Install self-hosted TimescaleDB on Debian-based systems
You can host TimescaleDB yourself, on your Debian or Ubuntu system. These instructions use the apt
package manager on these distributions:
- Debian 10 Buster
- Debian 11 Bullseye
- Ubuntu 20.04 LTS Focal Fossa
- Ubuntu 22.04 LTS Jammy Jellyfish
warning
If you have already installed PostgreSQL using a method other than the apt
package manager, you could encounter errors following these instructions. It is safest to remove any existing PostgreSQL installations before you begin. If you want to keep your current PostgreSQL installation, do not install TimescaleDB using this method. Install from source instead.
Installing self-hosted TimescaleDB on Debian-based systems
At the command prompt, as root, add the PostgreSQL third party repository to get the latest PostgreSQL packages:
apt install gnupg postgresql-common apt-transport-https lsb-release wget
Run the PostgreSQL repository setup script:
/usr/share/postgresql-common/pgdg/apt.postgresql.org.sh
Add the TimescaleDB third party repository:
Install Timescale GPG key
wget --quiet -O - https://packagecloud.io/timescale/timescaledb/gpgkey | sudo apt-key add -
note
For Ubuntu 21.10 and later use this command to install Timescale GPG key
wget --quiet -O - https://packagecloud.io/timescale/timescaledb/gpgkey | sudo gpg --dearmor -o /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d/timescaledb.gpg
Update your local repository list:
apt update
Install TimescaleDB:
apt install timescaledb-2-postgresql-14
note
If you want to install a specific version of TimescaleDB, instead of the most recent, you can specify the version like this:
apt-get install timescaledb-2-postgresql-12='2.6.0*' timescaledb-2-loader-postgresql-12='2.6.0*'
You can see the full list of TimescaleDB releases by visiting our releases page. Note that older versions of TimescaleDB don’t always support all the OS versions listed above.
When you have completed the installation, you need to configure your database so that you can use it. The easiest way to do this is to run the timescaledb-tune
script, which is included with the timescaledb-tools
package. Run the timescaledb-tune
script using the sudo timescaledb-tune
command. For more information, see the configuration section.
Set up the TimescaleDB extension
When you have PostgreSQL and TimescaleDB installed, you can connect to it from your local system using the psql
command-line utility.
Install psql on Debian and Ubuntu
You can use the apt
package manager on Debian and Ubuntu systems to install the psql
tool.
Installing psql using the apt package manager
Make sure your
apt
repository is up to date:apt-get update
Install the
postgresql-client
package:apt-get install postgresql-client
Setting up the TimescaleDB extension
Restart PostgreSQL and create the TimescaleDB extension:
Restart the service after enabling TimescaleDB with
timescaledb-tune
:systemctl restart postgresql
On your local system, at the command prompt, connect to the PostgreSQL instance as the
postgres
superuser:-u postgres psql
If your connection is successful, you’ll see a message like this, followed by the
psql
prompt:psql (15.0 (Ubuntu 15.0-1.pgdg20.04+1), server 14.5 (Ubuntu 14.5-2.pgdg20.04+2))
SSL connection (protocol: TLSv1.3, cipher: TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384, compression: off)
Type "help" for help.
Set the password for the
postgres
user:\password postgres
Exit from PostgreSQL:
\q
Use
psql
client to connect to PostgreSQL:psql -U postgres -h localhost
At the
psql
prompt, create an empty database. Our database is calledtsdb
:CREATE database tsdb;
Connect to the database you created:
\c tsdb
Add the TimescaleDB extension:
CREATE EXTENSION IF NOT EXISTS timescaledb;
Check that the TimescaleDB extension is installed by using the
\dx
command at thepsql
prompt. Output is similar to:tsdb-# \dx
List of installed extensions
Name | Version | Schema | Description
-------------+---------+------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------
plpgsql | 1.0 | pg_catalog | PL/pgSQL procedural language
timescaledb | 2.7.0 | public | Enables scalable inserts and complex queries for time-series data
(2 rows)
After you have created the extension and the database, you can connect to your database directly using this command:
psql -U postgres -h localhost -d tsdb
Where to next
Now that you have your first TimescaleDB database up and running, you can check out the TimescaleDB section in our documentation, and find out what you can do with it.
If you want to work through some tutorials to help you get up and running with TimescaleDB and time-series data, check out our tutorials section.
You can always contact us if you need help working something out, or if you want to have a chat.