Understood, but I thought that the install routine (in this case compiled from 
source on RHEL 6) will create the local user and group named postgres and chown 
the config and data dirs to that ....

PGDATA=/var/postgresql/log/data

-rw------- 1 postgres postgres     4 Jan  7 15:18 PG_VERSION
drwx------ 2 postgres postgres  4096 Jan  7 15:18 pg_twophase
drwx------ 4 postgres postgres  4096 Jan  7 15:18 pg_multixact
-rw------- 1 postgres postgres  1631 Jan  7 15:18 pg_ident.conf
-rw------- 1 postgres postgres 16908 Jan  7 15:18 orig_postgresql.conf
-rw------- 1 postgres postgres  3652 Jan  7 15:18 orig_pg_hba.conf
-rw------- 1 postgres postgres 17929 Jan  7 15:21 postgresql.conf
-rw------- 1 postgres postgres  4160 Jan  7 15:21 pg_hba.conf
drwx------ 6 postgres postgres  4096 Jan 11 17:19 base
-rw------- 1 postgres postgres    37 Jan 16 12:16 postmaster.opts
drwx------ 2 postgres postgres  4096 Jan 17 11:37 pg_clog
drwx------ 2 postgres postgres  4096 Jan 17 11:46 pg_subtrans
drwx------ 3 postgres postgres  4096 Jan 17 11:47 pg_xlog
drwx------ 2 postgres postgres  4096 Jan 17 11:47 pg_tblspc
drwx------ 2 postgres postgres  4096 Jan 18 10:51 pg_stat_tmp
drwx------ 2 postgres postgres  4096 Jan 18 10:51 global

-----Original Message-----
From: Tom Lane [mailto:t...@sss.pgh.pa.us] 
Sent: Wednesday, January 23, 2013 10:29 AM
To: Plugge, Joe R.
Cc: pgsql-admin@postgresql.org
Subject: Re: [ADMIN] Installing Postgres without the postgres user and group on 
Linux?

"Plugge, Joe R." <jrplu...@west.com> writes:
> Is it possible to install and then subsequently run the postgres engine on 
> Linux without creating the postgres user and group?  We have some folks 
> implementing LDAP that are resistant to creating a postgres account and group 
> and would rather create machine specific accounts (like one does for Windows 
> with SQL Server).

The server source code has no particular allegiance to any OS username.
You can run it under whatever account you want.

> I always thought that if the postgres user and group were not there upon 
> install (which is done as root), that the installation process would create 
> them for you, am I missing something?

Particular packagings of Postgres might act like that --- for instance, the 
Fedora/Red Hat RPMs would try to create such a user&group.  But you did not say 
whose packaging you were thinking of using.  In any case you could run the 
executables under some other user ID if you then adjusted file ownerships and 
startup scripts appropriately.

                        regards, tom lane


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