ALTER USER APPLICATION_USER ACCOUNT LOCK;SELECT ‘alter system kill session ”’ || sid
|| ‘,’ || serial# || ”’; ‘ || sql_id death
FROM v$session
WHERE username = ‘APPLICATION_USER’;
Clear Transaction Logs
This is how to disable archiving:
C:> sqlplus sys/@dbalias as sysdba
SQL> shutdown immediate
SQL> startup mount
SQL> alter database noarchivelog;
SQL> alter database open;
SQL> archive log list
SQL> alter system switch logfile;
Run this about 10 times, delete all archived log files and then proceed.
This is how to enable archiving:
SQL> archive log list
At this point the numbers should have incremented as many as the number of switches.
SQL> shutdown immediate
SQL> startup mount
SQL> alter database archivelog;
Database altered.
SQL> alter database open;
SQL> archive log list
SQL> alter system switch logfile;
Run this a couple of times and you should see new archived log files.
SQL> archive log list
At this point the numbers should have incremented as many as the number of switches.
Exit SQLPlus and do an immediate full backup of the system.
Example backup batch file
set ORACLE_SID=MYPROJ
exp system/******@myuser file=MYPROJ.dmp log=export.log full=y
for /f “tokens=1-5 delims= ” %%d in (“%date%”) do set dayfldr=%%d
xcopy MYPROJ.dmp “ProjectsMYPROJDatabaseDaily_Exports%dayfldr%” /Z /R /V /Y
Drop all objects in schema
Normally, it is simplest to drop and add the user. This is the preferred method if you have system or sysdba access to the database.
If you don’t have system level access, and want to scrub your schema, the following sql will produce a series of drop statments, which can then be executed. Note: be sure you are connected as the schema owner, would be tragic to drop system tables….
spool dropall.sql
select ‘drop ‘||object_type||’ ‘|| object_name|| DECODE(OBJECT_TYPE,’TABLE’,’ CASCADE CONSTRAINTS;’,’;’)
from user_objects
spool off
Then, can purge the recycle bin to really clean things up:
purge recyclebin;
This will produce a list of drop statements. Not all of them will execute – if you drop with cascade, dropping the PK_* indices will fail. But in the end, you will have a pretty clean schema. Confirm with:
select * from user_objects
Startup Shutdown Oracle DB
Listner commands at command prompt:
lsnrctl status
lsnrctl stop
lsnrctl start
Connect to Oracle
SET ORACLE_SID={SID}
sqlplus / AS SYSDBA
or
sqlplus /nolog
SQL>connect / AS SYSDBA
Shutdown
SQL>shutdown immediate
Startup
SQL>startup
Advance Sequence Nextvals to sync with table
Here’s a way to advance a sequence using an anonymous PL/SQL block:
DECLARE
mn integer;
mx integer;
BEGIN
SELECT MYPROJ.personnelid_seq.CURRVAL INTO mn FROM DUAL;
SELECT max(personnelid) INTO mx FROM MYPROJ.personnel;
WHILE mn
Drop a corrupt datafile
alter database datafile ‘D:ORACLEORADATAMYPROJDATA01.DBF’ offline drop;
drop tablespace MYPROJDATA including contents and datafiles;
Listener Commands
To Check and make sure that the SID is correct. The SIDs that are currently registered with the listener can be obtained by typing:
LSNRCTL SERVICES
These SIDs correspond to SID_NAMEs in TNSNAMES.ORA or DB_NAME in the initialisation file.
From a client with the SID registered in the tnsnames.ora, you can do TNSPING and see if the listener responds:
c:>tnsping DEV01
The listener is a separate process that resides on the server. It receives incoming client connection requests and manages the traffic of these requests to the server. A listener is configured with one or more listening protocol addresses and service information about the destination service. Protocol addresses are configured in the listener configuration file, listener.ora. Service information may or may not be configured in the listener.ora file. The listener must be running on the machine where the database resides. The listener can be started by using the Administrative ToolsServices:
Right click on the OracleTNSListener and select START.
To stop the listener, right click and select STOP.
The listener can also be started at a DOS prompt:
Load the listener:
C:>lsnrctl
LSNRCTL for 32-bit Windows: Version 8.1.7.0.0 – Production on 02-APR-2003 08:45:21
(c) Copyright 1998 Oracle Corporation. All rights reserved.
Welcome to LSNRCTL, type “help” for information.
LSNRCTL>
LSNRCTL> LSNRCTL> help
The following operations are available
An asterisk (*) denotes a modifier or extended command:
start
stop
status
services
version
reload
save_config
trace
dbsnmp_start
dbsnmp_stop
dbsnmp_status
change_password
quit
exit
set*
show*
Show the Listener status:
LSNRCTL> status
Connecting to (DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=IPC)(KEY=EXTPROC0)))
TNS-12541: TNS:no listener
TNS-12560: TNS:protocol adapter error
TNS-00511: No listener
32-bit Windows Error: 2: No such file or directory
Connecting to (DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=TCP)(HOST=GW0020480835)(PORT=1521)))
TNS-12541: TNS:no listener
TNS-12560: TNS:protocol adapter error
TNS-00511: No listener
32-bit Windows Error: 61: Unknown error
Start the Listener:
LSNRCTL> start
Starting tnslsnr: please wait…
TNSLSNR for 32-bit Windows: Version 8.1.7.0.0 – Production
System parameter file is D:OracleOra81networkadminlistener.ora
Log messages written to D:OracleOra81networkloglistener.log
Trace information written to D:OracleOra81networktracelistener.trc
Listening on: (DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=ipc)(PIPENAME=.pipeEXTPROC0ipc)))
Listening on: (DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=GW0020480835.xxx.xx.xx.xxx)(PORT=1521)))
Listening on: (DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=GW0020480835.xxx.xx.xx.xxx)(PORT=2481))(PROTOCOL_STACK=(PRESENTATION=GIOP)(SESSION=RAW)))
Connecting to (DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=IPC)(KEY=EXTPROC0)))
STATUS of the LISTENER
————————
Alias LISTENER
Version TNSLSNR for 32-bit Windows: Version 8.1.7.0.0 – Production
Start Date 02-APR-2003 08:49:13
Uptime 0 days 0 hr. 0 min. 2 sec
Trace Level user
Security OFF
SNMP OFF
Listener Parameter File D:OracleOra81networkadminlistener.ora
Listener Log File D:OracleOra81networkloglistener.log
Listener Trace File D:OracleOra81networktracelistener.trc
Services Summary…
AEF has 1 service handler(s)
CWSS has 1 service handler(s)
Develop has 1 service handler(s)
MyWorkDB has 1 service handler(s)
OEMREPO has 1 service handler(s)
PLSExtProc has 1 service handler(s)
Wanda has 1 service handler(s)
afportal has 1 service handler(s)
The command completed successfully
Stop the Listener:
LSNRCTL> stop
Connecting to (DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=IPC)(KEY=EXTPROC0)))
The command completed successfully
LSNRCTL>
Exit LSNRCTL
LSNRCTL> exit
ORA-12505: TNS:listener does not currently know of SID given in connect descriptor
Cause: The listener received a request to establish a connection to a database or other service. The connect descriptor received by the listener specified a SID for an instance (usually a database instance) that either has not yet dynamically registered with the listener or has not been statically configured for the listener. This may be a temporary condition such as after the listener has started, but before the database instance has registered with the listener.
Action: – Wait a moment and try to connect a second time.
– Check which instances are currently known by the listener by executing: lsnrctl services
– Check that the SID parameter in the connect descriptor specifies an instance known by the listener.
– Check for an event in the listener.log file.
Recompile Database Objects
Identifying Invalid Objects
The DBA_OBJECTS view can be used to identify invalid objects using the following query:
COLUMN object_name FORMAT A30
SELECT owner,
object_type,
object_name,
status
FROM dba_objects
WHERE status = ‘INVALID’
ORDER BY owner, object_type, object_name;
With this information you can decide which of the following recompilation methods is suitable for you.
The Manual Approach
For small numbers of objects you may decide that a manual recompilation is sufficient. The following example shows the compile syntax for several object types:
ALTER PACKAGE my_package COMPILE;
ALTER PACKAGE my_package COMPILE BODY;
ALTER PROCEDURE my_procedure COMPILE;
ALTER FUNCTION my_function COMPILE;
ALTER TRIGGER my_trigger COMPILE;
ALTER VIEW my_view COMPILE;
Notice that the package body is compiled in the same way as the package specification, with the addition of the word “BODY” at the end of the command.
An alternative approach is to use the DBMS_DDL package to perform the recompilations:
EXEC DBMS_DDL.alter_compile(‘PACKAGE’, ‘MY_SCHEMA’, ‘MY_PACKAGE’);
EXEC DBMS_DDL.alter_compile(‘PACKAGE BODY’, ‘MY_SCHEMA’, ‘MY_PACKAGE’);
EXEC DBMS_DDL.alter_compile(‘PROCEDURE’, ‘MY_SCHEMA’, ‘MY_PROCEDURE’);
EXEC DBMS_DDL.alter_compile(‘FUNCTION’, ‘MY_SCHEMA’, ‘MY_FUNCTION’);
EXEC DBMS_DDL.alter_compile(‘TRIGGER’, ‘MY_SCHEMA’, ‘MY_TRIGGER’);
This method is limited to PL/SQL objects, so it is not applicable for views.
Custom Script
In some situations you may have to compile many invalid objects in one go. One approach is to write a custom script to identify and compile the invalid objects. The following example identifies and recompiles invalid packages and package bodies.
SET SERVEROUTPUT ON SIZE 1000000
BEGIN
FOR cur_rec IN (SELECT owner,
object_name,
object_type,
DECODE(object_type, ‘PACKAGE’, 1,
‘PACKAGE BODY’, 2, 2) AS recompile_order
FROM dba_objects
WHERE object_type IN (‘PACKAGE’, ‘PACKAGE BODY’)
AND status != ‘VALID’
ORDER BY 4)
LOOP
BEGIN
IF cur_rec.object_type = ‘PACKAGE’ THEN
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE ‘ALTER ‘ || cur_rec.object_type ||
‘ “‘ || cur_rec.owner || ‘”.”‘ || cur_rec.object_name || ‘” COMPILE’;
ElSE
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE ‘ALTER PACKAGE “‘ || cur_rec.owner ||
‘”.”‘ || cur_rec.object_name || ‘” COMPILE BODY’;
END IF;
EXCEPTION
WHEN OTHERS THEN
DBMS_OUTPUT.put_line(cur_rec.object_type || ‘ : ‘ || cur_rec.owner ||
‘ : ‘ || cur_rec.object_name);
END;
END LOOP;
END;
/
This approach is fine if you have a specific task in mind, but be aware that you may end up compiling some objects multiple times depending on the order they are compiled in. It is probably a better idea to use one of the methods provided by Oracle since they take the code dependencies into account.
DBMS_UTILITY.compile_schema
The COMPILE_SCHEMA procedure in the DBMS_UTILITY package compiles all procedures, functions, packages, and triggers in the specified schema. The example below shows how it is called from SQL*Plus:
EXEC DBMS_UTILITY.compile_schema(schema => ‘SCOTT’);
UTL_RECOMP
The UTL_RECOMP package contains two procedures used to recompile invalid objects. As the names suggest, the RECOMP_SERIAL procedure recompiles all the invalid objects one at a time, while the RECOMP_PARALLEL procedure performs the same task in parallel using the specified number of threads. Their definitions are listed below:
PROCEDURE RECOMP_SERIAL(
schema IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL,
flags IN PLS_INTEGER DEFAULT 0);
PROCEDURE RECOMP_PARALLEL(
threads IN PLS_INTEGER DEFAULT NULL,
schema IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL,
flags IN PLS_INTEGER DEFAULT 0);
The usage notes for the parameters are listed below:
schema – The schema whose invalid objects are to be recompiled. If NULL all invalid objects in the database are recompiled.
threads – The number of threads used in a parallel operation. If NULL the value of the “job_queue_processes” parameter is used. Matching the number of available CPUs is generally a good starting point for this value.
flags – Used for internal diagnostics and testing only.
The following examples show how these procedures care used:
— Schema level.
EXEC UTL_RECOMP.recomp_serial(‘SCOTT’);
EXEC UTL_RECOMP.recomp_parallel(4, ‘SCOTT’);
— Database level.
EXEC UTL_RECOMP.recomp_serial();
EXEC UTL_RECOMP.recomp_parallel(4);
— Using job_queue_processes value.
EXEC UTL_RECOMP.recomp_parallel();
EXEC UTL_RECOMP.recomp_parallel(NULL, ‘SCOTT’);
There are a number of restrictions associated with the use of this package including:
Parallel execution is perfomed using the job queue. All existing jobs are marked as disabled until the operation is complete.
The package must be run from SQL*Plus as the SYS user, or another user with SYSDBA.
The package expects the STANDARD, DBMS_STANDARD, DBMS_JOB and DBMS_RANDOM to be present and valid.
Runnig DDL operations at the same time as this package may result in deadlocks.
utlrp.sql and utlprp.sql
The utlrp.sql and utlprp.sql scripts are provided by Oracle to recompile all invalid objects in the database. They are typically run after major database changes such as upgrades or patches. They are located in the $ORACLE_HOME/rdbms/admin directory and provide a wrapper on the UTL_RECOMP package. The utlrp.sql script simply calls the utlprp.sql script with a command line parameter of “0”. The utlprp.sql accepts a single integer parameter that indicates the level of parallelism as follows:
0 – The level of parallelism is derived based on the CPU_COUNT parameter.
1 – The recompilation is run serially, one object at a time.
N – The recompilation is run in parallel with “N” number of threads.
Both scripts must be run as the SYS user, or another user with SYSDBA, to work correctly.
For further information see:
DBMS_UTILITY.compile_schema
UTL_RECOMP
http://www.oracle-base.com/articles/misc/RecompilingInvalidSchemaObjects.php
Lock Unlock UserSchema
ALTER USER ACCOUNT LOCK
/
ALTER USER ACCOUNT UNLOCK
/
Also, you can revoke his create session priviledge. This will prevent that user from logging in, but all his objects will still be available.