1PSQL(1)                  PostgreSQL 14.3 Documentation                 PSQL(1)
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NAME

6       psql - PostgreSQL interactive terminal
7

SYNOPSIS

9       psql [option...] [dbname [username]]
10

DESCRIPTION

12       psql is a terminal-based front-end to PostgreSQL. It enables you to
13       type in queries interactively, issue them to PostgreSQL, and see the
14       query results. Alternatively, input can be from a file or from command
15       line arguments. In addition, psql provides a number of meta-commands
16       and various shell-like features to facilitate writing scripts and
17       automating a wide variety of tasks.
18

OPTIONS

20       -a
21       --echo-all
22           Print all nonempty input lines to standard output as they are read.
23           (This does not apply to lines read interactively.) This is
24           equivalent to setting the variable ECHO to all.
25
26       -A
27       --no-align
28           Switches to unaligned output mode. (The default output mode is
29           aligned.) This is equivalent to \pset format unaligned.
30
31       -b
32       --echo-errors
33           Print failed SQL commands to standard error output. This is
34           equivalent to setting the variable ECHO to errors.
35
36       -c command
37       --command=command
38           Specifies that psql is to execute the given command string,
39           command. This option can be repeated and combined in any order with
40           the -f option. When either -c or -f is specified, psql does not
41           read commands from standard input; instead it terminates after
42           processing all the -c and -f options in sequence.
43
44           command must be either a command string that is completely parsable
45           by the server (i.e., it contains no psql-specific features), or a
46           single backslash command. Thus you cannot mix SQL and psql
47           meta-commands within a -c option. To achieve that, you could use
48           repeated -c options or pipe the string into psql, for example:
49
50               psql -c '\x' -c 'SELECT * FROM foo;'
51
52           or
53
54               echo '\x \\ SELECT * FROM foo;' | psql
55
56           (\\ is the separator meta-command.)
57
58           Each SQL command string passed to -c is sent to the server as a
59           single request. Because of this, the server executes it as a single
60           transaction even if the string contains multiple SQL commands,
61           unless there are explicit BEGIN/COMMIT commands included in the
62           string to divide it into multiple transactions. (See
63           Section 53.2.2.1 for more details about how the server handles
64           multi-query strings.) Also, psql only prints the result of the last
65           SQL command in the string. This is different from the behavior when
66           the same string is read from a file or fed to psql's standard
67           input, because then psql sends each SQL command separately.
68
69           Because of this behavior, putting more than one SQL command in a
70           single -c string often has unexpected results. It's better to use
71           repeated -c commands or feed multiple commands to psql's standard
72           input, either using echo as illustrated above, or via a shell
73           here-document, for example:
74
75               psql <<EOF
76               \x
77               SELECT * FROM foo;
78               EOF
79
80       --csv
81           Switches to CSV (Comma-Separated Values) output mode. This is
82           equivalent to \pset format csv.
83
84       -d dbname
85       --dbname=dbname
86           Specifies the name of the database to connect to. This is
87           equivalent to specifying dbname as the first non-option argument on
88           the command line. The dbname can be a connection string. If so,
89           connection string parameters will override any conflicting command
90           line options.
91
92       -e
93       --echo-queries
94           Copy all SQL commands sent to the server to standard output as
95           well. This is equivalent to setting the variable ECHO to queries.
96
97       -E
98       --echo-hidden
99           Echo the actual queries generated by \d and other backslash
100           commands. You can use this to study psql's internal operations.
101           This is equivalent to setting the variable ECHO_HIDDEN to on.
102
103       -f filename
104       --file=filename
105           Read commands from the file filename, rather than standard input.
106           This option can be repeated and combined in any order with the -c
107           option. When either -c or -f is specified, psql does not read
108           commands from standard input; instead it terminates after
109           processing all the -c and -f options in sequence. Except for that,
110           this option is largely equivalent to the meta-command \i.
111
112           If filename is - (hyphen), then standard input is read until an EOF
113           indication or \q meta-command. This can be used to intersperse
114           interactive input with input from files. Note however that Readline
115           is not used in this case (much as if -n had been specified).
116
117           Using this option is subtly different from writing psql < filename.
118           In general, both will do what you expect, but using -f enables some
119           nice features such as error messages with line numbers. There is
120           also a slight chance that using this option will reduce the
121           start-up overhead. On the other hand, the variant using the shell's
122           input redirection is (in theory) guaranteed to yield exactly the
123           same output you would have received had you entered everything by
124           hand.
125
126       -F separator
127       --field-separator=separator
128           Use separator as the field separator for unaligned output. This is
129           equivalent to \pset fieldsep or \f.
130
131       -h hostname
132       --host=hostname
133           Specifies the host name of the machine on which the server is
134           running. If the value begins with a slash, it is used as the
135           directory for the Unix-domain socket.
136
137       -H
138       --html
139           Switches to HTML output mode. This is equivalent to \pset format
140           html or the \H command.
141
142       -l
143       --list
144           List all available databases, then exit. Other non-connection
145           options are ignored. This is similar to the meta-command \list.
146
147           When this option is used, psql will connect to the database
148           postgres, unless a different database is named on the command line
149           (option -d or non-option argument, possibly via a service entry,
150           but not via an environment variable).
151
152       -L filename
153       --log-file=filename
154           Write all query output into file filename, in addition to the
155           normal output destination.
156
157       -n
158       --no-readline
159           Do not use Readline for line editing and do not use the command
160           history. This can be useful to turn off tab expansion when cutting
161           and pasting.
162
163       -o filename
164       --output=filename
165           Put all query output into file filename. This is equivalent to the
166           command \o.
167
168       -p port
169       --port=port
170           Specifies the TCP port or the local Unix-domain socket file
171           extension on which the server is listening for connections.
172           Defaults to the value of the PGPORT environment variable or, if not
173           set, to the port specified at compile time, usually 5432.
174
175       -P assignment
176       --pset=assignment
177           Specifies printing options, in the style of \pset. Note that here
178           you have to separate name and value with an equal sign instead of a
179           space. For example, to set the output format to LaTeX, you could
180           write -P format=latex.
181
182       -q
183       --quiet
184           Specifies that psql should do its work quietly. By default, it
185           prints welcome messages and various informational output. If this
186           option is used, none of this happens. This is useful with the -c
187           option. This is equivalent to setting the variable QUIET to on.
188
189       -R separator
190       --record-separator=separator
191           Use separator as the record separator for unaligned output. This is
192           equivalent to \pset recordsep.
193
194       -s
195       --single-step
196           Run in single-step mode. That means the user is prompted before
197           each command is sent to the server, with the option to cancel
198           execution as well. Use this to debug scripts.
199
200       -S
201       --single-line
202           Runs in single-line mode where a newline terminates an SQL command,
203           as a semicolon does.
204
205               Note
206               This mode is provided for those who insist on it, but you are
207               not necessarily encouraged to use it. In particular, if you mix
208               SQL and meta-commands on a line the order of execution might
209               not always be clear to the inexperienced user.
210
211       -t
212       --tuples-only
213           Turn off printing of column names and result row count footers,
214           etc. This is equivalent to \t or \pset tuples_only.
215
216       -T table_options
217       --table-attr=table_options
218           Specifies options to be placed within the HTML table tag. See \pset
219           tableattr for details.
220
221       -U username
222       --username=username
223           Connect to the database as the user username instead of the
224           default. (You must have permission to do so, of course.)
225
226       -v assignment
227       --set=assignment
228       --variable=assignment
229           Perform a variable assignment, like the \set meta-command. Note
230           that you must separate name and value, if any, by an equal sign on
231           the command line. To unset a variable, leave off the equal sign. To
232           set a variable with an empty value, use the equal sign but leave
233           off the value. These assignments are done during command line
234           processing, so variables that reflect connection state will get
235           overwritten later.
236
237       -V
238       --version
239           Print the psql version and exit.
240
241       -w
242       --no-password
243           Never issue a password prompt. If the server requires password
244           authentication and a password is not available from other sources
245           such as a .pgpass file, the connection attempt will fail. This
246           option can be useful in batch jobs and scripts where no user is
247           present to enter a password.
248
249           Note that this option will remain set for the entire session, and
250           so it affects uses of the meta-command \connect as well as the
251           initial connection attempt.
252
253       -W
254       --password
255           Force psql to prompt for a password before connecting to a
256           database, even if the password will not be used.
257
258           If the server requires password authentication and a password is
259           not available from other sources such as a .pgpass file, psql will
260           prompt for a password in any case. However, psql will waste a
261           connection attempt finding out that the server wants a password. In
262           some cases it is worth typing -W to avoid the extra connection
263           attempt.
264
265           Note that this option will remain set for the entire session, and
266           so it affects uses of the meta-command \connect as well as the
267           initial connection attempt.
268
269       -x
270       --expanded
271           Turn on the expanded table formatting mode. This is equivalent to
272           \x or \pset expanded.
273
274       -X,
275       --no-psqlrc
276           Do not read the start-up file (neither the system-wide psqlrc file
277           nor the user's ~/.psqlrc file).
278
279       -z
280       --field-separator-zero
281           Set the field separator for unaligned output to a zero byte. This
282           is equivalent to \pset fieldsep_zero.
283
284       -0
285       --record-separator-zero
286           Set the record separator for unaligned output to a zero byte. This
287           is useful for interfacing, for example, with xargs -0. This is
288           equivalent to \pset recordsep_zero.
289
290       -1
291       --single-transaction
292           This option can only be used in combination with one or more -c
293           and/or -f options. It causes psql to issue a BEGIN command before
294           the first such option and a COMMIT command after the last one,
295           thereby wrapping all the commands into a single transaction. This
296           ensures that either all the commands complete successfully, or no
297           changes are applied.
298
299           If the commands themselves contain BEGIN, COMMIT, or ROLLBACK, this
300           option will not have the desired effects. Also, if an individual
301           command cannot be executed inside a transaction block, specifying
302           this option will cause the whole transaction to fail.
303
304       -?
305       --help[=topic]
306           Show help about psql and exit. The optional topic parameter
307           (defaulting to options) selects which part of psql is explained:
308           commands describes psql's backslash commands; options describes the
309           command-line options that can be passed to psql; and variables
310           shows help about psql configuration variables.
311

EXIT STATUS

313       psql returns 0 to the shell if it finished normally, 1 if a fatal error
314       of its own occurs (e.g., out of memory, file not found), 2 if the
315       connection to the server went bad and the session was not interactive,
316       and 3 if an error occurred in a script and the variable ON_ERROR_STOP
317       was set.
318

USAGE

320   Connecting to a Database
321       psql is a regular PostgreSQL client application. In order to connect to
322       a database you need to know the name of your target database, the host
323       name and port number of the server, and what user name you want to
324       connect as.  psql can be told about those parameters via command line
325       options, namely -d, -h, -p, and -U respectively. If an argument is
326       found that does not belong to any option it will be interpreted as the
327       database name (or the user name, if the database name is already
328       given). Not all of these options are required; there are useful
329       defaults. If you omit the host name, psql will connect via a
330       Unix-domain socket to a server on the local host, or via TCP/IP to
331       localhost on machines that don't have Unix-domain sockets. The default
332       port number is determined at compile time. Since the database server
333       uses the same default, you will not have to specify the port in most
334       cases. The default user name is your operating-system user name, as is
335       the default database name. Note that you cannot just connect to any
336       database under any user name. Your database administrator should have
337       informed you about your access rights.
338
339       When the defaults aren't quite right, you can save yourself some typing
340       by setting the environment variables PGDATABASE, PGHOST, PGPORT and/or
341       PGUSER to appropriate values. (For additional environment variables,
342       see Section 34.15.) It is also convenient to have a ~/.pgpass file to
343       avoid regularly having to type in passwords. See Section 34.16 for more
344       information.
345
346       An alternative way to specify connection parameters is in a conninfo
347       string or a URI, which is used instead of a database name. This
348       mechanism give you very wide control over the connection. For example:
349
350           $ psql "service=myservice sslmode=require"
351           $ psql postgresql://dbmaster:5433/mydb?sslmode=require
352
353       This way you can also use LDAP for connection parameter lookup as
354       described in Section 34.18. See Section 34.1.2 for more information on
355       all the available connection options.
356
357       If the connection could not be made for any reason (e.g., insufficient
358       privileges, server is not running on the targeted host, etc.), psql
359       will return an error and terminate.
360
361       If both standard input and standard output are a terminal, then psql
362       sets the client encoding to “auto”, which will detect the appropriate
363       client encoding from the locale settings (LC_CTYPE environment variable
364       on Unix systems). If this doesn't work out as expected, the client
365       encoding can be overridden using the environment variable
366       PGCLIENTENCODING.
367
368   Entering SQL Commands
369       In normal operation, psql provides a prompt with the name of the
370       database to which psql is currently connected, followed by the string
371       =>. For example:
372
373           $ psql testdb
374           psql (14.3)
375           Type "help" for help.
376
377           testdb=>
378
379       At the prompt, the user can type in SQL commands. Ordinarily, input
380       lines are sent to the server when a command-terminating semicolon is
381       reached. An end of line does not terminate a command. Thus commands can
382       be spread over several lines for clarity. If the command was sent and
383       executed without error, the results of the command are displayed on the
384       screen.
385
386       If untrusted users have access to a database that has not adopted a
387       secure schema usage pattern, begin your session by removing
388       publicly-writable schemas from search_path. One can add
389       options=-csearch_path= to the connection string or issue SELECT
390       pg_catalog.set_config('search_path', '', false) before other SQL
391       commands. This consideration is not specific to psql; it applies to
392       every interface for executing arbitrary SQL commands.
393
394       Whenever a command is executed, psql also polls for asynchronous
395       notification events generated by LISTEN and NOTIFY.
396
397       While C-style block comments are passed to the server for processing
398       and removal, SQL-standard comments are removed by psql.
399
400   Meta-Commands
401       Anything you enter in psql that begins with an unquoted backslash is a
402       psql meta-command that is processed by psql itself. These commands make
403       psql more useful for administration or scripting. Meta-commands are
404       often called slash or backslash commands.
405
406       The format of a psql command is the backslash, followed immediately by
407       a command verb, then any arguments. The arguments are separated from
408       the command verb and each other by any number of whitespace characters.
409
410       To include whitespace in an argument you can quote it with single
411       quotes. To include a single quote in an argument, write two single
412       quotes within single-quoted text. Anything contained in single quotes
413       is furthermore subject to C-like substitutions for \n (new line), \t
414       (tab), \b (backspace), \r (carriage return), \f (form feed), \digits
415       (octal), and \xdigits (hexadecimal). A backslash preceding any other
416       character within single-quoted text quotes that single character,
417       whatever it is.
418
419       If an unquoted colon (:) followed by a psql variable name appears
420       within an argument, it is replaced by the variable's value, as
421       described in SQL Interpolation below. The forms :'variable_name' and
422       :"variable_name" described there work as well. The :{?variable_name}
423       syntax allows testing whether a variable is defined. It is substituted
424       by TRUE or FALSE. Escaping the colon with a backslash protects it from
425       substitution.
426
427       Within an argument, text that is enclosed in backquotes (`) is taken as
428       a command line that is passed to the shell. The output of the command
429       (with any trailing newline removed) replaces the backquoted text.
430       Within the text enclosed in backquotes, no special quoting or other
431       processing occurs, except that appearances of :variable_name where
432       variable_name is a psql variable name are replaced by the variable's
433       value. Also, appearances of :'variable_name' are replaced by the
434       variable's value suitably quoted to become a single shell command
435       argument. (The latter form is almost always preferable, unless you are
436       very sure of what is in the variable.) Because carriage return and line
437       feed characters cannot be safely quoted on all platforms, the
438       :'variable_name' form prints an error message and does not substitute
439       the variable value when such characters appear in the value.
440
441       Some commands take an SQL identifier (such as a table name) as
442       argument. These arguments follow the syntax rules of SQL: Unquoted
443       letters are forced to lowercase, while double quotes (") protect
444       letters from case conversion and allow incorporation of whitespace into
445       the identifier. Within double quotes, paired double quotes reduce to a
446       single double quote in the resulting name. For example, FOO"BAR"BAZ is
447       interpreted as fooBARbaz, and "A weird"" name" becomes A weird" name.
448
449       Parsing for arguments stops at the end of the line, or when another
450       unquoted backslash is found. An unquoted backslash is taken as the
451       beginning of a new meta-command. The special sequence \\ (two
452       backslashes) marks the end of arguments and continues parsing SQL
453       commands, if any. That way SQL and psql commands can be freely mixed on
454       a line. But in any case, the arguments of a meta-command cannot
455       continue beyond the end of the line.
456
457       Many of the meta-commands act on the current query buffer. This is
458       simply a buffer holding whatever SQL command text has been typed but
459       not yet sent to the server for execution. This will include previous
460       input lines as well as any text appearing before the meta-command on
461       the same line.
462
463       The following meta-commands are defined:
464
465       \a
466           If the current table output format is unaligned, it is switched to
467           aligned. If it is not unaligned, it is set to unaligned. This
468           command is kept for backwards compatibility. See \pset for a more
469           general solution.
470
471       \c or \connect [ -reuse-previous=on|off ] [ dbname [ username ] [ host
472       ] [ port ] | conninfo ]
473           Establishes a new connection to a PostgreSQL server. The connection
474           parameters to use can be specified either using a positional syntax
475           (one or more of database name, user, host, and port), or using a
476           conninfo connection string as detailed in Section 34.1.1. If no
477           arguments are given, a new connection is made using the same
478           parameters as before.
479
480           Specifying any of dbname, username, host or port as - is equivalent
481           to omitting that parameter.
482
483           The new connection can re-use connection parameters from the
484           previous connection; not only database name, user, host, and port,
485           but other settings such as sslmode. By default, parameters are
486           re-used in the positional syntax, but not when a conninfo string is
487           given. Passing a first argument of -reuse-previous=on or
488           -reuse-previous=off overrides that default. If parameters are
489           re-used, then any parameter not explicitly specified as a
490           positional parameter or in the conninfo string is taken from the
491           existing connection's parameters. An exception is that if the host
492           setting is changed from its previous value using the positional
493           syntax, any hostaddr setting present in the existing connection's
494           parameters is dropped. Also, any password used for the existing
495           connection will be re-used only if the user, host, and port
496           settings are not changed. When the command neither specifies nor
497           reuses a particular parameter, the libpq default is used.
498
499           If the new connection is successfully made, the previous connection
500           is closed. If the connection attempt fails (wrong user name, access
501           denied, etc.), the previous connection will be kept if psql is in
502           interactive mode. But when executing a non-interactive script, the
503           old connection is closed and an error is reported. That may or may
504           not terminate the script; if it does not, all database-accessing
505           commands will fail until another \connect command is successfully
506           executed. This distinction was chosen as a user convenience against
507           typos on the one hand, and a safety mechanism that scripts are not
508           accidentally acting on the wrong database on the other hand. Note
509           that whenever a \connect command attempts to re-use parameters, the
510           values re-used are those of the last successful connection, not of
511           any failed attempts made subsequently. However, in the case of a
512           non-interactive \connect failure, no parameters are allowed to be
513           re-used later, since the script would likely be expecting the
514           values from the failed \connect to be re-used.
515
516           Examples:
517
518               => \c mydb myuser host.dom 6432
519               => \c service=foo
520               => \c "host=localhost port=5432 dbname=mydb connect_timeout=10 sslmode=disable"
521               => \c -reuse-previous=on sslmode=require    -- changes only sslmode
522               => \c postgresql://tom@localhost/mydb?application_name=myapp
523
524       \C [ title ]
525           Sets the title of any tables being printed as the result of a query
526           or unset any such title. This command is equivalent to \pset title
527           title. (The name of this command derives from “caption”, as it was
528           previously only used to set the caption in an HTML table.)
529
530       \cd [ directory ]
531           Changes the current working directory to directory. Without
532           argument, changes to the current user's home directory.
533
534               Tip
535               To print your current working directory, use \! pwd.
536
537       \conninfo
538           Outputs information about the current database connection.
539
540       \copy { table [ ( column_list ) ] } from { 'filename' | program
541       'command' | stdin | pstdin } [ [ with ] ( option [, ...] ) ] [ where
542       condition ]
543       \copy { table [ ( column_list ) ] | ( query ) } to { 'filename' |
544       program 'command' | stdout | pstdout } [ [ with ] ( option [, ...] ) ]
545           Performs a frontend (client) copy. This is an operation that runs
546           an SQL COPY command, but instead of the server reading or writing
547           the specified file, psql reads or writes the file and routes the
548           data between the server and the local file system. This means that
549           file accessibility and privileges are those of the local user, not
550           the server, and no SQL superuser privileges are required.
551
552           When program is specified, command is executed by psql and the data
553           passed from or to command is routed between the server and the
554           client. Again, the execution privileges are those of the local
555           user, not the server, and no SQL superuser privileges are required.
556
557           For \copy ... from stdin, data rows are read from the same source
558           that issued the command, continuing until \.  is read or the stream
559           reaches EOF. This option is useful for populating tables in-line
560           within an SQL script file. For \copy ... to stdout, output is sent
561           to the same place as psql command output, and the COPY count
562           command status is not printed (since it might be confused with a
563           data row). To read/write psql's standard input or output regardless
564           of the current command source or \o option, write from pstdin or to
565           pstdout.
566
567           The syntax of this command is similar to that of the SQL COPY
568           command. All options other than the data source/destination are as
569           specified for COPY. Because of this, special parsing rules apply to
570           the \copy meta-command. Unlike most other meta-commands, the entire
571           remainder of the line is always taken to be the arguments of \copy,
572           and neither variable interpolation nor backquote expansion are
573           performed in the arguments.
574
575               Tip
576               Another way to obtain the same result as \copy ... to is to use
577               the SQL COPY ... TO STDOUT command and terminate it with \g
578               filename or \g |program. Unlike \copy, this method allows the
579               command to span multiple lines; also, variable interpolation
580               and backquote expansion can be used.
581
582               Tip
583               These operations are not as efficient as the SQL COPY command
584               with a file or program data source or destination, because all
585               data must pass through the client/server connection. For large
586               amounts of data the SQL command might be preferable.
587
588       \copyright
589           Shows the copyright and distribution terms of PostgreSQL.
590
591       \crosstabview [ colV [ colH [ colD [ sortcolH ] ] ] ]
592           Executes the current query buffer (like \g) and shows the results
593           in a crosstab grid. The query must return at least three columns.
594           The output column identified by colV becomes a vertical header and
595           the output column identified by colH becomes a horizontal header.
596           colD identifies the output column to display within the grid.
597           sortcolH identifies an optional sort column for the horizontal
598           header.
599
600           Each column specification can be a column number (starting at 1) or
601           a column name. The usual SQL case folding and quoting rules apply
602           to column names. If omitted, colV is taken as column 1 and colH as
603           column 2.  colH must differ from colV. If colD is not specified,
604           then there must be exactly three columns in the query result, and
605           the column that is neither colV nor colH is taken to be colD.
606
607           The vertical header, displayed as the leftmost column, contains the
608           values found in column colV, in the same order as in the query
609           results, but with duplicates removed.
610
611           The horizontal header, displayed as the first row, contains the
612           values found in column colH, with duplicates removed. By default,
613           these appear in the same order as in the query results. But if the
614           optional sortcolH argument is given, it identifies a column whose
615           values must be integer numbers, and the values from colH will
616           appear in the horizontal header sorted according to the
617           corresponding sortcolH values.
618
619           Inside the crosstab grid, for each distinct value x of colH and
620           each distinct value y of colV, the cell located at the intersection
621           (x,y) contains the value of the colD column in the query result row
622           for which the value of colH is x and the value of colV is y. If
623           there is no such row, the cell is empty. If there are multiple such
624           rows, an error is reported.
625
626       \d[S+] [ pattern ]
627           For each relation (table, view, materialized view, index, sequence,
628           or foreign table) or composite type matching the pattern, show all
629           columns, their types, the tablespace (if not the default) and any
630           special attributes such as NOT NULL or defaults. Associated
631           indexes, constraints, rules, and triggers are also shown. For
632           foreign tables, the associated foreign server is shown as well.
633           (“Matching the pattern” is defined in Patterns below.)
634
635           For some types of relation, \d shows additional information for
636           each column: column values for sequences, indexed expressions for
637           indexes, and foreign data wrapper options for foreign tables.
638
639           The command form \d+ is identical, except that more information is
640           displayed: any comments associated with the columns of the table
641           are shown, as is the presence of OIDs in the table, the view
642           definition if the relation is a view, a non-default replica
643           identity setting and the access method name if the relation has an
644           access method.
645
646           By default, only user-created objects are shown; supply a pattern
647           or the S modifier to include system objects.
648
649               Note
650               If \d is used without a pattern argument, it is equivalent to
651               \dtvmsE which will show a list of all visible tables, views,
652               materialized views, sequences and foreign tables. This is
653               purely a convenience measure.
654
655       \da[S] [ pattern ]
656           Lists aggregate functions, together with their return type and the
657           data types they operate on. If pattern is specified, only
658           aggregates whose names match the pattern are shown. By default,
659           only user-created objects are shown; supply a pattern or the S
660           modifier to include system objects.
661
662       \dA[+] [ pattern ]
663           Lists access methods. If pattern is specified, only access methods
664           whose names match the pattern are shown. If + is appended to the
665           command name, each access method is listed with its associated
666           handler function and description.
667
668       \dAc[+] [access-method-pattern [input-type-pattern]]
669           Lists operator classes (see Section 38.16.1). If
670           access-method-pattern is specified, only operator classes
671           associated with access methods whose names match that pattern are
672           listed. If input-type-pattern is specified, only operator classes
673           associated with input types whose names match that pattern are
674           listed. If + is appended to the command name, each operator class
675           is listed with its associated operator family and owner.
676
677       \dAf[+] [access-method-pattern [input-type-pattern]]
678           Lists operator families (see Section 38.16.5). If
679           access-method-pattern is specified, only operator families
680           associated with access methods whose names match that pattern are
681           listed. If input-type-pattern is specified, only operator families
682           associated with input types whose names match that pattern are
683           listed. If + is appended to the command name, each operator family
684           is listed with its owner.
685
686       \dAo[+] [access-method-pattern [operator-family-pattern]]
687           Lists operators associated with operator families (see
688           Section 38.16.2). If access-method-pattern is specified, only
689           members of operator families associated with access methods whose
690           names match that pattern are listed. If operator-family-pattern is
691           specified, only members of operator families whose names match that
692           pattern are listed. If + is appended to the command name, each
693           operator is listed with its sort operator family (if it is an
694           ordering operator).
695
696       \dAp[+] [access-method-pattern [operator-family-pattern]]
697           Lists support functions associated with operator families (see
698           Section 38.16.3). If access-method-pattern is specified, only
699           functions of operator families associated with access methods whose
700           names match that pattern are listed. If operator-family-pattern is
701           specified, only functions of operator families whose names match
702           that pattern are listed. If + is appended to the command name,
703           functions are displayed verbosely, with their actual parameter
704           lists.
705
706       \db[+] [ pattern ]
707           Lists tablespaces. If pattern is specified, only tablespaces whose
708           names match the pattern are shown. If + is appended to the command
709           name, each tablespace is listed with its associated options,
710           on-disk size, permissions and description.
711
712       \dc[S+] [ pattern ]
713           Lists conversions between character-set encodings. If pattern is
714           specified, only conversions whose names match the pattern are
715           listed. By default, only user-created objects are shown; supply a
716           pattern or the S modifier to include system objects. If + is
717           appended to the command name, each object is listed with its
718           associated description.
719
720       \dC[+] [ pattern ]
721           Lists type casts. If pattern is specified, only casts whose source
722           or target types match the pattern are listed. If + is appended to
723           the command name, each object is listed with its associated
724           description.
725
726       \dd[S] [ pattern ]
727           Shows the descriptions of objects of type constraint, operator
728           class, operator family, rule, and trigger. All other comments may
729           be viewed by the respective backslash commands for those object
730           types.
731
732           \dd displays descriptions for objects matching the pattern, or of
733           visible objects of the appropriate type if no argument is given.
734           But in either case, only objects that have a description are
735           listed. By default, only user-created objects are shown; supply a
736           pattern or the S modifier to include system objects.
737
738           Descriptions for objects can be created with the COMMENT SQL
739           command.
740
741       \dD[S+] [ pattern ]
742           Lists domains. If pattern is specified, only domains whose names
743           match the pattern are shown. By default, only user-created objects
744           are shown; supply a pattern or the S modifier to include system
745           objects. If + is appended to the command name, each object is
746           listed with its associated permissions and description.
747
748       \ddp [ pattern ]
749           Lists default access privilege settings. An entry is shown for each
750           role (and schema, if applicable) for which the default privilege
751           settings have been changed from the built-in defaults. If pattern
752           is specified, only entries whose role name or schema name matches
753           the pattern are listed.
754
755           The ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES command is used to set default access
756           privileges. The meaning of the privilege display is explained in
757           Section 5.7.
758
759       \dE[S+] [ pattern ]
760       \di[S+] [ pattern ]
761       \dm[S+] [ pattern ]
762       \ds[S+] [ pattern ]
763       \dt[S+] [ pattern ]
764       \dv[S+] [ pattern ]
765           In this group of commands, the letters E, i, m, s, t, and v stand
766           for foreign table, index, materialized view, sequence, table, and
767           view, respectively. You can specify any or all of these letters, in
768           any order, to obtain a listing of objects of these types. For
769           example, \dti lists tables and indexes. If + is appended to the
770           command name, each object is listed with its persistence status
771           (permanent, temporary, or unlogged), physical size on disk, and
772           associated description if any. If pattern is specified, only
773           objects whose names match the pattern are listed. By default, only
774           user-created objects are shown; supply a pattern or the S modifier
775           to include system objects.
776
777       \des[+] [ pattern ]
778           Lists foreign servers (mnemonic: “external servers”). If pattern is
779           specified, only those servers whose name matches the pattern are
780           listed. If the form \des+ is used, a full description of each
781           server is shown, including the server's access privileges, type,
782           version, options, and description.
783
784       \det[+] [ pattern ]
785           Lists foreign tables (mnemonic: “external tables”). If pattern is
786           specified, only entries whose table name or schema name matches the
787           pattern are listed. If the form \det+ is used, generic options and
788           the foreign table description are also displayed.
789
790       \deu[+] [ pattern ]
791           Lists user mappings (mnemonic: “external users”). If pattern is
792           specified, only those mappings whose user names match the pattern
793           are listed. If the form \deu+ is used, additional information about
794           each mapping is shown.
795
796               Caution
797               \deu+ might also display the user name and password of the
798               remote user, so care should be taken not to disclose them.
799
800       \dew[+] [ pattern ]
801           Lists foreign-data wrappers (mnemonic: “external wrappers”). If
802           pattern is specified, only those foreign-data wrappers whose name
803           matches the pattern are listed. If the form \dew+ is used, the
804           access privileges, options, and description of the foreign-data
805           wrapper are also shown.
806
807       \df[anptwS+] [ pattern [ arg_pattern ... ] ]
808           Lists functions, together with their result data types, argument
809           data types, and function types, which are classified as “agg”
810           (aggregate), “normal”, “procedure”, “trigger”, or “window”. To
811           display only functions of specific type(s), add the corresponding
812           letters a, n, p, t, or w to the command. If pattern is specified,
813           only functions whose names match the pattern are shown. Any
814           additional arguments are type-name patterns, which are matched to
815           the type names of the first, second, and so on arguments of the
816           function. (Matching functions can have more arguments than what you
817           specify. To prevent that, write a dash - as the last arg_pattern.)
818           By default, only user-created objects are shown; supply a pattern
819           or the S modifier to include system objects. If the form \df+ is
820           used, additional information about each function is shown,
821           including volatility, parallel safety, owner, security
822           classification, access privileges, language, source code and
823           description.
824
825       \dF[+] [ pattern ]
826           Lists text search configurations. If pattern is specified, only
827           configurations whose names match the pattern are shown. If the form
828           \dF+ is used, a full description of each configuration is shown,
829           including the underlying text search parser and the dictionary list
830           for each parser token type.
831
832       \dFd[+] [ pattern ]
833           Lists text search dictionaries. If pattern is specified, only
834           dictionaries whose names match the pattern are shown. If the form
835           \dFd+ is used, additional information is shown about each selected
836           dictionary, including the underlying text search template and the
837           option values.
838
839       \dFp[+] [ pattern ]
840           Lists text search parsers. If pattern is specified, only parsers
841           whose names match the pattern are shown. If the form \dFp+ is used,
842           a full description of each parser is shown, including the
843           underlying functions and the list of recognized token types.
844
845       \dFt[+] [ pattern ]
846           Lists text search templates. If pattern is specified, only
847           templates whose names match the pattern are shown. If the form
848           \dFt+ is used, additional information is shown about each template,
849           including the underlying function names.
850
851       \dg[S+] [ pattern ]
852           Lists database roles. (Since the concepts of “users” and “groups”
853           have been unified into “roles”, this command is now equivalent to
854           \du.) By default, only user-created roles are shown; supply the S
855           modifier to include system roles. If pattern is specified, only
856           those roles whose names match the pattern are listed. If the form
857           \dg+ is used, additional information is shown about each role;
858           currently this adds the comment for each role.
859
860       \dl
861           This is an alias for \lo_list, which shows a list of large objects.
862
863       \dL[S+] [ pattern ]
864           Lists procedural languages. If pattern is specified, only languages
865           whose names match the pattern are listed. By default, only
866           user-created languages are shown; supply the S modifier to include
867           system objects. If + is appended to the command name, each language
868           is listed with its call handler, validator, access privileges, and
869           whether it is a system object.
870
871       \dn[S+] [ pattern ]
872           Lists schemas (namespaces). If pattern is specified, only schemas
873           whose names match the pattern are listed. By default, only
874           user-created objects are shown; supply a pattern or the S modifier
875           to include system objects. If + is appended to the command name,
876           each object is listed with its associated permissions and
877           description, if any.
878
879       \do[S+] [ pattern [ arg_pattern [ arg_pattern ] ] ]
880           Lists operators with their operand and result types. If pattern is
881           specified, only operators whose names match the pattern are listed.
882           If one arg_pattern is specified, only prefix operators whose right
883           argument's type name matches that pattern are listed. If two
884           arg_patterns are specified, only binary operators whose argument
885           type names match those patterns are listed. (Alternatively, write -
886           for the unused argument of a unary operator.) By default, only
887           user-created objects are shown; supply a pattern or the S modifier
888           to include system objects. If + is appended to the command name,
889           additional information about each operator is shown, currently just
890           the name of the underlying function.
891
892       \dO[S+] [ pattern ]
893           Lists collations. If pattern is specified, only collations whose
894           names match the pattern are listed. By default, only user-created
895           objects are shown; supply a pattern or the S modifier to include
896           system objects. If + is appended to the command name, each
897           collation is listed with its associated description, if any. Note
898           that only collations usable with the current database's encoding
899           are shown, so the results may vary in different databases of the
900           same installation.
901
902       \dp [ pattern ]
903           Lists tables, views and sequences with their associated access
904           privileges. If pattern is specified, only tables, views and
905           sequences whose names match the pattern are listed.
906
907           The GRANT and REVOKE commands are used to set access privileges.
908           The meaning of the privilege display is explained in Section 5.7.
909
910       \dP[itn+] [ pattern ]
911           Lists partitioned relations. If pattern is specified, only entries
912           whose name matches the pattern are listed. The modifiers t (tables)
913           and i (indexes) can be appended to the command, filtering the kind
914           of relations to list. By default, partitioned tables and indexes
915           are listed.
916
917           If the modifier n (“nested”) is used, or a pattern is specified,
918           then non-root partitioned relations are included, and a column is
919           shown displaying the parent of each partitioned relation.
920
921           If + is appended to the command name, the sum of the sizes of each
922           relation's partitions is also displayed, along with the relation's
923           description. If n is combined with +, two sizes are shown: one
924           including the total size of directly-attached leaf partitions, and
925           another showing the total size of all partitions, including
926           indirectly attached sub-partitions.
927
928       \drds [ role-pattern [ database-pattern ] ]
929           Lists defined configuration settings. These settings can be
930           role-specific, database-specific, or both.  role-pattern and
931           database-pattern are used to select specific roles and databases to
932           list, respectively. If omitted, or if * is specified, all settings
933           are listed, including those not role-specific or database-specific,
934           respectively.
935
936           The ALTER ROLE and ALTER DATABASE commands are used to define
937           per-role and per-database configuration settings.
938
939       \dRp[+] [ pattern ]
940           Lists replication publications. If pattern is specified, only those
941           publications whose names match the pattern are listed. If + is
942           appended to the command name, the tables associated with each
943           publication are shown as well.
944
945       \dRs[+] [ pattern ]
946           Lists replication subscriptions. If pattern is specified, only
947           those subscriptions whose names match the pattern are listed. If +
948           is appended to the command name, additional properties of the
949           subscriptions are shown.
950
951       \dT[S+] [ pattern ]
952           Lists data types. If pattern is specified, only types whose names
953           match the pattern are listed. If + is appended to the command name,
954           each type is listed with its internal name and size, its allowed
955           values if it is an enum type, and its associated permissions. By
956           default, only user-created objects are shown; supply a pattern or
957           the S modifier to include system objects.
958
959       \du[S+] [ pattern ]
960           Lists database roles. (Since the concepts of “users” and “groups”
961           have been unified into “roles”, this command is now equivalent to
962           \dg.) By default, only user-created roles are shown; supply the S
963           modifier to include system roles. If pattern is specified, only
964           those roles whose names match the pattern are listed. If the form
965           \du+ is used, additional information is shown about each role;
966           currently this adds the comment for each role.
967
968       \dx[+] [ pattern ]
969           Lists installed extensions. If pattern is specified, only those
970           extensions whose names match the pattern are listed. If the form
971           \dx+ is used, all the objects belonging to each matching extension
972           are listed.
973
974       \dX [ pattern ]
975           Lists extended statistics. If pattern is specified, only those
976           extended statistics whose names match the pattern are listed.
977
978           The status of each kind of extended statistics is shown in a column
979           named after its statistic kind (e.g. Ndistinct).  defined means
980           that it was requested when creating the statistics, and NULL means
981           it wasn't requested. You can use pg_stats_ext if you'd like to know
982           whether ANALYZE was run and statistics are available to the
983           planner.
984
985       \dy[+] [ pattern ]
986           Lists event triggers. If pattern is specified, only those event
987           triggers whose names match the pattern are listed. If + is appended
988           to the command name, each object is listed with its associated
989           description.
990
991       \e or \edit [ filename ] [ line_number ]
992           If filename is specified, the file is edited; after the editor
993           exits, the file's content is copied into the current query buffer.
994           If no filename is given, the current query buffer is copied to a
995           temporary file which is then edited in the same fashion. Or, if the
996           current query buffer is empty, the most recently executed query is
997           copied to a temporary file and edited in the same fashion.
998
999           If you edit a file or the previous query, and you quit the editor
1000           without modifying the file, the query buffer is cleared. Otherwise,
1001           the new contents of the query buffer are re-parsed according to the
1002           normal rules of psql, treating the whole buffer as a single line.
1003           Any complete queries are immediately executed; that is, if the
1004           query buffer contains or ends with a semicolon, everything up to
1005           that point is executed and removed from the query buffer. Whatever
1006           remains in the query buffer is redisplayed. Type semicolon or \g to
1007           send it, or \r to cancel it by clearing the query buffer.
1008
1009           Treating the buffer as a single line primarily affects
1010           meta-commands: whatever is in the buffer after a meta-command will
1011           be taken as argument(s) to the meta-command, even if it spans
1012           multiple lines. (Thus you cannot make meta-command-using scripts
1013           this way. Use \i for that.)
1014
1015           If a line number is specified, psql will position the cursor on the
1016           specified line of the file or query buffer. Note that if a single
1017           all-digits argument is given, psql assumes it is a line number, not
1018           a file name.
1019
1020               Tip
1021               See Environment, below, for how to configure and customize your
1022               editor.
1023
1024       \echo text [ ... ]
1025           Prints the evaluated arguments to standard output, separated by
1026           spaces and followed by a newline. This can be useful to intersperse
1027           information in the output of scripts. For example:
1028
1029               => \echo `date`
1030               Tue Oct 26 21:40:57 CEST 1999
1031
1032           If the first argument is an unquoted -n the trailing newline is not
1033           written (nor is the first argument).
1034
1035               Tip
1036               If you use the \o command to redirect your query output you
1037               might wish to use \qecho instead of this command. See also
1038               \warn.
1039
1040       \ef [ function_description [ line_number ] ]
1041           This command fetches and edits the definition of the named function
1042           or procedure, in the form of a CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION or CREATE
1043           OR REPLACE PROCEDURE command. Editing is done in the same way as
1044           for \edit. If you quit the editor without saving, the statement is
1045           discarded. If you save and exit the editor, the updated command is
1046           executed immediately if you added a semicolon to it. Otherwise it
1047           is redisplayed; type semicolon or \g to send it, or \r to cancel.
1048
1049           The target function can be specified by name alone, or by name and
1050           arguments, for example foo(integer, text). The argument types must
1051           be given if there is more than one function of the same name.
1052
1053           If no function is specified, a blank CREATE FUNCTION template is
1054           presented for editing.
1055
1056           If a line number is specified, psql will position the cursor on the
1057           specified line of the function body. (Note that the function body
1058           typically does not begin on the first line of the file.)
1059
1060           Unlike most other meta-commands, the entire remainder of the line
1061           is always taken to be the argument(s) of \ef, and neither variable
1062           interpolation nor backquote expansion are performed in the
1063           arguments.
1064
1065               Tip
1066               See Environment, below, for how to configure and customize your
1067               editor.
1068
1069       \encoding [ encoding ]
1070           Sets the client character set encoding. Without an argument, this
1071           command shows the current encoding.
1072
1073       \errverbose
1074           Repeats the most recent server error message at maximum verbosity,
1075           as though VERBOSITY were set to verbose and SHOW_CONTEXT were set
1076           to always.
1077
1078       \ev [ view_name [ line_number ] ]
1079           This command fetches and edits the definition of the named view, in
1080           the form of a CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW command. Editing is done in
1081           the same way as for \edit. If you quit the editor without saving,
1082           the statement is discarded. If you save and exit the editor, the
1083           updated command is executed immediately if you added a semicolon to
1084           it. Otherwise it is redisplayed; type semicolon or \g to send it,
1085           or \r to cancel.
1086
1087           If no view is specified, a blank CREATE VIEW template is presented
1088           for editing.
1089
1090           If a line number is specified, psql will position the cursor on the
1091           specified line of the view definition.
1092
1093           Unlike most other meta-commands, the entire remainder of the line
1094           is always taken to be the argument(s) of \ev, and neither variable
1095           interpolation nor backquote expansion are performed in the
1096           arguments.
1097
1098       \f [ string ]
1099           Sets the field separator for unaligned query output. The default is
1100           the vertical bar (|). It is equivalent to \pset fieldsep.
1101
1102       \g [ (option=value [...]) ] [ filename ]
1103       \g [ (option=value [...]) ] [ |command ]
1104           Sends the current query buffer to the server for execution.
1105
1106           If parentheses appear after \g, they surround a space-separated
1107           list of option=value formatting-option clauses, which are
1108           interpreted in the same way as \pset option value commands, but
1109           take effect only for the duration of this query. In this list,
1110           spaces are not allowed around = signs, but are required between
1111           option clauses. If =value is omitted, the named option is changed
1112           in the same way as for \pset option with no explicit value.
1113
1114           If a filename or |command argument is given, the query's output is
1115           written to the named file or piped to the given shell command,
1116           instead of displaying it as usual. The file or command is written
1117           to only if the query successfully returns zero or more tuples, not
1118           if the query fails or is a non-data-returning SQL command.
1119
1120           If the current query buffer is empty, the most recently sent query
1121           is re-executed instead. Except for that behavior, \g without any
1122           arguments is essentially equivalent to a semicolon. With arguments,
1123           \g provides a “one-shot” alternative to the \o command, and
1124           additionally allows one-shot adjustments of the output formatting
1125           options normally set by \pset.
1126
1127           When the last argument begins with |, the entire remainder of the
1128           line is taken to be the command to execute, and neither variable
1129           interpolation nor backquote expansion are performed in it. The rest
1130           of the line is simply passed literally to the shell.
1131
1132       \gdesc
1133           Shows the description (that is, the column names and data types) of
1134           the result of the current query buffer. The query is not actually
1135           executed; however, if it contains some type of syntax error, that
1136           error will be reported in the normal way.
1137
1138           If the current query buffer is empty, the most recently sent query
1139           is described instead.
1140
1141       \gexec
1142           Sends the current query buffer to the server, then treats each
1143           column of each row of the query's output (if any) as an SQL
1144           statement to be executed. For example, to create an index on each
1145           column of my_table:
1146
1147               => SELECT format('create index on my_table(%I)', attname)
1148               -> FROM pg_attribute
1149               -> WHERE attrelid = 'my_table'::regclass AND attnum > 0
1150               -> ORDER BY attnum
1151               -> \gexec
1152               CREATE INDEX
1153               CREATE INDEX
1154               CREATE INDEX
1155               CREATE INDEX
1156
1157           The generated queries are executed in the order in which the rows
1158           are returned, and left-to-right within each row if there is more
1159           than one column. NULL fields are ignored. The generated queries are
1160           sent literally to the server for processing, so they cannot be psql
1161           meta-commands nor contain psql variable references. If any
1162           individual query fails, execution of the remaining queries
1163           continues unless ON_ERROR_STOP is set. Execution of each query is
1164           subject to ECHO processing. (Setting ECHO to all or queries is
1165           often advisable when using \gexec.) Query logging, single-step
1166           mode, timing, and other query execution features apply to each
1167           generated query as well.
1168
1169           If the current query buffer is empty, the most recently sent query
1170           is re-executed instead.
1171
1172       \gset [ prefix ]
1173           Sends the current query buffer to the server and stores the query's
1174           output into psql variables (see Variables below). The query to be
1175           executed must return exactly one row. Each column of the row is
1176           stored into a separate variable, named the same as the column. For
1177           example:
1178
1179               => SELECT 'hello' AS var1, 10 AS var2
1180               -> \gset
1181               => \echo :var1 :var2
1182               hello 10
1183
1184           If you specify a prefix, that string is prepended to the query's
1185           column names to create the variable names to use:
1186
1187               => SELECT 'hello' AS var1, 10 AS var2
1188               -> \gset result_
1189               => \echo :result_var1 :result_var2
1190               hello 10
1191
1192           If a column result is NULL, the corresponding variable is unset
1193           rather than being set.
1194
1195           If the query fails or does not return one row, no variables are
1196           changed.
1197
1198           If the current query buffer is empty, the most recently sent query
1199           is re-executed instead.
1200
1201       \gx [ (option=value [...]) ] [ filename ]
1202       \gx [ (option=value [...]) ] [ |command ]
1203           \gx is equivalent to \g, except that it forces expanded output mode
1204           for this query, as if expanded=on were included in the list of
1205           \pset options. See also \x.
1206
1207       \h or \help [ command ]
1208           Gives syntax help on the specified SQL command. If command is not
1209           specified, then psql will list all the commands for which syntax
1210           help is available. If command is an asterisk (*), then syntax help
1211           on all SQL commands is shown.
1212
1213           Unlike most other meta-commands, the entire remainder of the line
1214           is always taken to be the argument(s) of \help, and neither
1215           variable interpolation nor backquote expansion are performed in the
1216           arguments.
1217
1218               Note
1219               To simplify typing, commands that consists of several words do
1220               not have to be quoted. Thus it is fine to type \help alter
1221               table.
1222
1223       \H or \html
1224           Turns on HTML query output format. If the HTML format is already
1225           on, it is switched back to the default aligned text format. This
1226           command is for compatibility and convenience, but see \pset about
1227           setting other output options.
1228
1229       \i or \include filename
1230           Reads input from the file filename and executes it as though it had
1231           been typed on the keyboard.
1232
1233           If filename is - (hyphen), then standard input is read until an EOF
1234           indication or \q meta-command. This can be used to intersperse
1235           interactive input with input from files. Note that Readline
1236           behavior will be used only if it is active at the outermost level.
1237
1238               Note
1239               If you want to see the lines on the screen as they are read you
1240               must set the variable ECHO to all.
1241
1242       \if expression
1243       \elif expression
1244       \else
1245       \endif
1246           This group of commands implements nestable conditional blocks. A
1247           conditional block must begin with an \if and end with an \endif. In
1248           between there may be any number of \elif clauses, which may
1249           optionally be followed by a single \else clause. Ordinary queries
1250           and other types of backslash commands may (and usually do) appear
1251           between the commands forming a conditional block.
1252
1253           The \if and \elif commands read their argument(s) and evaluate them
1254           as a Boolean expression. If the expression yields true then
1255           processing continues normally; otherwise, lines are skipped until a
1256           matching \elif, \else, or \endif is reached. Once an \if or \elif
1257           test has succeeded, the arguments of later \elif commands in the
1258           same block are not evaluated but are treated as false. Lines
1259           following an \else are processed only if no earlier matching \if or
1260           \elif succeeded.
1261
1262           The expression argument of an \if or \elif command is subject to
1263           variable interpolation and backquote expansion, just like any other
1264           backslash command argument. After that it is evaluated like the
1265           value of an on/off option variable. So a valid value is any
1266           unambiguous case-insensitive match for one of: true, false, 1, 0,
1267           on, off, yes, no. For example, t, T, and tR will all be considered
1268           to be true.
1269
1270           Expressions that do not properly evaluate to true or false will
1271           generate a warning and be treated as false.
1272
1273           Lines being skipped are parsed normally to identify queries and
1274           backslash commands, but queries are not sent to the server, and
1275           backslash commands other than conditionals (\if, \elif, \else,
1276           \endif) are ignored. Conditional commands are checked only for
1277           valid nesting. Variable references in skipped lines are not
1278           expanded, and backquote expansion is not performed either.
1279
1280           All the backslash commands of a given conditional block must appear
1281           in the same source file. If EOF is reached on the main input file
1282           or an \include-ed file before all local \if-blocks have been
1283           closed, then psql will raise an error.
1284
1285           Here is an example:
1286
1287               -- check for the existence of two separate records in the database and store
1288               -- the results in separate psql variables
1289               SELECT
1290                   EXISTS(SELECT 1 FROM customer WHERE customer_id = 123) as is_customer,
1291                   EXISTS(SELECT 1 FROM employee WHERE employee_id = 456) as is_employee
1292               \gset
1293               \if :is_customer
1294                   SELECT * FROM customer WHERE customer_id = 123;
1295               \elif :is_employee
1296                   \echo 'is not a customer but is an employee'
1297                   SELECT * FROM employee WHERE employee_id = 456;
1298               \else
1299                   \if yes
1300                       \echo 'not a customer or employee'
1301                   \else
1302                       \echo 'this will never print'
1303                   \endif
1304               \endif
1305
1306       \ir or \include_relative filename
1307           The \ir command is similar to \i, but resolves relative file names
1308           differently. When executing in interactive mode, the two commands
1309           behave identically. However, when invoked from a script, \ir
1310           interprets file names relative to the directory in which the script
1311           is located, rather than the current working directory.
1312
1313       \l[+] or \list[+] [ pattern ]
1314           List the databases in the server and show their names, owners,
1315           character set encodings, and access privileges. If pattern is
1316           specified, only databases whose names match the pattern are listed.
1317           If + is appended to the command name, database sizes, default
1318           tablespaces, and descriptions are also displayed. (Size information
1319           is only available for databases that the current user can connect
1320           to.)
1321
1322       \lo_export loid filename
1323           Reads the large object with OID loid from the database and writes
1324           it to filename. Note that this is subtly different from the server
1325           function lo_export, which acts with the permissions of the user
1326           that the database server runs as and on the server's file system.
1327
1328               Tip
1329               Use \lo_list to find out the large object's OID.
1330
1331       \lo_import filename [ comment ]
1332           Stores the file into a PostgreSQL large object. Optionally, it
1333           associates the given comment with the object. Example:
1334
1335               foo=> \lo_import '/home/peter/pictures/photo.xcf' 'a picture of me'
1336               lo_import 152801
1337
1338           The response indicates that the large object received object ID
1339           152801, which can be used to access the newly-created large object
1340           in the future. For the sake of readability, it is recommended to
1341           always associate a human-readable comment with every object. Both
1342           OIDs and comments can be viewed with the \lo_list command.
1343
1344           Note that this command is subtly different from the server-side
1345           lo_import because it acts as the local user on the local file
1346           system, rather than the server's user and file system.
1347
1348       \lo_list
1349           Shows a list of all PostgreSQL large objects currently stored in
1350           the database, along with any comments provided for them.
1351
1352       \lo_unlink loid
1353           Deletes the large object with OID loid from the database.
1354
1355               Tip
1356               Use \lo_list to find out the large object's OID.
1357
1358       \o or \out [ filename ]
1359       \o or \out [ |command ]
1360           Arranges to save future query results to the file filename or pipe
1361           future results to the shell command command. If no argument is
1362           specified, the query output is reset to the standard output.
1363
1364           If the argument begins with |, then the entire remainder of the
1365           line is taken to be the command to execute, and neither variable
1366           interpolation nor backquote expansion are performed in it. The rest
1367           of the line is simply passed literally to the shell.
1368
1369           “Query results” includes all tables, command responses, and notices
1370           obtained from the database server, as well as output of various
1371           backslash commands that query the database (such as \d); but not
1372           error messages.
1373
1374               Tip
1375               To intersperse text output in between query results, use
1376               \qecho.
1377
1378       \p or \print
1379           Print the current query buffer to the standard output. If the
1380           current query buffer is empty, the most recently executed query is
1381           printed instead.
1382
1383       \password [ username ]
1384           Changes the password of the specified user (by default, the current
1385           user). This command prompts for the new password, encrypts it, and
1386           sends it to the server as an ALTER ROLE command. This makes sure
1387           that the new password does not appear in cleartext in the command
1388           history, the server log, or elsewhere.
1389
1390       \prompt [ text ] name
1391           Prompts the user to supply text, which is assigned to the variable
1392           name. An optional prompt string, text, can be specified. (For
1393           multiword prompts, surround the text with single quotes.)
1394
1395           By default, \prompt uses the terminal for input and output.
1396           However, if the -f command line switch was used, \prompt uses
1397           standard input and standard output.
1398
1399       \pset [ option [ value ] ]
1400           This command sets options affecting the output of query result
1401           tables.  option indicates which option is to be set. The semantics
1402           of value vary depending on the selected option. For some options,
1403           omitting value causes the option to be toggled or unset, as
1404           described under the particular option. If no such behavior is
1405           mentioned, then omitting value just results in the current setting
1406           being displayed.
1407
1408           \pset without any arguments displays the current status of all
1409           printing options.
1410
1411           Adjustable printing options are:
1412
1413           border
1414               The value must be a number. In general, the higher the number
1415               the more borders and lines the tables will have, but details
1416               depend on the particular format. In HTML format, this will
1417               translate directly into the border=...  attribute. In most
1418               other formats only values 0 (no border), 1 (internal dividing
1419               lines), and 2 (table frame) make sense, and values above 2 will
1420               be treated the same as border = 2. The latex and
1421               latex-longtable formats additionally allow a value of 3 to add
1422               dividing lines between data rows.
1423
1424           columns
1425               Sets the target width for the wrapped format, and also the
1426               width limit for determining whether output is wide enough to
1427               require the pager or switch to the vertical display in expanded
1428               auto mode. Zero (the default) causes the target width to be
1429               controlled by the environment variable COLUMNS, or the detected
1430               screen width if COLUMNS is not set. In addition, if columns is
1431               zero then the wrapped format only affects screen output. If
1432               columns is nonzero then file and pipe output is wrapped to that
1433               width as well.
1434
1435           csv_fieldsep
1436               Specifies the field separator to be used in CSV output format.
1437               If the separator character appears in a field's value, that
1438               field is output within double quotes, following standard CSV
1439               rules. The default is a comma.
1440
1441           expanded (or x)
1442               If value is specified it must be either on or off, which will
1443               enable or disable expanded mode, or auto. If value is omitted
1444               the command toggles between the on and off settings. When
1445               expanded mode is enabled, query results are displayed in two
1446               columns, with the column name on the left and the data on the
1447               right. This mode is useful if the data wouldn't fit on the
1448               screen in the normal “horizontal” mode. In the auto setting,
1449               the expanded mode is used whenever the query output has more
1450               than one column and is wider than the screen; otherwise, the
1451               regular mode is used. The auto setting is only effective in the
1452               aligned and wrapped formats. In other formats, it always
1453               behaves as if the expanded mode is off.
1454
1455           fieldsep
1456               Specifies the field separator to be used in unaligned output
1457               format. That way one can create, for example, tab-separated
1458               output, which other programs might prefer. To set a tab as
1459               field separator, type \pset fieldsep '\t'. The default field
1460               separator is '|' (a vertical bar).
1461
1462           fieldsep_zero
1463               Sets the field separator to use in unaligned output format to a
1464               zero byte.
1465
1466           footer
1467               If value is specified it must be either on or off which will
1468               enable or disable display of the table footer (the (n rows)
1469               count). If value is omitted the command toggles footer display
1470               on or off.
1471
1472           format
1473               Sets the output format to one of aligned, asciidoc, csv, html,
1474               latex, latex-longtable, troff-ms, unaligned, or wrapped. Unique
1475               abbreviations are allowed.
1476
1477               aligned format is the standard, human-readable, nicely
1478               formatted text output; this is the default.
1479
1480               unaligned format writes all columns of a row on one line,
1481               separated by the currently active field separator. This is
1482               useful for creating output that might be intended to be read in
1483               by other programs, for example, tab-separated or
1484               comma-separated format. However, the field separator character
1485               is not treated specially if it appears in a column's value; so
1486               CSV format may be better suited for such purposes.
1487
1488               csv format
1489
1490               writes column values separated by commas, applying the quoting
1491               rules described in RFC 4180. This output is compatible with the
1492               CSV format of the server's COPY command. A header line with
1493               column names is generated unless the tuples_only parameter is
1494               on. Titles and footers are not printed. Each row is terminated
1495               by the system-dependent end-of-line character, which is
1496               typically a single newline (\n) for Unix-like systems or a
1497               carriage return and newline sequence (\r\n) for Microsoft
1498               Windows. Field separator characters other than comma can be
1499               selected with \pset csv_fieldsep.
1500
1501               wrapped format is like aligned but wraps wide data values
1502               across lines to make the output fit in the target column width.
1503               The target width is determined as described under the columns
1504               option. Note that psql will not attempt to wrap column header
1505               titles; therefore, wrapped format behaves the same as aligned
1506               if the total width needed for column headers exceeds the
1507               target.
1508
1509               The asciidoc, html, latex, latex-longtable, and troff-ms
1510               formats put out tables that are intended to be included in
1511               documents using the respective mark-up language. They are not
1512               complete documents! This might not be necessary in HTML, but in
1513               LaTeX you must have a complete document wrapper. The latex
1514               format uses LaTeX's tabular environment. The latex-longtable
1515               format requires the LaTeX longtable and booktabs packages.
1516
1517           linestyle
1518               Sets the border line drawing style to one of ascii, old-ascii,
1519               or unicode. Unique abbreviations are allowed. (That would mean
1520               one letter is enough.) The default setting is ascii. This
1521               option only affects the aligned and wrapped output formats.
1522
1523               ascii style uses plain ASCII characters. Newlines in data are
1524               shown using a + symbol in the right-hand margin. When the
1525               wrapped format wraps data from one line to the next without a
1526               newline character, a dot (.) is shown in the right-hand margin
1527               of the first line, and again in the left-hand margin of the
1528               following line.
1529
1530               old-ascii style uses plain ASCII characters, using the
1531               formatting style used in PostgreSQL 8.4 and earlier. Newlines
1532               in data are shown using a : symbol in place of the left-hand
1533               column separator. When the data is wrapped from one line to the
1534               next without a newline character, a ; symbol is used in place
1535               of the left-hand column separator.
1536
1537               unicode style uses Unicode box-drawing characters. Newlines in
1538               data are shown using a carriage return symbol in the right-hand
1539               margin. When the data is wrapped from one line to the next
1540               without a newline character, an ellipsis symbol is shown in the
1541               right-hand margin of the first line, and again in the left-hand
1542               margin of the following line.
1543
1544               When the border setting is greater than zero, the linestyle
1545               option also determines the characters with which the border
1546               lines are drawn. Plain ASCII characters work everywhere, but
1547               Unicode characters look nicer on displays that recognize them.
1548
1549           null
1550               Sets the string to be printed in place of a null value. The
1551               default is to print nothing, which can easily be mistaken for
1552               an empty string. For example, one might prefer \pset null
1553               '(null)'.
1554
1555           numericlocale
1556               If value is specified it must be either on or off which will
1557               enable or disable display of a locale-specific character to
1558               separate groups of digits to the left of the decimal marker. If
1559               value is omitted the command toggles between regular and
1560               locale-specific numeric output.
1561
1562           pager
1563               Controls use of a pager program for query and psql help output.
1564               If the environment variable PSQL_PAGER or PAGER is set, the
1565               output is piped to the specified program. Otherwise a
1566               platform-dependent default program (such as more) is used.
1567
1568               When the pager option is off, the pager program is not used.
1569               When the pager option is on, the pager is used when
1570               appropriate, i.e., when the output is to a terminal and will
1571               not fit on the screen. The pager option can also be set to
1572               always, which causes the pager to be used for all terminal
1573               output regardless of whether it fits on the screen.  \pset
1574               pager without a value toggles pager use on and off.
1575
1576           pager_min_lines
1577               If pager_min_lines is set to a number greater than the page
1578               height, the pager program will not be called unless there are
1579               at least this many lines of output to show. The default setting
1580               is 0.
1581
1582           recordsep
1583               Specifies the record (line) separator to use in unaligned
1584               output format. The default is a newline character.
1585
1586           recordsep_zero
1587               Sets the record separator to use in unaligned output format to
1588               a zero byte.
1589
1590           tableattr (or T)
1591               In HTML format, this specifies attributes to be placed inside
1592               the table tag. This could for example be cellpadding or
1593               bgcolor. Note that you probably don't want to specify border
1594               here, as that is already taken care of by \pset border. If no
1595               value is given, the table attributes are unset.
1596
1597               In latex-longtable format, this controls the proportional width
1598               of each column containing a left-aligned data type. It is
1599               specified as a whitespace-separated list of values, e.g., '0.2
1600               0.2 0.6'. Unspecified output columns use the last specified
1601               value.
1602
1603           title (or C)
1604               Sets the table title for any subsequently printed tables. This
1605               can be used to give your output descriptive tags. If no value
1606               is given, the title is unset.
1607
1608           tuples_only (or t)
1609               If value is specified it must be either on or off which will
1610               enable or disable tuples-only mode. If value is omitted the
1611               command toggles between regular and tuples-only output. Regular
1612               output includes extra information such as column headers,
1613               titles, and various footers. In tuples-only mode, only actual
1614               table data is shown.
1615
1616           unicode_border_linestyle
1617               Sets the border drawing style for the unicode line style to one
1618               of single or double.
1619
1620           unicode_column_linestyle
1621               Sets the column drawing style for the unicode line style to one
1622               of single or double.
1623
1624           unicode_header_linestyle
1625               Sets the header drawing style for the unicode line style to one
1626               of single or double.
1627
1628           Illustrations of how these different formats look can be seen in
1629           Examples, below.
1630
1631               Tip
1632               There are various shortcut commands for \pset. See \a, \C, \f,
1633               \H, \t, \T, and \x.
1634
1635       \q or \quit
1636           Quits the psql program. In a script file, only execution of that
1637           script is terminated.
1638
1639       \qecho text [ ... ]
1640           This command is identical to \echo except that the output will be
1641           written to the query output channel, as set by \o.
1642
1643       \r or \reset
1644           Resets (clears) the query buffer.
1645
1646       \s [ filename ]
1647           Print psql's command line history to filename. If filename is
1648           omitted, the history is written to the standard output (using the
1649           pager if appropriate). This command is not available if psql was
1650           built without Readline support.
1651
1652       \set [ name [ value [ ... ] ] ]
1653           Sets the psql variable name to value, or if more than one value is
1654           given, to the concatenation of all of them. If only one argument is
1655           given, the variable is set to an empty-string value. To unset a
1656           variable, use the \unset command.
1657
1658           \set without any arguments displays the names and values of all
1659           currently-set psql variables.
1660
1661           Valid variable names can contain letters, digits, and underscores.
1662           See Variables below for details. Variable names are case-sensitive.
1663
1664           Certain variables are special, in that they control psql's behavior
1665           or are automatically set to reflect connection state. These
1666           variables are documented in Variables, below.
1667
1668               Note
1669               This command is unrelated to the SQL command SET.
1670
1671       \setenv name [ value ]
1672           Sets the environment variable name to value, or if the value is not
1673           supplied, unsets the environment variable. Example:
1674
1675               testdb=> \setenv PAGER less
1676               testdb=> \setenv LESS -imx4F
1677
1678       \sf[+] function_description
1679           This command fetches and shows the definition of the named function
1680           or procedure, in the form of a CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION or CREATE
1681           OR REPLACE PROCEDURE command. The definition is printed to the
1682           current query output channel, as set by \o.
1683
1684           The target function can be specified by name alone, or by name and
1685           arguments, for example foo(integer, text). The argument types must
1686           be given if there is more than one function of the same name.
1687
1688           If + is appended to the command name, then the output lines are
1689           numbered, with the first line of the function body being line 1.
1690
1691           Unlike most other meta-commands, the entire remainder of the line
1692           is always taken to be the argument(s) of \sf, and neither variable
1693           interpolation nor backquote expansion are performed in the
1694           arguments.
1695
1696       \sv[+] view_name
1697           This command fetches and shows the definition of the named view, in
1698           the form of a CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW command. The definition is
1699           printed to the current query output channel, as set by \o.
1700
1701           If + is appended to the command name, then the output lines are
1702           numbered from 1.
1703
1704           Unlike most other meta-commands, the entire remainder of the line
1705           is always taken to be the argument(s) of \sv, and neither variable
1706           interpolation nor backquote expansion are performed in the
1707           arguments.
1708
1709       \t
1710           Toggles the display of output column name headings and row count
1711           footer. This command is equivalent to \pset tuples_only and is
1712           provided for convenience.
1713
1714       \T table_options
1715           Specifies attributes to be placed within the table tag in HTML
1716           output format. This command is equivalent to \pset tableattr
1717           table_options.
1718
1719       \timing [ on | off ]
1720           With a parameter, turns displaying of how long each SQL statement
1721           takes on or off. Without a parameter, toggles the display between
1722           on and off. The display is in milliseconds; intervals longer than 1
1723           second are also shown in minutes:seconds format, with hours and
1724           days fields added if needed.
1725
1726       \unset name
1727           Unsets (deletes) the psql variable name.
1728
1729           Most variables that control psql's behavior cannot be unset;
1730           instead, an \unset command is interpreted as setting them to their
1731           default values. See Variables below.
1732
1733       \w or \write filename
1734       \w or \write |command
1735           Writes the current query buffer to the file filename or pipes it to
1736           the shell command command. If the current query buffer is empty,
1737           the most recently executed query is written instead.
1738
1739           If the argument begins with |, then the entire remainder of the
1740           line is taken to be the command to execute, and neither variable
1741           interpolation nor backquote expansion are performed in it. The rest
1742           of the line is simply passed literally to the shell.
1743
1744       \warn text [ ... ]
1745           This command is identical to \echo except that the output will be
1746           written to psql's standard error channel, rather than standard
1747           output.
1748
1749       \watch [ seconds ]
1750           Repeatedly execute the current query buffer (as \g does) until
1751           interrupted or the query fails. Wait the specified number of
1752           seconds (default 2) between executions. Each query result is
1753           displayed with a header that includes the \pset title string (if
1754           any), the time as of query start, and the delay interval.
1755
1756           If the current query buffer is empty, the most recently sent query
1757           is re-executed instead.
1758
1759       \x [ on | off | auto ]
1760           Sets or toggles expanded table formatting mode. As such it is
1761           equivalent to \pset expanded.
1762
1763       \z [ pattern ]
1764           Lists tables, views and sequences with their associated access
1765           privileges. If a pattern is specified, only tables, views and
1766           sequences whose names match the pattern are listed.
1767
1768           This is an alias for \dp (“display privileges”).
1769
1770       \! [ command ]
1771           With no argument, escapes to a sub-shell; psql resumes when the
1772           sub-shell exits. With an argument, executes the shell command
1773           command.
1774
1775           Unlike most other meta-commands, the entire remainder of the line
1776           is always taken to be the argument(s) of \!, and neither variable
1777           interpolation nor backquote expansion are performed in the
1778           arguments. The rest of the line is simply passed literally to the
1779           shell.
1780
1781       \? [ topic ]
1782           Shows help information. The optional topic parameter (defaulting to
1783           commands) selects which part of psql is explained: commands
1784           describes psql's backslash commands; options describes the
1785           command-line options that can be passed to psql; and variables
1786           shows help about psql configuration variables.
1787
1788       \;
1789           Backslash-semicolon is not a meta-command in the same way as the
1790           preceding commands; rather, it simply causes a semicolon to be
1791           added to the query buffer without any further processing.
1792
1793           Normally, psql will dispatch an SQL command to the server as soon
1794           as it reaches the command-ending semicolon, even if more input
1795           remains on the current line. Thus for example entering
1796
1797               select 1; select 2; select 3;
1798
1799           will result in the three SQL commands being individually sent to
1800           the server, with each one's results being displayed before
1801           continuing to the next command. However, a semicolon entered as \;
1802           will not trigger command processing, so that the command before it
1803           and the one after are effectively combined and sent to the server
1804           in one request. So for example
1805
1806               select 1\; select 2\; select 3;
1807
1808           results in sending the three SQL commands to the server in a single
1809           request, when the non-backslashed semicolon is reached. The server
1810           executes such a request as a single transaction, unless there are
1811           explicit BEGIN/COMMIT commands included in the string to divide it
1812           into multiple transactions. (See Section 53.2.2.1 for more details
1813           about how the server handles multi-query strings.)  psql prints
1814           only the last query result it receives for each request; in this
1815           example, although all three SELECTs are indeed executed, psql only
1816           prints the 3.
1817
1818       Patterns
1819           The various \d commands accept a pattern parameter to specify the
1820           object name(s) to be displayed. In the simplest case, a pattern is
1821           just the exact name of the object. The characters within a pattern
1822           are normally folded to lower case, just as in SQL names; for
1823           example, \dt FOO will display the table named foo. As in SQL names,
1824           placing double quotes around a pattern stops folding to lower case.
1825           Should you need to include an actual double quote character in a
1826           pattern, write it as a pair of double quotes within a double-quote
1827           sequence; again this is in accord with the rules for SQL quoted
1828           identifiers. For example, \dt "FOO""BAR" will display the table
1829           named FOO"BAR (not foo"bar). Unlike the normal rules for SQL names,
1830           you can put double quotes around just part of a pattern, for
1831           instance \dt FOO"FOO"BAR will display the table named fooFOObar.
1832
1833           Whenever the pattern parameter is omitted completely, the \d
1834           commands display all objects that are visible in the current schema
1835           search path — this is equivalent to using * as the pattern. (An
1836           object is said to be visible if its containing schema is in the
1837           search path and no object of the same kind and name appears earlier
1838           in the search path. This is equivalent to the statement that the
1839           object can be referenced by name without explicit schema
1840           qualification.) To see all objects in the database regardless of
1841           visibility, use *.*  as the pattern.
1842
1843           Within a pattern, * matches any sequence of characters (including
1844           no characters) and ?  matches any single character. (This notation
1845           is comparable to Unix shell file name patterns.) For example, \dt
1846           int* displays tables whose names begin with int. But within double
1847           quotes, * and ?  lose these special meanings and are just matched
1848           literally.
1849
1850           A relation pattern that contains a dot (.) is interpreted as a
1851           schema name pattern followed by an object name pattern. For
1852           example, \dt foo*.*bar* displays all tables whose table name
1853           includes bar that are in schemas whose schema name starts with foo.
1854           When no dot appears, then the pattern matches only objects that are
1855           visible in the current schema search path. Again, a dot within
1856           double quotes loses its special meaning and is matched literally. A
1857           relation pattern that contains two dots (.) is interpreted as a
1858           database name followed by a schema name pattern followed by an
1859           object name pattern. The database name portion will not be treated
1860           as a pattern and must match the name of the currently connected
1861           database, else an error will be raised.
1862
1863           A schema pattern that contains a dot (.) is interpreted as a
1864           database name followed by a schema name pattern. For example, \dn
1865           mydb.*foo* displays all schemas whose schema name includes foo. The
1866           database name portion will not be treated as a pattern and must
1867           match the name of the currently connected database, else an error
1868           will be raised.
1869
1870           Advanced users can use regular-expression notations such as
1871           character classes, for example [0-9] to match any digit. All
1872           regular expression special characters work as specified in
1873           Section 9.7.3, except for .  which is taken as a separator as
1874           mentioned above, * which is translated to the regular-expression
1875           notation .*, ?  which is translated to ., and $ which is matched
1876           literally. You can emulate these pattern characters at need by
1877           writing ?  for ., (R+|) for R*, or (R|) for R?.  $ is not needed as
1878           a regular-expression character since the pattern must match the
1879           whole name, unlike the usual interpretation of regular expressions
1880           (in other words, $ is automatically appended to your pattern).
1881           Write * at the beginning and/or end if you don't wish the pattern
1882           to be anchored. Note that within double quotes, all regular
1883           expression special characters lose their special meanings and are
1884           matched literally. Also, the regular expression special characters
1885           are matched literally in operator name patterns (i.e., the argument
1886           of \do).
1887
1888   Advanced Features
1889       Variables
1890           psql provides variable substitution features similar to common Unix
1891           command shells. Variables are simply name/value pairs, where the
1892           value can be any string of any length. The name must consist of
1893           letters (including non-Latin letters), digits, and underscores.
1894
1895           To set a variable, use the psql meta-command \set. For example,
1896
1897               testdb=> \set foo bar
1898
1899           sets the variable foo to the value bar. To retrieve the content of
1900           the variable, precede the name with a colon, for example:
1901
1902               testdb=> \echo :foo
1903               bar
1904
1905           This works in both regular SQL commands and meta-commands; there is
1906           more detail in SQL Interpolation, below.
1907
1908           If you call \set without a second argument, the variable is set to
1909           an empty-string value. To unset (i.e., delete) a variable, use the
1910           command \unset. To show the values of all variables, call \set
1911           without any argument.
1912
1913               Note
1914               The arguments of \set are subject to the same substitution
1915               rules as with other commands. Thus you can construct
1916               interesting references such as \set :foo 'something' and get
1917               “soft links” or “variable variables” of Perl or PHP fame,
1918               respectively. Unfortunately (or fortunately?), there is no way
1919               to do anything useful with these constructs. On the other hand,
1920               \set bar :foo is a perfectly valid way to copy a variable.
1921
1922           A number of these variables are treated specially by psql. They
1923           represent certain option settings that can be changed at run time
1924           by altering the value of the variable, or in some cases represent
1925           changeable state of psql. By convention, all specially treated
1926           variables' names consist of all upper-case ASCII letters (and
1927           possibly digits and underscores). To ensure maximum compatibility
1928           in the future, avoid using such variable names for your own
1929           purposes.
1930
1931           Variables that control psql's behavior generally cannot be unset or
1932           set to invalid values. An \unset command is allowed but is
1933           interpreted as setting the variable to its default value. A \set
1934           command without a second argument is interpreted as setting the
1935           variable to on, for control variables that accept that value, and
1936           is rejected for others. Also, control variables that accept the
1937           values on and off will also accept other common spellings of
1938           Boolean values, such as true and false.
1939
1940           The specially treated variables are:
1941
1942           AUTOCOMMIT
1943               When on (the default), each SQL command is automatically
1944               committed upon successful completion. To postpone commit in
1945               this mode, you must enter a BEGIN or START TRANSACTION SQL
1946               command. When off or unset, SQL commands are not committed
1947               until you explicitly issue COMMIT or END. The autocommit-off
1948               mode works by issuing an implicit BEGIN for you, just before
1949               any command that is not already in a transaction block and is
1950               not itself a BEGIN or other transaction-control command, nor a
1951               command that cannot be executed inside a transaction block
1952               (such as VACUUM).
1953
1954                   Note
1955                   In autocommit-off mode, you must explicitly abandon any
1956                   failed transaction by entering ABORT or ROLLBACK. Also keep
1957                   in mind that if you exit the session without committing,
1958                   your work will be lost.
1959
1960                   Note
1961                   The autocommit-on mode is PostgreSQL's traditional
1962                   behavior, but autocommit-off is closer to the SQL spec. If
1963                   you prefer autocommit-off, you might wish to set it in the
1964                   system-wide psqlrc file or your ~/.psqlrc file.
1965
1966           COMP_KEYWORD_CASE
1967               Determines which letter case to use when completing an SQL key
1968               word. If set to lower or upper, the completed word will be in
1969               lower or upper case, respectively. If set to preserve-lower or
1970               preserve-upper (the default), the completed word will be in the
1971               case of the word already entered, but words being completed
1972               without anything entered will be in lower or upper case,
1973               respectively.
1974
1975           DBNAME
1976               The name of the database you are currently connected to. This
1977               is set every time you connect to a database (including program
1978               start-up), but can be changed or unset.
1979
1980           ECHO
1981               If set to all, all nonempty input lines are printed to standard
1982               output as they are read. (This does not apply to lines read
1983               interactively.) To select this behavior on program start-up,
1984               use the switch -a. If set to queries, psql prints each query to
1985               standard output as it is sent to the server. The switch to
1986               select this behavior is -e. If set to errors, then only failed
1987               queries are displayed on standard error output. The switch for
1988               this behavior is -b. If set to none (the default), then no
1989               queries are displayed.
1990
1991           ECHO_HIDDEN
1992               When this variable is set to on and a backslash command queries
1993               the database, the query is first shown. This feature helps you
1994               to study PostgreSQL internals and provide similar functionality
1995               in your own programs. (To select this behavior on program
1996               start-up, use the switch -E.) If you set this variable to the
1997               value noexec, the queries are just shown but are not actually
1998               sent to the server and executed. The default value is off.
1999
2000           ENCODING
2001               The current client character set encoding. This is set every
2002               time you connect to a database (including program start-up),
2003               and when you change the encoding with \encoding, but it can be
2004               changed or unset.
2005
2006           ERROR
2007               true if the last SQL query failed, false if it succeeded. See
2008               also SQLSTATE.
2009
2010           FETCH_COUNT
2011               If this variable is set to an integer value greater than zero,
2012               the results of SELECT queries are fetched and displayed in
2013               groups of that many rows, rather than the default behavior of
2014               collecting the entire result set before display. Therefore only
2015               a limited amount of memory is used, regardless of the size of
2016               the result set. Settings of 100 to 1000 are commonly used when
2017               enabling this feature. Keep in mind that when using this
2018               feature, a query might fail after having already displayed some
2019               rows.
2020
2021                   Tip
2022                   Although you can use any output format with this feature,
2023                   the default aligned format tends to look bad because each
2024                   group of FETCH_COUNT rows will be formatted separately,
2025                   leading to varying column widths across the row groups. The
2026                   other output formats work better.
2027
2028           HIDE_TABLEAM
2029               If this variable is set to true, a table's access method
2030               details are not displayed. This is mainly useful for regression
2031               tests.
2032
2033           HIDE_TOAST_COMPRESSION
2034               If this variable is set to true, column compression method
2035               details are not displayed. This is mainly useful for regression
2036               tests.
2037
2038           HISTCONTROL
2039               If this variable is set to ignorespace, lines which begin with
2040               a space are not entered into the history list. If set to a
2041               value of ignoredups, lines matching the previous history line
2042               are not entered. A value of ignoreboth combines the two
2043               options. If set to none (the default), all lines read in
2044               interactive mode are saved on the history list.
2045
2046                   Note
2047                   This feature was shamelessly plagiarized from Bash.
2048
2049           HISTFILE
2050               The file name that will be used to store the history list. If
2051               unset, the file name is taken from the PSQL_HISTORY environment
2052               variable. If that is not set either, the default is
2053               ~/.psql_history, or %APPDATA%\postgresql\psql_history on
2054               Windows. For example, putting:
2055
2056                   \set HISTFILE ~/.psql_history-:DBNAME
2057
2058               in ~/.psqlrc will cause psql to maintain a separate history for
2059               each database.
2060
2061                   Note
2062                   This feature was shamelessly plagiarized from Bash.
2063
2064           HISTSIZE
2065               The maximum number of commands to store in the command history
2066               (default 500). If set to a negative value, no limit is applied.
2067
2068                   Note
2069                   This feature was shamelessly plagiarized from Bash.
2070
2071           HOST
2072               The database server host you are currently connected to. This
2073               is set every time you connect to a database (including program
2074               start-up), but can be changed or unset.
2075
2076           IGNOREEOF
2077               If set to 1 or less, sending an EOF character (usually
2078               Control+D) to an interactive session of psql will terminate the
2079               application. If set to a larger numeric value, that many
2080               consecutive EOF characters must be typed to make an interactive
2081               session terminate. If the variable is set to a non-numeric
2082               value, it is interpreted as 10. The default is 0.
2083
2084                   Note
2085                   This feature was shamelessly plagiarized from Bash.
2086
2087           LASTOID
2088               The value of the last affected OID, as returned from an INSERT
2089               or \lo_import command. This variable is only guaranteed to be
2090               valid until after the result of the next SQL command has been
2091               displayed.  PostgreSQL servers since version 12 do not support
2092               OID system columns anymore, thus LASTOID will always be 0
2093               following INSERT when targeting such servers.
2094
2095           LAST_ERROR_MESSAGE
2096           LAST_ERROR_SQLSTATE
2097               The primary error message and associated SQLSTATE code for the
2098               most recent failed query in the current psql session, or an
2099               empty string and 00000 if no error has occurred in the current
2100               session.
2101
2102           ON_ERROR_ROLLBACK
2103               When set to on, if a statement in a transaction block generates
2104               an error, the error is ignored and the transaction continues.
2105               When set to interactive, such errors are only ignored in
2106               interactive sessions, and not when reading script files. When
2107               set to off (the default), a statement in a transaction block
2108               that generates an error aborts the entire transaction. The
2109               error rollback mode works by issuing an implicit SAVEPOINT for
2110               you, just before each command that is in a transaction block,
2111               and then rolling back to the savepoint if the command fails.
2112
2113           ON_ERROR_STOP
2114               By default, command processing continues after an error. When
2115               this variable is set to on, processing will instead stop
2116               immediately. In interactive mode, psql will return to the
2117               command prompt; otherwise, psql will exit, returning error code
2118               3 to distinguish this case from fatal error conditions, which
2119               are reported using error code 1. In either case, any currently
2120               running scripts (the top-level script, if any, and any other
2121               scripts which it may have in invoked) will be terminated
2122               immediately. If the top-level command string contained multiple
2123               SQL commands, processing will stop with the current command.
2124
2125           PORT
2126               The database server port to which you are currently connected.
2127               This is set every time you connect to a database (including
2128               program start-up), but can be changed or unset.
2129
2130           PROMPT1
2131           PROMPT2
2132           PROMPT3
2133               These specify what the prompts psql issues should look like.
2134               See Prompting below.
2135
2136           QUIET
2137               Setting this variable to on is equivalent to the command line
2138               option -q. It is probably not too useful in interactive mode.
2139
2140           ROW_COUNT
2141               The number of rows returned or affected by the last SQL query,
2142               or 0 if the query failed or did not report a row count.
2143
2144           SERVER_VERSION_NAME
2145           SERVER_VERSION_NUM
2146               The server's version number as a string, for example 9.6.2,
2147               10.1 or 11beta1, and in numeric form, for example 90602 or
2148               100001. These are set every time you connect to a database
2149               (including program start-up), but can be changed or unset.
2150
2151           SHOW_CONTEXT
2152               This variable can be set to the values never, errors, or always
2153               to control whether CONTEXT fields are displayed in messages
2154               from the server. The default is errors (meaning that context
2155               will be shown in error messages, but not in notice or warning
2156               messages). This setting has no effect when VERBOSITY is set to
2157               terse or sqlstate. (See also \errverbose, for use when you want
2158               a verbose version of the error you just got.)
2159
2160           SINGLELINE
2161               Setting this variable to on is equivalent to the command line
2162               option -S.
2163
2164           SINGLESTEP
2165               Setting this variable to on is equivalent to the command line
2166               option -s.
2167
2168           SQLSTATE
2169               The error code (see Appendix A) associated with the last SQL
2170               query's failure, or 00000 if it succeeded.
2171
2172           USER
2173               The database user you are currently connected as. This is set
2174               every time you connect to a database (including program
2175               start-up), but can be changed or unset.
2176
2177           VERBOSITY
2178               This variable can be set to the values default, verbose, terse,
2179               or sqlstate to control the verbosity of error reports. (See
2180               also \errverbose, for use when you want a verbose version of
2181               the error you just got.)
2182
2183           VERSION
2184           VERSION_NAME
2185           VERSION_NUM
2186               These variables are set at program start-up to reflect psql's
2187               version, respectively as a verbose string, a short string
2188               (e.g., 9.6.2, 10.1, or 11beta1), and a number (e.g., 90602 or
2189               100001). They can be changed or unset.
2190
2191       SQL Interpolation
2192           A key feature of psql variables is that you can substitute
2193           (“interpolate”) them into regular SQL statements, as well as the
2194           arguments of meta-commands. Furthermore, psql provides facilities
2195           for ensuring that variable values used as SQL literals and
2196           identifiers are properly quoted. The syntax for interpolating a
2197           value without any quoting is to prepend the variable name with a
2198           colon (:). For example,
2199
2200               testdb=> \set foo 'my_table'
2201               testdb=> SELECT * FROM :foo;
2202
2203           would query the table my_table. Note that this may be unsafe: the
2204           value of the variable is copied literally, so it can contain
2205           unbalanced quotes, or even backslash commands. You must make sure
2206           that it makes sense where you put it.
2207
2208           When a value is to be used as an SQL literal or identifier, it is
2209           safest to arrange for it to be quoted. To quote the value of a
2210           variable as an SQL literal, write a colon followed by the variable
2211           name in single quotes. To quote the value as an SQL identifier,
2212           write a colon followed by the variable name in double quotes. These
2213           constructs deal correctly with quotes and other special characters
2214           embedded within the variable value. The previous example would be
2215           more safely written this way:
2216
2217               testdb=> \set foo 'my_table'
2218               testdb=> SELECT * FROM :"foo";
2219
2220           Variable interpolation will not be performed within quoted SQL
2221           literals and identifiers. Therefore, a construction such as ':foo'
2222           doesn't work to produce a quoted literal from a variable's value
2223           (and it would be unsafe if it did work, since it wouldn't correctly
2224           handle quotes embedded in the value).
2225
2226           One example use of this mechanism is to copy the contents of a file
2227           into a table column. First load the file into a variable and then
2228           interpolate the variable's value as a quoted string:
2229
2230               testdb=> \set content `cat my_file.txt`
2231               testdb=> INSERT INTO my_table VALUES (:'content');
2232
2233           (Note that this still won't work if my_file.txt contains NUL bytes.
2234           psql does not support embedded NUL bytes in variable values.)
2235
2236           Since colons can legally appear in SQL commands, an apparent
2237           attempt at interpolation (that is, :name, :'name', or :"name") is
2238           not replaced unless the named variable is currently set. In any
2239           case, you can escape a colon with a backslash to protect it from
2240           substitution.
2241
2242           The :{?name} special syntax returns TRUE or FALSE depending on
2243           whether the variable exists or not, and is thus always substituted,
2244           unless the colon is backslash-escaped.
2245
2246           The colon syntax for variables is standard SQL for embedded query
2247           languages, such as ECPG. The colon syntaxes for array slices and
2248           type casts are PostgreSQL extensions, which can sometimes conflict
2249           with the standard usage. The colon-quote syntax for escaping a
2250           variable's value as an SQL literal or identifier is a psql
2251           extension.
2252
2253       Prompting
2254           The prompts psql issues can be customized to your preference. The
2255           three variables PROMPT1, PROMPT2, and PROMPT3 contain strings and
2256           special escape sequences that describe the appearance of the
2257           prompt. Prompt 1 is the normal prompt that is issued when psql
2258           requests a new command. Prompt 2 is issued when more input is
2259           expected during command entry, for example because the command was
2260           not terminated with a semicolon or a quote was not closed. Prompt 3
2261           is issued when you are running an SQL COPY FROM STDIN command and
2262           you need to type in a row value on the terminal.
2263
2264           The value of the selected prompt variable is printed literally,
2265           except where a percent sign (%) is encountered. Depending on the
2266           next character, certain other text is substituted instead. Defined
2267           substitutions are:
2268
2269           %M
2270               The full host name (with domain name) of the database server,
2271               or [local] if the connection is over a Unix domain socket, or
2272               [local:/dir/name], if the Unix domain socket is not at the
2273               compiled in default location.
2274
2275           %m
2276               The host name of the database server, truncated at the first
2277               dot, or [local] if the connection is over a Unix domain socket.
2278
2279           %>
2280               The port number at which the database server is listening.
2281
2282           %n
2283               The database session user name. (The expansion of this value
2284               might change during a database session as the result of the
2285               command SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION.)
2286
2287           %/
2288               The name of the current database.
2289
2290           %~
2291               Like %/, but the output is ~ (tilde) if the database is your
2292               default database.
2293
2294           %#
2295               If the session user is a database superuser, then a #,
2296               otherwise a >. (The expansion of this value might change during
2297               a database session as the result of the command SET SESSION
2298               AUTHORIZATION.)
2299
2300           %p
2301               The process ID of the backend currently connected to.
2302
2303           %R
2304               In prompt 1 normally =, but @ if the session is in an inactive
2305               branch of a conditional block, or ^ if in single-line mode, or
2306               !  if the session is disconnected from the database (which can
2307               happen if \connect fails). In prompt 2 %R is replaced by a
2308               character that depends on why psql expects more input: - if the
2309               command simply wasn't terminated yet, but * if there is an
2310               unfinished /* ... */ comment, a single quote if there is an
2311               unfinished quoted string, a double quote if there is an
2312               unfinished quoted identifier, a dollar sign if there is an
2313               unfinished dollar-quoted string, or ( if there is an unmatched
2314               left parenthesis. In prompt 3 %R doesn't produce anything.
2315
2316           %x
2317               Transaction status: an empty string when not in a transaction
2318               block, or * when in a transaction block, or !  when in a failed
2319               transaction block, or ?  when the transaction state is
2320               indeterminate (for example, because there is no connection).
2321
2322           %l
2323               The line number inside the current statement, starting from 1.
2324
2325           %digits
2326               The character with the indicated octal code is substituted.
2327
2328           %:name:
2329               The value of the psql variable name. See Variables, above, for
2330               details.
2331
2332           %`command`
2333               The output of command, similar to ordinary “back-tick”
2334               substitution.
2335
2336           %[ ... %]
2337               Prompts can contain terminal control characters which, for
2338               example, change the color, background, or style of the prompt
2339               text, or change the title of the terminal window. In order for
2340               the line editing features of Readline to work properly, these
2341               non-printing control characters must be designated as invisible
2342               by surrounding them with %[ and %]. Multiple pairs of these can
2343               occur within the prompt. For example:
2344
2345                   testdb=> \set PROMPT1 '%[%033[1;33;40m%]%n@%/%R%[%033[0m%]%# '
2346
2347               results in a boldfaced (1;) yellow-on-black (33;40) prompt on
2348               VT100-compatible, color-capable terminals.
2349
2350           %w
2351               Whitespace of the same width as the most recent output of
2352               PROMPT1. This can be used as a PROMPT2 setting, so that
2353               multi-line statements are aligned with the first line, but
2354               there is no visible secondary prompt.
2355           To insert a percent sign into your prompt, write %%. The default
2356           prompts are '%/%R%x%# ' for prompts 1 and 2, and '>> ' for prompt
2357           3.
2358
2359               Note
2360               This feature was shamelessly plagiarized from tcsh.
2361
2362       Command-Line Editing
2363           psql supports the Readline library for convenient line editing and
2364           retrieval. The command history is automatically saved when psql
2365           exits and is reloaded when psql starts up. Tab-completion is also
2366           supported, although the completion logic makes no claim to be an
2367           SQL parser. The queries generated by tab-completion can also
2368           interfere with other SQL commands, e.g., SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION
2369           LEVEL. If for some reason you do not like the tab completion, you
2370           can turn it off by putting this in a file named .inputrc in your
2371           home directory:
2372
2373               $if psql
2374               set disable-completion on
2375               $endif
2376
2377           (This is not a psql but a Readline feature. Read its documentation
2378           for further details.)
2379

ENVIRONMENT

2381       COLUMNS
2382           If \pset columns is zero, controls the width for the wrapped format
2383           and width for determining if wide output requires the pager or
2384           should be switched to the vertical format in expanded auto mode.
2385
2386       PGDATABASE
2387       PGHOST
2388       PGPORT
2389       PGUSER
2390           Default connection parameters (see Section 34.15).
2391
2392       PG_COLOR
2393           Specifies whether to use color in diagnostic messages. Possible
2394           values are always, auto and never.
2395
2396       PSQL_EDITOR
2397       EDITOR
2398       VISUAL
2399           Editor used by the \e, \ef, and \ev commands. These variables are
2400           examined in the order listed; the first that is set is used. If
2401           none of them is set, the default is to use vi on Unix systems or
2402           notepad.exe on Windows systems.
2403
2404       PSQL_EDITOR_LINENUMBER_ARG
2405           When \e, \ef, or \ev is used with a line number argument, this
2406           variable specifies the command-line argument used to pass the
2407           starting line number to the user's editor. For editors such as
2408           Emacs or vi, this is a plus sign. Include a trailing space in the
2409           value of the variable if there needs to be space between the option
2410           name and the line number. Examples:
2411
2412               PSQL_EDITOR_LINENUMBER_ARG='+'
2413               PSQL_EDITOR_LINENUMBER_ARG='--line '
2414
2415           The default is + on Unix systems (corresponding to the default
2416           editor vi, and useful for many other common editors); but there is
2417           no default on Windows systems.
2418
2419       PSQL_HISTORY
2420           Alternative location for the command history file. Tilde (~)
2421           expansion is performed.
2422
2423       PSQL_PAGER
2424       PAGER
2425           If a query's results do not fit on the screen, they are piped
2426           through this command. Typical values are more or less. Use of the
2427           pager can be disabled by setting PSQL_PAGER or PAGER to an empty
2428           string, or by adjusting the pager-related options of the \pset
2429           command. These variables are examined in the order listed; the
2430           first that is set is used. If none of them is set, the default is
2431           to use more on most platforms, but less on Cygwin.
2432
2433       PSQLRC
2434           Alternative location of the user's .psqlrc file. Tilde (~)
2435           expansion is performed.
2436
2437       SHELL
2438           Command executed by the \!  command.
2439
2440       TMPDIR
2441           Directory for storing temporary files. The default is /tmp.
2442
2443       This utility, like most other PostgreSQL utilities, also uses the
2444       environment variables supported by libpq (see Section 34.15).
2445

FILES

2447       psqlrc and ~/.psqlrc
2448           Unless it is passed an -X option, psql attempts to read and execute
2449           commands from the system-wide startup file (psqlrc) and then the
2450           user's personal startup file (~/.psqlrc), after connecting to the
2451           database but before accepting normal commands. These files can be
2452           used to set up the client and/or the server to taste, typically
2453           with \set and SET commands.
2454
2455           The system-wide startup file is named psqlrc and is sought in the
2456           installation's “system configuration” directory, which is most
2457           reliably identified by running pg_config --sysconfdir. By default
2458           this directory will be ../etc/ relative to the directory containing
2459           the PostgreSQL executables. The name of this directory can be set
2460           explicitly via the PGSYSCONFDIR environment variable.
2461
2462           The user's personal startup file is named .psqlrc and is sought in
2463           the invoking user's home directory. On Windows, which lacks such a
2464           concept, the personal startup file is named
2465           %APPDATA%\postgresql\psqlrc.conf. The location of the user's
2466           startup file can be set explicitly via the PSQLRC environment
2467           variable.
2468
2469           Both the system-wide startup file and the user's personal startup
2470           file can be made psql-version-specific by appending a dash and the
2471           PostgreSQL major or minor release number to the file name, for
2472           example ~/.psqlrc-9.2 or ~/.psqlrc-9.2.5. The most specific
2473           version-matching file will be read in preference to a
2474           non-version-specific file.
2475
2476       .psql_history
2477           The command-line history is stored in the file ~/.psql_history, or
2478           %APPDATA%\postgresql\psql_history on Windows.
2479
2480           The location of the history file can be set explicitly via the
2481           HISTFILE psql variable or the PSQL_HISTORY environment variable.
2482

NOTES

2484       •   psql works best with servers of the same or an older major version.
2485           Backslash commands are particularly likely to fail if the server is
2486           of a newer version than psql itself. However, backslash commands of
2487           the \d family should work with servers of versions back to 7.4,
2488           though not necessarily with servers newer than psql itself. The
2489           general functionality of running SQL commands and displaying query
2490           results should also work with servers of a newer major version, but
2491           this cannot be guaranteed in all cases.
2492
2493           If you want to use psql to connect to several servers of different
2494           major versions, it is recommended that you use the newest version
2495           of psql. Alternatively, you can keep around a copy of psql from
2496           each major version and be sure to use the version that matches the
2497           respective server. But in practice, this additional complication
2498           should not be necessary.
2499
2500       •   Before PostgreSQL 9.6, the -c option implied -X (--no-psqlrc); this
2501           is no longer the case.
2502
2503       •   Before PostgreSQL 8.4, psql allowed the first argument of a
2504           single-letter backslash command to start directly after the
2505           command, without intervening whitespace. Now, some whitespace is
2506           required.
2507

NOTES FOR WINDOWS USERS

2509       psql is built as a “console application”. Since the Windows console
2510       windows use a different encoding than the rest of the system, you must
2511       take special care when using 8-bit characters within psql. If psql
2512       detects a problematic console code page, it will warn you at startup.
2513       To change the console code page, two things are necessary:
2514
2515       •   Set the code page by entering cmd.exe /c chcp 1252. (1252 is a code
2516           page that is appropriate for German; replace it with your value.)
2517           If you are using Cygwin, you can put this command in /etc/profile.
2518
2519       •   Set the console font to Lucida Console, because the raster font
2520           does not work with the ANSI code page.
2521

EXAMPLES

2523       The first example shows how to spread a command over several lines of
2524       input. Notice the changing prompt:
2525
2526           testdb=> CREATE TABLE my_table (
2527           testdb(>  first integer not null default 0,
2528           testdb(>  second text)
2529           testdb-> ;
2530           CREATE TABLE
2531
2532       Now look at the table definition again:
2533
2534           testdb=> \d my_table
2535                         Table "public.my_table"
2536            Column |  Type   | Collation | Nullable | Default
2537           --------+---------+-----------+----------+---------
2538            first  | integer |           | not null | 0
2539            second | text    |           |          |
2540
2541       Now we change the prompt to something more interesting:
2542
2543           testdb=> \set PROMPT1 '%n@%m %~%R%# '
2544           peter@localhost testdb=>
2545
2546       Let's assume you have filled the table with data and want to take a
2547       look at it:
2548
2549           peter@localhost testdb=> SELECT * FROM my_table;
2550            first | second
2551           -------+--------
2552                1 | one
2553                2 | two
2554                3 | three
2555                4 | four
2556           (4 rows)
2557
2558       You can display tables in different ways by using the \pset command:
2559
2560           peter@localhost testdb=> \pset border 2
2561           Border style is 2.
2562           peter@localhost testdb=> SELECT * FROM my_table;
2563           +-------+--------+
2564           | first | second |
2565           +-------+--------+
2566           |     1 | one    |
2567           |     2 | two    |
2568           |     3 | three  |
2569           |     4 | four   |
2570           +-------+--------+
2571           (4 rows)
2572
2573           peter@localhost testdb=> \pset border 0
2574           Border style is 0.
2575           peter@localhost testdb=> SELECT * FROM my_table;
2576           first second
2577           ----- ------
2578               1 one
2579               2 two
2580               3 three
2581               4 four
2582           (4 rows)
2583
2584           peter@localhost testdb=> \pset border 1
2585           Border style is 1.
2586           peter@localhost testdb=> \pset format csv
2587           Output format is csv.
2588           peter@localhost testdb=> \pset tuples_only
2589           Tuples only is on.
2590           peter@localhost testdb=> SELECT second, first FROM my_table;
2591           one,1
2592           two,2
2593           three,3
2594           four,4
2595           peter@localhost testdb=> \pset format unaligned
2596           Output format is unaligned.
2597           peter@localhost testdb=> \pset fieldsep '\t'
2598           Field separator is "    ".
2599           peter@localhost testdb=> SELECT second, first FROM my_table;
2600           one     1
2601           two     2
2602           three   3
2603           four    4
2604
2605       Alternatively, use the short commands:
2606
2607           peter@localhost testdb=> \a \t \x
2608           Output format is aligned.
2609           Tuples only is off.
2610           Expanded display is on.
2611           peter@localhost testdb=> SELECT * FROM my_table;
2612           -[ RECORD 1 ]-
2613           first  | 1
2614           second | one
2615           -[ RECORD 2 ]-
2616           first  | 2
2617           second | two
2618           -[ RECORD 3 ]-
2619           first  | 3
2620           second | three
2621           -[ RECORD 4 ]-
2622           first  | 4
2623           second | four
2624
2625       Also, these output format options can be set for just one query by
2626       using \g:
2627
2628           peter@localhost testdb=> SELECT * FROM my_table
2629           peter@localhost testdb-> \g (format=aligned tuples_only=off expanded=on)
2630           -[ RECORD 1 ]-
2631           first  | 1
2632           second | one
2633           -[ RECORD 2 ]-
2634           first  | 2
2635           second | two
2636           -[ RECORD 3 ]-
2637           first  | 3
2638           second | three
2639           -[ RECORD 4 ]-
2640           first  | 4
2641           second | four
2642
2643       Here is an example of using the \df command to find only functions with
2644       names matching int*pl and whose second argument is of type bigint:
2645
2646           testdb=> \df int*pl * bigint
2647                                     List of functions
2648              Schema   |  Name   | Result data type | Argument data types | Type
2649           ------------+---------+------------------+---------------------+------
2650            pg_catalog | int28pl | bigint           | smallint, bigint    | func
2651            pg_catalog | int48pl | bigint           | integer, bigint     | func
2652            pg_catalog | int8pl  | bigint           | bigint, bigint      | func
2653           (3 rows)
2654
2655       When suitable, query results can be shown in a crosstab representation
2656       with the \crosstabview command:
2657
2658           testdb=> SELECT first, second, first > 2 AS gt2 FROM my_table;
2659            first | second | gt2
2660           -------+--------+-----
2661                1 | one    | f
2662                2 | two    | f
2663                3 | three  | t
2664                4 | four   | t
2665           (4 rows)
2666
2667           testdb=> \crosstabview first second
2668            first | one | two | three | four
2669           -------+-----+-----+-------+------
2670                1 | f   |     |       |
2671                2 |     | f   |       |
2672                3 |     |     | t     |
2673                4 |     |     |       | t
2674           (4 rows)
2675
2676       This second example shows a multiplication table with rows sorted in
2677       reverse numerical order and columns with an independent, ascending
2678       numerical order.
2679
2680           testdb=> SELECT t1.first as "A", t2.first+100 AS "B", t1.first*(t2.first+100) as "AxB",
2681           testdb(> row_number() over(order by t2.first) AS ord
2682           testdb(> FROM my_table t1 CROSS JOIN my_table t2 ORDER BY 1 DESC
2683           testdb(> \crosstabview "A" "B" "AxB" ord
2684            A | 101 | 102 | 103 | 104
2685           ---+-----+-----+-----+-----
2686            4 | 404 | 408 | 412 | 416
2687            3 | 303 | 306 | 309 | 312
2688            2 | 202 | 204 | 206 | 208
2689            1 | 101 | 102 | 103 | 104
2690           (4 rows)
2691
2692
2693
2694
2695PostgreSQL 14.3                      2022                              PSQL(1)
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