PG::UndefinedObject: ERROR: type "hstore" does not exist but it does
Asked Answered
M

3

11

First of all, this may look like a duplicate of:

postgres hstore exists and doesn't exist at same time

but it is not. While I am getting the same error message in the circumstance. When checking to see if hstore is installed on the DB, we can see that it is:

./psql -d photographerio_development -c '\dx'
                       List of installed extensions
  Name   | Version |   Schema   |                   Description                    
---------+---------+------------+--------------------------------------------------
 hstore  | 1.2     | hstore     | data type for storing sets of (key, value) pairs
 plpgsql | 1.0     | pg_catalog | PL/pgSQL procedural language

and it is too on the template_1 DB.

So, when I try to run the migration to add the hstore, I get the PG::Error: ERROR: extension "hstore" already exists and when I comment out this migration, on the next one, which requires the hstore, it says PG::UndefinedObject: ERROR: type "hstore" does not exist which is a bit of a paradox.

It is a Rails 4.0.1 app with postgresql 9 and I have hstore working on a few other projects running on this machine.

Modesta answered 20/2, 2014 at 13:34 Comment(0)
N
18

You have installed the hstore extension in a schema named hstore which is presumably not on your default search_path.

You must do one of these:

  • Add hstore to search_path during connection setup;
  • Add hstore to search_path with an ALTER USER ... SET or ALTER DATABASE ... SET;
  • Move the hstore extension from the hstore schema into public; or
  • schema-qualify all references to hstore, e.g. hstore.hstore(...). This must be done for operators too; -> becomes OPERATOR(hstore.->)
Ned answered 20/2, 2014 at 14:21 Comment(1)
Adding it to the search_path was the easiest way to fix this.Modesta
A
5

This is how I solved the problem. Create a schema called extensions and grant authorization to the db username you use in the project.

psql -U postgres -d template1 -c "CREATE SCHEMA extensions AUTHORIZATION <yourDbUserName>;"

create the extensions in the created schema (extensions)

psql -U postgres -d template1 -c "CREATE EXTENSION IF NOT EXISTS hstore SCHEMA extensions;"
Amphimacer answered 8/10, 2015 at 10:29 Comment(1)
The AUTHORIZATION was the part I was missing, thanks!Rabinowitz
S
3

This is how I solved this issue in ubuntu 18.04.

  1. Provide postgres super user access.

    sudo su postgres

  2. Then I run:

    psql -U postgres your_database_name -c 'create extension hstore;'

Now I can alter table your_database_name and add hstore type columns in it.

  • Connect to your database

    psql -d your_database_name -U your_user_role

And

alter table your_table_name add your_column_name HSTORE;

Though there might be saveral different ways to do it, but I solve it in this way.

Hope this will help novice users like me.

Scholasticate answered 29/7, 2020 at 6:40 Comment(1)
aka. create extension hstoreCribble

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