Ah, perfect:
pg_dumpall -g -U postgres -h myhost --no-role-passwords
Exactly what I am after, works on RDS.
On Fri, Jul 26, 2024 at 10:24 AM Ron Johnson <ronljohnsonjr@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
pg_dumpall has "--roles-only" and "--no-role-passwords" options (in at least PG 14).I'm 99.9% sure that "--no-role-passwords" was added specifically because of AWS RDS security policy.On Fri, Jul 26, 2024 at 1:19 PM Wells Oliver <wells.oliver@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:Ah, sorry for the multiple responses, but it doesn't seem like pg_dumpall is permitted in AWS RDS. If anyone has any other clever ways of getting to this info, would appreciate any ideas.On Fri, Jul 26, 2024 at 10:15 AM Wells Oliver <wells.oliver@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:Thanks. Yeah, I was basically looking for the role/user only version of pg_dumpall -g, where I'd then handle specific DB restore on its own. Your right thought, I can copy out what I care about from the output.On Fri, Jul 26, 2024 at 10:06 AM Ron Johnson <ronljohnsonjr@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:On Fri, Jul 26, 2024 at 12:43 PM Wells Oliver <wells.oliver@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:I am doing a pg_restore of a database, which is nothing difficult, but I also am creating a new server first, and rather than painstakingly making sure I create all users and roles etc prior to pg_restore (so we can have the same perms), is there some obvious way of doing this I'm unawares of?Running "pg_dumpall -g > source_roles.sql" and then scanning it for the relevant entries doesn't seem too onerous. It's a lot easier than the conceptually similar -- but much trickier -- process you need to go through when migrating SQL Server databases.--Wells Oliver
wells.oliver@xxxxxxxxx--Wells Oliver
wells.oliver@xxxxxxxxx
Wells Oliver
wells.oliver@xxxxxxxxx
wells.oliver@xxxxxxxxx