CREATE USER

Purpose

Use the CREATE USER statement to create and configure a database user, which is an account through which you can log in to the database, and to establish the means by which Oracle Database permits access by the user.

You can issue this statement in an Oracle Automatic Storage Management (Oracle ASM) cluster to add a user and password combination to the password file that is local to the Oracle ASM instance of the current node. Each node's Oracle ASM instance can use this statement to update its own password file. The password file itself must have been created by the ORAPWD utility.

You can enable a user to connect to the database through a proxy application or application server. For syntax and discussion, refer to ALTER USER.

Prerequisites

You must have the CREATE USER system privilege. When you create a user with the CREATE USER statement, the user's privilege domain is empty. To log on to Oracle Database, a user must have the CREATE SESSION system privilege. Therefore, after creating a user, you should grant the user at least the CREATE SESSION system privilege. Refer to GRANT for more information.

Only a user authenticated AS SYSASM can issue this command to modify the Oracle ASM instance password file.

To specify the CONTAINER clause, you must be connected to a multitenant container database (CDB). To specify CONTAINER = ALL, the current container must be the root. To specify CONTAINER = CURRENT, the current container must be a pluggable database (PDB).

Syntax

Semantics

user

Specify the name of the user to be created. This name can contain only characters from your database character set and must follow the rules described in the section "Database Object Naming Rules". Oracle recommends that the user name contain at least one single-byte character regardless of whether the database character set also contains multibyte characters.

In a non-CDB, a user name cannot begin with C## or c##.

Note:

A multitenant container database is the only supported architecture in Oracle Database 20c. While the documentation is being revised, legacy terminology may persist. In most cases, "database" and "non-CDB" refer to a CDB or PDB, depending on context. In some contexts, such as upgrades, "non-CDB" refers to a non-CDB from a previous release.

In a CDB, the requirements for a user name are as follows:

  • The name of a common user must begin with characters that are a case-insensitive match to the prefix specified by the COMMON_USER_PREFIX initialization parameter. By default, the prefix is C##.

  • The name of a local user must not begin with characters that are a case-insensitive match to the prefix specified by the COMMON_USER_PREFIX initialization parameter. Regardless of the value of COMMON_USER_PREFIX, the name of a local user can never begin with C## or c##.

Note:

If the value of COMMON_USER_PREFIX is an empty string, then there are no requirements for common or local user names with one exception: the name of a local user can never begin with C## or c##. Oracle recommends against using an empty string value because it might result in conflicts between the names of local and common users when a PDB is plugged into a different CDB, or when opening a PDB that was closed when a common user was created.

Note:

Oracle recommends that user names and passwords be encoded in ASCII or EBCDIC characters only, depending on your platform.

IDENTIFIED Clause

The IDENTIFIED clause lets you indicate how Oracle Database authenticates the user.

BY password

The BY password clause lets you creates a local user and indicates that the user must specify password to log on to the database. Passwords are case sensitive. Any subsequent CONNECT string used to connect this user to the database must specify the password using the same case (upper, lower, or mixed) that is used in this CREATE USER statement or a subsequent ALTER USER statement. Passwords can contain any single-byte, multibyte, or special characters, or any combination of these, from your database character set, with the exception of the double quotation mark (") and the return character. If a password starts with a non-alphabetic character, or contains a character other than an alphanumeric character, the underscore (_), dollar sign ($), or pound sign (#), then it must be enclosed in double quotation marks. Otherwise, enclosing a password in double quotation marks is optional.

See Also:

Oracle Database Security Guide for more information about case-sensitive passwords, password complexity, and other password guidelines

Passwords must follow the rules described in the section "Database Object Naming Rules", unless you are using one of the three Oracle Database password complexity verification routines. These routines requires a more complex combination of characters than the normal naming rules permit. You implement these routines with the UTLPWDMG.SQL script, which is further described in Oracle Database Security Guide.

Note:

Oracle recommends that user names and passwords be encoded in ASCII or EBCDIC characters only, depending on your platform.

See Also:

Oracle Database Security Guide to for a detailed discussion of password management and protection

[HTTP] DIGEST Clause

This clause lets you ENABLE or DISABLE HTTP Digest Access Authentication for the user. The default is DISABLE.

The HTTP keyword is optional and is provided for semantic clarity.

Restriction on the [HTTP] DIGEST Clause

You cannot specify this clause for external or global users.

EXTERNALLY Clause

Specify EXTERNALLY to create an external user. Such a user must be authenticated by an external service, such as an operating system or a third-party service. In this case, Oracle Database relies on authentication by the operating system or third-party service to ensure that a specific external user has access to a specific database user.

AS 'certificate_DN'

This clause is required for and used for SSL-authenticated external users only. The certificate_DN is the distinguished name in the user's PKI certificate in the user's wallet. The maximum length of certificate_DN is 1024 characters.

AS 'kerberos_principal_name'

This clause is required for and used for Kerberos-authenticated external users only. The maximum length of kerberos_principal_name is 1024 characters.

Note:

Oracle strongly recommends that you do not use IDENTIFIED EXTERNALLY with operating systems that have inherently weak login security.

Restriction on Creating External Users

Oracle ASM does not support the creation of external users.

GLOBALLY Clause

The GLOBALLY clause lets you create a global user. Such a user must be authorized by the enterprise directory service (Oracle Internet Directory).

The directory_DN string can take one of two forms:

  • The X.509 name at the enterprise directory service that identifies this user. It should be of the form CN=username,other_attributes, where other_attributes is the rest of the user's distinguished name (DN) in the directory. This form uses the LDAP Data Interchange Format (LDIF) and creates a private global schema.

  • A null string (' ') indicating that the enterprise directory service will map authenticated global users to this database schema with the appropriate roles. This form is the same as specifying the GLOBALLY keyword alone and creates a shared global schema.

The maximum length of directory_DN is 1024 characters.

You can control the ability of an application server to connect as the specified user and to activate that user's roles using the ALTER USER statement.

Restriction on Creating Global Users

Oracle ASM does not support the creation of global users.

NO AUTHENTICATION Clause

Use the NO AUTHENTICATION clause to create a schema that does not have a password and cannot be logged into. This is intended for schema only accounts and reduces maintenance by removing default passwords and any requirement to rotate the password.

DEFAULT COLLATION Clause

This clause lets you specify the default collation for the schema owned by the user. The default collation is assigned to tables, views, and materialized views that are subsequently created in the schema.

For collation_name, specify a valid named collation or pseudo-collation.

If you omit this clause, then the default collation for the schema owned by the user is set to the USING_NLS_COMP pseudo-collation.

You can override this clause and assign a different default collation to a particular table, materialized view, or view by specifying the DEFAULT COLLATION clause of the CREATE or ALTER statement for the table, materialized view, or view. You can also override the default collations of all schemas for the duration of a database session by setting the default collation for the session. See the DEFAULT_COLLATION clause of ALTER SESSION for more details.

You can specify the DEFAULT COLLATION clause only if the COMPATIBLE initialization parameter is set to 12.2 or greater, and the MAX_STRING_SIZE initialization parameter is set to EXTENDED.

DEFAULT TABLESPACE Clause

Specify the default tablespace for objects that are created in the user's schema. If you omit this clause, then the user's objects are stored in the database default tablespace. If no default tablespace has been specified for the database, then the user's objects are stored in the SYSTEM tablespace.

Restriction on Default Tablespaces

You cannot specify a locally managed temporary tablespace, including an undo tablespace, or a dictionary-managed temporary tablespace, as a user's default tablespace.

See Also:

[LOCAL] TEMPORARY TABLESPACE Clause

Specify the tablespace or tablespace group for the user's temporary segments. If you omit this clause, then the user's temporary segments are stored in the database default temporary tablespace or, if none has been specified, in the SYSTEM tablespace.

  • Specify tablespace to indicate the user's temporary tablespace. Specify TEMPORARY TABLESPACE to indicate a shared temporary tablespace. Specify LOCAL TEMPORARY TABLESPACE to indicate a local temporary tablespace. If you are connected to a CDB, then you can specify CDB$DEFAULT to use the CDB-wide default temporary tablespace.

  • Specify tablespace_group_name to indicate that the user can save temporary segments in any tablespace in the tablespace group specified by tablespace_group_name. Local temporary tablespaces cannot be part of a tablespace group.

Restrictions on Temporary Tablespace

This clause is subject to the following restrictions:

  • The tablespace must be a temporary tablespace and must have a standard block size.

  • The tablespace cannot be an undo tablespace or a tablespace with automatic segment-space management.

See Also:

QUOTA Clause

Use the QUOTA clause to specify the maximum amount of space the user can allocate in the tablespace.

A CREATE USER statement can have multiple QUOTA clauses for multiple tablespaces.

UNLIMITED lets the user allocate space in the tablespace without bound.

The maximum amount of space that you can specify is 2 terabytes (TB). If you need more space, then specify UNLIMITED.

Restriction on the QUOTA Clause

You cannot specify this clause for a temporary tablespace.

See Also:

size_clause for information on that clause and Oracle Database Security Guide for more information on assigning tablespace quotas

PROFILE Clause

Specify the profile you want to assign to the user. The profile limits the amount of database resources the user can use. If you omit this clause, then Oracle Database assigns the DEFAULT profile to the user.

You can use the CREATE USER statement to create a new user, and associate the user with a profile that has the PASSWORD_ROLLOVER_TIME configured.

You must first set the password rollover period using CREATE PROFILE or ALTER PROFILE.

In the example u1 is the user, with password p1. prof1 is the profile with PASSWORD_ROLLOVER_TIME set.

CREATE USER u1 IDENTIFIED BY p1 PROFILE prof1 ;

Note:

Oracle recommends that you use the Database Resource Manager to establish database resource limits rather than SQL profiles. The Database Resource Manager offers a more flexible means of managing and tracking resource use. For more information on the Database Resource Manager, refer to Oracle Database Administrator's Guide.

PASSWORD EXPIRE Clause

Specify PASSWORD EXPIRE if you want the user's password to expire. This setting forces the user or the DBA to change the password before the user can log in to the database.

ACCOUNT Clause

Specify ACCOUNT LOCK to lock the user's account and disable access. Specify ACCOUNT UNLOCK to unlock the user's account and enable access to the account. The default is ACCOUNT UNLOCK.

ENABLE EDITIONS

This clause is not reversible. Specify ENABLE EDITIONS to allow the user to create multiple versions of editionable objects in this schema using editions. Editionable objects in schemas that are not editions-enabled cannot be editioned.

Note the following before enabling editions with ALTER USER:

  • Enabling editions is not a live operation.

  • When a database is upgraded from Release 11.2 to Release 12.1, users who were enabled for editions in the pre-upgrade database are enabled for editions in the post-upgrade database and the default schema object types are editionable in their schemas. The default schema object types are displayed by the static data dictionary view DBA_EDITIONED_TYPES . Users who were not enabled for editions in the pre-upgrade database are not enabled for editions in the post-upgrade database and no schema object types are editionable in their schemas.

  • To see which users already have editions enabled, see the EDITIONS_ENABLED column of the static data dictionary view DBA_USERS or USER_USERS .

Restriction on Enabling Editions

The FOR clause is ignored when used with ENABLE EDITIONS. This only applies to the CREATE USER statement, not the ALTER USER statement.

You cannot enable editions for any schemas supplied by Oracle.

See Also:

CONTAINER Clause

The CONTAINER clause applies when you are connected to a CDB. However, it is not necessary to specify the CONTAINER clause because its default values are the only allowed values.

  • To create a common user, you must be connected to the root. You can optionally specify CONTAINER = ALL, which is the default when you are connected to the root.

  • To create a local user, you must be connected to a PDB. You can optionally specify CONTAINER = CURRENT, which is the default when you are connected to a PDB.

While creating a common user, any default tablespace, temporary tablespace, or profile specified using the following clauses must exist in all the containers belonging to the CDB:

  • DEFAULT TABLESPACE

  • TEMPORARY TABLESPACE

  • QUOTA

  • PROFILE

If these objects do not exist in all the containers, the CREATE USER statement fails.

Examples

All of the following examples use the example tablespace, which exists in the seed database and is accessible to the sample schemas.

Creating a Database User: Example

If you create a new user with PASSWORD EXPIRE, then the user's password must be changed before the user attempts to log in to the database. You can create the user sidney by issuing the following statement:

CREATE USER sidney 
    IDENTIFIED BY out_standing1 
    DEFAULT TABLESPACE example 
    QUOTA 10M ON example 
    TEMPORARY TABLESPACE temp
    QUOTA 5M ON system 
    PROFILE app_user 
    PASSWORD EXPIRE;

The user sidney has the following characteristics:

  • The password out_standing1

  • Default tablespace example, with a quota of 10 megabytes

  • Temporary tablespace temp

  • Access to the tablespace SYSTEM, with a quota of 5 megabytes

  • Limits on database resources defined by the profile app_user (which was created in "Creating a Profile: Example")

  • An expired password, which must be changed before sidney can log in to the database

Creating External Database Users: Examples

The following example creates an external user, who must be identified by an external source before accessing the database:

CREATE USER app_user1
   IDENTIFIED EXTERNALLY
   DEFAULT TABLESPACE example
   QUOTA 5M ON example
   PROFILE app_user;

The user app_user1 has the following additional characteristics:

  • Default tablespace example

  • Default temporary tablespace example

  • 5M of space on the tablespace example and unlimited quota on the temporary tablespace of the database

  • Limits on database resources defined by the app_user profile

To create another user accessible only by an operating system account, prefix the user name with the value of the initialization parameter OS_AUTHENT_PREFIX. For example, if this value is "ops$", then you can create the externally identified user external_user with the following statement:

CREATE USER ops$external_user
   IDENTIFIED EXTERNALLY
   DEFAULT TABLESPACE example
   QUOTA 5M ON example
   PROFILE app_user;     

Creating a Global Database User: Example

The following example creates a global user. When you create a global user, you can specify the X.509 name that identifies this user at the enterprise directory server:

CREATE USER global_user
   IDENTIFIED GLOBALLY AS 'CN=analyst, OU=division1, O=oracle, C=US'
   DEFAULT TABLESPACE example
   QUOTA 5M ON example;

Creating a Common User in a CDB

The following example creates a common user called c##comm_user in a CDB. Before you run this CREATE USER statement, ensure that the tablespaces example and temp_tbs exist in all of the containers in the CDB.

CREATE USER c##comm_user
   IDENTIFIED BY comm_pwd
   DEFAULT TABLESPACE example
   QUOTA 20M ON example
   TEMPORARY TABLESPACE temp_tbs;

The user comm_user has the following additional characteristics:

  • The password comm_pwd

  • Default tablespace example, with a quota of 20 megabytes

  • Temporary tablespace temp_tbs