Installing &repmgr; from packagesinstallationfrom packages
We recommend installing &repmgr; using the available packages for your
system.
RedHat/CentOS/Fedorainstallationon Red Hat/CentOS/Fedora etc.
&repmgr; RPM packages for RedHat/CentOS variants and Fedora are available from the
EDBpublic repository; see following
section for details.
Currently the EDBpublic repository provides
support for RedHat/CentOS versions 6,7 and 8.
RPM packages for &repmgr; are also available via Yum through
the PostgreSQL Global Development Group (PGDG) RPM repository
(https://yum.postgresql.org/).
Follow the instructions for your distribution (RedHat, CentOS,
Fedora, etc.) and architecture as detailed there. Note that it can take some days
for new &repmgr; packages to become available via the this repository.
&repmgr; RPM packages are designed to be compatible with the community-provided PostgreSQL packages
and EDB's PostgreSQL Extended Server (formerly 2ndQPostgres).
They may not work with vendor-specific packages such as those provided by RedHat for RHEL
customers, as the PostgreSQL filesystem layout may be different to the community RPMs.
Please contact your support vendor for assistance.
See also FAQ entry
.
For more information on the package contents, including details of installation
paths and relevant service commands,
see the appendix section .
EDB public RPM yum repositoryEDB provides a dedicated yumpublic repository for EDB software,
including &repmgr;. We recommend using this for all future &repmgr; releases.
General instructions for using this repository can be found on its
homepage. Specific instructions
for installing &repmgr; follow below.
Installation
Locate the repository RPM for your PostgreSQL version from the list at:
https://dl.enterprisedb.com/
Install the repository definition for your distribution and PostgreSQL version
(this enables the EDB repository as a source of &repmgr; packages).
For example, for PostgreSQL 11 on Rocky Linux 8, execute:
curl https://dl.enterprisedb.com/default/release/get/14/rpm | sudo bash
Verify that the repository is installed with:
sudo dnf repolist
The output should contain two entries like this:
2ndquadrant-dl-default-release-pg14 2ndQuadrant packages (PG14) for 8 - x86_64
2ndquadrant-dl-default-release-pg14-debug 2ndQuadrant packages (PG14) for 8 - x86_64 - Debug
Install the &repmgr; version appropriate for your PostgreSQL version (e.g. repmgr14):
sudo dnf install repmgr14
To determine the names of available packages, execute:
dnf search repmgr
In CentOS 7 and earlier, use yum instead of dnf.
Compatibility with PGDG Repositories
The EDB &repmgr; yum repository packages use the same definitions and file system layout as the
main PGDG repository.
Normally yum will prioritize the repository with the most recent &repmgr; version.
Once the PGDG repository has been updated, it doesn't matter which repository
the packages are installed from.
To ensure the EDB repository is always prioritised, set the priority option
in the repository configuration file (e.g. /etc/yum.repos.d/2ndquadrant-dl-default-release-pg14.repo
accordingly.
With CentOS 7 and earlier, the package yum-plugin-priorities must be installed
to be able to set the repository priority.
Installing a specific package version
To install a specific package version, execute dnf --showduplicates list
for the package in question:
[root@localhost ~]# dnf --showduplicates list repmgr10
Last metadata expiration check: 0:09:15 ago on Fri 11 Mar 2022 01:09:19 AM UTC.
Installed Packages
repmgr10.x86_64 5.3.1-1.el8 @2ndquadrant-dl-default-release-pg10
Available Packages
repmgr10.x86_64 5.0.0-1.rhel8 pgdg10
repmgr10.x86_64 5.1.0-1.el8 2ndquadrant-dl-default-release-pg10
repmgr10.x86_64 5.1.0-1.rhel8 pgdg10
repmgr10.x86_64 5.1.0-2.el8 2ndquadrant-dl-default-release-pg10
repmgr10.x86_64 5.2.0-1.el8 2ndquadrant-dl-default-release-pg10
repmgr10.x86_64 5.2.0-1.rhel8 pgdg10
repmgr10.x86_64 5.2.1-1.el8 2ndquadrant-dl-default-release-pg10
repmgr10.x86_64 5.3.0-1.el8 2ndquadrant-dl-default-release-pg10
repmgr10.x86_64 5.3.1-1.el8 2ndquadrant-dl-default-release-pg10
then append the appropriate version number to the package name with a hyphen, e.g.:
[root@localhost ~]# dnf install repmgr10-5.3.0-1.el8Installing old packages
See appendix Installing old package versions
for details on how to retrieve older package versions.
Debian/Ubuntuinstallationon Debian/Ubuntu etc..deb packages for &repmgr; are available from the
PostgreSQL Community APT repository (https://apt.postgresql.org/).
Instructions can be found in the APT section of the PostgreSQL Wiki
(https://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/Apt).
For more information on the package contents, including details of installation
paths and relevant service commands,
see the appendix section .
EDB public apt repository for Debian/UbuntuEDB provides a
public apt repository for EDB software,
including &repmgr;.
General instructions for using this repository can be found on its
homepage. Specific instructions
for installing &repmgr; follow below.
Installation
Install the repository definition for your distribution and PostgreSQL version
(this enables the EDB repository as a source of &repmgr; packages) by executing:
curl https://dl.enterprisedb.com/default/release/get/deb | sudo bash
This will automatically install the following additional packages, if not already present:
lsb-releaseapt-transport-https
Install the &repmgr; version appropriate for your PostgreSQL version (e.g. repmgr11):
sudo apt-get install postgresql-11-repmgr
For packages for PostgreSQL 9.6 and earlier, the package name includes
a period between major and minor version numbers, e.g.
postgresql-9.6-repmgr.
Installing old packages
See appendix Installing old package versions
for details on how to retrieve older package versions.