Oracle LSNRCTL – Listener Shutdown and Startup Procedures
Starting up and shutting down the
oracle listener is a routine task for a database administrator. However a Linux
system administrator or programmer may end-up doing some basic DBA operations
on development database. It is critical for non-DBAs to understand the basic
database admin activities.
In this article, let us review how to start, stop, check status of an oracle listener using Oracle listener control utility LSNRCTL.
Also refer to our earlier article about how to start and stop the Oracle database
In this article, let us review how to start, stop, check status of an oracle listener using Oracle listener control utility LSNRCTL.
Also refer to our earlier article about how to start and stop the Oracle database
How
To Start, Stop and Restart Oracle Listener
1.
Display Oracle Listener Status
Before starting, stopping or
restarting make sure to execute lsnrctl status command to check the oracle
listener status as shown below. Apart from letting us know whether the listener
is up or down, you can also find the following valuable information from the
lsnrctl status command output.
- Listner Start Date and Time.
- Uptime of listner – How long the listener has been up and running.
- Listener Parameter File – Location of the listener.ora file. Typically located under $ORACLE_HOME/network/admin
- Listener Log File – Location of the listener log file.
i.e log.xml
If the Oracle listener is not running, you’ll get the following message.
$
lsnrctl status
LSNRCTL
for Linux: Version 11.1.0.6.0 - Production on 04-APR-2009 16:27:39
Copyright
(c) 1991, 2007, Oracle. All rights
reserved.
Connecting
to (DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=TCP)(HOST=192.168.1.2)(PORT=1521)))
TNS-12541:
TNS:no listener
TNS-12560: TNS:protocol adapter error
TNS-00511: No listener
Linux Error: 111: Connection refused
Connecting
to (DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=IPC)(KEY=EXTPROC)))
TNS-12541:
TNS:no listener
TNS-12560: TNS:protocol adapter error
TNS-00511: No listener
Linux Error: 2: No
such file or directory
If the Oracle listener is running, you’ll get the following message.
$
lsnrctl status
LSNRCTL
for Linux: Version 11.1.0.6.0 - Production on 04-APR-2009 16:27:02
Copyright
(c) 1991, 2007, Oracle. All rights
reserved.
Connecting
to (DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=TCP)(HOST=192.168.1.2)(PORT=1521)))
STATUS
of the LISTENER
------------------------
Alias LISTENER
Version TNSLSNR for Linux: Version
11.1.0.6.0 - Production
Start
Date 29-APR-2009 18:43:13
Uptime 6 days 21 hr. 43 min. 49
sec
Trace
Level off
Security ON: Local OS Authentication
SNMP OFF
Listener
Parameter File /u01/app/oracle/product/11.1.0/network/admin/listener.ora
Listener
Log File /u01/app/oracle/diag/tnslsnr/devdb/listener/alert/log.xml
Listening
Endpoints Summary...
(DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=192.168.1.2)(PORT=1521)))
(DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=ipc)(KEY=EXTPROC)))
Services
Summary...
Service
"devdb" has 1 instance(s).
Instance "devdb", status UNKNOWN,
has 1 handler(s) for this service...
Service
"devdb.thegeekstuff.com" has 1 instance(s).
Instance "devdb", status READY, has
1 handler(s) for this service...
Service
"devdbXDB.thegeekstuff.com" has 1 instance(s).
Instance "devdb", status READY, has
1 handler(s) for this service...
Service
"devdb_XPT.thegeekstuff.com" has 1 instance(s).
Instance "devdb", status READY, has
1 handler(s) for this service...
The
command completed successfully
2.
Start Oracle Listener
If the Oracle listener is not
running, start the listener as shown below. This will start all the listeners.
If you want to start a specific listener, specify the listener name next to
start. i.e lsnrctl start [listener-name]
$ lsnrctl start
LSNRCTL
for Linux: Version 11.1.0.6.0 - Production on 04-APR-2009 16:27:42
Copyright
(c) 1991, 2007, Oracle. All rights
reserved.
Starting
/u01/app/oracle/product/11.1.0/bin/tnslsnr: please wait...
TNSLSNR
for Linux: Version 11.1.0.6.0 - Production
System
parameter file is /u01/app/oracle/product/11.1.0/network/admin/listener.ora
Log
messages written to /u01/app/oracle/diag/tnslsnr/devdb/listener/alert/log.xml
Listening
on: (DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=192.168.1.2)(PORT=1521)))
Listening
on: (DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=ipc)(KEY=EXTPROC)))
Connecting
to (DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=TCP)(HOST=192.168.1.2)(PORT=1521)))
STATUS
of the LISTENER
------------------------
Alias LISTENER
Version TNSLSNR for Linux: Version
11.1.0.6.0 - Production
Start
Date 04-APR-2009 16:27:42
Uptime 0 days 0 hr. 0 min. 0 sec
Trace
Level off
Security ON: Local OS Authentication
SNMP OFF
Listener
Parameter File
/u01/app/oracle/product/11.1.0/network/admin/listener.ora
Listener
Log File /u01/app/oracle/diag/tnslsnr/devdb/listener/alert/log.xml
Listening
Endpoints Summary...
(DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=192.168.1.2)(PORT=1521)))
(DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=ipc)(KEY=EXTPROC)))
Services
Summary...
Service
"devdb" has 1 instance(s).
Instance "devdb", status UNKNOWN,
has 1 handler(s) for this service...
The
command completed successfully
3.
Stop Oracle Listener
If the Oracle listener is running,
stop the listener as shown below. This will stop all the listeners. If you want
to stop a specific listener, specify the listener name next to stop. i.e
lsnrctl stop [listener-name]
$
lsnrctl stop
LSNRCTL
for Linux: Version 11.1.0.6.0 - Production on 04-APR-2009 16:27:37
Copyright
(c) 1991, 2007, Oracle. All rights
reserved.
Connecting
to (DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=TCP)(HOST=192.168.1.2)(PORT=1521)))
The
command completed successfully
4.
Restart Oracle Listener
To restart the listener use lsnrctl
reload as shown below instead of lsnrctl stop and lsnrctl start. realod will
read the listener.ora file for new setting without stop and start of the Oracle
listener.
$
lsnrctl reload
LSNRCTL
for Linux: Version 11.1.0.6.0 - Production on 04-APR-2009 17:03:31
Copyright
(c) 1991, 2007, Oracle. All rights
reserved.
Connecting
to (DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=TCP)(HOST=192.168.1.2)(PORT=1521)))
The
command completed successfully
Oracle
Listener Help
1.
View Available Listener Commands
lsnrctl help command will display
all available listener commands. In Oracle 11g following are the available
listener commands.
- start - Start the Oracle listener
- stop - Stop the Oracle listener
- status - Display the current status of the Oracle listener
- services - Retrieve the listener services information
- version - Display the oracle listener version information
- reload - This will reload the oracle listener SID and parameter files. This is equivalent to lsnrctl stop and lsnrctl start.
- save_config – This will save the current settings to the listener.ora file and also take a backup of the listener.ora file before overwriting it. If there are no changes, it will display the message “No changes to save for LISTENER”
- trace - Enable the tracing at the listener level. The available options are ‘trace OFF’, ‘trace USER’, ‘trace ADMIN’ or ‘trace SUPPORT’
- spawn - Spawns a new with the program with the spawn_alias mentioned in the listener.ora file
- change_password – Set the new password to the oracle listener (or) change the existing listener password.
- show - Display log files and other relevant listener information.
$
lsnrctl help
LSNRCTL
for Linux: Version 11.1.0.6.0 - Production on 04-APR-2009 16:12:09
Copyright
(c) 1991, 2007, Oracle. All rights
reserved.
The
following operations are available
An
asterisk (*) denotes a modifier or extended command:
start stop status
services version reload
save_config trace spawn
change_password quit
exit
set* show*
2.
Get More help on Specific Listener Command
You can get detailed help on a
specific oracle listener command as shown below. In the following example, it
gives all the available arguments/parameters that can be passed to the lsnrctl
show command.
$
lsnrctl help show
LSNRCTL
for Linux: Version 11.1.0.6.0 - Production on 04-APR-2009 16:22:28
Copyright
(c) 1991, 2007, Oracle. All rights
reserved.
The
following operations are available after show
An
asterisk (*) denotes a modifier or extended command:
rawmode displaymode
rules trc_file
trc_directory trc_level
log_file log_directory
log_status current_listener
inbound_connect_timeout startup_waittime
snmp_visible save_config_on_stop
dynamic_registration
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