Oracle database 12c networking between client and server machine using TNS - oracle

I followed the instructions in the link: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=ONGz9czAikE
And got to the point of testing a Local Net Name Configuration(8:30) when i got to the point of preforming the test it seems like the window is stuck, same thing happens when i try to connect to the server db with Sql developer there i get a socket timeout error after waiting few minutes.
I'm trying to avoid downloading the oracle client software because of a company long security verification protocol.
What am i missing? Any help will be appreciated.

From here:
Oracle 12c server cannot be accessed from remote computer using the .Net provider
Try using an external IP instead of hostname like so:
LISTENER =
(DESCRIPTION_LIST =
(DESCRIPTION =
(ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = TCP)(HOST = 10.30.50.90)(PORT = 1521))
)
)

Related

Listener refused the connection [duplicate]

I have installed Oracle 11g Express Edition Release 2 in my windows 7 64 bit OS and tried to execute JDBC program, then I got the following error:
java.sql.SQLException: Listener refused the connection with the following error:
ORA-12505, TNS:listener does not currently know of SID given in connect descriptor
at oracle.jdbc.driver.T4CConnection.logon(T4CConnection.java:412)
at oracle.jdbc.driver.PhysicalConnection.<init>(PhysicalConnection.java:531)
at oracle.jdbc.driver.T4CConnection.<init>(T4CConnection.java:221)
at oracle.jdbc.driver.T4CDriverExtension.getConnection(T4CDriverExtension.java:32)
at oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver.connect(OracleDriver.java:503)
at java.sql.DriverManager.getConnection(Unknown Source)
at java.sql.DriverManager.getConnection(Unknown Source)
at com.jlcindia.jdbc.JDBCUtil.geOracleConnection(JDBCUtil.java:28)
at Lab3O.main(Lab3O.java:15)
Caused by: oracle.net.ns.NetException: Listener refused the connection with the following error:
ORA-12505, TNS:listener does not currently know of SID given in connect descriptor
at oracle.net.ns.NSProtocol.connect(NSProtocol.java:385)
at oracle.jdbc.driver.T4CConnection.connect(T4CConnection.java:1042)
at oracle.jdbc.driver.T4CConnection.logon(T4CConnection.java:301)
... 8 more
I fixed this issue by correcting my jdbc string.
For example, the correct jdbc string should be...
jdbc:oracle:thin:#myserver:1521/XE
But the jdbs string I was using is ...
jdbc:oracle:thin:#myserver:1521:XE
(Note: between 1521 and XE should be a /)
This bad jdbc string give me a ORA-12505 error too.
There are a few things that can cause this problem, but before you get started with JDBC, you need to be sure that you can connect to the database using SQL*Plus. If you're not familiar with SQL*Plus, it's a command-line tool for connecting to Oracle databases that has been a standard part of Oracle for a long time and it is included with Oracle XE.
When connecting to an Oracle database using JDBC, you don't connect to the database directly. Instead, you connect to a TNS listener, which then connects you to the database. The error ORA-12505 means that the listener was up and you could connect to it, but it couldn't connect you to the database because it doesn't know that that database is up. There are two reasons for this:
the database has not been started up,
the database has not registered with the listener, e.g. because the database was started before the listener. (When the database starts, it registers itself with a listener if it is already running. If the listener isn't running, the database doesn't register itself, and if the listener starts, it doesn't go looking for databases that might register with it.)
ORA-12505 means that the listener knows about that database, but the listener hasn't received a notification from the database that the database is up. (If you were trying to connect to the wrong database, using the wrong SID, you would get an ORA-12154 error "TNS: could not resolve the connect identifier specified".)
What Oracle services are running in the Services snap-in? (Open this from Control Panel > Administrative Tools > Services, or just Start > Run > services.msc.) You need the services OracleServiceXE and OracleXETNSListener to be running.
If the services have both been started, can you connect to the database in SQL*Plus using any of the following at a command prompt? (I'm assuming you're running these on the machine you've installed Oracle XE on.)
sqlplus system/system-password#XE
sqlplus system/system-password
sqlplus / as sysdba
(Replace system-password with the password you set for the SYS and SYSTEM users during the Oracle XE installation.)
The first of these three connect via the TNS listener, but the second two connect directly to the database without going via the listener, and only work if you're on the same machine as the database. If the first one fails but the other two succeed, then JDBC connections will also fail. If so, connect to the database using either of the other two and run ALTER SYSTEM REGISTER. Then exit from SQL*Plus and try the first form again.
If the third one fails but the second one works, add your user account to the ora_dba group. Do this in Control Panel > Computer Management > Local Users and Groups.
Once you can get connections of the form
sqlplus system/system-password#XE
to work, you ought to be able to connect to Oracle XE via JDBC. (Incidentally, you haven't shown us the JDBC code you're using to connect to the database, but I would suspect that it is quite probably correct; there would be various other errors if parts of the connection string were wrong.)
I too got the same error but when tried all the three of them failed.
If the above three fails.Try LSNRCTL status if you find the service (XE in my case)missing try this
sqlplus /nolog
conn system
alter system register;
exit
lsnrctl status
Now you can see the service
Even if don't see try this one out
sqlplus /nolog
conn system
alter system set local_listener = '(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=TCP)(HOST=localhost)(PORT=1521))' scope = both;
alter system register;
exit
lsnrctl status
This should probably work ...
When your getting this error "ORA-12505, TNS:listener does not currently know of SID given in connect descriptor"
Solution: Open Services, and start OracleServiceXE, after that try to connect...
If you have a working connection in Oracle SQL Developer, use the information on the connection menu to build your url, as described in the following image:
In the above example, the url would be : jdbc:oracle:thin:#ORADEV.myserver.com:1521/myservice
Note that if your are using a SID, then there is a colon (":") instead of a slash ("/") after the host name.
I found some reasons for this exception.they are
1)The name of the database XE by default.so the url will be"jdbc:oracle:thin:#localhost:1521:XE".
2)Make sure that OracleServiceXE,OracleXETNSListener is running.it will be in Control Panel\All Control Panel Items\Administrative Tools\Services
I solved this issue by correcting my JDBC code.
the correct JDBC string should be...
conection = DriverManager.getConnection
("jdbc:oracle:thin:#localhost:1521:xe","system","ishantyagi");
But the JDBC string I was using was ...
conection = DriverManager.getConnection
("jdbc:oracle:thin:#localhost:1521:orcl","system","ishantyagi");
So, the mistake of specifying orcl instead of xe showed this error as the SID name was wrong.
My issue is resolved when I use the below code:
Class.forName("oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver");
Connection conn=DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:oracle:thin:#IPAddress:1521/servicename","userName","Password");
Faced similar error, any of the above solutions didn't help.
There was a problem in the listner.ora file. By mistake I had added SID out of the SID_LIST see below(section between the stars *).
SID_LIST_LISTENER =
(SID_LIST =
(SID_DESC =
(SID_NAME = PLSExtProc)
(ORACLE_HOME = C:\oraclexe\app\oracle\product\11.2.0\server)
(PROGRAM = extproc)
)
(SID_DESC =
(SID_NAME = CLRExtProc)
(ORACLE_HOME = C:\oraclexe\app\oracle\product\11.2.0\server)
(PROGRAM = extproc)
)
)
*(SID_DESC =
(SID_NAME = XE)
(ORACLE_HOME = C:\oraclexe\app\oracle\product\11.2.0\server)
)*
LISTENER =
(DESCRIPTION_LIST =
(DESCRIPTION =
(ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = IPC)(KEY = EXTPROC1))
(ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = TCP)(HOST = 127.0.0.1)(PORT = 1521))
)
)
DEFAULT_SERVICE_LISTENER = (XE)
Corrected this error as below:
SID_LIST_LISTENER =
(SID_LIST =
(SID_DESC =
(SID_NAME = XE)
(ORACLE_HOME = C:\oraclexe\app\oracle\product\11.2.0\server)
)
(SID_DESC =
(SID_NAME = PLSExtProc)
(ORACLE_HOME = C:\oraclexe\app\oracle\product\11.2.0\server)
(PROGRAM = extproc)
)
(SID_DESC =
(SID_NAME = CLRExtProc)
(ORACLE_HOME = C:\oraclexe\app\oracle\product\11.2.0\server)
(PROGRAM = extproc)
)
)
LISTENER =
(DESCRIPTION_LIST =
(DESCRIPTION =
(ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = IPC)(KEY = EXTPROC1))
(ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = TCP)(HOST = 127.0.0.1)(PORT = 1521))
)
)
DEFAULT_SERVICE_LISTENER = (XE)
Stopped and the database
Stopped the listeners OracleServiceXE and OracleXETNSListener manually as it did not stop automatically by going to Control Panel\All Control Panel Items\Administrative Tools\Services. Restarted the database and it worked like a charm.
Oracle:
Thin-style Service Name Syntax
Thin-style service names are supported only by the JDBC Thin driver. The syntax is:
#//host_name:port_number/service_name
http://docs.oracle.com/cd/B28359_01/java.111/b31224/urls.htm#BEIDHCBA
i initially came here with the same problem. I had jus installed Oracle 12c on Windows 8 (64-bit),but i have since resolved it by 'TNSPING xe' on the command line... If the connection isn't established or name not found,try the database name,in my case it was 'orcl'... 'TNSPING orcl' again and if it pings successfully then u need to change the SID to 'orcl' in this case (or whatever database name u used)...
One possibility that I haven't seen widely discussed is that there may be a problem resolving the hostname on the host machine itself. If there is no entry for $(hostname) in /etc/hosts, the Oracle listener gets confused and wont come up.
That turned out to be my problem, and adding the hostname and ip address in /etc/hosts resolved the problem.
I have faced the same issue and solved by restart the OracleServiceXE service. Goto Services.msc and then verify the 'OracleServiceXE' service is UP and running
I fixed this issue by changing "SID" to "SERVICE_NAME" in my TNSNAMES.ora file.
Please see if your DB asks for SID or SERVICE_NAME.
Cheers
Connection con=DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:oracle:thin:#localhost:1521:xe","scott","tiger");
Error I got:
java.sql.SQLException: Listener refused the connection with the following error:
ORA-12505, TNS:listener does not currently know of SID given in connect descriptor
The Connection descriptor used by the client was:
localhost:1521:xe
How I solved it:
Connection con=DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:oracle:thin:localhost:1521:xe","scott","tiger");
(Remove #)
Don't know why, but its working now...
I too faced the same issue. I had installed Oracle Express edition 10g in Windows XP OS using VMware and it was working fine. Since it was very awkward typing SQL queries in the SQL utility provided by 10g and since I was used to working with SQL developer, I installed 32 bit SQL developer in XP and tried connecting to my DB SID "XE". But the connection failed with error-ORA-12505 TNS listener doesn't currently know of SID given in connect descriptor. I was at sea as to how this problem occurred since it was working fine with the SQL utility and I had also created few Informatica mappings using the same. I did browse a lot on this stuff hither thither and applied the suggestions offered to me after pinging the status of "lsnrctl" on public forums but to no avail. However, this morning I tried creating a new connection again, and Voila, it worked with no issues. I am guessing after reading in few posts that sometimes listener listens before the DB connects or something(pardon me for my crude reference as I am a newbie here) but I suggest to just restart the machine and check again.
I had the same problem so to resolve this problem I first reconfigure my listener using netca after that I deleted my old database which was ORCL by using dbca and then i created the new database again using dbca
Please check both OracleServiceXE and OracleXETNSListener having the status started when you navigate through start->run->services.msc.
For my case only OracleXETNSListener was started but OracleServiceXE was not started, when I started by right clicking -> start and checked the connection its working for me
If you use Oracle Express Edition, you should have this url
jdbc:oracle:thin:#localhost:1521:xe or jdbc:oracle:thin:#localhost:1521/XE
I had similar problem with liquibase config plugin in pom.xml. And I changed my configuration:
`<configuration>
<driver>oracle.jdbc.OracleDriver</driver>
<url>jdbc:oracle:thin:#localhost:1521:xe</url>
<defaultSchemaName></defaultSchemaName>
<username>****</username>
<password>****</password>
</configuration>`
Check by doing tnsping and instance name in host machine. It will give u the tns decription and all most of the time host name is different which is not matching.
I resolve my issue likewise
In Unix machine
$ tnsping (Enter)
It gives me full tns description where I found that host name is different.. :)
I had similar problem in SQL Workbench.
URL:
jdbc:oracle:thin:#111.111.111.111:1111:xe
doesn't work.
URL:
jdbc:oracle:thin:#111.111.111.111:1111:asdb
works.
This help me in my concrete situation. I afraid, that could exists many other reasons with different solutions.
I got this error ORA-12505, TNS:listener does not currently know of SID given in connect descriptor when I tried to connect to oracle DB using SQL developer.
The JDBC string used was jdbc:oracle:thin:#myserver:1521/XE, obviously the correct one and the two mandatory oracle services OracleServiceXE, OracleXETNSListener were up and running.
The way I solved this issue (In Windows 10)
1. Open run command.
2. Type services.msc
3. Find services with name OracleServiceXE and OracleXETNSListener in the list.
4. Restart OracleServiceXE service first. After completing the restart try restarting OracleXETNSListener service.
Had a similar issue. The issue started occurring suddenly - we are having load balanced database connection URL, but in jdbc connections I was pointing to a single db directly.
Changed to load balanced db url and it worked.
In my case not was working out, finally i restarted my oracle and TNS listener and everything worked. Was struggling for 2 days.
Apart from running services(OracleServiceXE,OracleXETNSListener) on there is a chance your Anti-virus software/firewall may still block them. Just make sure they are not blocked.
I just fixed it by restarting / starting oracleService in services
My oracle stopped working and I was getting this error. I restarted my machine and also tried above solutions. Ultimately, I opened component services and restarted the oracle services and it all started working. Hope this helps someone.
I was just creating the database link incorrectly.
Simple fix for me was to simply change 'SID' to SERVICE_NAME
CREATE DATABASE LINK my_db_link
CONNECT TO myUser IDENTIFIED BY myPassword
USING
'
(
DESCRIPTION=
(
ADDRESS=
(PROTOCOL=TCP)
(HOST=host-name-heren)
(PORT=1521)
)
(CONNECT_DATA=(SID=theNameOfTheDatabase))
)';
Changing
SID=theNameOfTheDatabase
to
SERVICE_NAME=theNameOfTheDatabase
resolved my issue.
I encounter this problem because I did kill task to "Oracle" task in the Task Manager.
To fix it you need to open the cmd -> type: services.msc -> the window with all services will open -> find service "OracleServiceXE" -> right click: start.
#Luke Woodward's answer helped to identify my XE wasn't connecting.
I had an issue when connecting to a VPN. And I am using a fresh local Oracle 21c on Windows 11.
The files listener.ora and tnsnames.ora were using my PC name "ERIK-PC" like this:
LISTENER =
(DESCRIPTION_LIST =
(DESCRIPTION =
(ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = TCP)(HOST = ERIK-PC)(PORT = 1521))
(ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = IPC)(KEY = EXTPROC1521))
)
)
I just needed to change ERIK-PC to localhost.
More information in this thread.
By the way, I am using Oracle 21c, and since 18c, the *.ora files are under installationfolder\homes\OraDB21Home1\network\admin\*.ora
Save your changes and restart the listener using a privileged windows shell:
lsnrctl stop
lsnrctl start

How to connect Oracle 11G database using SQL developer from another computer in a LAN connection

I am very new in database and learning Oracle 11G. So, I do not have deep knowledge on it.
I have several computers in my lab connected via LAN. Oracle 11G is installed in computer-A(192.18.100.115). Now I want to use the database from other computers in my Lab via SQL Developer that is installed into all Computers.
Would you please explain
What I need to do in Computer-A for granting access from other Computers?
What I need to do in other computers for getting access from computer-A?
I will be grateful if any one gives me a proper solution.
What I need to do in Computer-A for granting access from other Computers?
You need to make sure the LISTENER is up and running to accept remote connection requests. Listener.ora is a SQL*Net configuration file used to configure Oracle Database Listeners. You will usually find that in ORACLE_HOME\NETWORK\ADMIN directory.
For example,
LISTENER =
(DESCRIPTION_LIST =
(DESCRIPTION =
(ADDRESS_LIST =
(ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = TCP)(HOST = hostname)(PORT = 1521))
)
)
)
SID_LIST_LISTENER =
(SID_LIST =
(SID_DESC =
(GLOBAL_DBNAME = ORCL)
(ORACLE_HOME = /u01/app/oracle/product/11.2.0)
(SID_NAME = ORCL)
)
)
As you mentioned your host 192.18.100.115, you need to put it in the hostname.
What I need to do in other computers for getting access from computer-A?
You just need to install Oracle database client. If you only want to connect to the remote DB server, you could install only Instant client.
If you are using SQL Developer, then you could use:
Basic connection type
Or,
TNS connection type
In basic connection type, you need to provide all the connection details in the connection properties itself. For using TNS connection type, you need to configure the tnsnames.ora file present in ORACLE_HOME\NETWORK\ADMIN directory.

LINQPad - Connection String to my Oracle DB

I just started using LINQPad and all works great when connecting to my SQL Server DB, but now I'm trying to set up a second connection to my Oracle DB and I'm getting stuck as to how to do it.
I downloaded the IQ driver (v 2.0.8.0 - Latest) and when I go to add a new connection, I select Oracle as my DB Provider and don't know how to do the rest based upon my usual connection string looking as follows:
Data Source=(DESCRIPTION =(ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = TCP)(HOST = [IP Address])(PORT = [Port]))(CONNECT_DATA = (SERVER = DEDICATED)(SERVICE_NAME = [Service Name])));User Id=[name];Password=[password];"
I know that you usually post what you've tried, but, believe me, I've tried filling in those text boxes every which way I could think of and keep getting errors when I click the "Test" button.
Also, one of the errors I get is:
License not valid due to the problems with dotConnect for Oracle installation - I don't think that's the only issue, but I'm sure I'll also need to fix that problem too....
Any suggestions / links to offer about what to fill in where to make this work??
THANKS!!!!!!!
I've just got this working with the latest version of LINQPad (4.55.03) Premium, and IQ (2.1.1.0), as of 2015-03-09.
In our workplace, we use the TNSNAMES.ORA file to connect to Oracle 11g using PL/SQL Developer with entries such as:
TNS_NAME =
(DESCRIPTION =
(ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = TCP)(HOST = the-host-name)(PORT = 1521))
(CONNECT_DATA =
(SERVER = DEDICATED)
(SERVICE_NAME = the-service-name)
)
)
and JDBC connection strings for ColdFusion's connection to Oracle in the format
jdbc:oracle:thin:#
(DESCRIPTION =
(ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = TCP)(HOST = the-host-name)(PORT = 1521))
(CONNECT_DATA =
(SERVER = DEDICATED)
(SERVICE_NAME = the-service-name)
)
)
In LINQPad's Choose Data Context window, select the IQ driver and click Next...
Provider: Oracle
Connection Mode: Direct (although my workstation has both 32 and 64 bit Oracle clients installed, which PL/SQL Developer and ColdFusion use, respectively)
Server: the-host-name
User Name: your Oracle username
Password: its password
On the Advanced tab:
Additional connection string options:
SERVICE NAME=the-service-name
Clicking Test shows Connection Successful
The connection icon (a cog) in the connections pane then populated with the list of tables.
There is a build issue in the newest IQDriver release. Revert to previous version (2.0.7) and you won't see that error. Author removed latest version, so you can do that directly from LINQPad (Add connection | Select IQ | Delete Driver | Re-download IQ Driver).

ORA-12505, TNS:listener does not currently know of SID given in connect descriptor

I have installed Oracle 11g Express Edition Release 2 in my windows 7 64 bit OS and tried to execute JDBC program, then I got the following error:
java.sql.SQLException: Listener refused the connection with the following error:
ORA-12505, TNS:listener does not currently know of SID given in connect descriptor
at oracle.jdbc.driver.T4CConnection.logon(T4CConnection.java:412)
at oracle.jdbc.driver.PhysicalConnection.<init>(PhysicalConnection.java:531)
at oracle.jdbc.driver.T4CConnection.<init>(T4CConnection.java:221)
at oracle.jdbc.driver.T4CDriverExtension.getConnection(T4CDriverExtension.java:32)
at oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver.connect(OracleDriver.java:503)
at java.sql.DriverManager.getConnection(Unknown Source)
at java.sql.DriverManager.getConnection(Unknown Source)
at com.jlcindia.jdbc.JDBCUtil.geOracleConnection(JDBCUtil.java:28)
at Lab3O.main(Lab3O.java:15)
Caused by: oracle.net.ns.NetException: Listener refused the connection with the following error:
ORA-12505, TNS:listener does not currently know of SID given in connect descriptor
at oracle.net.ns.NSProtocol.connect(NSProtocol.java:385)
at oracle.jdbc.driver.T4CConnection.connect(T4CConnection.java:1042)
at oracle.jdbc.driver.T4CConnection.logon(T4CConnection.java:301)
... 8 more
I fixed this issue by correcting my jdbc string.
For example, the correct jdbc string should be...
jdbc:oracle:thin:#myserver:1521/XE
But the jdbs string I was using is ...
jdbc:oracle:thin:#myserver:1521:XE
(Note: between 1521 and XE should be a /)
This bad jdbc string give me a ORA-12505 error too.
There are a few things that can cause this problem, but before you get started with JDBC, you need to be sure that you can connect to the database using SQL*Plus. If you're not familiar with SQL*Plus, it's a command-line tool for connecting to Oracle databases that has been a standard part of Oracle for a long time and it is included with Oracle XE.
When connecting to an Oracle database using JDBC, you don't connect to the database directly. Instead, you connect to a TNS listener, which then connects you to the database. The error ORA-12505 means that the listener was up and you could connect to it, but it couldn't connect you to the database because it doesn't know that that database is up. There are two reasons for this:
the database has not been started up,
the database has not registered with the listener, e.g. because the database was started before the listener. (When the database starts, it registers itself with a listener if it is already running. If the listener isn't running, the database doesn't register itself, and if the listener starts, it doesn't go looking for databases that might register with it.)
ORA-12505 means that the listener knows about that database, but the listener hasn't received a notification from the database that the database is up. (If you were trying to connect to the wrong database, using the wrong SID, you would get an ORA-12154 error "TNS: could not resolve the connect identifier specified".)
What Oracle services are running in the Services snap-in? (Open this from Control Panel > Administrative Tools > Services, or just Start > Run > services.msc.) You need the services OracleServiceXE and OracleXETNSListener to be running.
If the services have both been started, can you connect to the database in SQL*Plus using any of the following at a command prompt? (I'm assuming you're running these on the machine you've installed Oracle XE on.)
sqlplus system/system-password#XE
sqlplus system/system-password
sqlplus / as sysdba
(Replace system-password with the password you set for the SYS and SYSTEM users during the Oracle XE installation.)
The first of these three connect via the TNS listener, but the second two connect directly to the database without going via the listener, and only work if you're on the same machine as the database. If the first one fails but the other two succeed, then JDBC connections will also fail. If so, connect to the database using either of the other two and run ALTER SYSTEM REGISTER. Then exit from SQL*Plus and try the first form again.
If the third one fails but the second one works, add your user account to the ora_dba group. Do this in Control Panel > Computer Management > Local Users and Groups.
Once you can get connections of the form
sqlplus system/system-password#XE
to work, you ought to be able to connect to Oracle XE via JDBC. (Incidentally, you haven't shown us the JDBC code you're using to connect to the database, but I would suspect that it is quite probably correct; there would be various other errors if parts of the connection string were wrong.)
I too got the same error but when tried all the three of them failed.
If the above three fails.Try LSNRCTL status if you find the service (XE in my case)missing try this
sqlplus /nolog
conn system
alter system register;
exit
lsnrctl status
Now you can see the service
Even if don't see try this one out
sqlplus /nolog
conn system
alter system set local_listener = '(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=TCP)(HOST=localhost)(PORT=1521))' scope = both;
alter system register;
exit
lsnrctl status
This should probably work ...
When your getting this error "ORA-12505, TNS:listener does not currently know of SID given in connect descriptor"
Solution: Open Services, and start OracleServiceXE, after that try to connect...
If you have a working connection in Oracle SQL Developer, use the information on the connection menu to build your url, as described in the following image:
In the above example, the url would be : jdbc:oracle:thin:#ORADEV.myserver.com:1521/myservice
Note that if your are using a SID, then there is a colon (":") instead of a slash ("/") after the host name.
I found some reasons for this exception.they are
1)The name of the database XE by default.so the url will be"jdbc:oracle:thin:#localhost:1521:XE".
2)Make sure that OracleServiceXE,OracleXETNSListener is running.it will be in Control Panel\All Control Panel Items\Administrative Tools\Services
I solved this issue by correcting my JDBC code.
the correct JDBC string should be...
conection = DriverManager.getConnection
("jdbc:oracle:thin:#localhost:1521:xe","system","ishantyagi");
But the JDBC string I was using was ...
conection = DriverManager.getConnection
("jdbc:oracle:thin:#localhost:1521:orcl","system","ishantyagi");
So, the mistake of specifying orcl instead of xe showed this error as the SID name was wrong.
My issue is resolved when I use the below code:
Class.forName("oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver");
Connection conn=DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:oracle:thin:#IPAddress:1521/servicename","userName","Password");
Faced similar error, any of the above solutions didn't help.
There was a problem in the listner.ora file. By mistake I had added SID out of the SID_LIST see below(section between the stars *).
SID_LIST_LISTENER =
(SID_LIST =
(SID_DESC =
(SID_NAME = PLSExtProc)
(ORACLE_HOME = C:\oraclexe\app\oracle\product\11.2.0\server)
(PROGRAM = extproc)
)
(SID_DESC =
(SID_NAME = CLRExtProc)
(ORACLE_HOME = C:\oraclexe\app\oracle\product\11.2.0\server)
(PROGRAM = extproc)
)
)
*(SID_DESC =
(SID_NAME = XE)
(ORACLE_HOME = C:\oraclexe\app\oracle\product\11.2.0\server)
)*
LISTENER =
(DESCRIPTION_LIST =
(DESCRIPTION =
(ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = IPC)(KEY = EXTPROC1))
(ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = TCP)(HOST = 127.0.0.1)(PORT = 1521))
)
)
DEFAULT_SERVICE_LISTENER = (XE)
Corrected this error as below:
SID_LIST_LISTENER =
(SID_LIST =
(SID_DESC =
(SID_NAME = XE)
(ORACLE_HOME = C:\oraclexe\app\oracle\product\11.2.0\server)
)
(SID_DESC =
(SID_NAME = PLSExtProc)
(ORACLE_HOME = C:\oraclexe\app\oracle\product\11.2.0\server)
(PROGRAM = extproc)
)
(SID_DESC =
(SID_NAME = CLRExtProc)
(ORACLE_HOME = C:\oraclexe\app\oracle\product\11.2.0\server)
(PROGRAM = extproc)
)
)
LISTENER =
(DESCRIPTION_LIST =
(DESCRIPTION =
(ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = IPC)(KEY = EXTPROC1))
(ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = TCP)(HOST = 127.0.0.1)(PORT = 1521))
)
)
DEFAULT_SERVICE_LISTENER = (XE)
Stopped and the database
Stopped the listeners OracleServiceXE and OracleXETNSListener manually as it did not stop automatically by going to Control Panel\All Control Panel Items\Administrative Tools\Services. Restarted the database and it worked like a charm.
Oracle:
Thin-style Service Name Syntax
Thin-style service names are supported only by the JDBC Thin driver. The syntax is:
#//host_name:port_number/service_name
http://docs.oracle.com/cd/B28359_01/java.111/b31224/urls.htm#BEIDHCBA
i initially came here with the same problem. I had jus installed Oracle 12c on Windows 8 (64-bit),but i have since resolved it by 'TNSPING xe' on the command line... If the connection isn't established or name not found,try the database name,in my case it was 'orcl'... 'TNSPING orcl' again and if it pings successfully then u need to change the SID to 'orcl' in this case (or whatever database name u used)...
One possibility that I haven't seen widely discussed is that there may be a problem resolving the hostname on the host machine itself. If there is no entry for $(hostname) in /etc/hosts, the Oracle listener gets confused and wont come up.
That turned out to be my problem, and adding the hostname and ip address in /etc/hosts resolved the problem.
I have faced the same issue and solved by restart the OracleServiceXE service. Goto Services.msc and then verify the 'OracleServiceXE' service is UP and running
I fixed this issue by changing "SID" to "SERVICE_NAME" in my TNSNAMES.ora file.
Please see if your DB asks for SID or SERVICE_NAME.
Cheers
Connection con=DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:oracle:thin:#localhost:1521:xe","scott","tiger");
Error I got:
java.sql.SQLException: Listener refused the connection with the following error:
ORA-12505, TNS:listener does not currently know of SID given in connect descriptor
The Connection descriptor used by the client was:
localhost:1521:xe
How I solved it:
Connection con=DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:oracle:thin:localhost:1521:xe","scott","tiger");
(Remove #)
Don't know why, but its working now...
I too faced the same issue. I had installed Oracle Express edition 10g in Windows XP OS using VMware and it was working fine. Since it was very awkward typing SQL queries in the SQL utility provided by 10g and since I was used to working with SQL developer, I installed 32 bit SQL developer in XP and tried connecting to my DB SID "XE". But the connection failed with error-ORA-12505 TNS listener doesn't currently know of SID given in connect descriptor. I was at sea as to how this problem occurred since it was working fine with the SQL utility and I had also created few Informatica mappings using the same. I did browse a lot on this stuff hither thither and applied the suggestions offered to me after pinging the status of "lsnrctl" on public forums but to no avail. However, this morning I tried creating a new connection again, and Voila, it worked with no issues. I am guessing after reading in few posts that sometimes listener listens before the DB connects or something(pardon me for my crude reference as I am a newbie here) but I suggest to just restart the machine and check again.
I had the same problem so to resolve this problem I first reconfigure my listener using netca after that I deleted my old database which was ORCL by using dbca and then i created the new database again using dbca
Please check both OracleServiceXE and OracleXETNSListener having the status started when you navigate through start->run->services.msc.
For my case only OracleXETNSListener was started but OracleServiceXE was not started, when I started by right clicking -> start and checked the connection its working for me
If you use Oracle Express Edition, you should have this url
jdbc:oracle:thin:#localhost:1521:xe or jdbc:oracle:thin:#localhost:1521/XE
I had similar problem with liquibase config plugin in pom.xml. And I changed my configuration:
`<configuration>
<driver>oracle.jdbc.OracleDriver</driver>
<url>jdbc:oracle:thin:#localhost:1521:xe</url>
<defaultSchemaName></defaultSchemaName>
<username>****</username>
<password>****</password>
</configuration>`
Check by doing tnsping and instance name in host machine. It will give u the tns decription and all most of the time host name is different which is not matching.
I resolve my issue likewise
In Unix machine
$ tnsping (Enter)
It gives me full tns description where I found that host name is different.. :)
I had similar problem in SQL Workbench.
URL:
jdbc:oracle:thin:#111.111.111.111:1111:xe
doesn't work.
URL:
jdbc:oracle:thin:#111.111.111.111:1111:asdb
works.
This help me in my concrete situation. I afraid, that could exists many other reasons with different solutions.
I got this error ORA-12505, TNS:listener does not currently know of SID given in connect descriptor when I tried to connect to oracle DB using SQL developer.
The JDBC string used was jdbc:oracle:thin:#myserver:1521/XE, obviously the correct one and the two mandatory oracle services OracleServiceXE, OracleXETNSListener were up and running.
The way I solved this issue (In Windows 10)
1. Open run command.
2. Type services.msc
3. Find services with name OracleServiceXE and OracleXETNSListener in the list.
4. Restart OracleServiceXE service first. After completing the restart try restarting OracleXETNSListener service.
Had a similar issue. The issue started occurring suddenly - we are having load balanced database connection URL, but in jdbc connections I was pointing to a single db directly.
Changed to load balanced db url and it worked.
In my case not was working out, finally i restarted my oracle and TNS listener and everything worked. Was struggling for 2 days.
Apart from running services(OracleServiceXE,OracleXETNSListener) on there is a chance your Anti-virus software/firewall may still block them. Just make sure they are not blocked.
I just fixed it by restarting / starting oracleService in services
My oracle stopped working and I was getting this error. I restarted my machine and also tried above solutions. Ultimately, I opened component services and restarted the oracle services and it all started working. Hope this helps someone.
I was just creating the database link incorrectly.
Simple fix for me was to simply change 'SID' to SERVICE_NAME
CREATE DATABASE LINK my_db_link
CONNECT TO myUser IDENTIFIED BY myPassword
USING
'
(
DESCRIPTION=
(
ADDRESS=
(PROTOCOL=TCP)
(HOST=host-name-heren)
(PORT=1521)
)
(CONNECT_DATA=(SID=theNameOfTheDatabase))
)';
Changing
SID=theNameOfTheDatabase
to
SERVICE_NAME=theNameOfTheDatabase
resolved my issue.
I encounter this problem because I did kill task to "Oracle" task in the Task Manager.
To fix it you need to open the cmd -> type: services.msc -> the window with all services will open -> find service "OracleServiceXE" -> right click: start.
#Luke Woodward's answer helped to identify my XE wasn't connecting.
I had an issue when connecting to a VPN. And I am using a fresh local Oracle 21c on Windows 11.
The files listener.ora and tnsnames.ora were using my PC name "ERIK-PC" like this:
LISTENER =
(DESCRIPTION_LIST =
(DESCRIPTION =
(ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = TCP)(HOST = ERIK-PC)(PORT = 1521))
(ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = IPC)(KEY = EXTPROC1521))
)
)
I just needed to change ERIK-PC to localhost.
More information in this thread.
By the way, I am using Oracle 21c, and since 18c, the *.ora files are under installationfolder\homes\OraDB21Home1\network\admin\*.ora
Save your changes and restart the listener using a privileged windows shell:
lsnrctl stop
lsnrctl start

Unreliable Oracle connection (intermittent error "Connect failed because target host or object does not exist")

We recently changed physical DB's, new servers, new locations, same database schema and data and since the change over, whenever we try to connect directly to the DB in our own desktop type applications about half of the time we get this error:
SQL*Loader-704: Internal error: ulconnect: OCIServerAttach[0]
ORA-12545: Connect failed because target host or object does not exist
The rest of the time, it connects right away without any issues. Our applications that establish connections via JDBC don't seem to have any issues but we do when going through something that does a tnsnames.ora lookup (or that's my hunch at least). TNSPING works 100% but using an oracle executable like SQLLDDR fails at least 50% of the time. Here's an anonymized snppet of our TSNNAMES file and a TNSPING output:
DB_CONNECTION =
(DESCRIPTION =
(ADDRESS_LIST =
(ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = TCP)(HOST = 1.2.3.4)(PORT = 1521))
)
(CONNECT_DATA =
(SERVICE_NAME = MY.URL.COM)
)
)
And the TNSPING:
C:\>TNSPING DB_CONNECTION
TNS Ping Utility for 32-bit Windows: Version 9.2.0.1.0
Copyright (c) 1997 Oracle Corporation. All rights reserved.
Used parameter files:
C:\oracle\ora92\network\admin\sqlnet.ora
Used TNSNAMES adapter to resolve the alias
Attempting to contact (DESCRIPTION = (ADDRESS_LIST = (ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = TCP)
(HOST = 1.2.3.4)(PORT = 1521))) (CONNECT_DATA = (SERVICE_NAME = MY.URL.COM)))
OK (200 msec)
I have the SID of the DB, which is what the JDBC connections rely on but adding it to the tnsnames.ora doesn't improve the odds of making a connection. I don't know enough about how the tnsnames file is being used by Oracle to intelligently resolve this issue. What can I try?
Edit
The new DB's may be two load balanced databases which may be part of the problem.
We recently had a similar issue with our application. The application would sometimes connect to the Oracle RAC and sometimes it would complain with ORA-12545.
In short the issue was that the server had a real name while we were using virtual IP addresses in TNSNAMES.ORA. Once we added the mapping of the server name to IP address via system32\drivers\etc\hosts file everything started to work properly.
I have written a bit more in my blog
<shameless advert>http://dcarapic.blogspot.com/2009/04/intermittent-ora-12545-error.html</shameless advert>
Ah, gotta love the intermittent problems :)
(In the following I have had to replace the underscore character as I don't know the escape char for this wiki language)
Are you always using the same OS user to connect and to do the tnsping?
Check for environment variables TNS[underscore]ADMIN pointing to different tnsnames.ora locations. Do a scan of the client for duplicate tnsnames.ora; either in locations pointed to by $TNS[underscore]ADMIN or in different $ORACLE[underscore]HOMES (e.g. if you have 2 Oracle client installs).
Likewise check that you are using the same $ORACLE[underscore]HOME and $PATH environment variables for all connection attempts and tnsping. (E.g. always the same OS user or each user has the same values)
I see that the tnsping output reports version 9.2 so this is not likely, but in 11g the DB registers with the listener which can take a minute or so. (maybe also true with 10g). Attempts to connect prior to this will not find the target.
Another unlikely possibility - is a service with the same service name still advertised on the old host server? Remove it if at all possible.
After that I would start to look at the network itself. Is a ping of the server always successful and quick? If you're using the hostname rather than IP in the tnsnames.ora, does the hostname reliably resolve to the correct IP (nslookup). Is there a local firewall and if so is it behaving?
Regards
Karl
If you are using Oracle 10g, you may use an Easy Connect handler instead:
//servername/instancename
,
//1.2.3.4/my.url.com
in your case.
It's immune to lots of TNSNAMES issues.

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