🙎♂️ Renaming a Role (User)
Rename a PostgreSQL role in Docker by creating a temporary role, switching, renaming and deleting
CHEATSHEET
-
docker exec -it <POSTGRESQL_CONTAINER_NAME> psql -U <POSTGRESQL_USERNAME>
: Connect to the PostgreSQL server as<POSTGRESQL_USERNAME>
-
\du
: List all PostgreSQL roles -
CREATE ROLE <NEW_USER> SUPERUSER LOGIN PASSWORD '<USER_PASSWORD>';
: Create a new temporary role -
\q
: Exit the PostgreSQL prompt -
ALTER USER <OLD_USER_NAME> RENAME TO <NEW_USER_NAME>;
: Rename the desired role -
DROP ROLE <TEMPORARY_ROLE>;
: Delete the temporary role
DETAILS
Step 1: Connect to the PostgreSQL Server
To begin, connect to the PostgreSQL server within your Docker container using:
docker exec -it <POSTGRESQL_CONTAINER_NAME> psql -U <POSTGRESQL_USERNAME>
Step 2: Switch to a Different Role
⛔️ You’re likely connected with the role you intend to rename. PostgreSQL restricts renaming a role while connected to it.
✅ Solution: Connect as a Different Role
First, check existing roles:
\du
If there’s only one role (e.g., postgres
), you’ll need to create a temporary role, tmp
, switch to it, rename the target role, and then delete the temporary one.
Step 3: Create a Temporary Role
Create the new role by entering:
CREATE ROLE <NEW_USER> SUPERUSER LOGIN PASSWORD '<USER_PASSWORD>';
Exit the server using \q
and reconnect with the new temporary role:
docker exec -it <POSTGRESQL_CONTAINER_NAME> psql -U <NEW_USER>
Step 4: Rename the Role
Now, rename the original role using:
ALTER USER <OLD_USER_NAME> RENAME TO <NEW_USER_NAME>;
Confirm the role changes by running \du
. You should see both roles listed.
Step 5: Delete the Temporary Role
Finally, confirm the temporary role exists with \du
:
Then, delete it with:
DROP ROLE <TEMPORARY_ROLE>;
Check your roles again with \du
to verify the temporary role was removed.
Happy Me! 🌱
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