'password authentication failed for user "postgres"'

Postgresql

Postgresql Problem Overview


I have installed PostgreSQL 8.4, Postgres client and Pgadmin 3. Authentication failed for user "postgres" for both console client and Pgadmin. I have typed user as "postgres" and password "postgres", because it worked before. But now authentication is failed. I did it before a couple of times without this problem. What should I do? And what happens?

psql -U postgres -h localhost -W
Password for user postgres: 
psql: FATAL:  password authentication failed for user "postgres"
FATAL:  password authentication failed for user "postgres"

Postgresql Solutions


Solution 1 - Postgresql

If I remember correctly the user postgres has no DB password set on Ubuntu by default. That means, that you can login to that account only by using the postgres OS user account.

Assuming, that you have root access on the box you can do:

sudo -u postgres psql

If that fails with a database "postgres" does not exists error, then you are most likely not on a Ubuntu or Debian server :-) In this case simply add template1 to the command:

sudo -u postgres psql template1

If any of those commands fail with an error psql: FATAL: password authentication failed for user "postgres" then check the file /etc/postgresql/8.4/main/pg_hba.conf: There must be a line like this as the first non-comment line:

local   all         postgres                          ident

For newer versions of PostgreSQL ident actually might be peer. That's OK also.

Inside the psql shell you can give the DB user postgres a password:

ALTER USER postgres PASSWORD 'newPassword';

You can leave the psql shell by typing CtrlD or with the command \q.

Now you should be able to give pgAdmin a valid password for the DB superuser and it will be happy too. :-)

Solution 2 - Postgresql

The response of staff is correct, but if you want to further automate can do:

$ sudo -u postgres psql -c "ALTER USER postgres PASSWORD 'postgres';"

Done! You saved User = postgres and password = postgres.

If you do not have a password for the User postgres ubuntu do:

$ sudo passwd postgres

Solution 3 - Postgresql

This was frustrating, most of the above answers are correct but they fail to mention you have to restart the database service before the changes in the pg_hba.conf file will take affect.

so if you make the changes as mentioned above:

local all postgres ident

then restart as root ( on centos its something like service service postgresql-9.2 restart ) now you should be able to access the db as the user postgres

$psql
psql (9.2.4)
Type "help" for help.

postgres=# 

Hope this adds info for new postgres users

Solution 4 - Postgresql

Edit the pg_hba.conf file, for Debian on /etc/postgresql/9.3/main/pg_hba.conf and for Red Hat/IBM derivates at /var/lib/pgsql/9.4/data/pg_hba.conf

  • Change all authentication methods to trust.
  • Change Linux Password for postgres user.
  • Restart Server.
  • Login with psql -h localhost -U postgres and use the just set Unix password.
  • If it works you should re-set the pg_hba.conf file to values with md5 or ident methods and restart.

Solution 5 - Postgresql

For those who are using it first time and have no information regarding what the password is they can follow the below steps(assuming you are on ubuntu):

  1. Open the file pg_hba.conf in /etc/postgresql/9.x/main

     sudo vi pg_hba.conf 
    

2.edit the below line

     local   all             postgres                                peer

  to

     local   all             postgres                                trust

3. Restart the server

      sudo service postgresql restart

4. Finally you can login without need of a password as shown in the figureFinally you can login without need of a password as shown in the figure

Ref here for more info

Solution 6 - Postgresql

When you install postgresql no password is set for user postgres, you have to explicitly set it on Unix by using the command:

sudo passwd postgres

It will ask your sudo password and then promt you for new postgres user password. Source

Solution 7 - Postgresql

Try to not use the -W parameter and leave the password in blank. Sometimes the user is created with no-password.

If that doesn't work reset the password. There are several ways to do it, but this works on many systems:

$ su root
$ su postgres
$ psql -h localhost
> ALTER USER postgres with password 'YourNewPassword';

Solution 8 - Postgresql

As a rule of thumb: YOU SHOULD NEVER EVER SET A PASSWORD FOR THE POSTGRES USER.

If you need a superuser access from pgAdmin, make another superuser. That way, if the credentials for that superuser is compromised, you can always ssh into the actual database host and manually delete the superuser using

sudo -u postgres -c "DROP ROLE superuser;"

Solution 9 - Postgresql

Once you are in your postgres shell, Enter this command

postgres=# \password postgres

After entering this command you will be prompted to set your password , just set the password and then try.

Solution 10 - Postgresql

If you are trying to login postgres shell as postgres user, then you can use following commands.

switch to postgres user

# su - postgres

login to psql

# psql

Hope that helps

Solution 11 - Postgresql

Ancient thread, but I wasted half a day dealing with this in 2020, so this might help someone: Double-check your postgres port (on Ubuntu, it's in /etc/postgresql/9.5/main/postgresql.conf). The psql client defaults to using port 5432, BUT in my case, the server was running on port 5433. The solution was to specify the -p option in psql (e.g. psql --host=localhost --username=user -p 5433 mydatabase).

If you leave off the --host parameter, psql will connect via a socket, which worked in my case, but my Golang app (which uses TCP/IP) did not. Unfortunately, the error message was password authentication failed for user "user", which was misleading. The fix was to use a url connection string with the port (e.g. postgres://user:password@localhost:5433/mydatabase).

My setup was Ubuntu 18.04 on Digital Ocean, with postgres 9.5 installed via apt-get, so not sure why this happened. Hope this saves you some time.

Solution 12 - Postgresql

I faced the same error on Windows 10. In my case, when I setup the Postgres, my username was postgres by default. But when I ran the command psql, it as showing my the username as jitender which is my machine name, and I don't know why this username had been setup.

Anyway to solved it, I did the following steps: Run the command psql --help

  • In the output, look for the Connection Option, here you will see your default user, in my case it as jitender.
  • You will also get the command to set the anoter username, which should be psql --username postgres. You set the username whatever you require, and that's all, problem got solved.

Solution 13 - Postgresql

If you see error

FATAL:  password authentication failed for user "postgres"

and you are sure that your password is correct, check that the password has any special characters, especially "%" or slashes. In my case, it was "%" in the password string. After removing this symbol, everything works fine.

Solution 14 - Postgresql

Here are some combinations which I tried to login:

# login via user foo
psql -Ufoo -h localhost

sudo -u postgres psql postgres

# user foo login to postgres db
psql -Ufoo -h localhost -d postgres

Solution 15 - Postgresql

Time flies!

On version 12, I have to use "password" instead of "ident" here:

local   all             postgres                                password

Connect without using the -h option.

Solution 16 - Postgresql

First of All password crate

ALTER USER postgres with encrypted password 'postgres';

then service restart:

sudo systemctl restart postgresql.service

End.

Solution 17 - Postgresql

Follow these steps :

  1. sudo -u postgres -i
  2. psql
  3. \password postgres

After that, enter your password twice.

Then use that password in the pgAdmin4.

Solution 18 - Postgresql

I just wanted to add that you should also check if your password is expired.

See https://stackoverflow.com/questions/14564644/postgres-password-authentication-fails?rq=1 for details.

Solution 19 - Postgresql

In my case, Ubuntu 20.04 Postgresql 12 was using the wrong port.

I've checked /etc/postgresql/12/main/postgresql.conf and realized it was 5433 instead of 5432.

Solution 20 - Postgresql

>The answer is @diego

I want to add some explanations of how I fixed error and I hope it will help other folks: ERROR: password authentication failed for user "postgres"

  1. On Window

  • Make sure you download Postgres software, install it, create and confirm password and make sure its not complicated with some symbols and characters.

  • Open window, click SQL Shell (PSQL) and access it and create database

  • Create connection string like postgres://postgres:your_password@localhost:port/your_database

  1. On WSL

Follow Microsoft documentation

After successful installation

 // Open postgres
 su postgres
 
 // Type psql and hit enter
 psql

 // Create a user postgres if not exist or any other user you want 
 CREATE USER your_user_db WITH PASSWORD 'match_password_with_db_password';
 

 // Give user password same as the one you set up for postgres db
 ALTER USER your_user_db WITH PASSWORD 'match_password_with_db_password';

 // Restart the server
 sudo service postgresql restart

Solution 21 - Postgresql

i had a similar problem. Ubuntu was left me log in in console with any password for superuser. Except when i connected with -h localhost in psql line command.

I Observed too that "localhost:8080/MyJSPSiteLogIn" - showed: Fatal: autentication error with user "user".

pg_hba.conf was ok.

I noted had two versions of postgres running in the same service.

Solved - uninstalling inutil version.

Solution 22 - Postgresql

I had faced similar issue. While accessing any database I was getting below prompt after updating password "password authentication failed for user “postgres”" in PGAdmin


Solution:

  1. Shut down postgres server
  2. Re-run pgadmin
  3. pgadmin will ask for password.
  4. Please enter current password of mentioned user

Hope it will resolve your issue

enter image description here

Solution 23 - Postgresql

This happens due to caching.

When you run, php artisan config:cache, it will cache the configuration files. Whenever things get change, you need to keep running it to update the cache files. But, it won't cache if you never run that command.

This is OK for production, since config don't change that often. But during staging or dev, you can just disable caching by clearing the cache and don't run the cache command

So, just run php artisan config:clear, and don't run the command previously to avoid caching.

Check original post

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/42382075/password-authentication-failed-error-on-running-laravel-migration

Solution 24 - Postgresql

In my case, its Password was longer than 100 characters. Setting it to a smaller character password worked.

Actually I am wondering is there a reference somewhere to that.

Solution 25 - Postgresql

Please remember if you have two versions of Postgres installed you need to Uninstall one of them, in my case on MacOS I had one version installed via .dmg and one via brew.

What worked for me was to uninstall the one installed via .dmg using the following steps

  1. Go to /Library/PostgreSQL/13.
  2. Open uninstall-postgres.app.

then try

psql postgres

it should work.

Solution 26 - Postgresql

Answer given is almost correct just missing some pointers which i'll be taking care of in my solution

First make sure your user have a sudo access if not you can use the below command to add your user as sudo user :-

sudo adduser <username> sudo

The change will take effect the next time the user logs in.

i) Now go to sudo vim /etc/postgresql/<your_postgres_version>/main/pg_hba.conf file and look for line that says :

local   all             postgres                                md5 #peer

and comment that. Just below that line there must be a commented line that says:

local   all             postgres                                peer

or for older versions it'll be :-

local   all         postgres                          ident

Uncomment that line.

ii) Now restart the postgres by using any of these commands :-

sudo /etc/init.d/postgresql restart

OR

sudo service postgresql restart

iii) Now you can simply log into postgres using the following command :

sudo -u postgres psql

iv) once you're in you can create any operation you want to in my case i wanted to create a new database you can do the same using below command :

CREATE DATABASE airflow_replica;

Solution 27 - Postgresql

In my case it was so simple! I was taken error in application JAVA Spring because I needed remember the Database Superuser, it is showed during the install process PostgreSQL, in my case the datasource would be postgres. So, I added correctly the name and it works!

Solution 28 - Postgresql

  1. Open pg_hba.conf in any text editor (you can find this file in your postgres instalation folder);
  2. Change all the methods fields to trust (meaning you don't need a password for postgre);
  3. Run in your console this comand: "alter user postgres with password '[my password]';" | psql -U postgres (meaning to alter some user password for [my password] for the user as parameter -U postgres)
  4. Et voilà (don't forget to change back the method from trust for the one that should be best for you)

I hope this help someone someday.

Solution 29 - Postgresql

I hope this will help you short of time. You can change the password of postgres sql by using bellow command.

Command

sudo -u postgres psql

And next you can update the password

Command

Alter user postgres password 'YOUR_NEW_PASSWORD';

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
QuestionI159View Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - PostgresqlA.H.View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - PostgresqlDiegoView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - PostgresqlMiguel PereiraView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - Postgresqlstevek-proView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - PostgresqlJose KjView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - PostgresqlAlvaro Rodriguez ScelzaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - PostgresqlFrancisco PugaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - PostgresqlardilgulezView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 9 - Postgresqluser12023415View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 10 - PostgresqlgeekgugiView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 11 - PostgresqlChen LimView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 12 - PostgresqlJitender KumarView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 13 - PostgresqlSzeryfView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 14 - PostgresqltokhiView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 15 - PostgresqlfrankView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 16 - Postgresqlömer farukView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 17 - PostgresqlMohamed AhmedView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 18 - PostgresqlJörgView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 19 - Postgresqluser2417600View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 20 - PostgresqlNiyongabo EricView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 21 - PostgresqlDavid UvmView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 22 - Postgresqlamoljdv06View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 23 - PostgresqlAremu IbrahimView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 24 - Postgresqlviggy28View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 25 - PostgresqlMuhammadView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 26 - PostgresqlofficialrahulmandalView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 27 - PostgresqlVitor OliveiraView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 28 - PostgresqlGermano SoftwareDevView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 29 - PostgresqlSonu patelView Answer on Stackoverflow