Teams switch from Aurora Serverless to Neon for better performance and 80% less costs. Read more
PostgreSQL Tutorial/Administration/Check PostgreSQL Uptime

PostgreSQL Uptime

Summary: in this tutorial, you will learn how to calculate the PostgreSQL uptime based on the current time and the server’s started time.

Checking PostgreSQL uptime

First, open the Command Prompt on Windows or Terminal on Unix-like systems and connect to the PostgreSQL server:

psql -U postgres

Second, execute the following query to get the PostgreSQL uptime:

SELECT
  date_trunc(
    'second',
    current_timestamp - pg_postmaster_start_time()
  ) as uptime;

How it works

PostgreSQL stores the time when it was started in the database server. To retrieve the start time, you use the pg_postmaster_start_time() function as follows:

SELECT pg_postmaster_start_time();

Output:

pg_postmaster_start_time
-------------------------------
 2024-02-14 03:41:32.048451-07
(1 row)

You can then calculate the uptime based on the current time and the start time returned by the pg_postmaster_start_time() function:

SELECT current_timestamp - pg_postmaster_start_time() uptime;

Output:

uptime
------------------------
 6 days 07:39:06.006459
(1 row)

You can truncate the microsecond from the uptime using the DATE_TRUNC() function to make the output more human-readable:

SELECT
  date_trunc(
    'second',
    current_timestamp - pg_postmaster_start_time()
  ) as uptime;

Output:

uptime
-----------------
 6 days 07:39:24
(1 row)

Summary

  • Calculate the PostgreSQL uptime using the current time and start time.

Last updated on

Was this page helpful?