**Note**: `<server-path-to-postgres-dump.sql>` must be a file path to a Postgres dump file on the server (not on your local machine!).
## Troubleshooting
A table ownership issue can occur if you are importing from a Synapse installation which was both:
- migrated from SQLite to Postgres, and
- used a username other than 'synapse'
In this case you may run into the following error during the import task:
```
"ERROR: role \"synapse_user\" does not exist"
```
where `synapse_user` is the database username from the previous Synapse installation.
This can be verified by examining the dump for ALTER TABLE statements which set OWNER TO that username:
```Shell
$ grep "ALTER TABLE" homeserver.sql"
ALTER TABLE public.access_tokens OWNER TO synapse_user;
ALTER TABLE public.account_data OWNER TO synapse_user;
ALTER TABLE public.account_data_max_stream_id OWNER TO synapse_user;
ALTER TABLE public.account_validity OWNER TO synapse_user;
ALTER TABLE public.application_services_state OWNER TO synapse_user;
...
```
It can be worked around by changing the username to `synapse`, for example by using `sed`:
```Shell
$ sed -i "s/synapse_user/synapse/g" homeserver.sql"
```
This uses sed to perform an 'in-place' (`-i`) replacement globally (`/g`), searching for `synapse user` and replacing with `synapse` (`s/synapse_user/synapse`). If your database username was different, change `synapse_user` to that username instead.
Note that if the previous import failed with an error it may have made changes which are incompatible with re-running the import task right away; if you do so it may fail with an error such as:
```
ERROR: relation \"access_tokens\" already exists
```
In this case you can use the command suggested in the import task to clear the database before retrying the import:
```Shell
# systemctl stop matrix-postgres
# rm -rf /matrix/postgres/data/*
# systemctl start matrix-postgres
```
Once the database is clear and the ownership of the tables has been fixed in the SQL file, the import task should succeed.