Iuri Sampaio wrote:
Bud
Thanks for remind me that, but I already did that, even boot over again the
machine, turn off and turn on. Neither those worked out
iuri
'>'> The postgres commands doesn't work to an user account
'>'>
'>'>
'>'>
'>'> I already created the user on postgres
'>'>
'>'> desktop:~# su - postgres
'>'>
'>'> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ createuser -a -d oacsbr
'>'>
'>'>
'>'>
'>'> and set on .bashrc
'>'>
'>'> LD_LIBRARY_PATH=:/usr/local/pgsql/lib:/usr/local/pgsql/lib
'>'>
'>'> PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/bin/X11:/usr/games:/usr/local/
'>'>pgsql/b in:/usr/local/pgsql/bin
'>'>
'>'>
'>'>
'>'>
'>'>
'>'> But somehow I can't run any commands such as
'>'>
'>'> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ createdb -E UNICODE mytestdb
'>'>
'>'> -su: createdb: command not found
'>'>
'>'> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ psql -l
'>'>
'>'> -su: psql: command not found
'>'>
'>'> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ psql -l mytestdb.dmp mytestdb
'>'>
'>'> -su: psql: command not found
'>'>
'>'>
'>'>
'>'>
'>'>
'>'> Does anyone knows what I've missed?
'>'
'>'A small thing that I have overlooked more than once. You have to
'>'run .bashrc after an edit, either by logging out and back in, or by
'>'sourcing it on the command line.
'>'
'>'~$ . .bashrc
'>'
'>'
'>'--
'>'Bud Rogers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> KD5SZ
'>'
'>'
'>'
'>'--
'>'To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
'>'with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
'>'
are you exporting PATH in your bashrc ?
what does env | grep PATH report?
what about using the full path to the commands?
/usr/bin/psql ?
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]