16.2. Requirements
In general, a modern Unix-compatible platform should be able to runPostgreSQL. The platforms that had received specific testing at the time of release are listed inSection 16.6 below. In the The following software packages are required for buildingPostgreSQL: GNUmake version 3.80 or newer is required; othermake programs or olderGNUmake versions willnot work. (GNUmake is sometimes installed under the name You need anISO/ANSI C compiler (at least C89-compliant). Recent versions ofGCC are recommended, butPostgreSQL is known to build using a wide variety of compilers from different vendors. tar is required to unpack the source distribution, in addition to eithergzip orbzip2. TheGNUReadline library is used by default. It allowspsql (the PostgreSQL command line SQL interpreter) to remember each command you type, and allows you to use arrow keys to recall and edit previous commands. This is very helpful and is strongly recommended. If you don't want to use it then you must specify the Thezlib compression library is used by default. If you don't want to use it then you must specify the The following packages are optional. They are not required in the default configuration, but they are needed when certain build options are enabled, as explained below: To build the server programming languagePL/Perl you need a fullPerl installation, including the If you intend to make more than incidental use ofPL/Perl, you should ensure that thePerl installation was built with the To build thePL/Python server programming language, you need aPython installation with the header files and thesysconfig module. The minimum required version isPython 2.7.Python 3 is supported if it's version 3.2 or later; but seeSection 45.1 when using Python 3. SincePL/Python will be a shared library, the To build thePL/Tcl procedural language, you of course need aTcl installation. The minimum required version isTcl 8.4. To enable Native Language Support (NLS), that is, the ability to display a program's messages in a language other than English, you need an implementation of theGettextAPI. Some operating systems have this built-in (e.g.,Linux,NetBSD,Solaris), for other systems you can download an add-on package fromhttp://www.gnu.org/software/gettext/. If you are using theGettext implementation in theGNU C library then you will additionally need theGNU Gettext package for some utility programs. For any of the other implementations you will not need it. You needOpenSSL, if you want to support encrypted client connections. The minimum required version is 0.9.8. You needKerberos,OpenLDAP, and/orPAM, if you want to support authentication using those services. To build thePostgreSQL documentation, there is a separate set of requirements; seeSection J.2. If you are building from aGit tree instead of using a released source package, or if you want to do server development, you also need the following packages: GNUFlex andBison are needed to build from a Git checkout, or if you changed the actual scanner and parser definition files. If you need them, be sure to getFlex 2.5.31 or later andBison 1.875 or later. Otherlex andyacc programs cannot be used. Perl 5.8.3 or later is needed to build from a Git checkout, or if you changed the input files for any of the build steps that use Perl scripts. If building on Windows you will needPerl in any case.Perl is also required to run some test suites. If you need to get aGNU package, you can find it at your localGNU mirror site (seehttp://www.gnu.org/order/ftp.html for a list) or atftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/. Also check that you have sufficient disk space. You will need about 100 MB for the source tree during compilation and about 20 MB for the installation directory. An empty database cluster takes about 35 MB; databases take about five times the amount of space that a flat text file with the same data would take. If you are going to run the regression tests you will temporarily need up to an extra 150 MB. Use thedoc
subdirectory of the distribution there are several platform-specificFAQ documents you might wish to consult if you are having trouble.gmake
.) To test forGNUmake enter:make --version
--without-readline
option toconfigure
. As an alternative, you can often use the BSD-licensedlibedit
library, originally developed onNetBSD. Thelibedit
library is GNUReadline-compatible and is used iflibreadline
is not found, or if--with-libedit-preferred
is used as an option toconfigure
. If you are using a package-based Linux distribution, be aware that you need both thereadline
andreadline-devel
packages, if those are separate in your distribution.--without-zlib
option toconfigure
. Using this option disables support for compressed archives inpg_dump andpg_restore.libperl
library and the header files. The minimum required version isPerl 5.8.3. SincePL/Perl will be a shared library, thelibperl
library must be a shared library also on most platforms. This appears to be the default in recentPerl versions, but it was not in earlier versions, and in any case it is the choice of whomever installed Perl at your site.configure
will fail if buildingPL/Perl is selected but it cannot find a sharedlibperl
. In that case, you will have to rebuild and installPerl manually to be able to buildPL/Perl. During the configuration process forPerl, request a shared library.usemultiplicity
option enabled (perl -V
will show whether this is the case).libpython
library must be a shared library also on most platforms. This is not the case in a defaultPython installation built from source, but a shared library is available in many operating system distributions.configure
will fail if buildingPL/Python is selected but it cannot find a sharedlibpython
. That might mean that you either have to install additional packages or rebuild (part of) yourPython installation to provide this shared library. When building from source, runPython's configure with the--enable-shared
flag.df
command to check free disk space.