Try removung the # from infront of POSTGRES_USER, this designates it as a comment.
Thanks, I tried with and without the POSTGRES_USER
line commented out, still not joy. The documentation says it should default to default when not declared.
If there is already an initialized database, the environment variables will be ignored.
What you have looks correct; the POSTGRES_USER
variable only needs to be set if you want it to be something other than postgres
.
Note: If you use dashes, I believe it's KEY=Value
and if you don't use dashes, it's KEY: value
Try giving it a clean data volume and re-running to see if it picks it up.
Thanks, I'll give this a go during breakfast. I've been pulling out my hair and this seems the most likely solution I didn't think of.
Thank you so much, your comment set me in the right direction. Turns out the tutorial I followed which had the data volume empty was the culprit*. So when I actually mapped it to something, it started working.
- I'm blaming the tutorial, but it was totally my fault!
Just took a quick look at my config file and I have
POSTGRES_USER: postgres
Note specifically the colon and lack of quotes.
It's also worth noting I'm using postgres:16-bullseye
as my image. Something wasn't working right with latest when I was setting it up a few months ago, but I don't think it was the user. Regardless, worth a shot if the previous change doesn't help.
As others have said, remove the # to uncommit the line.
Commits are a special type of line in many languages that allow us humans to stick info (generally for humans) inside the code that the interpreter skips over. From the machines perspective this block looks like:
environment:
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: HDFnWzVZ5bGI
Note that the entire line is missing.
As a side note. Please change the password as it's been posted to the Internet.
Thanks, I tried with and without the POSTGRES_USER
line commented out, still not joy. The documentation says it should default to default when not declared.
As for the password, don't worry I changed it right away.
I assume there is nothing in the database? Delete the file under volumes and relaunch. At a guess your database for initialized without a user and is now just in that state.
Turns out I didn't actually have a volume, so nothing was actually created properly.
Yep. Sounds right. Welcome to learning docker compose.
It's commented out... Remove the #
Thanks, I tried with and without the POSTGRES_USER
line commented out, still not joy. The documentation says it should default to default when not declared.
Docker