From f51c859081bdb81b89293fa7a4d52782ce8429cb Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Pavel Kajaba Date: Wed, 18 Nov 2015 10:02:17 +0100 Subject: Added initial files from branch rhscl-2.1-rh-postgresql94-rhel-7 --- postgresql-config-comment.patch | 19 +++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 19 insertions(+) create mode 100644 postgresql-config-comment.patch (limited to 'postgresql-config-comment.patch') diff --git a/postgresql-config-comment.patch b/postgresql-config-comment.patch new file mode 100644 index 0000000..9df0221 --- /dev/null +++ b/postgresql-config-comment.patch @@ -0,0 +1,19 @@ +Add note warning users that Postgres' port number is forced in the service +file, mainly because it's traditional in Red Hat installations to set it +there rather than in postgresql.conf. (There are minor usability benefits +to doing it this way though, for example that the postmaster's port number +is visible in "ps" as part of its command line.) + + +diff -Naur postgresql-9.2rc1.orig/src/backend/utils/misc/postgresql.conf.sample postgresql-9.2rc1/src/backend/utils/misc/postgresql.conf.sample +--- postgresql-9.2rc1.orig/src/backend/utils/misc/postgresql.conf.sample 2012-08-23 18:06:49.000000000 -0400 ++++ postgresql-9.2rc1/src/backend/utils/misc/postgresql.conf.sample 2012-09-01 21:57:55.498629897 -0400 +@@ -61,6 +61,8 @@ + # defaults to 'localhost'; use '*' for all + # (change requires restart) + #port = 5432 # (change requires restart) ++# Note: In RHEL/Fedora installations, you can't set the port number here; ++# adjust it in the service file instead. + #max_connections = 100 # (change requires restart) + # Note: Increasing max_connections costs ~400 bytes of shared memory per + # connection slot, plus lock space (see max_locks_per_transaction). -- cgit