![]() ![]() ![]() Log as the postgres user that you use to manage the database. Next, stop any services that use the database, such as BitBucket, Jira or Confluence or whatever you have there. If you have something different, the following tutorial will probably work, but you’ll have to adjust some directories.įirst thing first, let’s check the version of PostgreSQL that we use. ![]() If you use the default version, then you probably use systemctl start/stop postgresql to manage the start/stop of the database daemon. In this case, your database most likely resides under /var/lib/pgsql/data and the binaries are under /usr/bin/psql. First, I assume that you installed PostgreSQL using yum from the default repo. While this post is for CentOS, it might work for other distros too. So, I’ll explain how to upgrade PostgreSQL on CentOS from 9.2.24 to PostgreSQL 9.6. While PostgeSQL 9.2 is quite old and they are already announcing version 12, mind that any of the Atlassian stack can’t support anything more than version 9.6 at the time of this writing. If you’ve installed BitBucket on a CentOS 7 server and use PostgreSQL as the back-end database, you’ve probably seen this nagging warning that support for PostgreSQL 9.2.24 has been deprecated and will be removed in an upcoming release. Post Views: 29,369 Reading Timee: 5 minutes ![]()
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