Description
  
   initdb creates a new
   PostgreSQL database cluster (or database
   system).  A database cluster is a collection of databases that are
   managed by a single server instance.
  
   Creating a database system consists of creating the directories in which
   the database data will live, generating the shared catalog tables 
   (tables that belong to the whole cluster rather than to any particular
   database), and creating the template1
   database.  When you create a new database, everything in the
   template1 database is copied.
   It contains catalog tables filled in for things like the
   built-in types.
  
   initdb initializes the database cluster's
   default locale and character set encoding.  Some locale categories
   are fixed for the lifetime of the cluster, so it is important to
   make the right choice when running initdb.
   Other locale categories can be changed later when the server is
   started.  initdb will write those locale
   settings into the postgresql.conf
   configuration file so they are the default, but they can be changed
   by editing that file.  To set the locale that
   initdb uses, see the description of the
   --locale option.  The character set encoding can
   be set separately for each database as it is created.
   initdb determines the encoding for the
   template1 database, which will serve as the
   default for all other databases.  To alter the default encoding use
   the --encoding option.
  
   initdb must be run as the user that will own the
   server process, because the server needs to have access to the
   files and directories that initdb creates.
   Since the server may not be run as root, you must not run
   initdb as root either.  (It will in fact refuse
   to do so.)
  
   Although initdb will attempt to create the
   specified data directory, often it won't have permission to do so,
   since the parent of the desired data directory is often a root-owned
   directory.  To set up an arrangement like this, create an empty data
   directory as root, then use chown to hand over
   ownership of that directory to the database user account, then
   su to become the database user, and
   finally run initdb as the database user.