17.5. Shutting Down the Server
There are several ways to shut down the database server. Under the hood, they all reduce to sending a signal to the supervisorpostgres
process.
If you are using a pre-packaged version ofPostgreSQL, and you used its provisions for starting the server, then you should also use its provisions for stopping the server. Consult the package-level documentation for details.
When managing the server directly, you can control the type of shutdown by sending different signals to thepostgres
process:
- SIGTERM
This is theSmart Shutdown mode. After receivingSIGTERM, the server disallows new connections, but lets existing sessions end their work normally. It shuts down only after all of the sessions terminate. If the server is in recovery when a smart shutdown is requested, recovery and streaming replication will be stopped only after all regular sessions have terminated.
- SIGINT
This is theFast Shutdown mode. The server disallows new connections and sends all existing server processesSIGTERM, which will cause them to abort their current transactions and exit promptly. It then waits for all server processes to exit and finally shuts down.
- SIGQUIT
This is theImmediate Shutdown mode. The server will sendSIGQUIT to all child processes and wait for them to terminate. If any do not terminate within 5 seconds, they will be sentSIGKILL. The supervisor server process exits as soon as all child processes have exited, without doing normal database shutdown processing. This will lead to recovery (by replaying the WAL log) upon next start-up. This is recommended only in emergencies.
Thepg_ctl program provides a convenient interface for sending these signals to shut down the server. Alternatively, you can send the signal directly using It is best not to useSIGKILL to shut down the server. Doing so will prevent the server from releasing shared memory and semaphores. Furthermore,SIGKILL kills the To terminate an individual session while allowing other sessions to continue, usekill
on non-Windows systems. ThePID of thepostgres
process can be found using theps
program, or from the filepostmaster.pid
in the data directory. For example, to do a fast shutdown:$
kill -INT `head -1 /usr/local/pgsql/data/postmaster.pid`
Important
postgres
process without letting it relay the signal to its subprocesses, so it might be necessary to kill the individual subprocesses by hand as well.pg_terminate_backend()
(seeTable 9.92) or send aSIGTERM signal to the child process associated with the session.