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Yeah the name you want for the database host is
postgres
, or whatever the container is named in thedocker-compose.yml
. The full name of what the container ends up being named on the host (usually,lemmy-postgres-1
or something) doesn't matter, it's its internal name that's important.That you get a password error specifically also suggests it is communicating with it properly otherwise the error would be connection refused or connection timeout or something similar.
Maybe try a very simple password temporarily like
test
, rebuild the postgres container/delete the volumes and see if it works. If it still doesn't work you have more troubleshooting to do, if it works then you know the password is tripping something somewhere.I was curious about this, and it turns out both work. I tested by pinging both
postgres
andlemmy_postgres_1
, and both responded with the same IP address. Good to know, but I did go ahead and change it back topostgres
I did this, and I'm still getting the same error, so obviously something is wrong.
At this point it makes me wonder if your changes are making it to the containers. If you change the username for the db both for postgres and lemmy, do you get a different error about the new username? Maybe lemmy's just using the default config and not reading your hjson file, that's a good way to test that.
Otherwise I'm at a loss, it should be pretty simple.
I tried this... updated the user to
lemmy1
. The error message does indeed change to reflect the new user.Super frustrating!