Follow the below instructions to set up PostgreSQL.The following sections describe how to replace the default H2 databases with PostgreSQL:
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Set up the database and login role
1. Install PostgreSQL on your computer.
2. Start the PostgreSQL service.
3. You can create a database and the login role from a GUI using the PGAdminIII tool: http://www.pgadmin.org/download.
4. To connect PGAdminIII to a PostgreSQL database server, locate the server from the object browser, right-click the client, and click Connect. This will show you the databases, tablespaces, and login roles. For example:
5. To create a database, click the Databases entry in the tree (inside the object browser), and click New Database.
6. From the New Database dialog box, give a name to the database (for example, "gregdb") and click OK.
7. To create a login role, click the Login Roles entry in the tree (inside the object browser), and click New Login Role. Enter the role name and a password.
These values will be used in the ESB configurations as described in the following sections.
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In the sample configuration, we are using "gregadmin" as the role name and "greadmin" as the password. |
Optionally, you can provide other policies, such as the expiration time for the login and the connection limit.
Click OK to finish creating the login role. For example:
Set up configuration files
1. Edit the default database configuration defined in the master-datasources.xml
file in the <ESB_HOME>/repository/conf/datasources
directory as follows. The database configurations in both registry.xml
and user-mgt.xml
refer to this data source.
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Replace these settings with your own custom values: |
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<datasource>
<name>WSO2_CARBON_DB</name>
<description>The datasource used for registry and user manager</description>
<jndiConfig>
<name>jdbc/WSO2CarbonDB</name>
</jndiConfig>
<definition type="RDBMS">
<configuration>
<url>jdbc:postgresql://localhost:5432/gregdb</url>
<username>regadmin</userName>
<password>regadmin</password>
<driverClassName>org.postgresql.Driver</driverClassName>
<maxActive>80</maxActive>
<maxWait>60000</maxWait>
<minIdle>5</minIdle>
<testOnBorrow>true</testOnBorrow>
<validationQuery>SELECT 1</validationQuery>
<validationInterval>30000</validationInterval>
</configuration>
</definition>
</datasource>
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Database configuration options
- url - The URL of the database.
- username - The name of the database user.
- password - The password of the database user.
- driverClassName - The class name of the database driver.
- maxActive - The maximum number of active connections that can be allocated from this pool at the same time or negative for no limit.
- maxWait - The maximum number of milliseconds that the pool will wait (when there are no available connections) for a connection to be returned before throwing an exception or <= 0 to wait indefinitely.
- minIdle - The minimum number of active connections that can remain idle in the pool, without extra ones being created, or 0 to create none.
Set up the drivers
1. Download the PostgreSQL JDBC4 driver from http://jdbc.postgresql.org/download.html.
2. Place the driver in the <ESB_HOME>/repository/components/lib
directory.
Create the database
The first time you start the ESB, run it with the -Dsetup
option. It will create all the tables in the given PostgreSQL database.
For Linux:
Code Block wso2server.sh -Dsetup
For Windows:
Code Block wso2server.bat -Dsetup
WSO2 ESB is now configured to run with PostgreSQL database.
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