Consider the scenario where you are trying to drop a database, but there are existing connections.
$ dropdb sample_db
dropdb: database removal failed: ERROR: database "sample_db" is being accessed by other users
DETAIL: There is 1 other session using the database.
If you don't know where these connections are, you can terminate them within
a psql
session. You just have to figure out the pid
of those
connections. In List Connections To A
Database, I explained how to
get at the pid
values of connections. Using the pid
value and
pg_terminate_backend()
, you can terminate a connection.
> select pg_terminate_backend(12345);
pg_terminate_backend
----------------------
t
To terminate all connections to a particular database, use a query like the following:
select pg_terminate_backend(pg_stat_activity.pid)
from pg_stat_activity
where pg_stat_activity.datname = 'sample_db'
and pid <> pg_backend_pid();
pg_terminate_backend
----------------------
t
This excludes the current session, so you'll need to exit psql
as well
before dropping the database.