myRailsApp - PostgreSQL FATAL error - ruby-on-rails

I'm very new with ruby and coding in general, I'm working on a ruby on rails project and PostgreSQL is giving me an error: FATAL:role "myRailsApp" does not exist. googled for posible solutions and couldn't find anything. thanks

You don't have a role with that name created in the Postgres DBMS. If you are new, you probably should download Pgadmin (http://www.pgadmin.org/), there you can configure your postgres database.
When you open it you will see your servers and stuff, loof for the 'Login roles' part and create a new role that can create databases (That role needs to have the same user and password you chose on the configuration file)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1wvDVBjNDys

Related

How can I link a postgreSQL database created with the command line to pgAdmin?

I am creating a Rails project with a postgresql database. I am referring to this guide: https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-set-up-a-ruby-on-rails-project-with-a-react-frontend
In the guide, you are to create a database with rails db:create, and modify the database.yml file to accept the permissions of a new role they have you make. Anyways, I would like to be able to use this database with pgAdmin to help me with organizing/visualizing the tables. How do I connect them? Do I have to add a new server to pgAdmin for the command line created database to show up? I am new to both rails and postgresql so sorry if this is a basic question.

How to solve psql: FATAL: role "ubuntu" does not exist

When i run rails db i get the below error.
psql: FATAL: role "ubuntu" does not exist
First i want to know the exact meaning of what it says before solving it.
I have tried http://stackoverflow.com/questions/11919391/postgresql-error-fatal-role-username-does-not-exist this link as well but nothing seems to workout for me ..
I don't have a Rails-specific answer for you, but I can tell you some possibly helpful facts about PostgreSQL authentication:
PostgreSQL uses the term "role" to mean "user" or "login", so the error message means you are trying to connect to the PostgreSQL database with a username of ubuntu, but no such user exists.
If you don't explicitly tell PostgreSQL what user you want to log in as, it will use your operating system credentials. That is, if you're logged in to Linux as the user ubuntu, PostgreSQL will try to log you in as a PostgreSQL user named ubuntu.
PostgreSQL authentication is configured in a file called pg_hba.conf. See http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/auth-pg-hba-conf.html. However, if you're using Rails, I suspect there's a way for you to control the PostgreSQL authentication setup without editing the pg_hba.conf file manually.

Postgres failed to create database for rails-composer

I'm running the rails-composer script with
rails new myproject -m https://raw.github.com/RailsApps/rails-composer/master/compser.rb
And everything goes along smoothly until it asks me if I want to go ahead and drop the db in. I say yes. All drops fail, and all creations fail.
Everything else finished fine. And testing the site brings up a beautiful error site with lots of details on how the database password wasn't accepted. But of course it was never created...
How do I give the script permission to create the database without a password? I've tried preempting creating the username as the app name in postgres. I tried building the Rails project as the postgres user.
It should be a simple and straightforward solution since the rest is automated.
Did you specify something other than SQLite for the database?
From the README:
Choose “SQLite” for the easiest setup. If you choose PostgreSQL or
MySQL, the databases must be installed and running before you run
Rails Composer.
Rails composer does not install and setup your database server for you. It assumes there's a properly named database already present before you run this if you're using PostgreSQL or MySQL.

Rails and PostgreSQL: Role postgres does not exist

I have installed PostgreSQL on my Mac OS Lion, and am working on a rails app. I use RVM to keep everything separate from my other Rails apps.
For some reason when I try to migrate the db for the first time rake cannot find the postgres user. I get the error
FATAL: role "postgres" does not exist
I have pgAdmin so I can clearly see there is a postgres user in the DB - the admin account in fact - so I'm not sure what else to do.
I read somewhere about people having issues with PostgreSQL because of which path it was installed in, but then I don't think I would have gotten that far if it couldn't find the db.
Actually, for some unknown reason, I found the issue was actually because the postgresql role hadn't been created.
Try running:
createuser -s -r postgres
Note that roles are the way that PostgreSQL maintains database permissions. If there is no role for the postgres user, then it can't access anything. The createuser command is a thin wrapper around the commands CREATE USER, CREATE ROLE, etc.
Recently i got this problem immediately after installing postgres.
If it comes immediately after installation, you might be missing the default user, postgres.
In that case, you can create default user postgres using below command.
createuser -s -U $USER
Ex: createuser -s -U $USER
enter your required role name: postgres
enter password for your the user:
It will prompt you to enter required database role name and password
Once you complete the process, you can login to the postgres console using below command
psql -U 'your_database_name'
Ex: psql -U postgres
Here, You need to enter the password if you have given any, while creating the user.
Hope it helps :)
I was on OSX 10.8, and everything I tried would give me the FATAL: role "USER" does not exist. Like many people said here, run createuser -s USER, but that gave me the same error. This finally worked for me:
$ sudo su
# su postgres
# createuser -s --username=postgres MYUSERNAME
The createuser -s --username=postgres creates a superuser (-s flag) by connecting as postgres (--username=postgres flag).
I see that your question has been answered, but I want to add this answer in for people using OSX trying to install PostgreSQL 9.2.4.
This message pops up, when the database user does not exist. Compare the manual here.
Multiple local databases cannot be the explanation. Roles are valid cluster-wide. The manual again:
Note that roles are defined at the database cluster level, and so are
valid in all databases in the cluster.
You must be ending up in another database-cluster. That would be another server running on the same machine, listening to a different port. Or, more likely, on a different machine.
Could it be that the message comes, in fact, from the remote server?
I met this issue right on when I first install the Heroku's POSTGRES.app thing. After one morning trial and error i think this one line of code solved problem. As describe earlier, this is because postgresql does not have default role the first time it is set up. And we need to set that.
sovanlandy=# CREATE ROLE postgres LOGIN;
You must log in to your respective psql console to use this psql command.
Also noted that, if you already created the role 'postgre' but still get permission errors, you need to alter with command:
sovanlandy=# ALTER ROLE postgres LOGIN;
Hope it helps!
In the Heroku documentation; Getting started whit rails 4, they say:
You will also need to remove the username field in your database.yml
if there is one so: In file config/database.yml remove: username:
myapp
Then you just delete that line in "development:", if you don't pg tells to the database that works under role "myapp"
This line tells rails that the database myapp_development should be
run under a role of myapp. Since you likely don’t have this role in
your database we will remove it. With the line remove Rails will try
to access the database as user who is currently logged into the
computer.
Also remember to create the database for development:
$createdb myapp_development
Repleace "myapp" for your app name
The installation procedure creates a user account called postgres that is associated with the default Postgres role. In order to use Postgres, you can log into that account. But if not explicitly specified the rails app looks for a different role, more particularly the role having your unix username which might not be created in the postgres roles.
To overcome that, you can create a new role, first by switching over to the default role postgres which was created during installation
sudo -i -u postgres
After you are logged in to the postgres account, you can create a new user by the command:
createuser --interactive
This will prompt you with some choices and, based on your responses, execute the correct Postgres commands to create a user.
Pass over a role name and some permissions and the role is created, you can then migrate your db
Could you have multiple local databases? Check your database.yml and make sure you are hitting the pg db that you want. Use rails console to confirm.
My answer was much more simple. Just went to the db folder and deleted the id column, which I had tried to forcefully create, but which is actually created automagically. I also deleted the USERNAME in the database.yml file (under the config folder).
In Ubuntu local user command prompt, but not root user, type
sudo -u postgres createuser username
username above should match the name indicated in the message "FATAL: role 'username' does not exist."
Enter password for username.
Then re-enter the command that generated role does not exist message.
I ended up here after attempting to follow Ryan Bate's tutorial on deploying to AWS EC2 with rubber. Here is what happened for me:
We created a new app using "
rails new blog -d postgresql
Obviosuly this creates a new app with pg as the database, but the database was not made yet. With sqlite, you just run rake db:migrate, however with pg you need to create the pg database first. Ryan did not do this step. The command is rake db:create:all, then we can run rake db:migrate
The second part is changing the database.yml file. The default for the username when the file is generated is 'appname'. However, chances are your role for postgresql admin is something different (at least it was for me). I changed it to my name (see above advice about creating a role name) and I was good to go.
Hope this helps.
After a bunch of installing and uninstalling of Postgres, here's what now seems to work consistently for me with Os X Mavericks, Rails 4 and Ruby 2.
In the database.yml file, I change the default usernames to my computer's username which for me is just "admin".
In the command line I run rake db:create:all
Then I run rake db:migrate
When I run the rails server and check the local host it says "Welcome aboard".
You might be able to workaround this by running initdb -U postgres -D /path/to/data or running it as user postgres, since it defaults to the current user. GL!

Installing Postgres on windows for use with Ruby-on-Rails

Currently I get the following error:
PGError (FATAL: password authentication failed for user "postgres" ):
when my app tries to access the database.
I wanted to test my SQL calls against postgres as my app regular breaks when pushed up to production on Heroku because of the stricter requirements of postgres (which I think is probably a healthy thing) over sqlite 3. So I have a similar request to this for a not out of date tutorial for installing postgres for use with ruby on rails on windows (7) please. I thought it'd be a quick 20 minutes of downloading and installing but 2 and a bit hours later and I don't think I'm very close yet. So far I've:
Downloaded and installed Postgres Version 8.4.8-1 from here
Set my environment variables such that Path (for User) is: C:\Ruby192\bin;C:\Program Files (x86)\PostgreSQL\8.4\bin
Gemfile:
gem 'pg', '0.11.0' # instead of gem 'sqlite3', '1.3.3'
ran bundle install for my rails app seemingly successfully, but haven't found easy way to validate installation yet.
set database.yml as suggested here to:
development:
adapter: postgresql
database: db/development
username: postgres
password: secret
host: localhost
encoding: UTF8
pool: 5
timeout: 5000
I know I need to set up a user name and password for Postgres, maybe also start the postgres server, connect to it(?) and put in my local IP address I'll connect to it on into a config files somewhere and then edit one of the other .conf files in 'C:\Program Files (x86)\PostgreSQL\8.4\data' etc...
I think Rails has made me soft, am I over thinking things or is it actually fairly tricky to set up and I should just go back to Sqlite3, for which there's also the awesomely useful SQLite Manager, Firefox plugin?
I'm still searching for a beginners guide to installing and using Postgres for rails but so far have only been confused by most of the stuff I look at / tried following like this, this, this, this, this(for Snow Leopard), this(linux).
Any pointers would be much appreciated. Thanks!
James
An approach to installing Postgres on windows 7 for use as PostgreSQL database for a rails 3 (3.0.7) project.
Preamble (you can skip this bit)
So the first thing to point out is that Postgres is not just a different file extension from .sqlite3, it's a whole mechanism for managing your databases. As such it has a client/server model, of which you'll need to set up both to use Postgres as the database for your rails app.
Motivation for going through considerable pain of Postgres setup versus almost effortless sqlite setup: if you're deploying to Heroku, they're currently using Postgres so some of your SQL calls that are fine on sqlite3 will break when used with Postgres. It's much easier to debug postgres locally rather than when it's on Heroku's servers.
So I did the following things:
(Disclaimer: I may have forgotten to include some of the things I did... it took me over 48 hours of on and off pain to get it to work... if the following advice doesn't work for you then the huge (2300 pages!!) but very thorough Postgres documentation should help. I'd recommend downloading this anyway if you're serious about using Postgres as it has a lot of material that I've only just begun to understand the significance of.)
(Second disclaimer: I have almost certainly broken 20 sensible Postgres guidelines and exposed security holes in the Postgres database whilst doing so. If there any obvious things an experienced Postgres user disagrees with, please edit my post.)
.Step 1. Download and install PostgreSQL v9.0.4-1 from here because here said only 9.0.x would be supported on windows 7. I kept all the default options and just used 'secret' as the password when prompted by the Postgres installer for one (again not entirely sure what the consequences of sharing that info on the internet is... will soon find out I'm sure). You'll need this password in step 3.
.Step 2. Change environment variables such that Path (for system, not user (I'm not sure if this is significant or not)) is: C:\Program Files\PostgreSQL\9.0\bin
(n.b. I'm on 64-bit windows hence it not being installed for 32-bit in 'C:\Program Files (x86)\PostgreS...')
Don't forget to change access rights to folder PostgreSQL\9.0 and remove any default readonly rights on the folder or content.
(You may also need to restart your computer for these to take effect - thanks #Gavin -although not likely).
.Step 3. Test Postgres installation by trying to create a new database:
From command line: createdb -U postgres mydb_as_postgres.
You should be prompted to enter the password now, if you're not it may be that you need to start the server first (I can't remember whether I needed to do this or not). The easiest way is through pgAdmin III, which should be 'pgAdmin3.exe' in a folder somewhere like C:\Program Files\PostgreSQL\9.0\bin. Once you've started pgAdmin III there should be a panel on the left called 'Object Browser'. In this there should be a tree with:
Server Groups > Servers > PostgreSQL 9.0 (localhost:5432)
Right click on 'PostgreSQL 9.0 (localhost:5432)' and select 'Connect'.
The createdb -U postgres mydb_as_postgres command should create a new databse called 'mydb_as_postgres' which you can check by firing up pgAdmin III and double clicking on 'PostgreSQL 9.0 (localhost:5432)'. Under this there should be:
Databases (2) which should list 2 databases called mydb_as_postgres and postgres
I called it _as_postgres because the -U postgres part of the command tells Postgres to create the database with the postgres user as it's owner, which you need to specify when you're not signed in as the postgres user. I have all of my files stored as 'AJames' user though so if you're the same and want to keep developing your app when signed in as a different user you need to create a Postgres 'role' for that user now (see step 4).
.Step 4. Through pgAdmin III. Right-click on Login Roles (which for me is in):
Object Browser > Server Groups > Servers > PostgreSQL 9.0 (localhost:5432) > Login Roles
Right-click on Login Roles and select 'New Login Role...'
in Role name, put in your operating system user name, which for me is AJames,
and fill in your password under the 'Role Privileges' tab, I checked all the boxes, but an experienced postgres user would likely strongly recommend to only check the 'inherits rights from parent roles' and the 'can create database objects' But I'm not an experienced user and just want to debug Rails SQL calls in Postgres so I also checked the 'Superuser' and 'Can create roles', just in case.
.Step 5. You should now be able to create a new database without being signed in as the postgres user. Try typing:
createdb mydb_as_user
Hopefully this should work for you.
.Step 6. Okay, so you've got a development.sqlite3 file in your rails 'db/' directory. Initially I was going to set the next test as converting this from sqlite3 to psql.
I couldn't get this to work though but I left my attempts here as the solution I used required having the data in a Rails app on Heroku.com (see instead the solution from step 7 onwards). For those who only have a local app and no data in Heroku, they can't use the same approach, so they might need to explore something like this:
x6.1 First, test 'psql' by trying a command from your command line like:
psql mydb_as_user
this should display something like below (after you've typed in your password):
C:>psql mydb_as_user
Password:
psql (9.0.4)
WARNING: Console code page (850) differs from Windows code page (1252)
8-bit characters might not work correctly. See psql reference
page "Notes for Windows users" for details.
Type "help" for help.
mydb5=#
x6.2 try entering:
CREATE TABLE users_table (id integer, "name" text);
It should display:
CREATE TABLE
mydb5=#
If you check in pgAdmin III, you should see the table there under:
Object Browser > Server Groups > Servers > PostgreSQL 9.0 (localhost:5432) > Databases > mydb_as_user > Schemas > public > Tables > users_table >
x6.3 Okay, next to try the conversion. Downloaded sqlite-shell precompiled binary for windows.
x6.4 Create a new directory, I used 'C:\temp' and put the sqlite3.exe and your development.sqlite3 files in it.
x6.5 Use the following commands (which are from here) to dump the development.sqlite3 database into Postgres.
sqlite3 development .dump | psql development2
you might get an error like:
psql: FATAL: database "development2" does not exist
x6.6 so I went into pgAdmin III and made a development 2 database, tried the command again and got:
ERROR: syntax error at or near "PRAGMA"
LINE 1: PRAGMA foreign_keys=OFF;
^
BEGIN
COMMIT
Like I said, I couldn't get it to work. I'm sure there's a way of getting round that error but I thought of a different way and so I instead used this solution (which requires a Heroku account to have your data and does the conversion from sqlite3 to psql using the Taps gem (I believe):
.Step 7. in pgAdmin III I created another database. Under the properties tab I set name: 'development', owner: 'AJames' (replace this with your own Windows user name). And under the privileges tab, set role: 'public' and checked the ALL option (thought this resets to unchecked so I'm not sure that's necessary).
.Step 8. add
gem 'pg', '0.11.0'
to your gem file. You'll probably also want to remove the:
gem 'sqlite3'
at this point too.
.Step 9. set database.yml as suggested here to:
development:
adapter: postgresql
database: db/development
username: AJames # replace this with your own user name
password: secret # replace this with your own password
host: localhost
encoding: UTF8
pool: 5
timeout: 5000
If you are working on an open source project and don't want your password to be made publicly available, have a look at some of the answers to Securely providing the database password in a Rails app.
.Step 10. from command line in your rails app's root directory run:
rake db:migrate
This will create the new schema and all the tables in the Postgres database.
.Step 11. run heroku db:pull from your command line (again from in the root directory of your rails app) to pull all your data down and into your new empty Postgres database. I think at this point your taps gem will be doing this work for you.
.Step 12. Hopefully there is no step 12! ...and it should now be working for you. Happy RoR PostgreSQL debugging! Please edit, or let me know, if there are any errors in this.
Also, here's a list of additional stuff that might be interesting/useful:
This is a blog post about Postgres passwords, what they're for,
why you need them, how to change them etc.
This, under 'Creating a spatial database', is useful for newbies to
understand what pg_hba.conf is about and the second link that
Reno gave above, under the 'Using pgAdmin III GUI' is useful to
testing to see if postgres is actually working, before trying to fit
it with Rails (i.e. try creating a database and putting a table and
some data into it).
In the huge but very comprehensive Postgres documentation, I'd
start on page 58, 'I. tutorial'. Then on pdf page 431(!) there's
'Chapter 17. Server setup and operation' that I also found useful.
the answer from AJP is the correct one with just a small re-config.
The line
database: db/development
does not work for me.
I have to change it to
database: development
I use this for ruby on rails for the command
rake db:create
and
rake db:migrate
to work
None of your links appeared to be the (arguably) most useful documentation - the official postgresql docs. I recently configure a Linux Mint box with postgresql and django using a combination of those documents and these, though the latter are specific to Linux.
I'd worry more about validating the postgresql side of things, less about rails. That is to say, your question should be "How can I set up and test a postgresql server on a Windows 7 box", moreso than you need to know how to get it locked into rails.
Edit:
Maybe this could also be of use to you - official postgresql wiki with detailed installation guides.
Good luck!

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