PostgreSQL: Difference between revisions
imported>Ikovnatsky m Add host on 127.0.0.0/32 trust to config |
Edits the current example of adjusting `services.postgresql.authentication` to allow IP/TCP connections.If you (like me) aren't familiar with configuring authentication rules for a postgres instance and opt to blindly copy-and-paste the examples here, doing that for the IP/TCP example won't work because it removes the auth rule that allows the postgres user to connect via the peer authentication mode, which the systemd service will use. This |
||
(22 intermediate revisions by 12 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[https://www.postgresql.org/ PostgreSQL] also known as Postgres, is a free and open-source relational database management system (RDBMS) emphasizing extensibility and SQL compliance. | |||
This article extends the documentation in the [https://nixos.org/manual/nixos/stable/#module-postgresql NixOS manual]. | |||
=== Getting started === | |||
To try out Postgresql add the following minimal example to your [[NixOS modules | NixOS module]]: | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix"> | |||
{ | |||
# ... | |||
config.services.postgresql = { | |||
enable = true; | |||
ensureDatabases = [ "mydatabase" ]; | |||
authentication = pkgs.lib.mkOverride 10 '' | |||
#type database DBuser auth-method | |||
local all all trust | |||
''; | |||
}; | |||
} | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
This will setup Postgresql with a default DB superuser/admin "postgres", a database "mydatabase" and let every DB user have access to it without a password through a "local" Unix socket "/var/run/postgresql" (TCP/IP is disabled by default because it's less performant and less secure). | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang=" | * [https://search.nixos.org/options?query=services.postgresql Available NixOS Postgresql service options] | ||
$ sudo -u | It's also possible to setup PostgreSQL with [[Nix Darwin]] similar to how you would on NixOS, see the [https://daiderd.com/nix-darwin/manual/index.html#opt-services.postgresql.enable options]. | ||
psql | |||
=== Verify setup === | |||
You can use <code>psql</code> that comes with Postgres in the terminal to verify that the DB setup is as expected: | |||
-----------+-------+----------+-------------+-------------+------------------- | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
postgres | | $ sudo -u postgres psql | ||
template0 | | psql | ||
Type "help" for help. | |||
template1 | | |||
postgres=# | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
We have to switch to a system user like "postgres" with <code>sudo -u postgres</code>, because by default <code>psql</code> logs you into the DB user of the same name as the current Linux/system user. By default, NixOS creates a system and DB user names "postgres". | |||
So the line <code>postgres=# </code> shows that we are now logged-in as DB user "postgres". | |||
Inside <code>psql</code> here the most frequent commands are: | |||
List all databases running on this Postgres instance with <code>\l</code>: | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | |||
postgres=# \l | |||
List of databases | |||
Name | Owner | Encoding | Collate | Ctype | Access privileges | |||
------------+----------+----------+-------------+-------------+------------------------ | |||
mydatabase | postgres | UTF8 | en_US.UTF-8 | en_US.UTF-8 | =Tc/postgres + | |||
| | | | | postgres=CTc/postgres + | |||
| | | | | rustnixos=CTc/postgres | |||
postgres | postgres | UTF8 | en_US.UTF-8 | en_US.UTF-8 | | |||
template0 | postgres | UTF8 | en_US.UTF-8 | en_US.UTF-8 | =c/postgres + | |||
| | | | | postgres=CTc/postgres | |||
template1 | postgres | UTF8 | en_US.UTF-8 | en_US.UTF-8 | =c/postgres + | |||
| | | | | postgres=CTc/postgres | |||
(4 rows) | (4 rows) | ||
</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
List all DB users (also called "roles" in Postgres) with <code>\du</code>: | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | |||
postgres=# \du | |||
List of roles | |||
Role name | Attributes | Member of | |||
-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+----------- | |||
postgres | Superuser, Create role, Create DB, Replication, Bypass RLS | {} | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
List all authentication rules (called an "pg_hba.conf" file in Postgres ) with <code>table pg_hba_file_rules;</code>: | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | |||
postgres=# table pg_hba_file_rules; | |||
line_number | type | database | user_name | address | netmask | auth_method | options | error | |||
-------------+-------+----------+-----------+---------+---------+-------------+---------+------- | |||
1 | local | {all} | {all} | | | peer | | | |||
(1 row) | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
* [https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/auth-pg-hba-conf.html Official Postgres authentication pg_hba.conf documentation] | |||
=== Allow TCP/IP connections === | |||
This example shows how to roll out a database with a default user and password: | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix"> | |||
services.postgresql = { | |||
enable = true; | |||
ensureDatabases = [ "mydatabase" ]; | |||
enableTCPIP = true; | |||
# port = 5432; | |||
authentication = pkgs.lib.mkOverride 10 '' | |||
#type database DBuser origin-address auth-method | |||
local all all trust | |||
# ... other auth rules ... | |||
# ipv4 | |||
host all all 127.0.0.1/32 trust | |||
# ipv6 | |||
host all all ::1/128 trust | |||
''; | |||
initialScript = pkgs.writeText "backend-initScript" '' | |||
CREATE ROLE nixcloud WITH LOGIN PASSWORD 'nixcloud' CREATEDB; | |||
CREATE DATABASE nixcloud; | |||
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON DATABASE nixcloud TO nixcloud; | |||
''; | |||
}; | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
This will allow "host" based authentification only from other webservices on the same computer ("127.0.0.1"), although any DB user will have access to any database. | |||
=== Set the Postgresql versions === | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang=" | By default, NixOS uses whatever Postgres version shipped as default for your [https://search.nixos.org/options?show=system.stateVersion system.stateVersion]. To use a different or more recent version, you can set it manually: | ||
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix"> | |||
services.postgresql = { | |||
enable = true; | |||
package = pkgs.postgresql_15; | |||
# ... | |||
}; | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
Note that changing the package version does not trigger any automatic migrations of your existing databases: if you update Postgres you should be ready to migrate any existing databases manually. | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang=" | * [https://search.nixos.org/packages?query=postgresql_ Available Nixpkgs Postgresql versions] | ||
$ psql -U postgres - | |||
=== Security === | |||
Letting every system and DB user have access to all data is dangerous. Postgres supports several layers of protection. | |||
One is to '''prefer "local" connections using Unix sockets''', that aren't accessible from the internet, whenever Postgres and your client app run on the same server. | |||
==== Harden authentication ==== | |||
We can '''limit what system user can connect'''. | |||
Postgres supports [https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/auth-username-maps.html "user name maps"], which limit which system users can log in as which DB user: | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix"> | |||
services.postgresql = { | |||
enable = true; | |||
ensureDatabases = [ "mydatabase" ]; | |||
identMap = '' | |||
# ArbitraryMapName systemUser DBUser | |||
superuser_map root postgres | |||
superuser_map postgres postgres | |||
# Let other names login as themselves | |||
superuser_map /^(.*)$ \1 | |||
''; | |||
}; | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
This map can have an arbitrary name and defines which system user can login as which DB user. Every other user and combination is rejected. | |||
For example, with the above mapping if we are logged-in as system user "root" but want enter the DB as DB user "postgres" we would be allowed: | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix"> | |||
root$ psql -U postgres | |||
# ok | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
==== Limit Access ==== | |||
Once logged-in we can '''limit what DB users can access'''. With the <code>authentication</code> we can limit what | |||
DB user can access which databases. A good default setting is as follows: | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix"> | |||
services.postgresql = { | |||
enable = true; | |||
ensureDatabases = [ "mydatabase" ]; | |||
authentication = pkgs.lib.mkOverride 10 '' | |||
#type database DBuser auth-method optional_ident_map | |||
local sameuser all peer map=superuser_map | |||
''; | |||
}; | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
With "sameuser" Postgres will allow DB user access only to databases of the same name. E.g. DB user "mydatabase" will get access to database "mydatabase" and nothing else. The part <code>map=superuser_map</code> is optional. | |||
One exception is the DB user "postgres", which by default is a superuser/admin with access to everything. | |||
=== Monitoring === | |||
A [[Prometheus]] exporter is available to export metrics to Prometheus-compatible storage.<syntaxhighlight lang="nix"> | |||
services.prometheus.exporters.postgres = { | |||
enable = true; | |||
listenAddress = "0.0.0.0"; | |||
port = 9187; | |||
}; | |||
</syntaxhighlight>[https://search.nixos.org/options?show=services.prometheus.exporters.postgres.dataSourceName&from=0&size=50&sort=relevance&type=packages&query=services.prometheus.exporters.postgres See all available options for services.prometheus.exporters.postgres] | |||
== TLS == | |||
To turn TLS on in recent versions of postgres it's pretty easy. Their [https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/ssl-tcp.html docs] are pretty good. | |||
Create a simple cert just to make it work. If you are doing this in production, you need to provide your own server.crt and server.key in the main PGDATA dir (~postgres). | |||
In a shell: | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix"> | |||
cd ~postgres | |||
sudo -u postgres openssl req -new -x509 -days 365 -nodes -text -out server.crt -keyout server.key -subj "/CN=dbhost.yourdomain.com" | |||
chmod og-rwx server.key | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
Then in your nix configuration: | |||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="nix"> | ||
services.postgresql = { | services.postgresql = { | ||
enable = true; | enable = true; | ||
package = pkgs. | package = pkgs.postgresql_16; | ||
enableTCPIP = true; | enableTCPIP = true; | ||
ensureDatabases = [ "tootieapp" ]; | |||
settings = { | |||
ssl = true; | |||
}; | |||
authentication = pkgs.lib.mkOverride 10 '' | authentication = pkgs.lib.mkOverride 10 '' | ||
local all all trust | #type database DBuser auth-method | ||
host all | local all all trust | ||
host all | host sameuser all 127.0.0.1/32 scram-sha-256 | ||
host sameuser all ::1/128 scram-sha-256 | |||
''; | ''; | ||
}; | }; | ||
</ | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
the `sameuser` mentioned in the authentication section requires the database name be the same as the username, which you may not want, you can change that to `all` to allow an authenticated user the ability to connect to any database. | |||
`scram-sha-256` is the require a password option, but you can authenticate a variety of different ways, see the official docs for other options as part of pg_hba.conf. | |||
user creation and permissions are best described in the PG manual under `CREATE ROLE` and `GRANT` | |||
for example: | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang="sql"> | |||
CREATE USER tootieapp WITH PASSWORD 'BIGLONGRANDOMSTRINGHERE'; | |||
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON DATABASE tootieapp TO tootieapp; | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
== Debugging with <code>psql</code> == | |||
To debug the SQL statements futher, one can use '''systemctl cat postgresql''' and see the '''ExecStartPost=/nix/store/rnv1v95bbf2lsy9ncwg7jdwj2s71sqra-unit-script/bin/postgresql-post-start''' line. Then open it with `cat` on the shell and see the '''psql''' command. | To debug the SQL statements futher, one can use '''systemctl cat postgresql''' and see the '''ExecStartPost=/nix/store/rnv1v95bbf2lsy9ncwg7jdwj2s71sqra-unit-script/bin/postgresql-post-start''' line. Then open it with `cat` on the shell and see the '''psql''' command. | ||
Line 78: | Line 252: | ||
^ | ^ | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
== Troubleshooting == | |||
=== Connection rejected with "Role does not exist" === | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix"> | |||
$ psql | |||
psql: error: connection to server on socket "/run/postgresql/.s.PGSQL.5432" failed: FATAL: role "root" does not exist | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
You are trying to login as a system user ("root" in this example) that has no DB user of the same name. Try <code>psql -U postgres</code> or <code>sudo -u postgres psql</code> to log in as a different DB user. | |||
=== Connection rejected with "Peer authentication failed" === | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix"> | |||
root$ psql -U postgres | |||
psql: error: connection to server on socket "/run/postgresql/.s.PGSQL.5432" failed: FATAL: Peer authentication failed for user "postgres" | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
You are trying to login as a DB user ("postgres" in this example) for which your current system user ("root" in this example) has no permission to switch to. Check your "user name map" in the <code>identMap</code> section. | |||
=== WARNING: database "XXX" has a collation version mismatch === | |||
The complete error which appears in the system log might look similar to this | |||
<syntaxhighlight> | |||
WARNING: database "outline" has a collation version mismatch | |||
DETAIL: The database was created using collation version 2.35, but the operating system provides version 2.38. | |||
HINT: Rebuild all objects in this database that use the default collation and run ALTER DATABASE outline REFRESH COLLATION VERSION, or build PostgreSQL with the right library version. | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
To fix it, run following commands in the psql console. Replace the database name <code>outline</code> with the name of the database which you want to migrate | |||
<syntaxhighlight> | |||
sudo -u postgres psql | |||
postgres=# \c outline; | |||
outline=# REINDEX DATABASE outline; | |||
outline=# ALTER DATABASE outline REFRESH COLLATION VERSION; | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
== Major upgrades == | |||
If you're using NixOS' modules for PostgreSQL and find yourself in a boot/switch after a major bump of it, you'll need to upgrade your cluster. | |||
Let the service successfully start once, and then stop it. Upon completion, proceed with the following command, substituting the numbers 15 and 16 with the respective versions you previously used and the more recent one: | |||
<syntaxhighlight> | |||
sudo -u postgres pg_upgrade -b "$(nix build --no-link --print-out-paths nixpkgs#postgresql_15.out)/bin" -B /run/current-system/sw/bin -d /var/lib/postgresql/15 -D /var/lib/postgresql/16 | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
== See also == | |||
* [https://search.nixos.org/options?query=services.postgresql Available NixOS service options] | |||
[[Category:Applications]] | |||
[[Category:Database]] | |||
[[Category:NixOS Manual]] |
Latest revision as of 23:01, 13 November 2024
PostgreSQL also known as Postgres, is a free and open-source relational database management system (RDBMS) emphasizing extensibility and SQL compliance.
This article extends the documentation in the NixOS manual.
Getting started
To try out Postgresql add the following minimal example to your NixOS module:
{
# ...
config.services.postgresql = {
enable = true;
ensureDatabases = [ "mydatabase" ];
authentication = pkgs.lib.mkOverride 10 ''
#type database DBuser auth-method
local all all trust
'';
};
}
This will setup Postgresql with a default DB superuser/admin "postgres", a database "mydatabase" and let every DB user have access to it without a password through a "local" Unix socket "/var/run/postgresql" (TCP/IP is disabled by default because it's less performant and less secure).
It's also possible to setup PostgreSQL with Nix Darwin similar to how you would on NixOS, see the options.
Verify setup
You can use psql
that comes with Postgres in the terminal to verify that the DB setup is as expected:
$ sudo -u postgres psql
psql
Type "help" for help.
postgres=#
We have to switch to a system user like "postgres" with sudo -u postgres
, because by default psql
logs you into the DB user of the same name as the current Linux/system user. By default, NixOS creates a system and DB user names "postgres".
So the line postgres=#
shows that we are now logged-in as DB user "postgres".
Inside psql
here the most frequent commands are:
List all databases running on this Postgres instance with \l
:
postgres=# \l
List of databases
Name | Owner | Encoding | Collate | Ctype | Access privileges
------------+----------+----------+-------------+-------------+------------------------
mydatabase | postgres | UTF8 | en_US.UTF-8 | en_US.UTF-8 | =Tc/postgres +
| | | | | postgres=CTc/postgres +
| | | | | rustnixos=CTc/postgres
postgres | postgres | UTF8 | en_US.UTF-8 | en_US.UTF-8 |
template0 | postgres | UTF8 | en_US.UTF-8 | en_US.UTF-8 | =c/postgres +
| | | | | postgres=CTc/postgres
template1 | postgres | UTF8 | en_US.UTF-8 | en_US.UTF-8 | =c/postgres +
| | | | | postgres=CTc/postgres
(4 rows)
List all DB users (also called "roles" in Postgres) with \du
:
postgres=# \du
List of roles
Role name | Attributes | Member of
-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+-----------
postgres | Superuser, Create role, Create DB, Replication, Bypass RLS | {}
List all authentication rules (called an "pg_hba.conf" file in Postgres ) with table pg_hba_file_rules;
:
postgres=# table pg_hba_file_rules;
line_number | type | database | user_name | address | netmask | auth_method | options | error
-------------+-------+----------+-----------+---------+---------+-------------+---------+-------
1 | local | {all} | {all} | | | peer | |
(1 row)
Allow TCP/IP connections
This example shows how to roll out a database with a default user and password:
services.postgresql = {
enable = true;
ensureDatabases = [ "mydatabase" ];
enableTCPIP = true;
# port = 5432;
authentication = pkgs.lib.mkOverride 10 ''
#type database DBuser origin-address auth-method
local all all trust
# ... other auth rules ...
# ipv4
host all all 127.0.0.1/32 trust
# ipv6
host all all ::1/128 trust
'';
initialScript = pkgs.writeText "backend-initScript" ''
CREATE ROLE nixcloud WITH LOGIN PASSWORD 'nixcloud' CREATEDB;
CREATE DATABASE nixcloud;
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON DATABASE nixcloud TO nixcloud;
'';
};
This will allow "host" based authentification only from other webservices on the same computer ("127.0.0.1"), although any DB user will have access to any database.
Set the Postgresql versions
By default, NixOS uses whatever Postgres version shipped as default for your system.stateVersion. To use a different or more recent version, you can set it manually:
services.postgresql = {
enable = true;
package = pkgs.postgresql_15;
# ...
};
Note that changing the package version does not trigger any automatic migrations of your existing databases: if you update Postgres you should be ready to migrate any existing databases manually.
Security
Letting every system and DB user have access to all data is dangerous. Postgres supports several layers of protection. One is to prefer "local" connections using Unix sockets, that aren't accessible from the internet, whenever Postgres and your client app run on the same server.
Harden authentication
We can limit what system user can connect.
Postgres supports "user name maps", which limit which system users can log in as which DB user:
services.postgresql = {
enable = true;
ensureDatabases = [ "mydatabase" ];
identMap = ''
# ArbitraryMapName systemUser DBUser
superuser_map root postgres
superuser_map postgres postgres
# Let other names login as themselves
superuser_map /^(.*)$ \1
'';
};
This map can have an arbitrary name and defines which system user can login as which DB user. Every other user and combination is rejected. For example, with the above mapping if we are logged-in as system user "root" but want enter the DB as DB user "postgres" we would be allowed:
root$ psql -U postgres
# ok
Limit Access
Once logged-in we can limit what DB users can access. With the authentication
we can limit what
DB user can access which databases. A good default setting is as follows:
services.postgresql = {
enable = true;
ensureDatabases = [ "mydatabase" ];
authentication = pkgs.lib.mkOverride 10 ''
#type database DBuser auth-method optional_ident_map
local sameuser all peer map=superuser_map
'';
};
With "sameuser" Postgres will allow DB user access only to databases of the same name. E.g. DB user "mydatabase" will get access to database "mydatabase" and nothing else. The part map=superuser_map
is optional.
One exception is the DB user "postgres", which by default is a superuser/admin with access to everything.
Monitoring
A Prometheus exporter is available to export metrics to Prometheus-compatible storage.
services.prometheus.exporters.postgres = {
enable = true;
listenAddress = "0.0.0.0";
port = 9187;
};
See all available options for services.prometheus.exporters.postgres
TLS
To turn TLS on in recent versions of postgres it's pretty easy. Their docs are pretty good.
Create a simple cert just to make it work. If you are doing this in production, you need to provide your own server.crt and server.key in the main PGDATA dir (~postgres).
In a shell:
cd ~postgres
sudo -u postgres openssl req -new -x509 -days 365 -nodes -text -out server.crt -keyout server.key -subj "/CN=dbhost.yourdomain.com"
chmod og-rwx server.key
Then in your nix configuration:
services.postgresql = {
enable = true;
package = pkgs.postgresql_16;
enableTCPIP = true;
ensureDatabases = [ "tootieapp" ];
settings = {
ssl = true;
};
authentication = pkgs.lib.mkOverride 10 ''
#type database DBuser auth-method
local all all trust
host sameuser all 127.0.0.1/32 scram-sha-256
host sameuser all ::1/128 scram-sha-256
'';
};
the `sameuser` mentioned in the authentication section requires the database name be the same as the username, which you may not want, you can change that to `all` to allow an authenticated user the ability to connect to any database.
`scram-sha-256` is the require a password option, but you can authenticate a variety of different ways, see the official docs for other options as part of pg_hba.conf.
user creation and permissions are best described in the PG manual under `CREATE ROLE` and `GRANT` for example:
CREATE USER tootieapp WITH PASSWORD 'BIGLONGRANDOMSTRINGHERE';
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON DATABASE tootieapp TO tootieapp;
Debugging with psql
To debug the SQL statements futher, one can use systemctl cat postgresql and see the ExecStartPost=/nix/store/rnv1v95bbf2lsy9ncwg7jdwj2s71sqra-unit-script/bin/postgresql-post-start line. Then open it with `cat` on the shell and see the psql command.
Then execute the complete statement on the shell, as:
/nix/store/3mqha1naji34i6iv78i90hc20dx0hld9-sudo-1.8.20p2/bin/sudo -u postgres psql -f "/nix/store/az5nglyw7j94blxwkn2rmpi2p6z9fbmy-backend-initScript" --port=5432 -d postgres psql:/nix/store/az5nglyw7j94blxwkn2rmpi2p6z9fbmy-backend-initScript:1: ERROR: syntax error at or near "-" LINE 1: CREATE ROLE nixcloud-admin WITH LOGIN PASSWORD 'nixcloud' CR... ^ psql:/nix/store/az5nglyw7j94blxwkn2rmpi2p6z9fbmy-backend-initScript:2: ERROR: database "nixcloud-db1" already exists psql:/nix/store/az5nglyw7j94blxwkn2rmpi2p6z9fbmy-backend-initScript:3: ERROR: syntax error at or near "-" LINE 1: ...ALL PRIVILEGES ON DATABASE "nixcloud-db1" TO nixcloud-admin; ^
Troubleshooting
Connection rejected with "Role does not exist"
$ psql
psql: error: connection to server on socket "/run/postgresql/.s.PGSQL.5432" failed: FATAL: role "root" does not exist
You are trying to login as a system user ("root" in this example) that has no DB user of the same name. Try psql -U postgres
or sudo -u postgres psql
to log in as a different DB user.
Connection rejected with "Peer authentication failed"
root$ psql -U postgres
psql: error: connection to server on socket "/run/postgresql/.s.PGSQL.5432" failed: FATAL: Peer authentication failed for user "postgres"
You are trying to login as a DB user ("postgres" in this example) for which your current system user ("root" in this example) has no permission to switch to. Check your "user name map" in the identMap
section.
WARNING: database "XXX" has a collation version mismatch
The complete error which appears in the system log might look similar to this
WARNING: database "outline" has a collation version mismatch
DETAIL: The database was created using collation version 2.35, but the operating system provides version 2.38.
HINT: Rebuild all objects in this database that use the default collation and run ALTER DATABASE outline REFRESH COLLATION VERSION, or build PostgreSQL with the right library version.
To fix it, run following commands in the psql console. Replace the database name outline
with the name of the database which you want to migrate
sudo -u postgres psql
postgres=# \c outline;
outline=# REINDEX DATABASE outline;
outline=# ALTER DATABASE outline REFRESH COLLATION VERSION;
Major upgrades
If you're using NixOS' modules for PostgreSQL and find yourself in a boot/switch after a major bump of it, you'll need to upgrade your cluster.
Let the service successfully start once, and then stop it. Upon completion, proceed with the following command, substituting the numbers 15 and 16 with the respective versions you previously used and the more recent one:
sudo -u postgres pg_upgrade -b "$(nix build --no-link --print-out-paths nixpkgs#postgresql_15.out)/bin" -B /run/current-system/sw/bin -d /var/lib/postgresql/15 -D /var/lib/postgresql/16