If your administration is as good as anybodies, you are bound to loose the not-so-frequently used password for the SYS and SYSTEM users of oracle. Here are a few ways I found to re-set those passwords:
Method 1: SQLPLUS (Tested on AIX Oracle 9.2.0.1.0)
Log into the database server as a user belonging to ‘dba’ [unix ] or ‘ora_dba’ [windows ] group , typically ‘oracle’, or an administrator on your windos machine. You are able to log into Oracle as SYS user, and change the SYSTEM password by doing the following:
$ sqlplus "/ as sysdba" SQL*Plus: Release 9.2.0.1.0 - Production on Mon Apr 5 15:32:09 2004 Copyright (c) 1982, 2002, Oracle Corporation. All rights reserved. Connected to: Oracle9i Enterprise Edition Release 9.2.0.1.0 - Production With the OLAP and Oracle Data Mining options JServer Release 9.2.0.1.0 - Production SQL> show user USER is "SYS" SQL> passw system Changing password for system New password: Retype new password: Password changed SQL> quit
Next, we need to change the password of SYS:
$ sqlplus "/ as system" SQL*Plus: Release 9.2.0.1.0 - Production on Mon Apr 5 15:36:45 2004 Copyright (c) 1982, 2002, Oracle Corporation. All rights reserved. SP2-0306: Invalid option. Usage: CONN[ECT] [logon] [AS {SYSDBA|SYSOPER}] where <logon> ::= <username>[/<password>][@<connect_string>] | / Enter user-name: system Enter password: Connected to: Oracle9i Enterprise Edition Release 9.2.0.1.0 - Production With the OLAP and Oracle Data Mining options JServer Release 9.2.0.1.0 - Production SQL> passw sys Changing password for sys New password: Retype new password: Password changed SQL> quit
You should now be able to log on the SYS and SYSTEM users, with the passwords you just typed in.
Method 2: Creating pwd file (Tested on Windows Oracle 8.1.7)
- Stop the Oracle service of the instance you want to change the passwords of.
- Find the PWD###.ora file for this instance, this is usuallly located atC:\oracle\ora81\database\, where ### is the SID of your database.
- rename the PWD###.ora file to PWD###.ora.bak for obvious safety reasons.
- Create a new pwd file by issuing the command:
orapwd file=C:\oracle\ora81\database\PWD###.ora password=XXXXX
where ### is the SID and XXXXX is the password you would like to use for the SYS and INTERNAL accounts. - Start the Oracle service for the instance you just fixed. You should be able to get in with the SYS user and change other passwords from there.
- Log in to post comments