diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 7e1ca4349..43e58be33 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -15,9 +15,9 @@ Environment * bash . If on windows, use git bash or cygwin. Bash is used as the build script technology. (could change very easily) * Definition of location for your developer workspace. Default is ~/workspace, but if you define an env variable, you can override. * pg_migrate_ruby - $ cd [workspace] && git clone https://github.com/sethcall/pg_migrate_ruby -* you want it so the current user has access to the 'postgres' database and is a super user. In other words, you want to make sure your current logged in user can do the following at the command line: 'psql postgres'. If you can do that, you should be OK. There are two reasons this may not work for you. -1. Your current user is not a superuser. If not, do `sudo su postgres -c "createuser YOURUSER"` and answer 'y' with the first question. -2. If your user already is a superuser, then the postgres database may not exist yet. In that case, do `psql` then `create database postgres` +* you want it so the current user has access to the 'postgres' database and is a super user. In other words, you want to make sure your current logged in user can do the following at the command line: 'psql postgres'. If you can do that, you should be OK. There are two reasons this may not work for you. +Your current user is not a superuser. If not, do `sudo su postgres -c "createuser YOURUSER"` and answer 'y' with the first question. +If your user already is a superuser, then the postgres database may not exist yet. In that case, do `psql` then `create database postgres` * NOT YET: $IVY defined as path to the [apache ivy jar](http://ant.apache.org/ivy/download.cgi). Download the latest ivy from here, extract somewhere, and create an IVY environment variable with a path to the ivy.jar. For example, in my bash.profile: `export IVY=/Users/seth/workspace/apache-ivy-2.3.0-rc1/ivy-2.3.0-rc1.jar` Building