pgAdmin is an open-source administration and development platform for PostgreSQL and its related database management systems. Written in Python and jQuery, it supports all the features found in PostgreSQL. You can use pgAdmin to do everything from writing basic SQL queries to monitoring your databases and configuring advanced database architectures.
In this tutorial, we’ll walk through the process of installing and configuring the latest version of pgAdmin onto an Ubuntu 18.04 server, accessing pgAdmin through a web browser, and connecting it to a PostgreSQL database on your server.
To complete this tutorial, you will need:
ufw
. For help with setting this up, follow our Initial Server Setup Guide for Ubuntu 18.04.http://unix:/tmp/pgadmin4.sock
, following Step 1 and 2 of How To Configure Nginx as a Reverse Proxy on Ubuntu 22.04.venv
installed on your server. Follow How To Install Python 3 and Set Up a Programming Environment on an Ubuntu 18.04 server to install these tools and set up a virtual environment.As of this writing, the most recent version of pgAdmin is pgAdmin 4, while the most recent version available through the official Ubuntu repositories is pgAdmin 3. pgAdmin 3 is no longer supported though, and the project maintainers recommend installing pgAdmin 4. In this step, we will go over the process of installing the latest version of pgAdmin 4 within a virtual environment (as recommended by the project’s development team) and installing its dependencies using apt
.
To begin, update your server’s package index if you haven’t done so recently:
- sudo apt update
Next, install the following dependencies. These include libgmp3-dev
, a multiprecision arithmetic library; libpq-dev
, which includes header files and a static library that helps communication with a PostgreSQL backend:
- sudo apt install libgmp3-dev libpq-dev
Following this, create a few directories where pgAdmin will store its sessions data, storage data, and logs:
- sudo mkdir -p /var/lib/pgadmin4/sessions
- sudo mkdir /var/lib/pgadmin4/storage
- sudo mkdir /var/log/pgadmin4
Then, change ownership of these directories to your non-root user and group. This is necessary because they are currently owned by your root user, but we will install pgAdmin from a virtual environment owned by your non-root user, and the installation process involves creating some files within these directories. After the installation, however, we will change the ownership over to the www-data user and group so it can be served to the web:
- sudo chown -R sammy:sammy /var/lib/pgadmin4
- sudo chown -R sammy:sammy /var/log/pgadmin4
Next, open up your virtual environment. Navigate to the directory your programming environment is in and activate it. Following the naming conventions of the prerequisite Python 3 tutorial, we’ll go to the environments
directory and activate the my_env
environment:
- cd environments/
- source my_env/bin/activate
After activating the virtual environment, it would be prudent to ensure that you have the latest version of pip
installed on your system. The version of pip
that’s available from the default Ubuntu 18.04 repositories is version 9.0.1, while the latest version is 21.0.1. If you installed the python3-pip
package as outlined in the prerequisite Python installation tutorial but you haven’t upgraded it to the latest version, you will run into problems when configuring pgAdmin in the next step.
To upgrade pip
to the latest version, run the following command:
- python -m pip install -U pip
Following this, download the pgAdmin 4 source code onto your machine. To find the latest version of the source code, navigate to the pgAdmin 4 (Python Wheel) Download page. Click the link for the latest version ( v6.10, as of this writing), then on the next page click the link reading pip. From this File Browser page, copy the file link that ends with .whl
— the standard built-package format used for Python distributions. Then go back to your terminal and run the following wget
command, making sure to replace the link with the one you copied from the PostgreSQL site, which will download the .whl
file to your server:
- wget https://ftp.postgresql.org/pub/pgadmin/pgadmin4/v6.10/pip/pgadmin4-6.10-py3-none-any.whl
Next install the wheel
package, the reference implementation of the wheel packaging standard. A Python library, this package serves as an extension for building wheels and includes a command line tool for working with .whl
files:
- python -m pip install wheel
Then install pgAdmin 4 package with the following command:
- python -m pip install pgadmin4-6.10-py3-none-any.whl
Next, install Gunicorn, a Python WSGI server that will be used with Nginx to serve the pgadmin
web interface later in the tutorial:
- python -m pip install gunicorn
That takes care of installing pgAdmin and its dependencies. Before connecting it to your database, though, there are a few changes you’ll need to make to the program’s configuration.
Although pgAdmin has been installed on your server, there are still a few steps you must go through to ensure it has the permissions and configurations needed to allow it to correctly serve the web interface.
pgAdmin’s main configuration file, config.py
, is read before any other configuration file. Its contents can be used as a reference point for further configuration settings that can be specified in pgAdmin’s other config files, but to avoid unforeseen errors, you should not edit the config.py
file itself. We will add some configuration changes to a new file, named config_local.py
, which will be read after the primary one.
Create this file now using your preferred text editor. Here, we will use nano
:
- nano my_env/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pgadmin4/config_local.py
In your editor, add the following content:
LOG_FILE = '/var/log/pgadmin4/pgadmin4.log'
SQLITE_PATH = '/var/lib/pgadmin4/pgadmin4.db'
SESSION_DB_PATH = '/var/lib/pgadmin4/sessions'
STORAGE_DIR = '/var/lib/pgadmin4/storage'
SERVER_MODE = True
Here are what these five directives do:
LOG_FILE
: this defines the file in which pgAdmin’s logs will be stored.SQLITE_PATH
: pgAdmin stores user-related data in an SQLite database, and this directive points the pgAdmin software to this configuration database. Because this file is located under the persistent directory /var/lib/pgadmin4/
, your user data will not be lost after you upgrade.SESSION_DB_PATH
: specifies which directory will be used to store session data.STORAGE_DIR
: defines where pgAdmin will store other data, like backups and security certificates.SERVER_MODE
: setting this directive to True
tells pgAdmin to run in Server mode, as opposed to Desktop mode.Notice that each of these file paths point to the directories you created in Step 1.
After adding these lines, save and close the file. If you used nano
, do so by press CTRL + X
followed by Y
and then ENTER
.
With those configurations in place, run the pgAdmin setup script to set your login credentials:
- python my_env/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pgadmin4/setup.py
After running this command, you will see a prompt asking for your email address and a password. These will serve as your login credentials when you access pgAdmin later on, so be sure to remember or take note of what you enter here:
Output. . .
Enter the email address and password to use for the initial pgAdmin user account:
Email address: sammy@example.com
Password:
Retype password:
With that, pgAdmin is fully configured. However, the program isn’t yet being served from your server, so it remains inaccessible. To resolve this, we will configure Gunicorn and Nginx to serve pgAdmin so you can access its user interface through a web browser.
You will be using Gunicorn to serve pgAdmin as a web application. However, as an application server Gunicorn will only be available locally, and not accessible through the internet. To make it available remotely, you will need to use Nginx as a reverse proxy.
Having completed the prerequisite to set up Nginx as a reverse proxy, your Nginx configuration file will contain this:
server {
listen 80;
listen [::]:80;
server_name your_domain www.your_domain;
location / {
proxy_pass http://unix:/tmp/pgadmin4.sock;
include proxy_params;
}
}
This reverse proxy configuration enables your Gunicorn server to be accessible in your local browser. Start your Gunicorn server with the pgAdmin application:
- gunicorn --bind unix:/tmp/pgadmin4.sock --workers=1 --threads=25 --chdir ~/environments/my_env/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pgadmin4 pgAdmin4:app
Output[2022-08-29 00:19:11 +0000] [7134] [INFO] Starting gunicorn 20.1.0
[2022-08-29 00:19:11 +0000] [7134] [INFO] Listening at: unix:/tmp/pgadmin4.sock (7134)
[2022-08-29 00:19:11 +0000] [7134] [INFO] Using worker: gthread
[2022-08-29 00:19:11 +0000] [7135] [INFO] Booting worker with pid: 7135
Note: Invoking Gunicorn in this manner ties the process to your terminal. For a more long-term solution, invoke Gunicorn with a program like Supervisor. You can follow this tutorial on how to install and manage Supervisor on Ubuntu and Debian VPS.
With Gunicorn acting as an application server made accessible by your Nginx reverse proxy, you are ready to access pgAdmin in your web browser.
On your local machine, open up your preferred web browser and navigate to your server’s IP address:
http://your_server_ip
Once there, you’ll be presented with a login screen similar to the following:
Enter the login credentials you defined in Step 2, and you’ll be taken to the pgAdmin Welcome Screen:
Now that you’ve confirmed you can access the pgAdmin interface, all that’s left to do is to connect pgAdmin to your PostgreSQL database. Before doing so, though, you’ll need to make one minor change to your PostgreSQL superuser’s configuration.
If you followed the prerequisite PostgreSQL tutorial, you should already have PostgreSQL installed on your server with a new superuser role and database set up.
By default in PostgreSQL, you authenticate as database users using the “Identification Protocol,” or “ident,” authentication method. This involves PostgreSQL taking the client’s Ubuntu username and using it as the allowed database username. This can allow for greater security in many cases, but it can also cause issues in instances where you’d like an outside program, such as pgAdmin, to connect to one of your databases. To resolve this, we will set a password for this PostgreSQL role which will allow pgAdmin to connect to your database.
From your terminal, open the PostgreSQL prompt under your superuser role:
- sudo -u sammy psql
From the PostgreSQL prompt, update the user profile to have a strong password of your choosing:
- ALTER USER sammy PASSWORD 'password';
Then exit the PostgreSQL prompt:
- \q
Next, go back to the pgAdmin 4 interface in your browser, and locate the Browser menu on the left hand side. Right-click on Servers to open a context menu, hover your mouse over Create, and click Server….
This will cause a window to pop up in your browser in which you’ll enter info about your server, role, and database.
In the General tab, enter the name for this server. This can be anything you’d like, but you may find it helpful to make it something descriptive. In our example, the server is named Sammy-server-1
.
Next, click on the Connection tab. In the Host name/address field, enter localhost
. The Port should be set to 5432
by default, which will work for this setup, as that’s the default port used by PostgreSQL.
In the Maintenance database field, enter the name of the database you’d like to connect to. Note that this database must already be created on your server. Then, enter the PostgreSQL username and password you configured previously in the Username and Password fields, respectively.
The empty fields in the other tabs are optional, and it’s only necessary that you fill them in if you have a specific setup in mind in which they’re required. Click the Save button, and the database will appear under the Servers in the Browser menu.
You’ve successfully connected pgAdmin4 to your PostgreSQL database. You can do just about anything from the pgAdmin dashboard that you would from the PostgreSQL prompt. To illustrate this, we will create an example table and populate it with some sample data through the web interface.
From the pgAdmin dashboard, locate the Browser menu on the left-hand side of the window. Click on the plus sign (+) next to Servers (1) to expand the tree menu within it. Next, click the plus sign to the left of the server you added in the previous step (Sammy-server-1 in our example), then expand Databases, the name of the database you added (sammy, in our example), and then Schemas (1). You should see a tree menu like the following:
Right-click the Tables list item, then hover your cursor over Create and click Table….
This will open up a Create-Table window. Under the General tab of this window, enter a name for the table. This can be anything you’d like, but to keep things simple we’ll refer to it as table-01.
Then navigate to the Columns tab and click the + sign in the upper right corner of the window to add some columns. When adding a column, you’re required to give it a Name and a Data type, and you may need to choose a Length if it’s required by the data type you’ve selected.
Additionally, the official PostgreSQL documentation states that adding a primary key to a table is usually best practice. A primary key is a constraint that indicates a specific column or set of columns that can be used as a special identifier for rows in the table. This isn’t a requirement, but if you’d like to set one or more of your columns as the primary key, toggle the switch at the far right from No to Yes.
Click the Save button to create the table.
By this point, you’ve created a table and added a couple columns to it. However, the columns don’t yet contain any data. To add data to your new table, right-click the name of the table in the Browser menu, hover your cursor over Scripts and click on INSERT Script.
This will open a new panel on the dashboard. At the top you’ll see a partially-completed INSERT
statement, with the appropriate table and column names. Go ahead and replace the question marks (?) with some dummy data, being sure that the data you add aligns with the data types you selected for each column. Note that you can also add multiple rows of data by adding each row in a new set of parentheses, with each set of parentheses separated by a comma as shown in the following example.
If you’d like, feel free to replace the partially-completed INSERT
script with this example INSERT
statement:
INSERT INTO public."table-01"(
col1, col2, col3)
VALUES ('Juneau', 14, 337), ('Bismark', 90, 2334), ('Lansing', 51, 556);
Click on the sideways triangle icon (▶) to execute the INSERT
statement. Note that in older versions of pgAdmin, the execute icon is instead a lightning bolt (⚡).
To view the table and all the data within it, right-click the name of your table in the Browser menu once again, hover your cursor over View/Edit Data, and select All Rows.
This will open another new panel, below which, in the lower panel’s Data Output tab, you can view all the data held within that table.
With that, you’ve successfully created a table and populated it with some data through the pgAdmin web interface. Of course, this is just one method you can use to create a table through pgAdmin. For example, it’s possible to create and populate a table using SQL instead of the GUI-based method described in this step.
In this guide, you learned how to install pgAdmin 4 from a Python virtual environment, configure it, serve it to the web with Gunicorn and Nginx, and how to connect it to a PostgreSQL database. Additionally, this guide went over one method that can be used to create and populate a table, but pgAdmin can be used for much more than just creating and editing tables.
For more information on how to get the most out of all of pgAdmin’s features, we encourage you to review the project’s documentation. You can also learn more about PostgreSQL through our Community tutorials on the subject.
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This was the first tutorial I followed from this site. Thank you very much for this post, it was 100% all the way through!
Thanks for this awesome and elaborative tutorial. I want to host this in Nginx instead of the Apache server. Can you add the configuration part (step 3) for the Nginx server? Thanks in advance.
Hello, I have a problem when I try to set up the email and the password. (running this command :
python my_env/lib/python3.6/site-packages/pgadmin4/setup.py
I got this error : sqlalchemy.exc.OperationalError: (sqlite3.OperationalError) table version already exists. do you have any solution pls ?I fallow step by step and in step 4 I got an error from apache:
“Forbidden You don’t have permission to access / on this server.”
How can I slove this?
Hey, currently the login page is: http://my_server_ip/login How can I change it, e. g. to http://my_server_ip/some_other_path/login ?
Thanks for an answer.
Thanks for the tutorial! I have a problem, for some reason I cannot access the postgresql server :/ Not sure what is wrong… My server is running on a DO droplet. The port 5432 seems to be open: ~$ lsof -i :5432 COMMAND PID USER FD TYPE DEVICE SIZE/OFF NODE NAME postgres 23170 postgres 6u IPv4 9234028 0t0 TCP localhost:postgresql (LISTEN)
I have created a user/password and a database, but when I try to connect from my computer with HeidiSQL or pgAdmin, I get error messages like: “Is the server running on host “138.x.x.x” and accepting TCP/IP connections on port 5432?”
What am I missing?
After a lot of failed attempts at the end with 500 error from apache. I just used this link: https://www.pgadmin.org/download/pgadmin-4-apt/ and installed pgadmin4
This comment has been deleted
Hi, thanks for the tutorial! How can I change the default port? I’ve more than one app running on my server and I’would like to change the listen address for pgadmin4, for example on port 8081. Thanks!
Hi! First of all, thank you very much for the tutorial. I was able to go through it without major problems from beginning to end. However, navigating to my ip’s address in chrome (also firefox) shows a red screen with text: “404 not found. File not found error”.
I don’t know exactly why this may be happening since as I said I managed to get working all the steps, but I think (just intuition from what I have tried and googled) that could be something related to the firewall. Any help would be much appreciated!