I have a task of connecting to a legacy Oracle 9i database and validate users with the new ERP, however when I try to run the query, I get ORA-00903: invalid table name
This is the naive query I am starting with: SELECT * FROM USER. The table does exist, and I can view it's content using an "in-house database browser" made by some company that no longer exist and to which I do not have the source code for.
Obviously, SELECT * FROM ALL_USERS is not what I want, etc.
The point is to validate that some user credentials are valid, the most fundamental concept of authentication, against a table called "USER", with two fields: USER_NO and PASSWORD (all values stored in plain text (... yeah... I know).
user is a reserved keyword. If you want to use that for a table name you have to quote it (which you already had to do when creating it)
select *
from "USER";
Related
In my database, i have one procedure which has been accessed by two other users through FID (outside of the database).
i need to log the FID of the user who are all using my procedure.
Is there any SQL Query to get the FID in oracle??
You didn't specify how exactly your users are identified (there is no "FID thing" in Oracle RDBMS).
Oracle knows only about two layers of identification:
Session user (for example scott#). This is how to get connected user:
select sys_context('userenv','session_user') from dual;
Proxy user (for example proxy[scott]#). This is how to get connected proxy user:
select sys_context('userenv','proxy_user') from dual;
If your user identification is happening outside Oracle, then you can't catch it in PLSQL. You should add another IN parameter to PLSQL procedure and pass it by your outside app when calling stored procedure.
I had a schema in one oracle DB as ui_prod. I asked my DBA team guys to create exactly same schema like ui_prod but as read only and name it ui_prod_readonly. Usually I will use Oracle SQL developer to connect a DB and query directly with table name like below.
--Connect to ui_prod
select * from table
but why I requested to put owner name infront when query for readonly schema they created for me, as without putting it, I get error table not exist.
--Connect to ui_prod_readonly
select * from ui_prod.table
I have project files which hardcode the sql query with only table names and adding owner name in front will cause many changes and effort. Can anyone explain me on this? or provide me any document/link to read. Thanks
You should look into synonyms, apparently the user you are connecting to the database as is not the owner of the objects. So to view the object you have to prepend the names with the schema name (the owner of the object themselves).
http://www.techonthenet.com/oracle/synonyms.php
CREATE OR REPLACE SYNONYM ui_prod_readonly.synonym_name
FOR ui_prod.object_name
It seems to me that your dbas have not created another set of tables but just granted the existing tables to the user ui_prod_readonly.
When you log in to Oracle, the current schema is the name of the user you used to log in. So if you log in with ui_prod_readonly Oracle checks that schema for the table if you do not qualify it with the owner (=schema).
If you want to change the current schema so that you don't need to fully qualify the tables, you can do that with ALTER SESSION
alter session set current_schema = ui_prod;
Once you have done that, you don't need to fully qualify the table with the owner (=schema).
if you need a user to read the data only
its simple to create new user and grant it only select privilege
you can create user and grant select privilege using
CREATE USER [user] IDENTIFIED BY [your_password];
grant select on table to [user]
I use SQL developer and i made a connection to my database with the system user, after I created a user and made a another connection with that user with all needed privileges.
But when I try to proceed following I get the SQL Error
ORA-00942 table or view does not exist.:
INSERT INTO customer (c_id,name,surname) VALUES ('1','Micheal','Jackson')
Because this post is the top one found on stackoverflow when searching for "ORA-00942: table or view does not exist insert", I want to mention another possible cause of this error (at least in Oracle 12c): a table uses a sequence to set a default value and the user executing the insert query does not have select privilege on the sequence. This was my problem and it took me an unnecessarily long time to figure it out.
To reproduce the problem, execute the following SQL as user1:
create sequence seq_customer_id;
create table customer (
c_id number(10) default seq_customer_id.nextval primary key,
name varchar(100) not null,
surname varchar(100) not null
);
grant select, insert, update, delete on customer to user2;
Then, execute this insert statement as user2:
insert into user1.customer (name,surname) values ('michael','jackson');
The result will be "ORA-00942: table or view does not exist" even though user2 does have insert and select privileges on user1.customer table and is correctly prefixing the table with the schema owner name. To avoid the problem, you must grant select privilege on the sequence:
grant select on seq_customer_id to user2;
Either the user doesn't have privileges needed to see the table, the table doesn't exist or you are running the query in the wrong schema
Does the table exist?
select owner,
object_name
from dba_objects
where object_name = any ('CUSTOMER','customer');
What privileges did you grant?
grant select, insert on customer to user;
Are you running the query against the owner from the first query?
Case sensitive Tables (table names created with double-quotes) can throw this same error as well. See this answer for more information.
Simply wrap the table in double quotes:
INSERT INTO "customer" (c_id,name,surname) VALUES ('1','Micheal','Jackson')
You cannot directly access the table with the name 'customer'. Either it should be 'user1.customer' or create a synonym 'customer' for user2 pointing to 'user1.customer'. hope this helps..
Here is an answer: http://www.dba-oracle.com/concepts/synonyms.htm
An Oracle synonym basically allows you to create a pointer to an object that exists somewhere else. You need Oracle synonyms because when you are logged into Oracle, it looks for all objects you are querying in your schema (account). If they are not there, it will give you an error telling you that they do not exist.
I am using Oracle Database and i had same problem. Eventually i found ORACLE DB is converting all the metadata (table/sp/view/trigger) in upper case.
And i was trying how i wrote table name (myTempTable) in sql whereas it expect how it store table name in databsae (MYTEMPTABLE). Also same applicable on column name.
It is quite common problem with developer whoever used sql and now jumped into ORACLE DB.
in my case when i used asp.net core app i had a mistake in my sql query. If your database contains many schemas, you have to write schema_name before table_name, like:
Select * from SCHEMA_NAME.TABLE_NAME...
i hope it will helpful.
I want to execute a query that selects data from a different schema than the one specified in the DB connection (same Oracle server, same database, different schema)
I have an python app talking to an Oracle server. It opens a connection to database (server/schema) A, and executes select queries to tables inside that database.
I've tried the following :
select ....
from pct.pi_int, pct.pi_ma, pct.pi_es
where ...
But I get:
ORA-00942: table or view does not exist
I've also tried surrounding the schema name with brackets:
from [PCT].pi_int, [PCT].pi_ma, [PCAT].pi_es
I get:
ORA-00903: invalid table name
The queries are executed using the cx_Oracle python module from inside a Django app.
Can this be done or should I make a new db connection?
Does the user that you are using to connect to the database (user A in this example) have SELECT access on the objects in the PCT schema? Assuming that A does not have this access, you would get the "table or view does not exist" error.
Most likely, you need your DBA to grant user A access to whatever tables in the PCT schema that you need. Something like
GRANT SELECT ON pct.pi_int
TO a;
Once that is done, you should be able to refer to the objects in the PCT schema using the syntax pct.pi_int as you demonstrated initially in your question. The bracket syntax approach will not work.
In addition to grants, you can try creating synonyms. It will avoid the need for specifying the table owner schema every time.
From the connecting schema:
CREATE SYNONYM pi_int FOR pct.pi_int;
Then you can query pi_int as:
SELECT * FROM pi_int;
Depending on the schema/account you are using to connect to the database, I would suspect you are missing a grant to the account you are using to connect to the database.
Connect as PCT account in the database, then grant the account you are using select access for the table.
grant select on pi_int to Account_used_to_connect
Is there a way, to select data only form the own schema, even if there is an public synonym?
something like: Select * from current_schema.Table1
more info:
I got a public synonym on table1 on schema1.
now I have a package(on schema2) that selects table1, I want to select table1 of schema2 not schema1.
My problem is, I dont what the user to change the identifier when he uses the package at his server.
edit
I see my question is not clear, what i wanted to know is is there a placeholder for my current schema?
at the moment i need to do this:
Select * from schema2.Table1
and i want is something Like this :
Select * from MySchema.Table1
or
Select * from this.Table1
or
Select * from current_schema.Table1
does something like this exists in oracle?
The scoping rules are quite clear. When the databse parses a query it looks for objects matching the identifiers in your statement in the following order of precedence:
objects of that name in your schema
private synonyms of that name (in your schema)
public synonys of that name
But if you want to be clear certainly you can prefix your table references with the specific schema name. That is helpful in communicating your intent to others looking at your code.
Furthermore, if you have a table TABLE1 in your schema and there is a public synonym called TABLE1 pointing at a table in another schema which you want to query instead you must prefix your reference with that other schema.
"what i wanted to know is is there a placeholder for my current
schema"
No, because it's not necessary. The default is always your current schema. That is, this statement ...
SQL> select * from t23;
... will always select from T23 in your current schema, if it has a table (or a private synonym) with that name.
Note that it is possible to change the value of your current schema, with the ALTER SESSION command:
SQL> alter session set current_schema=scott;
Now if you executed the previous select it would return results from SCOTT.T23 providing the SCOTT schema had such a table, and taht you had privileges on it. You can find out more about Oracle schemas in a blog piece I wrote a while back.
I was trying to understand what problem you were having, and I noticed that your scenario is one user executing a package owned by another user. Now, by default a package owned by SCHEMA2 will run against objects owned by SCHEMA2 and use the privileges on other objects granted to SCHEMA2.
But PL/SQL offers us the ability to change that: the AUTHID clause determines whether the package runs with the definer's privileges (that is the package owner) or invoker's privileges (the current user. So if SCHEMA2 defined their package with AUTHID CURRENT_USER when SCHEMA1 runs it the instance of TABLE2 will be the one in scope of SCHEMA1, which would be the one owned by SCHEMA1 or the one indicated by a public synonym.
Find out more.