make Postgres log to a file.
     # More on logging with Postgres: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/runtime-config-logging.html
     command: postgres -c logging_collector=on -c log_destination=stderr -c log_directory=/logs
     environment:
       # Provide the password via an environment variable. If the variable is unset or empty, use a default password
       # Explanation of this shell feature: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/122845/using-a-b-for-variable-assignment-in-scripts/122848#122848
       - POSTGRES_PASSWORD=${POSTGRES_PASSWORD:-4WXUms893U6j4GE&Hvk3S*hqcqebFgo!vZi}
     # If on a non-Linux OS, make sure you share the drive used here. Go to Docker's settings -> Shared Drives
     volumes:
       # Persist the data between container invocations
       - postgresVolume:/var/lib/postgresql/data
       - ./logs:/logs
     networks:
       myApp-network:
         # Our application can communicate with the database using this hostname
         aliases:
           - postgresForMyApp
networks:
  myApp-network:
    driver: bridge
# Creates a named volume to persist our data. When on a non-Linux OS, the volume's data will be in the Docker VM
# (e.g., MobyLinuxVM) in /var/lib/docker/volumes/
volumes:
  postgresVolume:

Permission to write to the log directory

Note that when on Linux, the log directory on the host must have the right permissions. Otherwise you'll get the slightly misleading error

> FATAL: could not open log file > "/logs/postgresql-2017-02-04_115222.log": Permission denied

I say misleading, since the error message suggests that the directory in the container has the wrong permission, when in reality the directory on the host doesn't permit writing.

To fix this, I set the correct permissions on the host using

chgroup ./logs docker && chmod 770 ./logs

Solution 2 - Postgresql

The postgres:9.4 image you've inherited from declares a volume at /var/lib/postgresql/data. This essentially means you can't copy any files to that path in your image; the changes will be discarded.

You have a few choices:

  • You could just add your own configuration files as a volume at run-time with docker run -v postgresql.conf:/var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf .... However, I'm not sure exactly how that will interact with the existing volume.

  • You could copy the file over when the container is started. To do that, copy your file into the build at a location which isn't underneath the volume then call a script from the entrypoint or cmd which will copy the file to the correct location and start Postgres.

  • Clone the project behind the Postgres official image and edit the Dockerfile to add your own config file in before the VOLUME is declared (anything added before the VOLUME instruction is automatically copied in at run-time).

  • Pass all config changes in command option in docker-compose file

Like this:

services:
  postgres:
    ...
    command:
      - "postgres"
      - "-c"
      - "max_connections=1000"
      - "-c"
      - "shared_buffers=3GB"
      - "-c"
      ...

Solution 3 - Postgresql

Inject custom postgresql.conf into Postgres Docker container

The default postgresql.conf file lives within the PGDATA dir (/var/lib/postgresql/data), which makes things more complicated especially when running the Postgres container for the first time, since the docker-entrypoint.sh wrapper invokes the initdb step for PGDATA dir initialization.

To customize the PostgreSQL configuration in Docker consistently, I suggest using the config_file Postgres option together with Docker volumes like this:

Production database (PGDATA dir as Persistent Volume)

docker run -d \
-v $CUSTOM_CONFIG:/etc/postgresql.conf \
-v $CUSTOM_DATADIR:/var/lib/postgresql/data \
-e POSTGRES_USER=postgres \
-p 5432:5432 \
--name postgres \
postgres:9.6 postgres -c config_file=/etc/postgresql.conf

Testing database (PGDATA dir will be discarded after docker rm)

docker run -d \
-v $CUSTOM_CONFIG:/etc/postgresql.conf \
-e POSTGRES_USER=postgres \
--name postgres \
postgres:9.6 postgres -c config_file=/etc/postgresql.conf

Debugging
  1. Remove the -d (detach option) from docker run command to see the server logs directly.

  2. Connect to the Postgres server with the psql client and query the configuration:

    docker run -it --rm --link postgres:postgres postgres:9.6 sh -c 'exec psql -h $POSTGRES_PORT_5432_TCP_ADDR -p $POSTGRES_PORT_5432_TCP_PORT -U postgres'
    
    psql (9.6.0)
    Type "help" for help.
    
    postgres=# SHOW all;
    

Solution 4 - Postgresql

When you run the official entrypoint (A.K.A. when you launch the container), it runs initdb in $PGDATA (/var/lib/postgresql/data by default), and then it stores in that directory these 2 files:

  • postgresql.conf with default manual settings.
  • postgresql.auto.conf with settings overriden automatically with ALTER SYSTEM commands.

The entrypoint also executes any /docker-entrypoint-initdb.d/*.{sh,sql} files.

All this means you can supply a shell/SQL script in that folder that configures the server for the next boot (which will be immediately after the DB initialization, or the next times you boot the container).

Example:

conf.sql file:

ALTER SYSTEM SET max_connections = 6;
ALTER SYSTEM RESET shared_buffers;

Dockerfile file:

FROM posgres:9.6-alpine
COPY *.sql /docker-entrypoint-initdb.d/
RUN chmod a+r /docker-entrypoint-initdb.d/*

And then you will have to execute conf.sql manually in already-existing databases. Since configuration is stored in the volume, it will survive rebuilds.


Another alternative is to pass -c flag as many times as you wish:

docker container run -d postgres -c max_connections=6 -c log_lock_waits=on

This way you don't need to build a new image, and you don't need to care about already-existing or not databases; all will be affected.

Solution 5 - Postgresql

You can put your custom postgresql.conf in a temporary file inside the container, and overwrite the default configuration at runtime.

To do that :

  • Copy your custom postgresql.conf inside your container
  • Copy the updateConfig.sh file in /docker-entrypoint-initdb.d/

Dockerfile

FROM postgres:9.6

COPY postgresql.conf      /tmp/postgresql.conf
COPY updateConfig.sh      /docker-entrypoint-initdb.d/_updateConfig.sh

updateConfig.sh

#!/usr/bin/env bash

cat /tmp/postgresql.conf > /var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.conf

At runtime, the container will execute the script inside /docker-entrypoint-initdb.d/ and overwrite the default configuration with yout custom one.

Solution 6 - Postgresql

I looked through all answers and there is another option left. You can change your CMD value in docker file (it is not the best one, but still possible way to achieve your goal).

Basically we need to

  • Copy config file in docker container
  • Override postgres start options

Docker file example:

FROM postgres:9.6
USER postgres

# Copy postgres config file into container
COPY postgresql.conf /etc/postgresql

# Override default postgres config file
CMD ["postgres", "-c", "config_file=/etc/postgresql/postgresql.conf"]

Though I think using command: postgres -c config_file=/etc/postgresql/postgresql.confin your docker-compose.yml file proposed by Matthias Braun is the best option.

Solution 7 - Postgresql

This works for me:

FROM postgres:9.6
USER postgres

# Copy postgres config file into container
COPY postgresql.conf /etc/postgresql

# Override default postgres config file
CMD ["postgres", "-c", "config_file=/etc/postgresql/postgresql.conf"]

Solution 8 - Postgresql

I was also using the official image (FROM postgres) and I was able to change the config by executing the following commands.

The first thing is to locate the PostgreSQL config file. This can be done by executing this command in your running database.

SHOW config_file;

I my case it returns /data/postgres/postgresql.conf.

The next step is to find out what is the hash of your running PostgreSQL docker container.

docker ps -a

This should return a list of all the running containers. In my case it looks like this.

...
0ba35e5427d9    postgres    "docker-entrypoint.s…" ....
...

Now you have to switch to the bash inside your container by executing:

docker exec -it 0ba35e5427d9 /bin/bash

Inside the container check if the config is at the correct path and display it.

cat /data/postgres/postgresql.conf

I wanted to change the max connections from 100 to 1000 and the shared buffer from 128MB to 3GB. With the sed command I can do a search and replace with the corresponding variables ins the config.

sed -i -e"s/^max_connections = 100.*$/max_connections = 1000/" /data/postgres/postgresql.conf
sed -i -e"s/^shared_buffers = 128MB.*$/shared_buffers = 3GB/" /data/postgres/postgresql.conf

The last thing we have to do is to restart the database within the container. Find out which version you of PostGres you are using.

cd /usr/lib/postgresql/
ls 

In my case its 12 So you can now restart the database by executing the following command with the correct version in place.

su - postgres -c "PGDATA=$PGDATA /usr/lib/postgresql/12/bin/pg_ctl -w restart"

Solution 9 - Postgresql

A fairly low-tech solution to this problem seems to be to declare the service (I'm using swarm on AWS and a yaml file) with your database files mounted to a persisted volume (here AWS EFS as denoted by the cloudstor:aws driver specification).

  version: '3.3'
  services:
    database:
      image: postgres:latest
      volumes:
        - postgresql:/var/lib/postgresql
        - postgresql_data:/var/lib/postgresql/data
    volumes:
       postgresql:
         driver: "cloudstor:aws" 
       postgresql_data:
         driver: "cloudstor:aws"
  1. The db comes up as initialized with the image default settings.
  2. You edit the conf settings inside the container, e.g if you want to increase the maximum number of concurrent connections that requires a restart
  3. stop the running container (or scale the service down to zero and then back to one)
  4. the swarm spawns a new container, which this time around picks up your persisted configuration settings and merrily applies them.

A pleasant side-effect of persisting your configuration is that it also persists your databases (or was it the other way around) ;-)

Solution 10 - Postgresql

My solution is for colleagues who needs to make changes in config before launching docker-entrypoint-initdb.d

I was needed to change 'shared_preload_libraries' setting so during it's work postgres already has new library preloaded and code in docker-entrypoint-initdb.d can use it.

So I just patched postgresql.conf.sample file in Dockerfile:

RUN echo "shared_preload_libraries='citus,pg_cron'" >> /usr/share/postgresql/postgresql.conf.sample
RUN echo "cron.database_name='newbie'" >> /usr/share/postgresql/postgresql.conf.sample

And with this patch it become possible to add extension in .sql file in docker-entrypoint-initdb.d/:

CREATE EXTENSION pg_cron;

Solution 11 - Postgresql

Using docker compose you can mount a volume with postgresql.auto.conf. Example:

version: '2'

services:
  db:
    image: postgres:10.9-alpine
    volumes:
      - postgres:/var/lib/postgresql/data:z
      - ./docker/postgres/postgresql.auto.conf:/var/lib/postgresql/data/postgresql.auto.conf
    ports:
      - 5432:5432

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionSabbaneView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - PostgresqlMatthias BraunView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - PostgresqlAdrian MouatView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - PostgresqlVojtech VitekView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - PostgresqlYajoView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - PostgresqlalphayaxView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - PostgresqlDr. BotwingView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - PostgresqlGuillermo SolisView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - PostgresqlSebView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 9 - PostgresqlEoanView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 10 - Postgresql40minView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 11 - PostgresqlBaldView Answer on Stackoverflow