Mercurial > dive4elements > river
view backend/doc/schema/postgresql-setup.sh @ 9778:b57b236c4f4e 3.2.x
Backed out changeset b1b48fa7bd80
It turns out that, while this works for PostgreSQL/PostGIS,
it does not with Oracle. Hibernatespatial tries to map spatial
types to PostGIS hibernate types in both cases.
author | Tom Gottfried <tom@intevation.de> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 06 Feb 2023 16:57:03 +0100 |
parents | 358a0fd48a00 |
children | f89fb9e9abad |
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#!/bin/bash # $1: name, user and password for new DB (optional. Default: d4e) # $2: host (optional. Default: localhost) SCRIPT_DIR=`dirname $0` DB_NAME=${1:-d4e} PG_HOST=${2:-localhost} # run as user postgres (postgresql super-user) # it is assumed that the owner of the DB has the same name as the DB! # create PostGIS-DB createuser -S -D -R $DB_NAME createdb $DB_NAME psql -d $DB_NAME -c "ALTER USER $DB_NAME WITH PASSWORD '$DB_NAME';" psql -d $DB_NAME -c "CREATE EXTENSION postgis;" psql -d $DB_NAME -c "GRANT ALL ON geometry_columns TO $DB_NAME; GRANT ALL ON geography_columns TO $DB_NAME; GRANT ALL ON spatial_ref_sys TO $DB_NAME;" # add credentials to .pgpass (or create .pgpass) echo "*:*:$DB_NAME:$DB_NAME:$DB_NAME" >> ~/.pgpass chmod 0600 ~/.pgpass # apply schema-scripts psql -d $DB_NAME -U $DB_NAME -h $PG_HOST -f $SCRIPT_DIR/postgresql.sql psql -d $DB_NAME -U $DB_NAME -h $PG_HOST -f $SCRIPT_DIR/postgresql-spatial.sql psql -d $DB_NAME -U $DB_NAME -h $PG_HOST -f $SCRIPT_DIR/postgresql-minfo.sql