If the database system is running on a machine you have access to, you might start it in single user mode and establish a new superuser role or change the password.
Directly from SQL this isn't possible as it would make all restrictions useless.
Directly from SQL this isn't possible as it would make all restrictions useless.
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Holger Jakobs, Bergisch Gladbach
Tel. +49 178 9759012
Holger Jakobs, Bergisch Gladbach
Tel. +49 178 9759012
Am 19. September 2024 17:06:57 MESZ schrieb "David G. Johnston" <david.g.johnston@xxxxxxxxx>:
On Thursday, September 19, 2024, Sunil Jadhav <sunilbjpatil@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:I don't know the superuser password?You will need to figure out a way to login as the (an?) existing superuser. Typically a password is not required since the pg_hba.conf file usually has a “local postgres postgres peer” (or equivalent) entry which lets the DBA become the OS postgres (or whatever user owns the service) user and then just connect to the cluster using the postgres role. Regardless, your ability to becomes superuser depends at this point on being able to become the OS user that owns the PostgreSQL service so you can modify pg_hba.conf to let you login.David J.