On Sunday 09 April 2017 20:07:01 Adrian Klaver wrote:
> On 04/09/2017 03:27 PM, rob stone wrote:
> > Hello John,
> >
> > Just saw this message.
> >
> >> Still set to the default:
> >>
> >> #listen_addresses = 'localhost' # what IP address(es) to
> >> listen on;
> >>
> >> # comma-separated list of
> >>
> >> addresses;
> >>
> >> # defaults to 'localhost';
> >>
> >> use '*'
> >> for all
> >>
> >> # (change requires restart)
> >>
> >> #port = 5432 # (change requires restart)
> >>
> >> I did change the Unix domain socket directories:
> >>
> >> #unix_socket_directories = '/tmp' # comma-separated list of
> >> directories
> >> unix_socket_directories = '/tmp,/var/pgsql' # *****changed from
> >> default
> >> #
> >
> > Your set-up has Apache, PHP and Postgres all running from the same
> > machine.
> > So as far as running from there goes, it is "localhost".
>
> The issue is not localhost, it is the case when John is trying to
> connect without a host specifier and therefore is trying to reach the
> Unix socket.
>
> > There is no requirement to traverse a network. It is all on the same
> > physical machine.
> >
> > Alter your postgresql.conf file and remove the hash so that:-
> >
> > listen_addresses = 'localhost'
> >
> > is explicitly defined. Alter pg_hba.conf so that localhost is declared
> > and let's see what happens.
>
> It will be the same effect, the commented line is just showing that the
> default is 'localhost'. Though, John if you do decide to do this
> remember to restart the server to have the change take effect.
Yes, I learned that lesson years ago!
I have been restarting both Apache and Postgresql and closed the browser on
every change, and have rebooted a few times too, to ensure that all buffers
are not serving stale images. It only takes a minute and keeps a lot of
egg off my face!
>
> > Cheers,
> > Rob