CREATE DATABASE name [ WITH [ LOCATION = 'dbpath' ] [ TEMPLATE = template ] [ ENCODING = encoding ] ]
The name of a database to create.
An alternate file-system location in which to store the new database, specified as a string literal; or DEFAULT to use the default location.
Name of template from which to create the new database, or DEFAULT to use the default template (template1).
Multibyte encoding method to use in the new database. Specify a string literal name (e.g., 'SQL_ASCII'), or an integer encoding number, or DEFAULT to use the default encoding.
Message returned if the command completes successfully.
You must have the special CREATEDB privilege to create databases. See CREATE USER.
This occurs if a database with the name specified already exists.
The database location dbpath cannot contain single quotes. This is required so that the shell commands that create the database directory can execute safely.
If you have an explicit transaction block in progress you cannot call CREATE DATABASE. You must finish the transaction first.
These are most likely related to insufficient permissions on the data directory, a full disk, or other file system problems. The user under which the database server is running must have access to the location.
CREATE DATABASE creates a new PostgreSQL database. The creator becomes the owner of the new database.
An alternate location can be specified in order to, for example, store the database on a different disk. The path must have been prepared with the initlocation command.
If the path name does not contain a slash, it is interpreted as an environment variable name, which must be known to the server process. This way the database administrator can exercise control over locations in which databases can be created. (A customary choice is, e.g., PGDATA2.) If the server is compiled with ALLOW_ABSOLUTE_DBPATHS (not so by default), absolute path names, as identified by a leading slash (e.g., /usr/local/pgsql/data), are allowed as well.
By default, the new database will be created by cloning the standard system database template1. A different template can be specified by writing TEMPLATE = name. In particular, by writing TEMPLATE = template0, you can create a virgin database containing only the standard objects predefined by your version of PostgreSQL. This is useful if you wish to avoid copying any installation-local objects that may have been added to template1.
The optional encoding parameter allows selection of the database encoding, if your server was compiled with multibyte encoding support. When not specified, it defaults to the encoding used by the selected template database.
Optional parameters can be written in any order, not only the order illustrated above.
CREATE DATABASE is a PostgreSQL language extension.
Use DROP DATABASE to remove a database.
The program createdb is a shell script wrapper around this command, provided for convenience.
There are security and data integrity issues involved with using alternate database locations specified with absolute path names, and by default only an environment variable known to the backend may be specified for an alternate location. See the Administrator's Guide for more information.
Although it is possible to copy a database other than template1 by specifying its name as the template, this is not (yet) intended as a general-purpose COPY DATABASE facility. We recommend that databases used as templates be treated as read-only. See the Administrator's Guide for more information.
To create a new database:
olly=> create database lusiadas;
To create a new database in an alternate area ~/private_db:
$ mkdir private_db $ initlocation ~/private_db The location will be initialized with username "olly". This user will own all the files and must also own the server process. Creating directory /home/olly/private_db Creating directory /home/olly/private_db/base initlocation is complete. $ psql olly Welcome to psql, the PostgreSQL interactive terminal. Type: \copyright for distribution terms \h for help with SQL commands \? for help on internal slash commands \g or terminate with semicolon to execute query \q to quit olly=> CREATE DATABASE elsewhere WITH LOCATION = '/home/olly/private_db'; CREATE DATABASE