Step 2: Set Operating System Environment Variables
Depending on your platform, you may have to set environment variables before starting SQL*Plus, or at least verify that they are set properly.
For example, on most platforms, you must set the environment variables ORACLE_SID
and ORACLE_HOME
. In addition, you must configure the PATH
environment variable to include the ORACLE_HOME/bin
directory. Some platforms may require additional environment variables:
-
On UNIX and Linux, set environment variables by entering operating system commands.
-
On Windows, Oracle Universal Installer (OUI) automatically assigns values to
ORACLE_HOME
andORACLE_SID
in the Windows registry.
If you did not create a database upon installation, OUI does not set ORACLE_SID
in the registry; after you create your database at a later time, you must set the ORACLE_SID
environment variable from a command window.
UNIX and Linux installations come with two scripts, oraenv
and coraenv
, that you can use to easily set environment variables. For more information, see Oracle Database Administrator's Reference for Linux and UNIX-Based Operating Systems.
For all platforms, when switching between instances with different Oracle homes, you must change the ORACLE_HOME
environment variable. If multiple instances share the same Oracle home, then you must change only ORACLE_SID
when switching instances.
Example 3-1 Setting Environment Variables in UNIX (C Shell)
setenv ORACLE_SID orcl
setenv ORACLE_HOME /u01/app/oracle/product/database_release_number/dbhome_1
setenv LD_LIBRARY_PATH $ORACLE_HOME/lib:/usr/lib:/usr/dt/lib:/usr/openwin/lib:/usr/ccs/lib
Example 3-2 Setting Environment Variables in UNIX (Bash Shell)
export ORACLE_SID=orcl
export ORACLE_HOME=/u01/app/oracle/product/database_release_number/dbhome_1
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$ORACLE_HOME/lib:/usr/lib:/usr/dt/lib:/usr/openwin/lib:/usr/ccs/lib
Example 3-3 Setting Environment Variables in Windows
SET ORACLE_SID=orawin2
Example 3-3 assumes that ORACLE_HOME
and ORACLE_SID
are set in the registry but that you want to override the registry value of ORACLE_SID
to connect to a different instance.
On Windows, environment variable values that you set in a command prompt window override the values in the registry.
Parent topic: Connecting to the Database with SQL*Plus