This chapter provides a complete listing of the cman.ora file configuration parameters.
This chapter contains the following topics:
Oracle Connection Manager configuration information, stored in the cman.ora file, consists of the following elements:
Protocol address of the Oracle Connection Manager listener
Access control parameters
Performance parameters
By default, the cman.ora file is located in the ORACLE_HOME/network/admin directory. The cman.ora file can also be stored in the following locations:
The directory specified by the TNS_ADMIN environment variable or registry value.
On Linux and UNIX operating systems, the global configuration directory. For example, on the Solaris Operating System, this directory is /var/opt/oracle.
See Also:
Oracle operating system-specific documentationExample 8-1 shows an sample of a cman.ora file.
Example 8-1 Sample cman.ora File
CMAN=
(CONFIGURATION=
(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=proxysvr)(PORT=1521))
(RULE_LIST=
(RULE=(SRC=192.168.2.32/27)(DST=sales-server)(SRV=*)(ACT=accept))
(ACTION_LIST=(AUT=on)(MCT=120)(MIT=30)))
(RULE=(SRC=foo)(DST=hr-server)(SRV=cmon)(ACT=accept)))
(PARAMETER_LIST=
(MAX_GATEWAY_PROCESSES=8)
(MIN_GATEWAY_PRCESSSES=3)
(DIAG_ADR_ENABLED=ON)
(ADR_BASE=/oracle/log)))
The cman.ora configuration file consists of the following sections:
Listening address: Preceded by ADDRESS=, this section contains information pertinent to the listener. The ADDRESS parameter is required.
Rule list: Preceded by RULE_LIST=, this section contains rule information. The RULE parameter is listed in the rule list section of the file. The RULE parameter is required.
Parameter list: Preceded by PARAMETER_LIST=, this section contains all other parameters including those listed in "ADR Diagnostic Parameters for Oracle Connection Manager", and "Non-ADR Diagnostic Parameters for Oracle Connection Manager".
The following parameters are allowed in the parameter list section of the cman.ora file. The default values are bold. To override the default setting for a parameter, enter the parameter and a nondefault value.
ASO_AUTHENTICATION_FILTER={off | on}
CONNECTION_STATISTICS={no | yes}
EVENT_GROUP={init_and_term | memory_ops | conn_hdlg | proc_mgmt | reg_and_load | wake_up | timer | cmd_proc | relay}
IDLE_TIMEOUT=0 or greater
INBOUND_CONNECT_TIMEOUT=0 or greater
LOG_DIRECTORY=log_directory
LOG_LEVEL={off | user | admin | support}
MAX_CMCTL_SESSIONS= Any positive number
MAX_CONNECTIONS=[1 to 1024]
MAX_GATEWAY_PROCESSES= Any number greater than the minimum number of gateway processes up to 64
MIN_GATEWAY_PROCESSES= Any positive number less than or equal to 64. Must be less than or equal to the maximum number of gateway processes.
OUTBOUND_CONNECT_TIMEOUT=0 or greater
PASSWORD_instance_name= Value is the encrypted instance password, if one has been set.
SESSION_TIMEOUT=0 or greater
TRACE_DIRECTORY=trace_directory
TRACE_FILELEN= Any positive number
TRACE_FILENO= Any positive number
TRACE_LEVEL={off | user | admin | support}
TRACE_TIMESTAMP={off | on}
Notes:
INBOUND_CONNECT_TIMEOUT default value is 60.
LOG_DIRECTORY default value is ORACLE_HOME/network/log.
MAX_CMCTL_SESSIONS default value is 4.
MAX_CONNECTIONS default value is 256.
MAX_GATEWAY_PROCESSES default value is 16.
MIN_GATEWAY_PROCESSES default value is 2.
PASSWORD_instance_name default value is no value.
TRACE_DIRECTORY default value is ORACLE_HOME/network/trace.
TRACE_FILEEN default value is 0.
TRACE_FILENO default value is 0.
You cannot add the parameter PASSWORD_instance_name directly to the cman.ora file. The parameter is added when you issue the command SAVE_PASSWD.
Example 8-2 shows the parameter list section of a cman.ora file.
Example 8-2 Parameter List Section of a cman.ora File
(PARAMETER_LIST=
(ASO_AUTHENTICATION_FILTER=ON)
(CONNECTION_STATISTICS=NO)
(EVENT_GROUP=INIT_AND_TERM,MEMORY_OPS,PROCESS_MGMT)
(IDLE_TIMEOUT=30)
(INBOUND_CONNECT_TIMEOUT=30)
(LOG_DIRECTORY=/home/user/network/admin/log)
(LOG_LEVEL=SUPPORT)
(MAX_CMCTL_SESSIONS=6)
(MAX_CONNECTIONS=512)
(MAX_GATEWAY_PROCESSES=10)
(MIN_GATEWAY_PROCESSES=4)
(OUTBOUND_CONNECT_TIMEOUT=30)
(SESSION_TIMEOUT=60)
(TRACE_DIRECTORY=/home/user/network/admin/trace)
(TRACE_FILELEN=100)
(TRACE_FILENO=2)
(TRACE_LEVEL=SUPPORT)
(TRACE_TIMESTAMP=ON))
This section lists and describes the following cman.ora file parameters:
To specify the protocol address of Oracle Connection Manager.
(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=protocol)(HOST=host_name)(PORT=port_number)
(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=sales-server)(PORT=1521))
To specify whether Oracle Advanced Security authentication settings must be used by the client. The global setting can be overridden by a rule-level setting in ACTION_LIST.
on to instruct Oracle Connection Manager to reject connect requests that are not using Secure Network Services (SNS). SNS is part of the Oracle Advanced Security.
off (default) to instruct Oracle Connection Manager not to check for SNS between the client and server
To specify whether the SHOW_CONNECTIONS command displays connection statistics. The global setting can be overridden by a rule-level setting in ACTION_LIST.
yes to display statistics
no (default) to not display statistics
To specify which event groups are logged. Multiple events may be designated using a comma-delimited list.
alert for alert notifications
cmd_proc for command processing
conn_hdlg for connection handling
init_and_term for initialization and termination
memory_ops for memory operations
proc_mgmt for process management
reg_and_load for registration and load update
relay for events associated with connection control blocks
timer for gateway timeouts
wake_up for events related to CMADMIN wake-up queue
Note:
The event groupALERT cannot be turned off.To specify the amount of time that an established connection can remain active without transmitting data. The global setting can be overridden by a rule-level setting in ACTION_LIST.
0 (default) to disable the timeout.
any number greater than 0 to enable the timeout. The number equals the timeout period in seconds
To specify how long the Oracle Connection Manager listener waits for a valid connection from a client or another instance of Oracle Connection Manager.
60 (default) to disable the timeout.
any number greater than 0 to enable the timeout. The number equals the timeout period in seconds.
To specify the level for log messages.
off for no logging. This is the default.
user for user-induced errors log information.
admin for administration, such as installation-specific, log information.
support for Oracle Support Services information.
To specify the maximum number of concurrent local or remote sessions of the Oracle Connection Manager control utility allowable for a given instance. One of these sessions must be a local session.
Any number of sessions can be designated.
To specify the maximum number of connection slots that a gateway process can handle.
This parameter accepts a range of 1 to 1024.
To specify the maximum number of gateway processes that an instance of Oracle Connection Manager supports.
The number designated must be greater than the minimum number of gateway processes. The maximum is 64.
To specify the minimum number of gateway processes that an instance of Oracle Connection Manager must support.
Any number of sessions can be designated up to 64.
To specify the length of time that the Oracle Connection Manager instance waits for a valid connection to be established with the database server or with another Oracle Connection Manager instance.
60 (default) to disable the timeout.
Any number greater than 0 to enable the timeout. The number equals the timeout period in seconds.
To specify an access control rule list to filter incoming connections. A rule list specifies which connections are accepted, rejected, or dropped.
This parameter is listed in the rule list section of the cman.ora file preceded by RULE_LIST=.
(RULE_LIST=
(RULE=
(SRC=host)
(DST=host)
(SRV=service_name)
(ACT={accept|reject|drop})
(ACTION_LIST=AUT={on|off}
((CONN_STATS={yes|no})(MCT=time)(MIT=time)(MOCT=time)))
(RULE= ...))
The RULE parameter filters a connection or group of connections using the following parameters:
SRC: Specify the source host name or IP address of the client.
DST: Specify the destination server host name or IP address of the database server.
SRV: Specify database service name of Oracle Database obtained from the SERVICE_NAME parameter in the initialization parameter file.
ACT: Specify accept to accept incoming requests, reject to reject incoming requests, or drop to reject incoming requests without sending an error message.
ACTION_LIST: Specify rule-level parameter settings for some parameters. These parameters are as follows:
AUT: Oracle Advanced Security authentication on client side
CONN_STATS: Log input and output statistics
MCT: Maximum connect time
MIT: Maximum idle timeout
MOCT: Maximum outbound connect time
Rule-level parameters override their global counterparts.
If no rules are specified, then all connections are rejected.
The source and destination can be a host name, IP address, or subnet mask.
You must enter at least one rule for client connections and one rule for CMCTL connections. Omitting one or the other results in the rejection of all connections for the rule type omitted. The last rule in the example that follows is a CMCTL rule.
Oracle Connection Manager does not support wildcards for partial IP addresses. If you use a wildcard, then use it in place of a full IP address. The IP address of the client may, for example, be (SRC=*).
Oracle Connection Manager supports only the /nn notation for subnet addresses. In the first rule in the example, /27 represents a subnet mask that comprises 27 left-most bits.
(RULE_LIST=
(RULE=
(SRC=client1-pc)
(DST=sales-server)
(SRV=sales.us.example.com)
(ACT=reject))
(RULE=
(SRC=192.168.2.45)
(DST=192.168.2.200)
(SRV=db1)
(ACT=accept))
(RULE=
(SRC=foo)
(DST=foobar)
(SRV=cmon)
(ACT=accept)))
To specify the maximum time allowed for a user session. The global setting can be overridden by a rule-level setting in ACTION_LIST. This parameter accepts the following values:
To specify the size of the trace file in KB. When the size is reached, the trace information is written to the next file. The number of files is specified with the TRACE_FILENO parameter.
To specify the number of trace files. When this parameter is set along with the TRACE_FILELEN parameter, trace files are used in a cyclical fashion. The first file is filled first, then the second file, and so on. When the last file has been filled, the first file is reused, and so on.
To specify the level for trace messages.
off for no tracing. This is the default.
user for user-induced errors trace information.
admin for administration, such as installation-specific, trace information.
support for Oracle Support Services information.
To specify the use of a timestamp for the tracing logs. If the TRACING parameter is enabled, then a time stamp in the form of dd-mon-yyyy hh:mi:ss:mil for every trace event in the trace file.
off for no timestamp is included in the file.
on for timestamp to be included in the file.
Beginning with Oracle Database 11g, Oracle Database includes an advanced fault diagnosability infrastructure for preventing, detecting, diagnosing, and resolving problems. The problems are critical errors such as those caused by database code bugs, metadata corruption, and customer data corruption.
When a critical error occurs, it is assigned an incident number, and diagnostic data for the error, such as traces and dumps, are immediately captured and tagged with the incident number. The data is then stored in the Automatic Diagnostic Repository (ADR), a file-based repository outside the database.
This section describes the parameters used when ADR is enabled (when DIAG_ADR_ENABLED is set to on). "Non-ADR Diagnostic Parameters for Oracle Connection Manager" describes the parameters used when ADR is disabled (when DIAG_ADR_ENABLED is set to off). Non-ADR parameters listed in the cman.ora file are ignored when ADR is enabled.
To specify the base directory into which tracing and logging incidents are stored when ADR is enabled.
The default is ORACLE_BASE, or ORACLE_HOME/log if ORACLE_BASE is not defined.
Any valid directory path to a directory with write permission.
ADR_BASE=/oracle/network/trace
To indicate whether ADR tracing is enabled.
When the DIAG_ADR_ENABLED parameter is set to OFF, non-ADR file tracing is used.
on | off
DIAG_ADR_ENABLED=on
To specify the level of logging performed by Oracle Connection Manager. This parameter is also applicable when non-ADR logging is used.
The following log files are used with Oracle Connection Manager:
instance-name_pid.log for the listener
instance-name_cmadmin_pid.log for CMADMIN
instance-name_cmgw_pid.log for the gateway processes
The log files are located in the ORACLE_HOME/network/log directory.
off or 0
off or 0 for no log output
user or 4 for user log information
admin or 10 for administration log information
support or 16 for Oracle Support Services log information
LOG_LEVEL=admin
To specify the trace level for the Oracle Connection Manager instance. This parameter is also applicable when non-ADR tracing is used.
The following trace files are used with Oracle Connection Manager:
instance-name_pid.trc for the listener
instance-name_cmadmin_pid.trc for CMADMIN
instance-name_cmgw_pid.trc for the gateway processes
The log files are located in the ORACLE_HOME/network/log directory.
off
off for no trace output
user for user trace information
admin for administration trace information
support for Oracle Support Services trace information
TRACE_LEVEL=admin
To add a time stamp in the form of dd-mon-yyyy hh:mi:ss:mil to every trace event in the trace file for the listener. This parameter is used with the TRACE_LEVEL parameter. This parameter is also applicable when non-ADR tracing is used.
on
on or true
off or false
TRACE_TIMESTAMP=true
This section lists the parameters used when ADR is disabled (when DIAG_ADR_ENABLED is set to off):
Notes:
The default value of DIAG_ADR_ENABLED ison. Therefore, the DIAG_ADR_ENABLED parameter must explicitly be set to off in order for non-ADR tracing to be used.To specify the location of Oracle Connection Manager log files. Use this parameter when ADR is not enabled.
ORACLE_HOME/network/log
Any valid directory path to a directory with write permission.
LOG_DIRECTORY=/oracle/network/log
To specify the location of the Oracle Connection Manager trace files. Use this parameter when ADR is not enabled.
ORACLE_HOME/network/trace
Any valid directory path to a directory with write permission.
TRACE_DIRECTORY=/oracle/network/admin/trace
To specify the size, in KB, of the trace file. When the size is met, the trace information is written to the next file. The number of files is specified with the TRACE_FILENO parameter. Any size can be designated. Use this parameter when ADR is not enabled.
Unlimited
TRACE_FILELEN=100
To specify the number of trace files for Oracle Connection Manager tracing. When this parameter is set along with the TRACE_FILELEN parameter, trace files are used in a cyclical fashion. The first file is filled first, then the second file, and so on. When the last file has been filled, the first file is reused, and so on. Any number of files can be designated.
The trace file names are distinguished from one another by their sequence number. For example, if this parameter is set to 3, then the gateway trace files would be named instance-name_cmgw1_pid.trc, instance_name_cmgw2_pid.trc and instance_name_cmgw3_pid.trc.
In addition, trace events in the trace files are preceded by the sequence number of the file. Use this parameter when ADR is not enabled.
1
TRACE_FILENO=3