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From the PostGIS manual about Compiling and Install from source I get the general procedure to be ...

  1. Install postgres
  2. get a couple of libraries PostGIS depends on
  3. download and extract the PostGIS sources
  4. run the configure shell script
  5. run make

that should build PostGIS against (and only working with) the current installed postgres version.

now my questions

  1. will you get something out of the build process that you can move to other machines with the same postgres version (and the required libraries) and use it there as well, or
  2. build PostGIS into the running postgres installation and be able to use it on that exact machine in that exact combination?
  3. if you want to upgrade PostGIS ... do you have to remove the old version after the migration? if so, how do you do that exactly?
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  • You can move the binaries to another machine, as long as that has the same architecture, the same PostgreSQL version and compatible libraries installed. After all, that's what binary packages are doing. Commented Nov 21, 2022 at 6:35

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As respects your questions:

1 & 2. The version and products for your build will be specific to the build host. If you want to install the same products on another identical server, the easiest way is to NFS mount the build directory and run make install on the target. Again, the target must be identical, including installation of dependent libraries. It's far easier to use your platform's packaging system instead, especially if you need to install PostGIS on a large number of servers. Package management is out of scope for dba.SE.

  1. Upgrade instructions are in the manual.
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  • Package management is out of scope for dba.SE. It is? Where does it say that? I would have thought that installation issues are on-topic on dba.se.
    – Vérace
    Commented Nov 21, 2022 at 10:44
  • @Vérace I meant package building tools, I.e. rpm-build. Their setup and configuration are the subject of entire books.
    – user234725
    Commented Nov 21, 2022 at 15:06
  • Fair enough....
    – Vérace
    Commented Nov 21, 2022 at 15:59

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