# PostgreSQL database details Starting with Zulip 3.0, Zulip supports a range of PostgreSQL versions. PostgreSQL 14 is the current default for new installations; PostgreSQL 10, 11, 12, and 13 are all supported. Previous versions of Zulip used whatever version of PostgreSQL was included with the base operating system (E.g. PostgreSQL 12 on Ubuntu 20.04). We recommend that installations currently using older PostgreSQL releases [upgrade to PostgreSQL 14][upgrade-postgresql], as we may drop support for older PostgreSQL in a future release. [upgrade-postgresql]: upgrade-or-modify.html#upgrading-postgresql #### Remote PostgreSQL database This is a bit annoying to set up, but you can configure Zulip to use a dedicated PostgreSQL server by setting the `REMOTE_POSTGRES_HOST` variable in /etc/zulip/settings.py, and configuring PostgreSQL certificate authentication (see http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.1/static/ssl-tcp.html and http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.1/static/libpq-ssl.html for documentation on how to set this up and deploy the certificates) to make the DATABASES configuration in `zproject/computed_settings.py` work (or override that configuration). If you want to use a remote PostgreSQL database, you should configure the information about the connection with the server. You need a user called "zulip" in your database server. You can configure these options in `/etc/zulip/settings.py` (the below descriptions are from the PostgreSQL documentation): - `REMOTE_POSTGRES_HOST`: Name or IP address of the remote host - `REMOTE_POSTGRES_SSLMODE`: SSL Mode used to connect to the server, different options you can use are: - disable: I don't care about security, and I don't want to pay the overhead of encryption. - allow: I don't care about security, but I will pay the overhead of encryption if the server insists on it. - prefer: I don't care about encryption, but I wish to pay the overhead of encryption if the server supports it. - require: I want my data to be encrypted, and I accept the overhead. I trust that the network will make sure I always connect to the server I want. - verify-ca: I want my data encrypted, and I accept the overhead. I want to be sure that I connect to a server that I trust. - verify-full: I want my data encrypted, and I accept the overhead. I want to be sure that I connect to a server I trust, and that it's the one I specify. Then you should specify the password of the user zulip for the database in /etc/zulip/zulip-secrets.conf: ```ini postgres_password = xxxx ``` Finally, you can stop your database on the Zulip server via: ```bash sudo service postgresql stop sudo update-rc.d postgresql disable ``` In future versions of this feature, we'd like to implement and document how to the remote PostgreSQL database server itself automatically by using the Zulip install script with a different set of Puppet manifests than the all-in-one feature; if you're interested in working on this, post to the Zulip development mailing list and we can give you some tips. #### Debugging PostgreSQL database issues When debugging PostgreSQL issues, in addition to the standard `pg_top` tool, often it can be useful to use this query: ```postgresql SELECT procpid,waiting,query_start,current_query FROM pg_stat_activity ORDER BY procpid; ``` which shows the currently running backends and their activity. This is similar to the pg_top output, with the added advantage of showing the complete query, which can be valuable in debugging. To stop a runaway query, you can run `SELECT pg_cancel_backend(pid int)` or `SELECT pg_terminate_backend(pid int)` as the 'postgres' user. The former cancels the backend's current query and the latter terminates the backend process. They are implemented by sending SIGINT and SIGTERM to the processes, respectively. We recommend against sending a PostgreSQL process SIGKILL. Doing so will cause the database to kill all current connections, roll back any pending transactions, and enter recovery mode. #### Stopping the Zulip PostgreSQL database To start or stop PostgreSQL manually, use the pg_ctlcluster command: ```bash pg_ctlcluster 9.1 [--force] main {start|stop|restart|reload} ``` By default, using stop uses "smart" mode, which waits for all clients to disconnect before shutting down the database. This can take prohibitively long. If you use the --force option with stop, pg_ctlcluster will try to use the "fast" mode for shutting down. "Fast" mode is described by the manpage thusly: > With the --force option the "fast" mode is used which rolls back all > active transactions, disconnects clients immediately and thus shuts > down cleanly. If that does not work, shutdown is attempted again in > "immediate" mode, which can leave the cluster in an inconsistent state > and thus will lead to a recovery run at the next start. If this still > does not help, the postmaster process is killed. Exits with 0 on > success, with 2 if the server is not running, and with 1 on other > failure conditions. This mode should only be used when the machine is > about to be shut down. Many database parameters can be adjusted while the database is running. Just modify /etc/postgresql/9.1/main/postgresql.conf and issue a reload. The logs will note the change. #### Debugging issues starting PostgreSQL pg_ctlcluster often doesn't give you any information on why the database failed to start. It may tell you to check the logs, but you won't find any information there. pg_ctlcluster runs the following command underneath when it actually goes to start PostgreSQL: ```bash /usr/lib/postgresql/9.1/bin/pg_ctl start -D /var/lib/postgresql/9.1/main -s -o \ '-c config_file="/etc/postgresql/9.1/main/postgresql.conf"' ``` Since pg_ctl doesn't redirect stdout or stderr, running the above can give you better diagnostic information. However, you might want to stop PostgreSQL and restart it using pg_ctlcluster after you've debugged with this approach, since it does bypass some of the work that pg_ctlcluster does. #### PostgreSQL vacuuming alerts The `autovac_freeze` PostgreSQL alert from `check_postgres` is particularly important. This alert indicates that the age (in terms of number of transactions) of the oldest transaction id (XID) is getting close to the `autovacuum_freeze_max_age` setting. When the oldest XID hits that age, PostgreSQL will force a VACUUM operation, which can often lead to sudden downtime until the operation finishes. If it did not do this and the age of the oldest XID reached 2 billion, transaction id wraparound would occur and there would be data loss. To clear the nagios alert, perform a `VACUUM` in each indicated database as a database superuser (`postgres`). See http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.1/static/routine-vacuuming.html#VACUUM-FOR-WRAPAROUND for more details on PostgreSQL vacuuming.