I am writing some simple batch scripts to login to the DB and do a pg_dump. Also, when I login to do my own SQL tinkering, I'd like not to be asked for a password every time (which, for silly corporate reasons, is quite a convoluted one). So I read up on .pgpass. Where should this file be located. "User's home directory" says the manual, but there's no "home directory" for database users (or is there? if so, where?), only for the postgres user. So I promptly did "su - postgres" and added the requisite info in the .pgpass file therein. But that doesn't seem to automate anything for actual DB users. Next, the manual refers to some PGPASSFILE env variable ( http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.2/interactive/libpq-envars.html ) but it is unclear where this environment is set up. I don't see any such setting in the postgresql.conf file, which wouldn't make much sense anyway. Where else can I tweak the environment variables? No pointer in the manual. Or was this page only some arcane C libpg stuff? So, my questions: 1. Where do I set up the automated password for (a) psql stuff and (b) for bash scripts or cron jobs -- I suppose both could have the same solution. 2. While we're on psql, I quite like the "\timing" stuff inside psql. I find it very useful to have that on every time I login to psql console, but I don't see any command line option to automate this every time. The psql man page ( http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.2/interactive/app-psql.html ) talks about a "psqlrc", which on my system is found at "/usr/share/pgsql/psqlrc" so I opened it up, entered the only line: \timing And saved it. Then I started the psql console again, but there's no timing on by default. How can I setup default options for psql? Many TIA! ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 1: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate subscribe-nomail command to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx so that your message can get through to the mailing list cleanly