ASMCMD Instance Management Commands
This topic provides a summary of the ASMCMD instance management commands.
Some commands in this section affect the Grid Plug and Play (GPnP) profile, which is a resource in a clustered configuration. In an Oracle Restart configuration, the profile is actually located in a resource attribute, not the Grid Plug and Play (GPnP) profile. However, the functionality of the commands is the same for both configurations.
Note:
After a change has been made to the location of the password file, the following SQL statement should be executed to flush the password file metadata cache.
SQL> ALTER SYSTEM FLUSH PASSWORDFILE_METADATA_CACHE
The location of the password file can be changed by running orapwd
, or the ASMCMD pwcopy
, pwcreate
, pwdelete
, pwmove
, or pwset
command.
See Also:
Oracle Grid Infrastructure Installation and Upgrade Guide for your operating system for information about installing and configuring Oracle Grid Infrastructure
Table 10-4lists the Oracle ASM instance management commands with brief descriptions.
Table 10-4 Summary of ASMCMD instance management commands
Command | Description |
---|---|
Retrieves the discovery diskstring value that is used by the Oracle ASM instance and its clients. |
|
Sets the disk discovery diskstring value that is used by the Oracle ASM instance and its clients. |
|
Lists information about current Oracle ASM clients. |
|
Lists the current operations on a disk group or Oracle ASM instance. |
|
Lists the users from an Oracle ASM password file. |
|
Adds, drops, or changes an Oracle ASM password user. |
|
Copies a password file to the specified location. |
|
Creates a password file at the specified location. |
|
Deletes a password file at the specified location. |
|
Returns the location of the password file. |
|
Moves the location of the password file. |
|
Sets the location of the password file. |
|
Displays the current mode of the Oracle ASM cluster. |
|
Displays the current state of the cluster. |
|
Lists the patches applied to the Oracle Grid Infrastructure home. |
|
Displays the Oracle ASM cluster release and software patch levels. |
|
Shuts down an instance. |
|
Backs up an Oracle ASM SPFILE. |
|
Copies an Oracle ASM SPFILE. |
|
Retrieves the location of the Oracle ASM SPFILE. |
|
Moves an Oracle ASM SPFILE. |
|
Sets the location of the Oracle ASM SPFILE. |
|
Starts up an instance. |
dsget
Purpose
Retrieves the discovery diskstring value that is used by the Oracle ASM instance and its clients.
Syntax and Description
dsget [ --normal | --parameter | --profile [-f] ]
The syntax options for the dsget
command are described in Table 10-5.
Table 10-5 Options for the dsget command
Option | Description |
---|---|
|
Retrieves the discovery string from the Grid Plug and Play (GPnP) profile and the one that is set in the Oracle ASM instance. It returns one row each for the profile and parameter setting. This is the default setting. |
|
Retrieves the |
|
Retrieves the discovery string from the GPnP profile. If |
Example
The following example uses dsget
to retrieve the current discovery diskstring value from the GPnP profile and the ASM_DISKSTRING
parameter.
Example 10-6 Using the ASMCMD dsget command
ASMCMD [+] > dsget profile: /devices1/disk* parameter: /devices2/disk*
dsset
Purpose
Sets the discovery diskstring value that is used by the Oracle ASM instance and its clients.
The specified diskstring must be valid for existing mounted disk groups. The updated value takes effect immediately.
Syntax and Description
dsset [ --normal | --parameter | --profile [-f] ] diskstring
The syntax options for the dsset
command are described in Table 10-6.
Table 10-6 Options for the dsset command
Option | Description |
---|---|
|
Sets the discovery string in the Grid Plug and Play (GPnP) profile and in the Oracle ASM instance. The update occurs after the Oracle ASM instance has successfully validated that the specified discovery string has discovered all the necessary disk groups and voting files. This command fails if the instance is not using a server parameter file (SPFILE). This is the default setting. |
|
Specifies that the diskstring is updated in memory after validating that the discovery diskstring discovers all the current mounted disk groups and voting files. The diskstring is not persistently recorded in either the SPFILE or the GPnP profile. |
|
Specifies the discovery diskstring that is pushed to the GPnP profile without any validation by the Oracle ASM instance, ensuring that the instance can discover all the required disk groups. The update is guaranteed to be propagated to all the nodes that are part of the cluster. If |
|
Specifies the value for the discovery diskstring. |
For information about disk discovery and the discovery diskstring, see Oracle ASM Disk Discovery.
Example
The following example uses dsset
to set the current value of the discovery diskstring in the GPnP profile.
Example 10-7 Using the ASMCMD dsset command
ASMCMD [+] > dsset /devices1/disk*,/devices2/disk*
lsct
Purpose
Lists information about current Oracle ASM clients from the V$ASM_CLIENT
view. A client, such as Oracle Database or Oracle ASM Dynamic Volume Manager (Oracle ADVM), uses disk groups that are managed by the Oracle ASM instance to which ASMCMD is currently connected.
Syntax and Description
lsct [--suppressheader] [-g] disk_group
The following table lists the options for the lsct
command.
Table 10-7 Options for the lsct command
Option | Description |
---|---|
|
Selects from the |
|
Suppresses column headings. |
|
Specifies the disk group. |
Client information is only listed for the specified disk group.
Example
The following example displays information about the clients that are accessing the data
disk group.
Example 10-8 Using the ASMCMD lsct command
ASMCMD [+] > lsct data DB_Name Status Software_Version Compatible_version Instance_Name Disk_Group +ASM CONNECTED 19.0.0.0.0 19.0.0.0.0 +ASM DATA asmvol CONNECTED 19.0.0.0.0 19.0.0.0.0 +ASM DATA orcl CONNECTED 19.0.0.0.0 19.0.0.0.0 orcl DATA
lsop
Purpose
Lists the current operations on a disk group in an Oracle ASM instance.
Syntax and Description
lsop
lsop
displays information from the V$ASM_OPERATION
view.
Example
The following are examples of the lsop
command. The examples list operations on the disk groups of the current Oracle ASM instance.
Example 10-9 Using the ASMCMD lsop command
ASMCMD [+] > lsop Group_Name Dsk_Num State Power DATA REBAL WAIT 2 ASMCMD [+] > lsop Group_Name Dsk_Num State Power FRA REBAL REAP 3
lspwusr
Purpose
List the users from the local Oracle ASM password file.
Syntax and Description
lspwusr [--suppressheader]
Table 10-8 lists the options for the lspwusr
command.
Table 10-8 Options for the lspwusr command
Option | Description |
---|---|
|
Suppresses column headers from the output. |
Examples
The following is an example of the lspwusr
example. The example lists the current users in the local Oracle ASM password file.
Example 10-10 Using the ASMCMD lspwusr command
ASMCMD [+] > lspwusr Username sysdba sysoper sysasm SYS TRUE TRUE TRUE ASMSNMP TRUE FALSE FALSE
orapwusr
Purpose
Add, drop, or modify an Oracle ASM password file user.
Syntax and Description
orapwusr { --add | --modify | --delete | grant {sysasm|sysdba|sysoper} |
--revoke {sysasm|sysdba|sysoper} } user
Table 10-9 lists the options for the orapwusr
command.
Table 10-9 Options for the orapwusr command
Option | Description |
---|---|
|
Adds a user to the password file. Also prompts for a password. |
|
Changes the password for the specified user. |
|
Drops a user from the password file. |
|
Sets the role for the user. The options are |
|
Removes the role for the user. The options are |
|
Name of the user to add, drop, or modify. |
orapwusr
attempts to update passwords on all nodes in a cluster. This command requires the SYSASM privilege to run. A user logged in as SYSDBA cannot change its password using this command.
Examples
The following is an example of the orapwusr
command. This example adds the hruser
to the Oracle ASM password file.
Example 10-11 Using the ASMCMD orapwusr command
ASMCMD [+] > orapwusr --add hruser
pwcopy
Purpose
Copies an Oracle ASM or database instance password file to the specified location.
Syntax and Description
pwcopy [--asm |--dbuniquename string] source destination [-f]
Table 10-10 lists the options for the pwcopy
command.
Table 10-10 Options for the pwcopy command
Option | Description |
---|---|
|
The |
|
The |
|
The |
|
The |
|
The —f option enables the password file to be copied without any checks.
|
pwcopy
copies a password file from one disk group to another, from the operating system to a disk group, or from a disk group to the operating system. If the —f
option is specified, then the password file can be copied to the same disk group.
Either –-asm
or --dbuniquename
is required to identify a CRSD resource. When either –-asm
or --dbuniquename
is included in the pwcopy
command, the target file is set to the current password file.
The compatible.asm
disk group attribute must be set to 12.1
or higher for the disk group where the password is to be copied.
The SYSASM
or SYSDBA
privilege is required to manage the Oracle ASM and database password files.
Example
The following example copies an Oracle ASM password file in one disk group to a different disk group. Because the pwcopy
command includes the --asm
option, the target file (+fra/orapwasm_new
) is set to the current password file.
Example 10-12 Using the ASMCMD pwcopy command
ASMCMD [+] > pwcopy --asm +DATA/orapwasm +FRA/orapwasm_new copying +DATA/orapwasm -> +FRA/orapwasm_new
pwcreate
Purpose
Note:
Do not use pwcreate
to create a new Oracle ASM password file when Oracle ASM is configured in a cluster. If the Oracle ASM password file is inaccessible in a cluster configuration, you must restore the password file using an available backup rather than create a new file. For articles about recreating a shared Oracle ASM password file in a cluster, such as document 1929673.1, refer to articles at My Oracle Support (https://support.oracle.com
).
Creates an Oracle ASM or Oracle Database instance password file at the specified location.
Syntax and Description
pwcreate { --asm |--dbuniquename string } [-f] [--format format] file_path [sys_password]
Table 10-11 lists the options for the pwcreate
command.
Table 10-11 Options for the pwcreate command
Option | Description |
---|---|
|
Associates the password file with the Oracle ASM instance that ASMCMD is logged into. |
|
Specifies the Oracle Database unique name associated with the password file. |
|
Forces a deletion of the existing password file and creates a new password file. |
|
Specifies the format in which the password is created. Values are |
|
Specifies the location where the password file is created. |
|
Specifies the initial |
pwcreate
creates a password file in the disk group specified by file_path
. The initial SYS
password is specified by sys_password
.
Either –-asm
or --dbuniquename
is required. The compatible.asm
disk group attribute must be set to 12.1
or higher for the disk group where the password is to be located.
The SYSASM
or SYSDBA
privilege is required to manage the Oracle ASM and database password files.
For additional information, refer to Managing a Shared Password File in a Disk Group.
Example
The following example creates an Oracle Database password file in an Oracle ASM disk group.
Example 10-13 Using the ASMCMD pwcreate command
ASMCMD [+] > pwcreate –-dbuniquename orcl '+data/ORCL/orapwdb' Enter password for SYS:
pwdelete
Purpose
Deletes an Oracle ASM or database instance password file.
Syntax and Description
pwdelete { --asm |--dbuniquename string | file_path }
Table 10-12 lists the options for the pwdelete
command.
Table 10-12 Options for the pwdelete command
Option | Description |
---|---|
|
The |
|
The |
|
The |
pwdelete
deletes the specified password file. Either –-asm
or --dbuniquename
is required to identify a CRSD resource and to remove the password location from the CRSD resource.
The SYSASM
or SYSDBA
privilege is required to manage the Oracle ASM and database password files.
Example
The following example deletes the specified password file from a disk group.
Example 10-14 Using the ASMCMD pwdelete command
ASMCMD [+] > pwdelete +FRA/orapwasm_bak
pwget
Purpose
Returns the location of the password file for the Oracle ASM or database instance.
Syntax and Description
pwget { --asm | --dbuniquename string }
Table 10-13 lists the options for the pwget
command.
Table 10-13 Options for the pwget command
Option | Description |
---|---|
|
The |
|
The |
pwget
returns the location of the password file for the Oracle ASM instance identified by –-asm
or the database instance identified by --dbuniquename
.
The SYSASM
or SYSDBA
privilege is required to manage the Oracle ASM and database password files.
Example
The following example returns the location of the Oracle ASM password file.
Example 10-15 Using the ASMCMD pwget command
ASMCMD [+] > pwget --asm +DATA/orapwasm
pwmove
Purpose
Moves an Oracle ASM or database instance password file to the specified location.
Syntax and Description
pwmove { --asm | --dbuniquename string } source destination [-f]
Table 10-14 lists the options for the pwmove
command.
Table 10-14 Options for the pwmove command
Option | Description |
---|---|
|
The |
|
The |
|
The |
|
The |
|
The |
pwmove
moves a password file from one disk group to another, from the operating system to a disk group, or from a disk group to the operating system. If the —f
option is specified, then a password file can be moved to a file in the same disk group.
Either –-asm
or --dbuniquename
is required to identify a CRSD resource.
The compatible.asm
disk group attribute must be set to 12.1
or higher for the disk group where the password is to be moved.
The SYSASM
or SYSDBA
privilege is required to manage the Oracle ASM and database password files.
Example
The following example moves a password file from one disk group to another disk group.
Example 10-16 Using the ASMCMD pwmove command
ASMCMD [+] > pwmove --asm +FRA/orapwasm_bak +DATA/orapwasm moving +FRA/orapwasm_bak -> +DATA/orapwasm
pwset
Purpose
Sets the location of the password file for an Oracle ASM or database instance.
Syntax and Description
pwset { --asm | --dbuniquename string } file_path
Table 10-15 lists the options for the pwset
command.
Table 10-15 Options for the pwset command
Option | Description |
---|---|
|
The |
|
The |
|
The |
pwset
sets the location of the password file for an Oracle ASM or database instance to the value specified by file_path
. Either --dbuniquename
or –-asm
is required to identify a CRSD resource.
The SYSASM
or SYSDBA
privilege is required to manage the Oracle ASM and database password files.
Example
The following example sets the location of the Oracle ASM password file in a disk group.
Example 10-17 Using the ASMCMD pwset command
ASMCMD [+] > pwset --asm +DATA/orapwasm
showclustermode
Purpose
Displays the current mode of the Oracle ASM cluster.
Syntax and Description
showclustermode
showclustermode
displays the mode that the Oracle ASM cluster is currently in. The possible return values are ASM cluster : Flex mode enabled or ASM cluster : Flex mode disabled.
Example
The following example shows the use of the showclustermode
command.
Example 10-18 Using the ASMCMD showclustermode command
ASMCMD [+] > showclustermode ASM cluster : Flex mode disabled
showclusterstate
Purpose
Displays the current state of the cluster.
Syntax and Description
showclusterstate
showclusterstate
displays the state that the Oracle ASM cluster is currently in. The possible values returned are normal, in-upgrade, or in-rollingpatch mode.
Example
This example shows the use of the showclusterstate
command.
Example 10-19 Using the ASMCMD showclusterstate command
ASMCMD [+] > showclusterstate
showpatches
Purpose
Lists the patches applied on the Oracle Grid Infrastructure home.
Syntax and Description
showpatches [-l]
The following table lists the options for the showpatches
command.
Table 10-16 Options for the showpathches command
Option | Description |
---|---|
|
Displays all details about the patches. |
showpatches
lists the patches that have been applied to the Oracle Grid Infrastructure home.
Example
This example shows the use of the showpatches
command.
Example 10-20 Using the ASMCMD showpatches command
ASMCMD [+] > showpatches -l Oracle ASM release patch level is [0] and no patches have been applied on the local node. The release patch string is [18.1.0.0.0].
showversion
Purpose
Displays the patch levels of the Oracle ASM cluster release and software.
Syntax and Description
showversion [[[--releasepatch] [--softwarepatch]] | [--active]]
The following table lists the options for the showversion
command.
Table 10-17 Options for the showversion command
Option | Description |
---|---|
|
Displays the cluster level patch version. Use |
|
Displays the patch level on the local node. Use |
|
Displays the active version and active patch level |
showversion
displays the Oracle ASM cluster release and software patch levels. The release and software patch options may differ depending whether the Oracle ASM or Oracle Grid Infrastructure home is being patched.
Note:
The releasepatch
and softwarepatch
options may be different when the Oracle Grid Infrastructure or Oracle ASM home is being patched. When in normal mode, the options should be same. When there is no Oracle ASM instance connected, release patch information is not displayed.
Example
This example shows the use of the showversion
command.
Example 10-21 Using the ASMCMD showversion command
ASMCMD [+] > showversion --active Oracle ASM active version on the cluster is [19.0.0.0.0]. The cluster upgrade state is [NORMAL]. The cluster active patch level is [0].
shutdown
Purpose
Shuts down an instance.
Syntax and Description
shutdown [--target target_instance] [--normal | --abort|--immediate ]
Table 10-18 lists the options for the shutdown
command.
Table 10-18 Options for the shutdown command
Option | Description |
---|---|
|
Specify the target instance. The value of |
|
Shut down normal. This is the default action. |
|
Shut down aborting all existing operations. |
|
Shut down immediately. |
The default target instance is determined by the ORACLE_SID
environmental variable. The default action is a normal shutdown.
Oracle strongly recommends that you shut down all database instances that use the Oracle ASM instance and dismount all file systems mounted on Oracle ASM Dynamic Volume Manager (Oracle ADVM) volumes before attempting to shut down the Oracle ASM instance with the abort (--abort
) option.
For more information about shutting down an Oracle ASM instance, see "About Shutting Down an Oracle ASM Instance".
Example
The following are examples of the shutdown
command. The first example performs a shut down of the Oracle ASM instance with normal action. The second example performs a shut down with immediate action. The third example performs a shut down that aborts all existing operations.
Example 10-22 Using the ASMCMD shutdown command
ASMCMD [+] > shutdown --target ASM --normal ASMCMD [+] > shutdown --target ASM --immediate ASMCMD [+] > shutdown --target ASM --abort
spbackup
Purpose
Backs up an Oracle ASM SPFILE to a backup file.
Syntax and Description
spbackup source destination
Table 10-19 lists the options for the spbackup
command.
Table 10-19 Options for the spbackup command
Option | Description |
---|---|
|
Specifies the source file name. |
|
Specifies the destination file. |
spbackup
should be used when you want to make single or multiple backups of an SPFILE in the same or a different disk group without creating an SPFILE in the target disk group.
Note the following about the use of spbackup
:
-
spbackup
can back up an Oracle ASM SPFILE from a disk group to a disk group or to an operating system file. -
spbackup
can back up an Oracle ASM SPFILE from an operating system file to a disk group. -
spbackup
can back up an Oracle ASM SPFILE when the SPFILE is being used by an open Oracle ASM instance. -
spbackup
can make multiple backups of an Oracle ASM SPFILE in the same disk group.
spbackup
does not affect the GPnP profile. The backup file that is created is not a special file type and is not identified as an SPFILE. This backup file cannot be copied with spcopy
. To copy this backup file to and from a disk group, use the ASMCMD cp
command.
To make a copy of a backup file in a disk group that is identified as an SPFILE file:
Example
The following are examples of the spbackup
command. The first example backs up the SPFILE in the data
disk group. The second example backs up the SPFILE from the data
disk group to the fra
disk group.
Example 10-23 Using the ASMCMD spbackup command
ASMCMD> spbackup +DATA/asm/asmparameterfile/registry.253.721810181 +DATA/spfileBackASM.bak ASMCMD> spbackup +DATA/asm/asmparameterfile/registry.253.721810181 +FRA/spfileBackASM.bak
spcopy
Purpose
Copies an Oracle ASM SPFILE from the source location to an SPFILE in the destination location.
Syntax and Description
spcopy [-u] source destination
Table 10-20 lists the options for the spcopy
command.
Table 10-20 Options for the spcopy command
Option | Description |
---|---|
|
Updates the Grid Plug and Play (GPnP) profile. |
|
Specifies the source file name. |
|
Specifies the destination. |
Note the following about the use of spcopy
:
-
spcopy
can copy an Oracle ASM SPFILE from a disk group to a different disk group or to an operating system file. -
spcopy
can copy an Oracle ASM SPFILE from an operating system file to a disk group. -
spcopy
can copy an Oracle ASM SPFILE when the SPFILE is being used by an open Oracle ASM instance. -
spcopy
cannot make multiple copies of an Oracle ASM SPFILE in the same disk group. You can usespbackup
for that purpose.
To update the GPnP profile, include the -u
option with spcopy
. You can also use spset
to update the GPnP profile if spcopy
is run without the -u
option.
After copying the SPFILE and updating the GPnP profile, you must restart the instance with the SPFILE in the new location to use that SPFILE. When the Oracle ASM instance is running with the SPFILE in the new location, you can remove the source SPFILE.
To copy an Oracle ASM SPFILE into a disk group using spcopy
, the COMPATIBLE.ASM
attribute must be set to 11.2
or greater in the target disk group.
Example
The following are examples of the spcopy
command. The first example copies the Oracle ASM SPFILE from the data
disk group to the fra
disk group. The second example copies the Oracle ASM SPFILE from the data
disk group to an operating system location. The third example copies an Oracle ASM SPFILE from an operating system location to the data
disk group and updates the GPnP profile with the -u
option.
Example 10-24 Using the ASMCMD spcopy command
ASMCMD> spcopy +DATA/asm/asmparameterfile/registry.253.721810181 +FRA/spfileCopyASM.ora ASMCMD> spcopy +DATA/asm/asmparameterfile/registry.253.721810181 $ORACLE_HOME/dbs/spfileCopyASM.ora ASMCMD> spcopy -u /oracle/product/11.2.0/grid/dbs/spfileTestASM.ora +DATA/ASM/spfileCopyASM.ora
See Also:
-
spset for information about using the ASMCMD
spset
command -
About Backing Up, Copying, and Moving an Oracle ASM Initialization Parameter File for information about copying and moving an Oracle ASM instance initialization parameter file after upgrading
-
Oracle Database SQL Language Reference for information about creating a server parameter file with the
CREATE SPFILE
SQL statement
spget
Purpose
Retrieves the location of the Oracle ASM SPFILE from the Grid Plug and Play (GPnP) profile.
Syntax and Description
spget
The location retrieved by spget
is the location in the GPnP profile, but not always the location of the SPFILE currently used. For example, the location could have been recently updated by spset
or spcopy
with the -u
option on an Oracle ASM instance that has not been restarted. After the next restart of the Oracle ASM, this location points to the Oracle ASM SPFILE currently being used.
Example
The following is an example of the spget
command that retrieves and displays the location of the SPFILE from the GPnP profile.
Example 10-25 Using the ASMCMD spget command
ASMCMD [+] > spget +DATA/ASM/ASMPARAMETERFILE/registry.253.813507611
spmove
Purpose
Moves an Oracle ASM SPFILE from source to destination and automatically updates the GPnP profile.
Syntax and Description
spmove source destination
Table 10-21 lists the options for the spmove
command.
Table 10-21 Options for the spmove command
Option | Description |
---|---|
|
Specifies the source file. |
|
Specifies the destination file. |
Note the following about the use of spmove
:
-
spmove
can move an Oracle ASM SPFILE when the open instance is using a PFILE or a different SPFILE. After moving the SPFILE, you must restart the instance with the SPFILE in the new location to use that SPFILE. -
spmove
cannot move an Oracle ASM SPFILE when the SPFILE is being used by an open Oracle ASM instance.
For information about copying and moving an Oracle ASM instance initialization parameter file after upgrading, see "About Backing Up, Copying, and Moving an Oracle ASM Initialization Parameter File".
To use spmove
to move an Oracle ASM SPFILE into a disk group, the disk group attribute COMPATIBLE.ASM
must be set to 11.2
or greater.
Example
The following are examples of the spmove
command. The first example moves an Oracle ASM SPFILE from the data
disk group to an operating system location. The second example moves an SPFILE from an operating system location to the data
disk group.
Example 10-26 Using the ASMCMD spmove command
ASMCMD> spmove +DATA/spfileASM.ora /oracle/product/11.2.0/grid/dbs/spfileMoveASM.ora ASMCMD> spmove /oracle/product/11.2.0/grid/dbs/spfile+ASM.ora +DATA/ASM/spfileMoveASM.ora
spset
Purpose
Sets the location of the Oracle ASM SPFILE in the Grid Plug and Play (GPnP) profile.
Syntax and Description
spset location
Table 10-22 lists the options for the spset
command.
Table 10-22 Options for the spset command
Option | Description |
---|---|
|
Specifies the location of the Oracle ASM SPFILE. The location is the full path to the SPFILE. |
Example
The following is an example of the spset
command that sets the location of the Oracle ASM SPFILE command in the data
disk group.
Example 10-27 Using the ASMCMD spset command
ASMCMD> spset +DATA/asm/asmparameterfile/asmspfile.ora
startup
Purpose
Starts up the default instance.
Syntax and Description
startup [--mount] [--nomount] [--restrict] [ --pfile pfile ]
Table 10-23 lists the options for the startup
command.
Table 10-23 Options for the startup command
Option | Description |
---|---|
|
Specifies a mount operation. This is the default action. |
|
Specifies no mount operation. |
|
Specifies restricted mode. |
|
Oracle ASM initialization parameter file. |
This command starts up an instance specified by the ORACLE_SID
environmental variable. The variable could be set to the Oracle ASM, IOServer, or APX proxy instance.
The default action for an Oracle ASM instance is a startup that mounts disk groups and enables Oracle ASM Dynamic Volume Manager (Oracle ADVM) volumes.
Example
The following is an example of the startup
command that starts the Oracle ASM instance (ORACLE_SID=+ASM
) without mounting disk groups and uses the asm_init.ora
initialization parameter file.
Example 10-28 Using the ASMCMD startup command
ASMCMD> startup --nomount --pfile asm_init.ora
See Also:
-
About Mounting Disk Groups at Startup for information about disk groups that are mounted at startup time
-
About Starting Up an Oracle ASM Instance for more information about starting up an Oracle ASM instance