I received the following error when trying to write session data using Tomcat's PersistentManager to a Postgres DB running on my local machine:
SEVERE: A SQL exception occurred org.postgresql.util.PSQLException: Connection to localhost:5432 refused. Check that the hostname and port are correct and that the postmaster is accepting TCP/IP connections.
The application itself runs in a docker container. For completeness sake, my current context.xml file is:
<?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?>
<Context>
<Manager className="org.apache.catalina.session.PersistentManager"
distributable="true" processExpiresFrequency="6" maxIdleBackup="0" debug="99" >
<Store className="org.apache.catalina.session.JDBCStore"
driverName="org.postgresql.Driver"
connectionURL="jdbc:postgresql://localhost/admin?stringtype=unspecified"
connectionName="admin" connectionPassword="admin"
sessionAppCol="app_name" sessionDataCol="session_data" sessionIdCol="session_id"
sessionLastAccessedCol="last_access" sessionMaxInactiveCol="max_inactive"
sessionTable="tomcat_sessions_tb" sessionValidCol="valid_session" />
</Manager>
</Context>
Pursuant to the suggestions here: Postgresql : Connection refused. Check that the hostname and port are correct and that the postmaster is accepting TCP/IP connections
I confirmed via a netstat -aln | grep LISTEN
that Postgresql is running and listening on the correct ports:
tcp4 0 0 127.0.0.1.5432 *.* LISTEN
tcp6 0 0 ::1.5432 *.* LISTEN
and that my postgresql.conf (located in usr/local/var/postgres
) has listen_addresses = localhost and port = 5432, which mirrors the host and port of my running server in Pgadmin3.
I suspect that the problem is that Docker runs in a VM, and thus the local information I have obtained may not be the whole story. Reading up on the available information online, it seems that I may require some sort of bridged networking.
However, I admit I am a novice in this area, and I'm unsure of how to set it up.
If you are using docker-compose together with postgres image, than you can reuse service name as IP inside jdbc connection (here: app-db)
I was getting the same error but this simple solution works perfect for me.
sudo docker run -d --net="host" -it <IMAGE>
Now I can run my apphttps://x.x.x.x:pppp/../..
and everything works fine. I hope this helpsWhy I can NOT connect to localhost:5432?
Cat your container's
/etc/hosts
For docker networks is
bridge
by default, thelocalhost
inside points to container itself(Docker default bridge network). Then you don't have5432
listening in your container:Solution 1. If you wanna hardcode the "localhost:5432" inside your config xml, the easiest way is creating your container with the option "--net=host":
Solution 2. Change the
localhost
of your docker host ip inside the container/etc/hosts
to point the localhost to docker host ip:Solution 3. Modify your db config file to use an alias instead of
Then add thelocalhost
:DB_ALIAS
to the container's hosts :