Version 1 (modified by 3 years ago) ( diff ) | ,
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The PostgreSQL Apt Repository now hosts installs of PostGIS, pgRouting, pgpointcloud in addition to PostgreSQL.
The following describes how to install PostgreSQL 14, PostGIS 3.2, pgRouting 3.4 on an Ubuntu/Debian system. It is assumed to also work on Linux Mint, Lubuntu, and Xubuntu.
Run these in terminal:
Verify what version of Ubuntu you are running
sudo lsb_release -a
Add Respository to sources.list
You'll need to replace the nickname below with what you are running.
# prereqs needed for accept certs apt install ca-certificates gnupg
Adds pgdg keys and main repo
curl https://www.postgresql.org/media/keys/ACCC4CF8.asc | gpg --dearmor | sudo tee /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d/apt.postgresql.org.gpg >/dev/null sudo sh -c 'echo "deb http://apt.postgresql.org/pub/repos/apt $(lsb_release -cs)-pgdg main" > /etc/apt/sources.list.d/pgdg.list'
Testing Beta Packages
# If you want to try beta packages like not yet released PG15 and PostGIS 3.3 versions, you can do
sudo sh -c 'echo "deb http://apt.postgresql.org/pub/repos/apt $(lsb_release -cs)-pgdg-testing main 15" > /etc/apt/sources.list.d/pgdg-testing.list'
Allow dependencies to be installed
PostgreSQL relies on libpq and other things, sometimes your upstream packaging will get in the way. To ensure PostgreSQL apt repo takes, precendence, create a file as follows
# to allow dependencies to be installed cat << EOF >> /etc/apt/preferences.d/pgdg.pref Package: * Pin: release o=apt.postgresql.org Pin-Priority: 500 EOF
Installing
- Then update your catalog and installed software
sudo apt update sudo apt upgrade
- Install PostgreSQL replacing 14 with the version you want
sudo apt install postgresql-14
Apt system allows for installing multiple versions of PostgreSQL, so you could also install an additional, such as
sudo apt install postgresql-15
- You can check which clusters you are running using the pg_lsclusters commandline tool that is also installed
pg_lsclusters
- To see what extensions are available
apt search postgresql-14 | grep postgis
Install PostGIS, pgRouting
The following will install PostGIS and pgRouting (the -3 always refers to latest 3 version available. So at this time that would be 3.2.1)
sudo apt install postgresql-14-postgis-3 #to get the commandline tools shp2pgsql, raster2pgsql you need to do this sudo apt install postgis
To get pgRouting
- Check versions available
apt search postgresql-14 | grep pgrouting
# Install pgRouting sudo apt install postgresql-14-pgrouting
- A companion package for pgrouting is the osm2pgrouting which allows you to load osm data in a routable format. To install do the following
apt install osm2pgrouting
Enable PostGIS and pgRouting in database
Never install PostGIS or pgrouting in the postgres database, create a user database You can also enable the PostGIS extension here (or with the GUI as described below):
sudo -u postgres psql
CREATE DATABASE gisdb; ALTER DATABASE gisdb SET search_path=public,postgis,contrib; \connect gisdb; CREATE SCHEMA postgis; CREATE EXTENSION postgis SCHEMA postgis; SELECT postgis_full_version();
should give you output something like this:
postgis_full_version POSTGIS="3.2.1" [EXTENSION] PGSQL="140" GEOS="3.10.2-CAPI-1.16.0" PROJ="8.2.1" LIBXML="2.9.13" LIBJSON="0.15" LIBPROTOBUF="1.3.3" WAGYU="0.5.0 (Internal)" (1 row)
Installing postgis_sfcgal, if you need advanced 3D support
CREATE EXTENSION postgis_sfcgal SCHEMA postgis; SELECT postgis_full_version();
should give you:
postgis_full_version POSTGIS="3.2.1" [EXTENSION] PGSQL="140" GEOS="3.10.2-CAPI-1.16.0" SFCGAL="SFCGAL 1.4.1, CGAL 5.3.1, BOOST 1.74.0" PROJ="8.2.1" LIBXML="2.9.13" LIBJSON="0.15" LIBPROTOBUF="1.3.3" WAGYU="0.5.0 (Internal)"
Install pgRouting
CREATE EXTENSION pgrouting SCHEMA postgis; SELECT * FROM pgr_version();
Depending on the version, newer versions only output a version number as below. Older versions output a whole table
pgr_version ------------- 3.3.0
To get a full detail table on newer versions of pgrouting, use pgr_full_version();
Exit the psql console:
\q
Installing ogr_fdw
ogr_fdw is a spatial foreign data wrapper that uses GDAL under the hood. To install binaries:
sudo apt install postgresql-14-ogr-fdw
Once binaries are installed, you can enable in your database and link to external files as follows
\connect gisdb; CREATE EXTENSION ogr_fdw SCHEMA postgis; CREATE SCHEMA IF NOT EXISTS staging ; -- see a list of data sources supported SELECT * FROM unnest(ogr_fdw_drivers()); -- here I assume you have a file in root of /gis_data folder that postgres process has read rights to -- any file that gdal can read will do e.g shape file, CSV, etc CREATE SERVER svr_shp FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER ogr_fdw OPTIONS ( datasource '/gis_data', format 'ESRI Shapefile' ); -- this will link in all your shapefile tables in folder gis_data as foreign tables IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA ogr_all FROM SERVER svr_shp INTO staging;
More examples of loading you can find at https://github.com/pramsey/pgsql-ogr-fdw