Configuration file repmgr.conf configuration repmgr.conf repmgr and &repmgrd; use a common configuration file, by default called repmgr.conf (although any name can be used if explicitly specified). repmgr.conf must contain a number of required parameters, including the database connection string for the local node and the location of its data directory; other values will be inferred from defaults if not explicitly supplied. See section for more details. Configuration file format repmgr.conf format repmgr.conf is a plain text file with one parameter/value combination per line. Whitespace is insignificant (except within a quoted parameter value) and blank lines are ignored. Hash marks (#) designate the remainder of the line as a comment. Parameter values that are not simple identifiers or numbers should be single-quoted. Note that single quote cannot be embedded in a parameter value. &repmgr; will interpret double-quotes as being part of a string value; only use single quotes to quote parameter values. Example of a valid repmgr.conf file: # repmgr.conf node_id=1 node_name= node1 conninfo ='host=node1 dbname=repmgr user=repmgr connect_timeout=2' data_directory = /var/lib/pgsql/11/data Configuration file location repmgr.conf location The configuration file will be searched for in the following locations: a configuration file specified by the -f/--config-file command line option a location specified by the package maintainer (if repmgr as installed from a package and the package maintainer has specified the configuration file location) repmgr.conf in the local directory /etc/repmgr.conf the directory reported by pg_config --sysconfdir Note that if a file is explicitly specified with -f/--config-file, an error will be raised if it is not found or not readable, and no attempt will be made to check default locations; this is to prevent repmgr unexpectedly reading the wrong configuration file. If providing the configuration file location with -f/--config-file, avoid using a relative path, particularly when executing and , as &repmgr; stores the configuration file location in the repmgr metadata for use when &repmgr; is executed remotely (e.g. during ). &repmgr; will attempt to convert the a relative path into an absolute one, but this may not be the same as the path you would explicitly provide (e.g. ./repmgr.conf might be converted to /path/to/./repmgr.conf, whereas you'd normally write /path/to/repmgr.conf).