Interactive command-line interface for Greenplum Database
psql [<option> ...] [<dbname> [<username>]]
psql
is a terminal-based front-end to Greenplum Database. It enables you to type in queries interactively, issue them to Greenplum Database, and see the query results. Alternatively, input can be from a file. In addition, it provides a number of meta-commands and various shell-like features to facilitate writing scripts and automating a wide variety of tasks.
all
.
Specifies that psql
is to run the specified command string, and then exit. This is useful in shell scripts. command must be either a command string that is completely parseable by the server, or a single backslash command. Thus you cannot mix SQL and psql
meta-commands with this option. To achieve that, you could pipe the string into psql
, like this:
echo '\x \\ SELECT * FROM foo;' | psql
(\\
is the separator meta-command.)
BEGIN/COMMIT
commands included in the string to divide it into multiple transactions. This is different from the behavior when the same string is fed to
psql
's standard input. Also, only the result of the last SQL command is returned.
Specifies the name of the database to connect to. This is equivalent to specifying dbname as the first non-option argument on the command line.
=
sign or starts with a valid URI prefix (
postgresql://
or
postgres://
), it is treated as a
conninfo
string. See
Connection Strings in the PostgreSQL documentation for more information.
\d
and other backslash commands. You can use this to study
psql
's internal operations. This is equivalent to setting the variable ECHO_HIDDEN to
on
.
Use the file filename as the source of commands instead of reading commands interactively. After the file is processed, psql
terminates. This is in many ways equivalent to the meta-command \i
.
If filename is -
(hyphen), then standard input is read until an EOF indication or \q
meta-command. Note however that Readline is not used in this case (much as if -n
had been specified).
psql < <filename>
. In general, both will do what you expect, but using
-f
enables some nice features such as error messages with line numbers. There is also a slight chance that using this option will reduce the start-up overhead. On the other hand, the variant using the shell's input redirection is (in theory) guaranteed to yield exactly the same output you would have received had you entered everything by hand.
\pset
on the command line. Note that here you have to separate name and value with an equal sign instead of a space. Thus to set the output format to
LaTeX
, you could write
-P format=latex
.
psql
should do its work quietly. By default, it prints welcome messages and various informational output. If this option is used, none of this happens. This is useful with the
-c
option. This is equivalent to setting the variable QUIET to
on
.
\pset tuples_only
and is provided for convenience.
\pset
for details.
\set
meta command. Note that you must separate name and value, if any, by an equal sign on the command line. To unset a variable, leave off the equal sign. To set a variable with an empty value, use the equal sign but leave off the value. These assignments are done during a very early stage of start-up, so variables reserved for internal purposes might get overwritten later.
psql
version and exit.
psqlrc
file nor the user's
~/.psqlrc
file).
xargs -0
.
When psql
runs a script, adding this option wraps BEGIN
/COMMIT
around the script to run it as a single transaction. This ensures that either all the commands complete successfully, or no changes are applied.
BEGIN
,
COMMIT
, or
ROLLBACK
, this option will not have the desired effects. Also, if the script contains any command that cannot be run inside a transaction block, specifying this option will cause that command (and hence the whole transaction) to fail.
psql
command line arguments, and exit.
Connection Options
The host name of the machine on which the Greenplum master database server is running. If not specified, reads from the environment variable PGHOST
or defaults to localhost.
psql
on the master host, if the host value begins with a slash, it is used as the directory for the UNIX-domain socket.
PGPORT
or defaults to 5432.
PGUSER
or defaults to the current system role name.
psql
should automatically prompt for a password whenever the server requests password authentication. However, currently password request detection is not totally reliable, hence this option to force a prompt. If no password prompt is issued and the server requires password authentication, the connection attempt will fail.
Never issue a password prompt. If the server requires password authentication and a password is not available by other means such as a .pgpass file, the connection attempt will fail. This option can be useful in batch jobs and scripts where no user is present to enter a password.
NoteThis option remains set for the entire session, and so it affects uses of the meta-command
\connect
as well as the initial connection attempt.
psql
returns 0 to the shell if it finished normally, 1 if a fatal error of its own (out of memory, file not found) occurs, 2 if the connection to the server went bad and the session was not interactive, and 3 if an error occurred in a script and the variable ON_ERROR_STOP
was set.
Connecting to a Database
psql
is a client application for Greenplum Database. In order to connect to a database you need to know the name of your target database, the host name and port number of the Greenplum master server and what database user name you want to connect as. psql
can be told about those parameters via command line options, namely -d
, -h
, -p
, and -U
respectively. If an argument is found that does not belong to any option it will be interpreted as the database name (or the user name, if the database name is already given). Not all of these options are required; there are useful defaults. If you omit the host name, psql
will connect via a UNIX-domain socket to a master server on the local host, or via TCP/IP to localhost
on machines that do not have UNIX-domain sockets. The default master port number is 5432. If you use a different port for the master, you must specify the port. The default database user name is your operating-system user name, as is the default database name. Note that you cannot just connect to any database under any user name. Your database administrator should have informed you about your access rights.
When the defaults are not right, you can save yourself some typing by setting any or all of the environment variables PGAPPNAME
, PGDATABASE
, PGHOST
, PGPORT
, and PGUSER
to appropriate values.
It is also convenient to have a ~/.pgpass
file to avoid regularly having to type in passwords. This file should reside in your home directory and contain lines of the following format:
<hostname>:<port>:<database>:<username>:<password>
The permissions on .pgpass
must disallow any access to world or group (for example: chmod 0600 ~/.pgpass
). If the permissions are less strict than this, the file will be ignored. (The file permissions are not currently checked on Microsoft Windows clients, however.)
An alternative way to specify connection parameters is in a conninfo
string or a URI, which is used instead of a database name. This mechanism gives you very wide control over the connection. For example:
$ psql "service=myservice sslmode=require"
$ psql postgresql://gpmaster:5433/mydb?sslmode=require
This way you can also use LDAP for connection parameter lookup as described in LDAP Lookup of Connection Parameters in the PostgreSQL documentation. See Parameter Keywords in the PostgreSQL documentation for more information on all the available connection options.
If the connection could not be made for any reason (insufficient privileges, server is not running, etc.), psql
will return an error and terminate.
If at least one of standard input or standard output are a terminal, then psql
sets the client encoding to auto
, which will detect the appropriate client encoding from the locale settings (LC_CTYPE
environment variable on Unix systems). If this doesn't work out as expected, the client encoding can be overridden using the environment variable PGCLIENTENCODING
.
Entering SQL Commands
In normal operation, psql
provides a prompt with the name of the database to which psql
is currently connected, followed by the string => for a regular user or =# for a superuser. For example:
testdb=>
testdb=#
At the prompt, the user may type in SQL commands. Ordinarily, input lines are sent to the server when a command-terminating semicolon is reached. An end of line does not terminate a command. Thus commands can be spread over several lines for clarity. If the command was sent and run without error, the results of the command are displayed on the screen.
If untrusted users have access to a database that has not adopted a secure schema usage pattern, begin your session by removing publicly-writable schemas from search_path. You can add options=-csearch_path=
to the connection string or issue SELECT pg_catalog.set_config('search_path', '', false)
before other SQL commands. This consideration is not specific to psql
; it applies to every interface for running arbitrary SQL commands.
Anything you enter in psql
that begins with an unquoted backslash is a psql
meta-command that is processed by psql
itself. These commands help make psql
more useful for administration or scripting. Meta-commands are more commonly called slash or backslash commands.
The format of a psql
command is the backslash, followed immediately by a command verb, then any arguments. The arguments are separated from the command verb and each other by any number of whitespace characters.
To include whitespace into an argument you may quote it with single quotes. To include a single quote into such an argument, write two single quotes within single-quoted text. Anything contained in single quotes is furthermore subject to C-like substitutions for \n
(new line), \t
(tab), \b
(backspace), \r
(carriage return), \f
(form feed), \digits
(octal), and \xdigits
(hexadecimal). A backslash preceding any other character within single-quoted text quotes that single character, whatever it is.
Within an argument, text that is enclosed in backquotes (```) is taken as a command line that is passed to the shell. The output of the command (with any trailing newline removed) replaces the backquoted text.
If an unquoted colon (:
) followed by a psql
variable name appears within an argument, it is replaced by the variable's value, as described in SQL Interpolation.
Some commands take an SQL identifier (such as a table name) as argument. These arguments follow the syntax rules of SQL: Unquoted letters are forced to lowercase, while double quotes ("
) protect letters from case conversion and allow incorporation of whitespace into the identifier. Within double quotes, paired double quotes reduce to a single double quote in the resulting name. For example, FOO"BAR"BAZ
is interpreted as fooBARbaz
, and "A weird"" name"
becomes A weird" name
.
Parsing for arguments stops when another unquoted backslash occurs. This is taken as the beginning of a new meta-command. The special sequence \\
(two backslashes) marks the end of arguments and continues parsing SQL commands, if any. That way SQL and psql
commands can be freely mixed on a line. But in any case, the arguments of a meta-command cannot continue beyond the end of the line.
The following meta-commands are defined:
\pset
for a more general solution.
Establishes a new Greenplum Database connection. The connection parameters to use can be specified either using a positional syntax, or using conninfo
connection strings as detailed in libpq Connection Strings.
Where the command omits database name, user, host, or port, the new connection can reuse values from the previous connection. By default, values from the previous connection are reused except when processing a conninfo
string. Passing a first argument of -reuse-previous=on
or -reuse-previous=off
overrides that default. When the command neither specifies nor reuses a particular parameter, the libpq
default is used. Specifying any of dbname, username, host or port as -
is equivalent to omitting that parameter.
If the new connection is successfully made, the previous connection is closed. If the connection attempt failed, the previous connection will only be kept if psql
is in interactive mode. When running a non-interactive script, processing will immediately stop with an error. This distinction was chosen as a user convenience against typos, and a safety mechanism that scripts are not accidentally acting on the wrong database.
Examples:
=> \c mydb myuser host.dom 6432
=> \c service=foo
=> \c "host=localhost port=5432 dbname=mydb connect_timeout=10 sslmode=disable"
=> \c postgresql://tom@localhost/mydb?application_name=myapp
\pset title
.
\!pwd
.
TCP/IP
, etc.), the host, and the port.
Performs a frontend (client) copy. This is an operation that runs an SQL [COPY](../../ref_guide/sql_commands/COPY.html)
command, but instead of the server reading or writing the specified file, psql
reads or writes the file and routes the data between the server and the local file system. This means that file accessibility and privileges are those of the local user, not the server, and no SQL superuser privileges are required.
When program
is specified, command is run by psql
and the data from or to command is routed between the server and the client. This means that the execution privileges are those of the local user, not the server, and no SQL superuser privileges are required.
\copy ... from stdin | to stdout
reads/writes based on the command input and output respectively. All rows are read from the same source that issued the command, continuing until \.
is read or the stream reaches EOF
. Output is sent to the same place as command output. To read/write from psql
's standard input or output, use pstdin
or pstdout
. This option is useful for populating tables in-line within a SQL script file.
The syntax of the command is similar to that of the SQL COPY command, and option must indicate one of the options of the SQL COPY
command. Note that, because of this, special parsing rules apply to the \copy
command. In particular, the variable substitution rules and backslash escapes do not apply.
COPY
command because all data must pass through the client/server connection.
For each relation (table, external table, view, materialized view, index, sequence, or foreign table) or composite type matching the relation pattern, show all columns, their types, the tablespace (if not the default) and any special attributes such as NOT NULL
or defaults. Associated indexes, constraints, rules, and triggers are also shown. For foreign tables, the associated foreign server is shown as well.
\d
shows additional information for each column: column values for sequences, indexed expressions for indexes, and foreign data wrapper options for foreign tables.\d+
is identical, except that more information is displayed: any comments associated with the columns of the table are shown, as is the presence of OIDs in the table, the view definition if the relation is a view. \d
or \d+
specified with the root partition table or child partition table displays information about the table including partition keys on the current level of the partition table. The command \d+
also displays the immediate child partitions of the table and whether the child partition is an external table or regular table. \d+
displays the storage options for a table. For append-optimized tables, the options are displayed for the table. For column-oriented tables, storage options are displayed for each column.S
modifier to include system objects. \d
is used without a pattern argument, it is equivalent to \dtvmsE
which will show a list of all visible tables, views, materialized views, sequences, and foreign tables.S
modifier to include system objects.
S
modifier to include system objects. If
+
is appended to the command name, each object is listed with its associated description.
+
is appended to the command name, each object is listed with its associated description.
Shows the descriptions of objects of type constraint
, operator class
, operator family
, rule
, and trigger
. All other comments may be viewed by the respective backslash commands for those object types.
\dd
displays descriptions for objects matching the pattern, or of visible objects of the appropriate type if no argument is given. But in either case, only objects that have a description are listed. By default, only user-created objects are shown; supply a pattern or the S
modifier to include system objects.
COMMENT
SQL command.
Lists default access privilege settings. An entry is shown for each role (and schema, if applicable) for which the default privilege settings have been changed from the built-in defaults. If pattern is specified, only entries whose role name or schema name matches the pattern are listed.
S
modifier to include system objects. If
+
is appended to the command name, each object is listed with its associated permissions and description.
E
,
i
,
m
,
s
,
t
,
P
, and
v
stand for external table, index, materialized view, sequence, table, parent table, and view, respectively. You can specify any or all of these letters, in any order, to obtain a listing of objects of these types. For example,
\dit
lists indexes and tables. If
+
is appended to the command name, each object is listed with its physical size on disk and its associated description, if any. If a pattern is specified, only objects whose names match the pattern are listed. By default, only user-created objects are shown; supply a pattern or the
S
modifier to include system objects.
\des+
is used, a full description of each server is shown, including the server's ACL, type, version, options, and description.
\det+
is used, generic options and the foreign table description are also displayed.
\deu+
is used, additional information about each mapping is shown.
Caution
\deu+
might also display the user name and password of the remote user, so care should be taken not to disclose them.
\dew+
is used, the ACL, options, and description of the foreign-data wrapper are also shown.
a
,
n
,
t
, or
w
, to the command. If a pattern is specified, only functions whose names match the pattern are shown. If the form
\df+
is used, additional information about each function, including security, volatility, language, source code, and description, is shown. By default, only user-created objects are shown; supply a pattern or the
S
modifier to include system objects.
\dF+
is used, a full description of each configuration is shown, including the underlying text search parser and the dictionary list for each parser token type.
\dFd+
is used, additional information is shown about each selected dictionary, including the underlying text search template and the option values.
\dFp+
is used, a full description of each parser is shown, including the underlying functions and the list of recognized token types.
\dFt+
is used, additional information is shown about each template, including the underlying function names.
\du
.) If a pattern is specified, only those roles whose names match the pattern are listed. If the form
\dg+
is used, additional information is shown about each role; currently this adds the comment for each role.
\lo_list
, which shows a list of large objects.
S
modifier to include system objects. If
+
is appended to the command name, each language is listed with its call handler, validator, access privileges, and whether it is a system object.
S
modifier to include system objects. If
+
is appended to the command name, each object is listed with its associated permissions and description, if any.
S
modifier to include system objects.
S
modifier to include system objects. If
+
is appended to the command name, each collation is listed with its associated description, if any. Note that only collations usable with the current database's encoding are shown, so the results may vary in different databases of the same installation.
Lists defined configuration settings. These settings can be role-specific, database-specific, or both. role-pattern and database-pattern are used to select specific roles and database to list, respectively. If omitted, or if *
is specified, all settings are listed, including those not role-specific or database-specific, respectively.
+
is appended to the command name, each type is listed with its internal name and size, its allowed values if it is an
enum
type, and its associated permissions. By default, only user-created objects are shown; supply a pattern or the
S
modifier to include system objects.
\dg
.) If a pattern is specified, only those roles whose names match the pattern are listed. If the form
\du+
is used, additional information is shown about each role; currently this adds the comment for each role.
\dx+
is used, all of the objects belonging to each matching extension are listed.
+
is appended to the command name, each object is listed with its associated description.
Lists event triggers. If a pattern is specified, only those triggers whose names match the pattern are listed. If +
is appended to the command name, each object is listed with its associated description.
NoteGreenplum Database does not support user-defined triggers.
If filename is specified, the file is edited; after the editor exits, its content is copied back to the query buffer. If no filename is given, the current query buffer is copied to a temporary file which is then edited in the same fashion.
The new query buffer is then re-parsed according to the normal rules of psql
, where the whole buffer is treated as a single line. (Thus you cannot make scripts this way. Use \i
for that.) This means also that if the query ends with (or rather contains) a semicolon, it is immediately run. In other cases it will merely wait in the query buffer; type semicolon or \g
to send it, or \r
to cancel.
If a line number is specified, psql
will position the cursor on the specified line of the file or query buffer. Note that if a single all-digits argument is given, psql
assumes it is a line number, not a file name.
Prints the arguments to the standard output, separated by one space and followed by a newline. This can be useful to intersperse information in the output of scripts. If the first argument is an unquoted -n
, the trailing newline is not written.
NoteIf you use the
\o
command to redirect your query output you might wish to use\qecho
instead of this command.
This command fetches and edits the definition of the named function, in the form of a CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION
command. Editing is done in the same way as for \edit
. After the editor exits, the updated command waits in the query buffer; type semicolon or \g
to send it, or \r
to cancel.
The target function can be specified by name alone, or by name and arguments, for example foo(integer, text)
. The argument types must be given if there is more than one function with the same name.
If no function is specified, a blank CREATE FUNCTION
template is presented for editing.
If a line number is specified, psql
will position the cursor on the specified line of the function body. (Note that the function body typically does not begin on the first line of the file.)
|
). See also
\pset
for a generic way of setting output options.
|
command ]
Sends the current query input buffer to the server, and optionally stores the query's output in filename or pipes the output to the shell command command. The file or command is written to only if the query successfully returns zero or more tuples, not if the query fails or is a non-data-returning SQL command.
\g
is essentially equivalent to a semi-colon. A
\g
with argument is a one-shot alternative to the
\o
command.
Sends the current query input buffer to the server and stores the query's output into psql
variables. The query to be run must return exactly one row. Each column of the row is stored into a separate variable, named the same as the column. For example:
=> SELECT 'hello' AS var1, 10 AS var2;
-> \gset
=> \echo :var1 :var2
hello 10
If you specify a prefix, that string is prepended to the query's column names to create the variable names to use:
=> SELECT 'hello' AS var1, 10 AS var2;
-> \gset result_
=> \echo :result_var1 :result_var2
hello 10
If a column result is NULL, the corresponding variable is unset rather than being set.
psql
will list all the commands for which syntax help is available. If command is an asterisk (
*
) then syntax help on all SQL commands is shown. To simplify typing, commands that consist of several words do not have to be quoted.
\pset
about setting other output options.
Reads input from the file filename and runs it as though it had been typed on the keyboard.
If filename is -
(hyphen), then standard input is read until an EOF indication or \q
meta-command. This can be used to intersperse interactive input with input from files. Note that Readline behavior will be used only if it is active at the outermost level.
ECHO
to
all
.
\ir
command is similar to
\i
, but resolves relative file names differently. When running in interactive mode, the two commands behave identically. However, when invoked from a script,
\ir
interprets file names relative to the directory in which the script is located, rather than the current working directory.
+
is appended to the command name, database sizes, default tablespaces, and descriptions are also displayed. (Size information is only available for databases that the current user can connect to.)
Reads the large object with OID loid from the database and writes it to filename. Note that this is subtly different from the server function lo_export
, which acts with the permissions of the user that the database server runs as and on the server's file system. Use \lo_list
to find out the large object's OID.
NoteGreenplum Database does not support the PostgreSQL large object facility for streaming user data that is stored in large-object structures.
mydb=> \lo_import '/home/gpadmin/pictures/photo.xcf' 'a
picture of me'
lo_import 152801
The response indicates that the large object received object ID 152801 which one ought to remember if one wants to access the object ever again. For that reason it is recommended to always associate a human-readable comment with every object. Those can then be seen with the \lo_list
command. Note that this command is subtly different from the server-side lo_import
because it acts as the local user on the local file system, rather than the server's user and file system.
NoteGreenplum Database does not support the PostgreSQL large object facility for streaming user data that is stored in large-object structures.
Shows a list of all large objects currently stored in the database, along with any comments provided for them.
NoteGreenplum Database does not support the PostgreSQL large object facility for streaming user data that is stored in large-object structures.
Deletes the large object of the specified OID from the database. Use \lo_list
to find out the large object's OID.
NoteGreenplum Database does not support the PostgreSQL large object facility for streaming user data that is stored in large-object structures.
|
command ]
\d
), but not error messages. To intersperse text output in between query results, use
\qecho
.
ALTER ROLE
command. This makes sure that the new password does not appear in cleartext in the command history, the server log, or elsewhere.
Prompts the user to supply text, which is assigned to the variable name. An optional prompt string, text, can be specified. (For multiword prompts, surround the text with single quotes.)
\prompt
uses the terminal for input and output. However, if the
-f
command line switch was used,
\prompt
uses standard input and standard output.
This command sets options affecting the output of query result tables. print_option describes which option is to be set. The semantics of value vary depending on the selected option. For some options, omitting value causes the option to be toggled or unset, as described under the particular option. If no such behavior is mentioned, then omitting value just results in the current setting being displayed.
\pset
without any arguments displays the current status of all printing options.
Adjustable printing options are:
border
– The value must be a number. In general, the higher the number the more borders and lines the tables will have, but this depends on the particular format. In HTML format, this will translate directly into the border=...
attribute; in the other formats only values 0
(no border), 1
(internal dividing lines), and 2
(table frame) make sense. latex
and latex-longtable
also support a border
value of 3 which adds a dividing line between each row.columns
– Sets the target width for the wrapped
format, and also the width limit for determining whether output is wide enough to require the pager or switch to the vertical display in expanded auto mode. The default is zero. Zero causes the target width to be controlled by the environment variable COLUMNS
, or the detected screen width if COLUMNS
is not set. In addition, if columns
is zero then the wrapped format affects screen output only. If columns is nonzero then file and pipe output is wrapped to that width as well. \pset format wrapped
to enable the wrapped format.expanded
| x
– If value is specified it must be either on
or off
, which will activate or deactivate expanded mode, or auto
. If value is omitted the command toggles between the on
and off
settings. When expanded mode is enabled, query results are displayed in two columns, with the column name on the left and the data on the right. This mode is useful if the data wouldn't fit on the screen in the normal "horizontal" mode. In the auto
setting, the expanded mode is used whenever the query output is wider than the screen, otherwise the regular mode is used. The auto
setting is only effective in the aligned and wrapped formats. In other formats, it always behaves as if the expanded mode is off
.fieldsep
– Specifies the field separator to be used in unaligned output mode. That way one can create, for example, tab- or comma-separated output, which other programs might prefer. To set a tab as field separator, type \pset fieldsep '\t'
. The default field separator is '|'
(a vertical bar).fieldsep_zero
- Sets the field separator to use in unaligned output format to a zero byte.footer
– If value is specified it must be either on
or off
which will activate or deactivate display of the table footer (the (n rows) count). If value is omitted the command toggles footer display on or off.format
– Sets the output format to one of unaligned
, aligned
, html
, latex
(uses tabular
), latex-longtable
, troff-ms
, or wrapped
. Unique abbreviations are allowed. unaligned
format writes all columns of a row on one line, separated by the currently active field separator. This is useful for creating output that might be intended to be read in by other programs (for example, tab-separated or comma-separated format). aligned
format is the standard, human-readable, nicely formatted text output; this is the default. html
, latex
, latex-longtable
, and troff-ms
formats put out tables that are intended to be included in documents using the respective mark-up language. They are not complete documents! (This might not be so dramatic in HTML, but in LaTeX you must have a complete document wrapper. latex-longtable
also requires the LaTeX longtable
and booktabs
packages.) wrapped
format is like aligned
, but wraps wide data values across lines to make the output fit in the target column width. The target width is determined as described under the columns
option. Note that psql
does not attempt to wrap column header titles; the wrapped
format behaves the same as aligned
if the total width needed for column headers exceeds the target.linestyle
[unicode
| ascii
| old-ascii
] – Sets the border line drawing style to one of unicode, ascii, or old-ascii. Unique abbreviations, including one letter, are allowed for the three styles. The default setting is ascii
. This option only affects the aligned
and wrapped
output formats. ascii
– uses plain ASCII characters. Newlines in data are shown using a +
symbol in the right-hand margin. When the wrapped format wraps data from one line to the next without a newline character, a dot (.
) is shown in the right-hand margin of the first line, and again in the left-hand margin of the following line. old-ascii
– style uses plain ASCII characters, using the formatting style used in PostgreSQL 8.4 and earlier. Newlines in data are shown using a :
symbol in place of the left-hand column separator. When the data is wrapped from one line to the next without a newline character, a ;
symbol is used in place of the left-hand column separator. unicode
– style uses Unicode box-drawing characters. Newlines in data are shown using a carriage return symbol in the right-hand margin. When the data is wrapped from one line to the next without a newline character, an ellipsis symbol is shown in the right-hand margin of the first line, and again in the left-hand margin of the following line. border
setting is greater than zero, this option also determines the characters with which the border lines are drawn. Plain ASCII characters work everywhere, but Unicode characters look nicer on displays that recognize them.null 'string'
– The second argument is a string to print whenever a column is null. The default is to print nothing, which can easily be mistaken for an empty string. For example, one might prefer \pset null '(null)'
.numericlocale
– If value is specified it must be either on
or off
which will activate or deactivate display of a locale-specific character to separate groups of digits to the left of the decimal marker. If value is omitted the command toggles between regular and locale-specific numeric output.pager
– Controls the use of a pager for query and psql
help output. If the environment variable PAGER
is set, the output is piped to the specified program. Otherwise a platform-dependent default (such as more
) is used. When off
, the pager program is not used. When on
, the pager is used only when appropriate, i.e. when the output is to a terminal and will not fit on the screen. Pager can also be set to always
, which causes the pager to be used for all terminal output regardless of whether it fits on the screen. \pset pager
without a value toggles pager use on and off.recordsep
– Specifies the record (line) separator to use in unaligned output mode. The default is a newline character.recordsep_zero
- Sets the record separator to use in unaligned output format to a zero byte.tableattr
| T
[text] – In HTML format, this specifies attributes to be placed inside the HTML table
tag. This could for example be cellpadding
or bgcolor
. Note that you probably don't want to specify border
here, as that is already taken care of by \pset border
. If no value is given, the table attributes are unset. latex-longtable
format, this controls the proportional width of each column containing a left-aligned data type. It is specified as a whitespace-separated list of values, e.g. '0.2 0.2 0.6'
. Unspecified output columns use the last specified value.title
[text] – Sets the table title for any subsequently printed tables. This can be used to give your output descriptive tags. If no value is given, the title is unset.tuples_only
| t
[novalue | on | off] – If value is specified, it must be either on
or off
which will activate or deactivate tuples-only mode. If value is omitted the command toggles between regular and tuples-only output. Regular output includes extra information such as column headers, titles, and various footers. In tuples-only mode, only actual table data is shown. The \t
command is equivalent to \pset``tuples_only
and is provided for convenience.Tip:
There are various shortcut commands for \pset
. See \a
, \C
, \f
, \H
, \t
, \T
, and \x
.
psql
program. In a script file, only execution of that script is terminated.
\echo
except that the output will be written to the query output channel, as set by
\o
.
psql
's command line history to
filename
. If
filename
is omitted, the history is written to the standard output (using the pager if appropriate). This command is not available if
psql
was built without
Readline
support.
Sets the psql
variable name to value, or if more than one value is given, to the concatenation of all of them. If only one argument is given, the variable is just set with an empty value. To unset a variable, use the \unset
command.
\set
without any arguments displays the names and values of all currently-set psql
variables.
Valid variable names can contain characters, digits, and underscores. See "Variables" in Advanced Features. Variable names are case-sensitive.
Although you are welcome to set any variable to anything you want, psql
treats several variables as special. They are documented in the topic about variables.
Sets the environment variable name to value, or if the value is not supplied, unsets the environment variable. Example:
testdb=> \setenv PAGER less
testdb=> \setenv LESS -imx4F
This command fetches and shows the definition of the named function, in the form of a CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION
command. The definition is printed to the current query output channel, as set by \o
.
The target function can be specified by name alone, or by name and arguments, for example foo(integer, text)
. The argument types must be given if there is more than one function of the same name.
+
is appended to the command name, then the output lines are numbered, with the first line of the function body being line 1.
\t
command by itself toggles a display of output column name headings and row count footer. The values
on
and
off
set the tuples display, regardless of the current setting. This command is equivalent to
\pset tuples_only
and is provided for convenience.
table
tag in HTML output format. This command is equivalent to
\pset tableattr table_options
on
and
off
set the time display, regardless of the current setting.
psql
variable name.
|
command
\g
) until interrupted or the query fails. Wait the specified number of seconds (default 2) between executions.
\pset expanded
.
\dp
.
psql
backslash commands.
The various \d
commands accept a pattern parameter to specify the object name(s) to be displayed. In the simplest case, a pattern is just the exact name of the object. The characters within a pattern are normally folded to lower case, just as in SQL names; for example, \dt FOO
will display the table named foo
. As in SQL names, placing double quotes around a pattern stops folding to lower case. Should you need to include an actual double quote character in a pattern, write it as a pair of double quotes within a double-quote sequence; again this is in accord with the rules for SQL quoted identifiers. For example, \dt "FOO""BAR"
will display the table named FOO"BAR
(not foo"bar
). Unlike the normal rules for SQL names, you can put double quotes around just part of a pattern, for instance \dt FOO"FOO"BAR
will display the table named fooFOObar
.
Within a pattern, *
matches any sequence of characters (including no characters) and ?
matches any single character. (This notation is comparable to UNIX shell file name patterns.) For example, \dt int*
displays all tables whose names begin with int
. But within double quotes, *
and ?
lose these special meanings and are just matched literally.
A pattern that contains a dot (.
) is interpreted as a schema name pattern followed by an object name pattern. For example, \dt foo*.bar*
displays all tables whose table name starts with bar
that are in schemas whose schema name starts with foo
. When no dot appears, then the pattern matches only objects that are visible in the current schema search path. Again, a dot within double quotes loses its special meaning and is matched literally.
Advanced users can use regular-expression notations. All regular expression special characters work as specified in the PostgreSQL documentation on regular expressions, except for .
which is taken as a separator as mentioned above, *
which is translated to the regular-expression notation .*
, and ?
which is translated to ..
You can emulate these pattern characters at need by writing ?
for .,``(R+|)
for R*
, or (R|)
for R?
. Remember that the pattern must match the whole name, unlike the usual interpretation of regular expressions; write *
at the beginning and/or end if you don't wish the pattern to be anchored. Note that within double quotes, all regular expression special characters lose their special meanings and are matched literally. Also, the regular expression special characters are matched literally in operator name patterns (such as the argument of \do
).
Whenever the pattern parameter is omitted completely, the \d
commands display all objects that are visible in the current schema search path – this is equivalent to using the pattern *.
To see all objects in the database, use the pattern *.*.
Variables
psql
provides variable substitution features similar to common UNIX command shells. Variables are simply name/value pairs, where the value can be any string of any length. The name must consist of letters (including non-Latin letters), digits, and underscores.
To set a variable, use the psql meta-command \set
. For example,
testdb=> \set foo bar
sets the variable foo
to the value bar
. To retrieve the content of the variable, precede the name with a colon, for example:
testdb=> \echo :foo
bar
This works in both regular SQL commands and meta-commands; there is more detail in SQL Interpolation.
If you call \set
without a second argument, the variable is set, with an empty string as value. To unset (i.e., delete) a variable, use the command \unset
. To show the values of all variables, call \set
without any argument.
NoteThe arguments of
\set
are subject to the same substitution rules as with other commands. Thus you can construct interesting references such as\set :foo 'something'
and get 'soft links' or 'variable variables' of Perl or PHP fame, respectively. Unfortunately, there is no way to do anything useful with these constructs. On the other hand,\set bar :foo
is a perfectly valid way to copy a variable.
A number of these variables are treated specially by psql
. They represent certain option settings that can be changed at run time by altering the value of the variable, or in some cases represent changeable state of psql
. Although you can use these variables for other purposes, this is not recommended, as the program behavior might grow really strange really quickly. By convention, all specially treated variables' names consist of all upper-case ASCII letters (and possibly digits and underscores). To ensure maximum compatibility in the future, avoid using such variable names for your own purposes. A list of all specially treated variables follows.
When on (the default), each SQL command is automatically committed upon successful completion. To postpone commit in this mode, you must enter a BEGIN
or START TRANSACTION
SQL command. When off or unset, SQL commands are not committed until you explicitly issue COMMIT
or END
. The autocommit-on mode works by issuing an implicit BEGIN
for you, just before any command that is not already in a transaction block and is not itself a BEGIN
or other transaction-control command, nor a command that cannot be run inside a transaction block (such as VACUUM
).
In autocommit-off mode, you must explicitly abandon any failed transaction by entering ABORT
or ROLLBACK
. Also keep in mind that if you exit the session without committing, your work will be lost.
~/.psqlrc
file.
lower
or
upper
, the completed word will be in lower or upper case, respectively. If set to
preserve-lower
or
preserve-upper
(the default), the completed word will be in the case of the word already entered, but words being completed without anything entered will be in lower or upper case, respectively.
all
, all nonempty input lines are printed to standard output as they are read. (This does not apply to lines read interactively.) To select this behavior on program start-up, use the switch
-a
. If set to queries,
psql
prints each query to standard output as it is sent to the server. The switch for this is
-e
.
on
and a backslash command queries the database, the query is first shown. This feature helps you to study Greenplum Database internals and provide similar functionality in your own programs. (To select this behavior on program start-up, use the switch
-E
.) If you set the variable to the value
noexec
, the queries are just shown but are not actually sent to the server and run.
If this variable is set to an integer value > 0, the results of SELECT
queries are fetched and displayed in groups of that many rows, rather than the default behavior of collecting the entire result set before display. Therefore only a limited amount of memory is used, regardless of the size of the result set. Settings of 100 to 1000 are commonly used when enabling this feature. Keep in mind that when using this feature, a query may fail after having already displayed some rows.
FETCH_COUNT
rows will be formatted separately, leading to varying column widths across the row groups. The other output formats work better.
ignorespace
, lines which begin with a space are not entered into the history list. If set to a value of
ignoredups
, lines matching the previous history line are not entered. A value of
ignoreboth
combines the two options. If unset, or if set to any other value than those above, all lines read in interactive mode are saved on the history list.
The file name that will be used to store the history list. The default value is ~/.psql_history
. For example, putting
\set HISTFILE ~/.psql_history- :DBNAME
~/.psqlrc
will cause
psql
to maintain a separate history for each database.
EOF
character (usually
CTRL+D
) to an interactive session of
psql
will terminate the application. If set to a numeric value, that many
EOF
characters are ignored before the application terminates. If the variable is set but has no numeric value, the default is
10
.
INSERT
or
lo_import
command. This variable is only guaranteed to be valid until after the result of the next SQL command has been displayed.
on
, if a statement in a transaction block generates an error, the error is ignored and the transaction continues. When set to
interactive
, such errors are only ignored in interactive sessions, and not when reading script files. When unset or set to
off
, a statement in a transaction block that generates an error cancels the entire transaction. The error rollback mode works by issuing an implicit
SAVEPOINT
for you, just before each command that is in a transaction block, and rolls back to the savepoint on error.
on
, processing will instead stop immediately. In interactive mode,
psql
will return to the command prompt; otherwise,
psql
will exit, returning error code 3 to distinguish this case from fatal error conditions, which are reported using error code 1. In either case, any currently running scripts (the top-level script, if any, and any other scripts which it may have in invoked) will be terminated immediately. If the top-level command string contained multiple SQL commands, processing will stop with the current command.
psql
issues should look like. See "Prompting".
on
is equivalent to the command line option
-q
. It is not very useful in interactive mode.
-S
.
on
is equivalent to the command line option
-s
.
default
,
verbose
, or
terse
to control the verbosity of error reports.
SQL Interpolation
A key feature of psql
variables is that you can substitute ("interpolate") them into regular SQL statements, as well as the arguments of meta-commands. Furthermore, psql
provides facilities for ensuring that variable values used as SQL literals and identifiers are properly quoted. The syntax for interpolating a value without any quoting is to prepend the variable name with a colon (:
). For example,
testdb=> \set foo 'my_table'
testdb=> SELECT * FROM :foo;
would query the table my_table
. Note that this may be unsafe: the value of the variable is copied literally, so it can contain unbalanced quotes, or even backslash commands. You must make sure that it makes sense where you put it.
When a value is to be used as an SQL literal or identifier, it is safest to arrange for it to be quoted. To quote the value of a variable as an SQL literal, write a colon followed by the variable name in single quotes. To quote the value as an SQL identifier, write a colon followed by the variable name in double quotes. These constructs deal correctly with quotes and other special characters embedded within the variable value. The previous example would be more safely written this way:
testdb=> \set foo 'my_table'
testdb=> SELECT * FROM :"foo";
Variable interpolation will not be performed within quoted SQL literals and identifiers. Therefore, a construction such as ':foo'
doesn't work to produce a quoted literal from a variable's value (and it would be unsafe if it did work, since it wouldn't correctly handle quotes embedded in the value).
One example use of this mechanism is to copy the contents of a file into a table column. First load the file into a variable and then interpolate the variable's value as a quoted string:
testdb=> \set content `cat my_file.txt`
testdb=> INSERT INTO my_table VALUES (:'content');
(Note that this still won't work if my_file.txt
contains NUL
bytes. psql
does not support embedded NUL
bytes in variable values.)
Since colons can legally appear in SQL commands, an apparent attempt at interpolation (that is, :name
, :'name'
, or :"name"
) is not replaced unless the named variable is currently set. In any case, you can escape a colon with a backslash to protect it from substitution.
The colon syntax for variables is standard SQL for embedded query languages, such as ECPG. The colon syntaxes for array slices and type casts are Greenplum Database extensions, which can sometimes conflict with the standard usage. The colon-quote syntax for escaping a variable's value as an SQL literal or identifier is a psql
extension.
Prompting
The prompts psql
issues can be customized to your preference. The three variables PROMPT1
, PROMPT2
, and PROMPT3
contain strings and special escape sequences that describe the appearance of the prompt. Prompt 1 is the normal prompt that is issued when psql
requests a new command. Prompt 2 is issued when more input is expected during command entry, for example because the command was not terminated with a semicolon or a quote was not closed. Prompt 3 is issued when you are running an SQL COPY FROM STDIN
command and you need to type in a row value on the terminal.
The value of the selected prompt variable is printed literally, except where a percent sign (%
) is encountered. Depending on the next character, certain other text is substituted instead. Defined substitutions are:
[local]
if the connection is over a UNIX domain socket, or
[local:/dir/name]
, if the UNIX domain socket is not at the compiled in default location.
[local]
if the connection is over a UNIX domain socket.
SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION
.)
%/
, but the output is
~
(tilde) if the database is your default database.
SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION
.)
=
, but
^
if in single-line mode, or
!
if the session is disconnected from the database (which can happen if
\connect
fails). In prompt 2
%R
is replaced by a character that depends on why
psql
expects more input:
-
if the command simply wasn't terminated yet, but
*
if there is an unfinished
/* ... */
comment, a single quote if there is an unfinished quoted string, a double quote if there is an unfinished quoted identifier, a dollar sign if there is an unfinished dollar-quoted string, or
(
if there is an unmatched left parenthesis. In prompt 3
%R
doesn't produce anything.
psql
variable name. See "Variables" in
Advanced Features for details.
Prompts may contain terminal control characters which, for example, change the color, background, or style of the prompt text, or change the title of the terminal window. In order for line editing to work properly, these non-printing control characters must be designated as invisible by surrounding them with %[
and %]
. Multiple pairs of these may occur within the prompt. For example,
testdb=> \set PROMPT1 '%[%033[1;33;40m%]%n@%/%R%[%033[0m%]%#'
1;
) yellow-on-black (
33;40
) prompt on VT100-compatible, color-capable terminals. To insert a percent sign into your prompt, write
%%
. The default prompts are
'%/%R%# '
for prompts 1 and 2, and
'>> '
for prompt 3.
Command-Line Editing
psql
uses the readline
library for convenient line editing and retrieval. The command history is automatically saved when psql
exits and is reloaded when psql
starts up. Tab-completion is also supported, although the completion logic makes no claim to be an SQL parser. The queries generated by tab-completion can also interfere with other SQL commands, e.g. SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL
. If for some reason you do not like the tab completion, you can turn it off by putting this in a file named .inputrc
in your home directory:
$if psql
set disable-completion on
$endif
\pset columns
is zero, controls the width for the wrapped format and width for determining if wide output requires the pager or should be switched to the vertical format in expanded auto mode.
more
or
less
. The default is platform-dependent. The use of the pager can be deactivated by setting PAGER to empty, or by using pager-related options of the
\pset
command.
Editor used by the \e
and \ef
commands. The variables are examined in the order listed; the first that is set is used.
vi
on Unix systems and
notepad.exe
on Windows systems.
When \e
or \ef
is used with a line number argument, this variable specifies the command-line argument used to pass the starting line number to the user's editor. For editors such as Emacs or vi
, this is a plus sign. Include a trailing space in the value of the variable if there needs to be space between the option name and the line number. Examples:
PSQL_EDITOR_LINENUMBER_ARG='+'
PSQL_EDITOR_LINENUMBER_ARG='--line '
+
on Unix systems (corresponding to the default editor
vi
, and useful for many other common editors); but there is no default on Windows systems.
~
) expansion is performed.
.psqlrc
file. Tilde (
~
) expansion is performed.
\!
command.
/tmp
.
Unless it is passed an -X
or -c
option, psql
attempts to read and run commands from the system-wide startup file (psqlrc
) and then the user's personal startup file (~/.psqlrc
), after connecting to the database but before accepting normal commands. These files can be used to set up the client and/or the server to taste, typically with \set
and SET
commands.
The system-wide startup file is named psqlrc
and is sought in the installation's "system configuration" directory, which is most reliably identified by running pg_config --sysconfdir
. By default this directory will be../etc/
relative to the directory containing the Greenplum Database executables. The name of this directory can be set explicitly via the PGSYSCONFDIR
environment variable.
The user's personal startup file is named .psqlrc
and is sought in the invoking user's home directory. On Windows, which lacks such a concept, the personal startup file is named %APPDATA%\postgresql\psqlrc.conf
. The location of the user's startup file can be set explicitly via the PSQLRC
environment variable.
~/.psqlrc-9.4
. The most specific version-matching file will be read in preference to a non-version-specific file.
The command-line history is stored in the file ~/.psql_history
, or%APPDATA%\postgresql\psql_history
on Windows.
PSQL_HISTORY
environment variable.
psql
works best with servers of the same or an older major version. Backslash commands are particularly likely to fail if the server is of a newer version than psql
itself. However, backslash commands of the \d
family should work with older server versions, though not necessarily with servers newer than psql
itself. The general functionality of running SQL commands and displaying query results should also work with servers of a newer major version, but this cannot be guaranteed in all cases.
If you want to use psql
to connect to several servers of different major versions, it is recommended that you use the newest version of psql
. Alternatively, you can keep a copy of psql
from each major version around and be sure to use the version that matches the respective server. But in practice, this additional complication should not be necessary.
psql
is built as a console application. Since the Windows console windows use a different encoding than the rest of the system, you must take special care when using 8-bit characters within psql
. If psql
detects a problematic console code page, it will warn you at startup. To change the console code page, two things are necessary:
Set the code page by entering:
cmd.exe /c chcp 1252
1252
is a character encoding of the Latin alphabet, used by Microsoft Windows for English and some other Western languages. If you are using Cygwin, you can put this command in /etc/profile
.
Set the console font to Lucida Console, because the raster font does not work with the ANSI code page.
Start psql
in interactive mode:
psql -p 54321 -U sally mydatabase
In psql
interactive mode, spread a command over several lines of input. Notice the changing prompt:
testdb=> CREATE TABLE my_table (
testdb(> first integer not null default 0,
testdb(> second text)
testdb-> ;
CREATE TABLE
Look at the table definition:
testdb=> \d my_table
Table "public.my_table"
Column | Type | Modifiers
-----------+---------+--------------------
first | integer | not null default 0
second | text |
Distributed by: (first)
Run psql
in non-interactive mode by passing in a file containing SQL commands:
psql -f /home/gpadmin/test/myscript.sql