194

Is there any hidden table, system variable or something to show active connections in a given moment?

10 Answers 10

210

Use the V$SESSION view.

V$SESSION displays session information for each current session.

7
  • 7
    Error starting at line 1 in command: select * from FROM v$session Error at Command Line:1 Column:14 Error report: SQL Error: ORA-00903: invalid table name 00903. 00000 - "invalid table name" *Cause: *Action:
    – pistacchio
    Jun 25, 2009 at 10:22
  • 3
    Either you don't have permissions, or you didn't install the DBA views correctly.
    – S.Lott
    Jun 25, 2009 at 10:24
  • 4
    You'll need the select_catalog_role role. Jun 25, 2009 at 10:25
  • 2
    You can join v$sqltext to get the current SQL of sessions too.
    – Alkini
    Jun 25, 2009 at 16:46
  • 33
    pistacchio, you have 2 "from FROM" in the SQL: "select * from FROM v$session"
    – marcprux
    Nov 23, 2010 at 20:02
131

For a more complete answer see: http://dbaforums.org/oracle/index.php?showtopic=16834

select
       substr(a.spid,1,9) pid,
       substr(b.sid,1,5) sid,
       substr(b.serial#,1,5) ser#,
       substr(b.machine,1,6) box,
       substr(b.username,1,10) username,
--       b.server,
       substr(b.osuser,1,8) os_user,
       substr(b.program,1,30) program
from v$session b, v$process a
where
b.paddr = a.addr
and type='USER'
order by spid; 
1
  • The substr feels unnecessary
    – gic186
    Feb 26 at 15:00
36

When I'd like to view incoming connections from our application servers to the database I use the following command:

SELECT username FROM v$session 
WHERE username IS NOT NULL 
ORDER BY username ASC;

Simple, but effective.

8
Select count(1) From V$session
where status='ACTIVE'
/
8
select s.sid as "Sid", s.serial# as "Serial#", nvl(s.username, ' ') as "Username", s.machine as "Machine", s.schemaname as "Schema name", s.logon_time as "Login time", s.program as "Program", s.osuser as "Os user", s.status as "Status", nvl(s.process, ' ') as "OS Process id"
from v$session s
where nvl(s.username, 'a') not like 'a' and status like 'ACTIVE'
order by 1,2

This query attempts to filter out all background processes.

5
select
  username,
  osuser,
  terminal,
  utl_inaddr.get_host_address(terminal) IP_ADDRESS
from
  v$session
where
  username is not null
order by
  username,
  osuser;
1
  • 4
    Welcome to SO! Please provide some intuition for your answers.
    – vefthym
    Jul 17, 2014 at 10:56
4
select status, count(1) as connectionCount from V$SESSION group by status;
4

The following gives you list of operating system users sorted by number of connections, which is useful when looking for excessive resource usage.

select osuser, count(*) as active_conn_count 
from v$session 
group by osuser 
order by active_conn_count desc

SQL> select osuser, count(*) as active_conn_count from v$session group by osuser;

OSUSER ACTIVE_CONN_COUNT


tepadm 20 oracle 39

2
select 
    count(1) "NO. Of DB Users", 
    to_char(sysdate,'DD-MON-YYYY:HH24:MI:SS') sys_time
from 
    v$session 
where 
    username is NOT  NULL;
1
  • 2
    While this code snippet may solve the question, including an explanation really helps to improve the quality of your post. Remember that you are answering the question for readers in the future, and those people might not know the reasons for your code suggestion.
    – DimaSan
    Mar 7, 2017 at 11:06
0

---check active seeeion---

SQL> SELECT SID, Serial#, UserName, Status, SchemaName, Logon_Time FROM V$Session WHERE Status='ACTIVE' AND UserName IS NOT NULL;

   SID    SERIAL# USERNAME                       STATUS   SCHEMANAME                     LOGON_TIM

   247      28849 SYS                            ACTIVE   SYS                            11-JAN-23
   251      27524 SAPSR3                         ACTIVE   SAPSR3                         11-JAN-23

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