FROM quay.io/enterprisedb/edb-postgres-advanced:11.20-3.3-postgis USER root # this 777 will be replaced by 700 at runtime (allows semi-arbitrary "--user" values) RUN chown -R postgres:postgres /var/lib/edb && chmod 777 /var/lib/edb && rm /docker-entrypoint-initdb.d/10_postgis.sh USER postgres ENV LANG en_US.utf8 ENV PG_MAJOR 11 ENV PG_VERSION 11 ENV PGPORT 5444 ENV PGDATA /var/lib/edb/as$PG_MAJOR/data/ VOLUME /var/lib/edb/as$PG_MAJOR/data/ COPY docker-entrypoint.sh /usr/local/bin/ ENTRYPOINT ["docker-entrypoint.sh"] # We set the default STOPSIGNAL to SIGINT, which corresponds to what PostgreSQL # calls "Fast Shutdown mode" wherein new connections are disallowed and any # in-progress transactions are aborted, allowing PostgreSQL to stop cleanly and # flush tables to disk, which is the best compromise available to avoid data # corruption. # # Users who know their applications do not keep open long-lived idle connections # may way to use a value of SIGTERM instead, which corresponds to "Smart # Shutdown mode" in which any existing sessions are allowed to finish and the # server stops when all sessions are terminated. # # See https://www.postgresql.org/docs/12/server-shutdown.html for more details # about available PostgreSQL server shutdown signals. # # See also https://www.postgresql.org/docs/12/server-start.html for further # justification of this as the default value, namely that the example (and # shipped) systemd service files use the "Fast Shutdown mode" for service # termination. # STOPSIGNAL SIGINT # # An additional setting that is recommended for all users regardless of this # value is the runtime "--stop-timeout" (or your orchestrator/runtime's # equivalent) for controlling how long to wait between sending the defined # STOPSIGNAL and sending SIGKILL (which is likely to cause data corruption). # # The default in most runtimes (such as Docker) is 10 seconds, and the # documentation at https://www.postgresql.org/docs/12/server-start.html notes # that even 90 seconds may not be long enough in many instances. EXPOSE 5444 CMD ["postgres"]