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I have applied for an internship in a company and as a question they have asked me to create a schema for their company with certain requirements and mail them the DDL file. I have installed Oracle database 11g Express edition, but how do I create a new schema in Oracle database 11g? I have searched in the net for a solution but I could not understand what to do. And after creating a schema, which file should I mail them?

4
  • 1
    create user foo .... Please read the manual-
    – user330315
    Commented Aug 23, 2013 at 12:40
  • may i know what is oracle automatic storage management cluster?
    – acoder
    Commented Aug 23, 2013 at 13:03
  • 7
    This site is not a substitute for doing your own research and learning from the product documentation. Searching the link Ben gave for that term will tell you what ASM is as well. You need to start at the beginning. You can't expect people here to explain the whole of Oracle, its much too big a topic; or even explain every new term you come across. Maybe you should explain to the company that you don't have any Oracle knowledge but would like to learn and see if they can provide training for you.
    – Alex Poole
    Commented Aug 23, 2013 at 13:20
  • 1
    For complete newcomers to Oracle, the process is simplified if you are able to use Oracle Database XE. XE provides a Web UI to create a new user/schema (aka "Application Express Workspace") I've tried this in XE 11.2. Credit to @vitfo for the full verbose 11g answer below.
    – Paul
    Commented May 11, 2016 at 11:00

5 Answers 5

278

Generally speaking a schema in oracle is the same as a user. Oracle Database automatically creates a schema when you create a user. A file with the DDL file extension is an SQL Data Definition Language file.

Creating new user (using SQL Plus)

Basic SQL Plus commands:

  - connect: connects to a database
  - disconnect: logs off but does not exit
  - exit: exits

Open SQL Plus and log:

/ as sysdba

The sysdba is a role and is like "root" on unix or "Administrator" on Windows. It sees all, can do all. Internally, if you connect as sysdba, your schema name will appear to be SYS.

Create a user:

SQL> create user johny identified by 1234;

View all users and check if the user johny is there:

SQL> select username from dba_users;

If you try to login as johny now you would get an error:

ERROR:
ORA-01045: user JOHNY lacks CREATE SESSION privilege; logon denied

The user to login needs at least create session priviledge so we have to grant this privileges to the user:

SQL> grant create session to johny;

Now you are able to connect as the user johny:

username: johny
password: 1234

To get rid of the user you can drop it:

SQL> drop user johny;

That was basic example to show how to create a user. It might be more complex. Above we created a user whose objects are stored in the database default tablespace. To have database tidy we should place users objects to his own space (tablespace is an allocation of space in the database that can contain schema objects).

Show already created tablespaces:

SQL> select tablespace_name from dba_tablespaces;

Create tablespace:

SQL> create tablespace johny_tabspace
  2  datafile 'johny_tabspace.dat'
  3  size 10M autoextend on;

Create temporary tablespace (Temporaty tablespace is an allocation of space in the database that can contain transient data that persists only for the duration of a session. This transient data cannot be recovered after process or instance failure.):

SQL> create temporary tablespace johny_tabspace_temp
  2  tempfile 'johny_tabspace_temp.dat'
  3  size 5M autoextend on;

Create the user:

SQL> create user johny
  2  identified by 1234
  3  default tablespace johny_tabspace
  4  temporary tablespace johny_tabspace_temp;

Grant some privileges:

SQL> grant create session to johny;
SQL> grant create table to johny;
SQL> grant unlimited tablespace to johny;

Login as johny and check what privileges he has:

SQL> select * from session_privs;

PRIVILEGE
----------------------------------------
CREATE SESSION
UNLIMITED TABLESPACE
CREATE TABLE

With create table privilege the user can create tables:

SQL> create table johny_table
  2  (
  3     id int not null,
  4     text varchar2(1000),
  5     primary key (id)
  6  );

Insert data:

SQL> insert into johny_table (id, text)
  2  values (1, 'This is some text.');

Select:

SQL> select * from johny_table;

ID  TEXT
--------------------------
1   This is some text.

To get DDL data you can use DBMS_METADATA package that "provides a way for you to retrieve metadata from the database dictionary as XML or creation DDL and to submit the XML to re-create the object.". (with help from http://www.dba-oracle.com/oracle_tips_dbms_metadata.htm)

For table:

SQL> set pagesize 0
SQL> set long 90000
SQL> set feedback off
SQL> set echo off
SQL> SELECT DBMS_METADATA.GET_DDL('TABLE',u.table_name) FROM USER_TABLES u;

Result:

  CREATE TABLE "JOHNY"."JOHNY_TABLE"
   (    "ID" NUMBER(*,0) NOT NULL ENABLE,
        "TEXT" VARCHAR2(1000),
         PRIMARY KEY ("ID")
  USING INDEX PCTFREE 10 INITRANS 2 MAXTRANS 255
  STORAGE(INITIAL 65536 NEXT 1048576 MINEXTENTS 1 MAXEXTENTS 2147483645
  PCTINCREASE 0 FREELISTS 1 FREELIST GROUPS 1 BUFFER_POOL DEFAULT FLASH_CACHE DE
FAULT CELL_FLASH_CACHE DEFAULT)
  TABLESPACE "JOHNY_TABSPACE"  ENABLE
   ) SEGMENT CREATION IMMEDIATE
  PCTFREE 10 PCTUSED 40 INITRANS 1 MAXTRANS 255 NOCOMPRESS LOGGING
  STORAGE(INITIAL 65536 NEXT 1048576 MINEXTENTS 1 MAXEXTENTS 2147483645
  PCTINCREASE 0 FREELISTS 1 FREELIST GROUPS 1 BUFFER_POOL DEFAULT FLASH_CACHE DE
FAULT CELL_FLASH_CACHE DEFAULT)
  TABLESPACE "JOHNY_TABSPACE"

For index:

SQL> set pagesize 0
SQL> set long 90000
SQL> set feedback off
SQL> set echo off
SQL> SELECT DBMS_METADATA.GET_DDL('INDEX',u.index_name) FROM USER_INDEXES u;

Result:

  CREATE UNIQUE INDEX "JOHNY"."SYS_C0013353" ON "JOHNY"."JOHNY_TABLE" ("ID")
  PCTFREE 10 INITRANS 2 MAXTRANS 255
  STORAGE(INITIAL 65536 NEXT 1048576 MINEXTENTS 1 MAXEXTENTS 2147483645
  PCTINCREASE 0 FREELISTS 1 FREELIST GROUPS 1 BUFFER_POOL DEFAULT FLASH_CACHE DE
FAULT CELL_FLASH_CACHE DEFAULT)
  TABLESPACE "JOHNY_TABSPACE"

More information:

DDL

DBMS_METADATA

Schema objects

Differences between schema and user

Privileges

Creating user/schema

Creating tablespace

SQL Plus commands

8
  • 4
    The / as sysdba at the beginning means to run "c:\oraclexe\app\oracle\product\11.2.0\server\bin\sqlplus.exe / as sysdba" from a Windows command shell.
    – Uwe Keim
    Commented Mar 18, 2016 at 20:40
  • 4
    Also handy to have: GRANT CREATE VIEW TO <user>; GRANT CREATE SEQUENCE TO <user>; Commented Jun 8, 2017 at 6:05
  • I connected using sqlplus system/oracle@(DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=TCP)(Host=127.0.0.1)(Port=1521))(CONNECT_DATA=(SID=XE))) and then typed in all these commands of yours. But then, doing a connect myuser I get the error ORA-01034: ORACLE not available ORA-27101: shared memory realm does not exist̀
    – Stephane
    Commented Jul 1, 2018 at 13:42
  • Could you give us the full sqlplus command ? Like, based on the user just created above, having the complete command sqlplus ???/???@(DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=TCP)(Host=127.0.0.1)(Port=1521))(CONNECT_DATA=(SID=???))
    – Stephane
    Commented Jul 1, 2018 at 17:55
  • I get error ORA-65096: invalid common user or role name when running the create user ... default tablespace ... command
    – cryanbhu
    Commented Oct 15, 2020 at 6:28
19

It's a working example:

CREATE USER auto_exchange IDENTIFIED BY 123456;
GRANT RESOURCE TO auto_exchange;
GRANT CONNECT TO auto_exchange;
GRANT CREATE VIEW TO auto_exchange;
GRANT CREATE SESSION TO auto_exchange;
GRANT UNLIMITED TABLESPACE TO auto_exchange;
1
17

Let's get you started. Do you have any knowledge in Oracle?

First you need to understand what a SCHEMA is. A schema is a collection of logical structures of data, or schema objects. A schema is owned by a database user and has the same name as that user. Each user owns a single schema. Schema objects can be created and manipulated with SQL.

  1. CREATE USER acoder; -- whenever you create a new user in Oracle, a schema with the same name as the username is created where all his objects are stored.
  2. GRANT CREATE SESSION TO acoder; -- Failure to do this you cannot do anything.

To access another user's schema, you need to be granted privileges on specific object on that schema or optionally have SYSDBA role assigned.

That should get you started.

5
SQL> select Username from dba_users
  2  ;

USERNAME
------------------------------
SYS
SYSTEM
ANONYMOUS
APEX_PUBLIC_USER
FLOWS_FILES
APEX_040000
OUTLN
DIP
ORACLE_OCM
XS$NULL
MDSYS

USERNAME
------------------------------
CTXSYS
DBSNMP
XDB
APPQOSSYS
HR

16 rows selected.

SQL> create user testdb identified by password;

User created.

SQL> select username from dba_users;

USERNAME
------------------------------
TESTDB
SYS
SYSTEM
ANONYMOUS
APEX_PUBLIC_USER
FLOWS_FILES
APEX_040000
OUTLN
DIP
ORACLE_OCM
XS$NULL

USERNAME
------------------------------
MDSYS
CTXSYS
DBSNMP
XDB
APPQOSSYS
HR

17 rows selected.

SQL> grant create session to testdb;

Grant succeeded.

SQL> create tablespace testdb_tablespace
  2  datafile 'testdb_tabspace.dat'
  3  size 10M autoextend on;

Tablespace created.

SQL> create temporary tablespace testdb_tablespace_temp
  2  tempfile 'testdb_tabspace_temp.dat'
  3  size 5M autoextend on;

Tablespace created.

SQL> drop user testdb;

User dropped.

SQL> create user testdb
  2  identified by password
  3  default tablespace testdb_tablespace
  4  temporary tablespace testdb_tablespace_temp;

User created.

SQL> grant create session to testdb;

Grant succeeded.

SQL> grant create table to testdb;

Grant succeeded.

SQL> grant unlimited tablespace to testdb;

Grant succeeded.

SQL>
0

From oracle Sql developer, execute the below in sql worksheet:

create user lctest identified by lctest;
grant dba to lctest;

then right click on "Oracle connection" -> new connection, then make everything lctest from connection name to user name password. Test connection shall pass. Then after connected you will see the schema.

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