.. module:: oracledb
.. function:: Binary(string) Constructs an object holding a binary (long) string value.
.. function:: clientversion() Returns the version of the client library being used as a 5-tuple. The five values are the major version, minor version, update number, patch number, and port update number. .. note:: This function can only be called when python-oracledb is in Thick mode. See :ref:`enablingthick`. If ``clientversion()`` is called when in python-oracledb Thin mode, that is, if :func:`oracledb.init_oracle_client()` is not called first, then an exception will be thrown. .. note:: This method is an extension to the DB API definition.
.. function:: connect(dsn=None, pool=None, conn_class=None, params=None, \ user=None, proxy_user=None, password=None, newpassword=None, \ wallet_password=None, access_token=None, host=None, port=1521, \ protocol="tcp", https_proxy=None, https_proxy_port=0, \ service_name=None, sid=None, server_type=None, cclass=None, \ purity=oracledb.PURITY_DEFAULT, expire_time=0, retry_count=0, \ retry_delay=0, tcp_connect_timeout=60.0, ssl_server_dn_match=True, \ ssl_server_cert_dn=None, wallet_location=None, events=False, \ externalauth=False, mode=oracledb.AUTH_MODE_DEFAULT, \ disable_oob=False, stmtcachesize=oracledb.defaults.stmtcachesize, \ edition=None, tag=None, matchanytag=False, \ config_dir=oracledb.defaults.config_dir, appcontext=[], \ shardingkey=[], supershardingkey=[], debug_jdwp=None, \ connection_id_prefix=None, ssl_context=None, sdu=8192, \ pool_boundary=None, use_tcp_fast_open=False, handle=0) Constructor for creating a connection to the database. Returns a :ref:`Connection Object <connobj>`. All parameters are optional and can be specified as keyword parameters. See :ref:`standaloneconnection` information about connections. Not all parameters apply to both python-oracledb Thin and :ref:`Thick <enablingthick>` modes. Some values, such as the database host name, can be specified as parameters, as part of the connect string, and in the params object. If a ``dsn`` (data source name) parameter is passed, the python-oracledb Thick mode will use the string to connect, otherwise a connection string is internally constructed from the individual parameters and params object values, with the individual parameters having precedence. In python-oracledb's default Thin mode, a connection string is internally used that contains all relevant values specified. The precedence in Thin mode is that values in any ``dsn`` parameter override values passed as individual parameters, which themselves override values set in the ``params`` parameter object. Similar precedence rules also apply to other values. The ``dsn`` (data source name) parameter can be a string in the format ``user/password@connect_string`` or can simply be the connect string (in which case authentication credentials such as the username and password need to be specified separately). See :ref:`connstr` for more information. The ``pool`` parameter is expected to be a pool object. The use of this parameter is the equivalent of calling :meth:`ConnectionPool.acquire()`. The ``conn_class`` parameter is expected to be Connection or a subclass of Connection. The ``params`` parameter is expected to be of type :ref:`ConnectParams <connparam>` and contains connection parameters that will be used when establishing the connection. If this parameter is not specified, the additional keyword parameters will be used to create an instance of ConnectParams. If both the params parameter and additional keyword parameters are specified, the values in the keyword parameters have precedence. Note that if a ``dsn`` is also supplied, then in the python-oracledb Thin mode, the values of the parameters specified (if any) within the ``dsn`` will override the values passed as additional keyword parameters, which themselves override the values set in the ``params`` parameter object. The ``user`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the name of the user to connect to. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``proxy_user`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the name of the proxy user to connect to. If this value is not specified, it will be parsed out of user if user is in the form "user[proxy_user]". This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``password`` parameter expected to be a string which indicates the password for the user. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``newpassword`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the new password for the user. The new password will take effect immediately upon a successful connection to the database. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``wallet_password`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the password to use to decrypt the PEM-encoded wallet, if it is encrypted. This value is only used in python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``wallet_password`` parameter is not needed for cwallet.sso files that are used in the python-oracledb Thick mode. The ``access_token`` parameter is expected to be a string or a 2-tuple or a callable. If it is a string, it specifies an Azure AD OAuth2 token used for Open Authorization (OAuth 2.0) token based authentication. If it is a 2-tuple, it specifies the token and private key strings used for Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) Identity and Access Management (IAM) token based authentication. If it is a callable, it returns either a string or a 2-tuple used for OAuth 2.0 or OCI IAM token based authentication and is useful when the pool needs to expand and create new connections but the current authentication token has expired. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``host`` parameter is expected to be a string which specifies the name or IP address of the machine hosting the listener, which handles the initial connection to the database. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``port`` parameter is expected to be an integer which indicates the port number on which the listener is listening. The default value is 1521. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``protocol`` parameter is expected to be one of the strings "tcp" or "tcps" which indicates whether to use unencrypted network traffic or encrypted network traffic (TLS). The default value is tcp. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``https_proxy`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the name or IP address of a proxy host to use for tunneling secure connections. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``https_proxy_port`` parameter is expected to be an integer which indicates the port that is to be used to communicate with the proxy host. The default value is 0. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``service_name`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the service name of the database. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``sid`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the SID of the database. It is recommended to use ``service_name`` instead. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``server_type`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the type of server connection that should be established. If specified, it should be one of `dedicated`, `shared`, or `pooled`. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``cclass`` parameter is expected to be a string that identifies the connection class to use for Database Resident Connection Pooling (DRCP). This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``purity`` parameter is expected to be one of the :ref:`oracledb.PURITY_* <drcppurityconsts>` constants that identifies the purity to use for DRCP. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The purity will internally default to :data:`~oracledb.PURITY_SELF` for pooled connections. For standalone connections, the purity will internally default to :data:`~oracledb.PURITY_NEW`. The ``expire_time`` parameter is expected to be an integer which indicates the number of minutes between the sending of keepalive probes. If this parameter is set to a value greater than zero it enables keepalive. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is 0. The ``retry_count`` parameter is expected to be an integer that identifies the number of times that a connection attempt should be retried before the attempt is terminated. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is 0. The ``retry_delay`` parameter is expected to be an integer that identifies the number of seconds to wait before making a new connection attempt. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is 0. The ``tcp_connect_timeout`` parameter is expected to be a float that indicates the maximum number of seconds to wait for establishing a connection to the database host. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is 60.0. The ``ssl_server_dn_match`` parameter is expected to be a boolean that indicates whether the server certificate distinguished name (DN) should be matched in addition to the regular certificate verification that is performed. Note that if the ``ssl_server_cert_dn`` parameter is not provided, host name matching is performed instead. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is True. The ``ssl_server_cert_dn`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the distinguished name (DN) which should be matched with the server. This value is ignored if the ``ssl_server_dn_match`` parameter is not set to the value True. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``wallet_location`` parameter is expected to be a string that identifies the directory where the wallet can be found. In python-oracledb Thin mode, this must be the directory of the PEM-encoded wallet file, ewallet.pem. In python-oracledb Thick mode, this must be the directory of the file, cwallet.sso. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``events`` parameter is expected to be a boolean that specifies whether the events mode should be enabled. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode and is ignored in the Thin mode. This parameter is needed for continuous query notification and high availability event notifications. The default value is False. The ``externalauth`` parameter is a boolean that specifies whether external authentication should be used. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode and is ignored in the Thin mode. The default value is False. For standalone connections, external authentication occurs when the ``user`` and ``password`` attributes are not used. If these attributes are not used, you can optionally set the ``externalauth`` attribute to True, which may aid code auditing. If the ``mode`` parameter is specified, it must be one of the :ref:`connection authorization modes <connection-authorization-modes>` which are defined at the module level. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is :data:`oracledb.AUTH_MODE_DEFAULT`. The ``disable_oob`` parameter is expected to be a boolean that indicates whether out-of-band breaks should be disabled. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thin mode and has no effect on Windows which does not support this functionality. The default value is False. The ``stmtcachesize`` parameter is expected to be an integer which specifies the initial size of the statement cache. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default is the value of :attr:`defaults.stmtcachesize`. The ``edition`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the edition to use for the connection. This parameter cannot be used simultaneously with the ``cclass`` parameter. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode and is ignored in the Thin mode. The ``tag`` parameter is expected to be a string that identifies the type of connection that should be returned from a pool. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode and is ignored in the Thin mode. The ``matchanytag`` parameter is expected to be a boolean specifying whether any tag can be used when acquiring a connection from the pool. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode when acquiring a connection from a pool. This value is ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The default value is False. The ``config_dir`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the directory in which configuration files (tnsnames.ora) are found. This value is only used in python-oracledb Thin mode. The default is the value of :attr:`defaults.config_dir`. For python-oracledb Thick mode, use the ``config_dir`` parameter of :func:`oracledb.init_oracle_client()`. The ``appcontext`` parameter is expected to be a list of 3-tuples that identifies the application context used by the connection. This parameter should contain namespace, name, and value and each entry in the tuple should be a string. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode and is ignored in the Thin mode. The ``shardingkey`` parameter and ``supershardingkey`` parameters, if specified, are expected to be a sequence of values which identifies the database shard to connect to. The key values can be a list of strings, numbers, bytes, or dates. These values are only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode and are ignored in the Thin mode. The ``debug_jdwp`` parameter is expected to be a string with the format `host=<host>;port=<port>` that specifies the host and port of the PL/SQL debugger. This allows using the Java Debug Wire Protocol (JDWP) to debug PL/SQL code called by python-oracledb. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thin mode. For python-oracledb Thick mode, set the ``ORA_DEBUG_JDWP`` environment variable which has the same syntax. For more information, see :ref:`applntracing`. The ``connection_id_prefix`` parameter is expected to be a string and is added to the beginning of the generated ``connection_id`` that is sent to the database for `tracing <https://www.oracle.com/pls/topic/lookup? ctx=dblatest&id=GUID-B0FC69F9-2EBC-44E8-ACB2-62FBA14ABD5C>`__. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``ssl_context`` parameter is expected to be an `SSLContext object <https://docs.python.org/3/library/ssl.html#ssl-contexts>`__ which is used for connecting to the database using TLS. This SSL context will be modified to include the private key or any certificates found in a separately supplied wallet. This parameter should only be specified if the default SSLContext object cannot be used. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``sdu`` parameter is expected to be an integer that returns the requested size of the Session Data Unit (SDU), in bytes. The value tunes internal buffers used for communication to the database. Bigger values can increase throughput for large queries or bulk data loads, but at the cost of higher memory use. The SDU size that will actually be used is negotiated down to the lower of this value and the database network SDU configuration value. See the `SQL*Net documentation <https://www.oracle. com/pls/topic/lookup?ctx=dblatest&id=GUID-86D61D6F-AD26-421A-BABA- 77949C8A2B04>`__ for more details. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is 8192 bytes. The ``pool_boundary`` parameter is expected to be one of the strings "statement" or "transaction" which indicates when pooled DRCP or PRCP connections can be returned to the pool. If the value is "statement", then pooled DRCP or PRCP connections are implicitly released back to the DRCP or PRCP pool when the connection is stateless (that is, there are no active cursors, active transactions, temporary tables, or temporary LOBs). If the value is "transaction", then pooled DRCP or PRCP connections are implicitly released back to the DRCP or PRCP pool when either one of the methods :meth:`Connection.commit()` or :meth:`Connection.rollback()` are called. This parameter requires the use of DRCP or PRCP with Oracle Database 23c (or later). See :ref:`implicitconnpool` for more information. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``use_tcp_fast_open`` parameter is expected to be a boolean which indicates whether to use an `Oracle Autonomous Database Serverless (ADB-S) <https://docs.oracle.com/en/cloud/paas/autonomous-database/serverless/ adbsb/adbsb-overview.html#GUID-A7435462-9D74-44B4-8240-4A6F06E92348>`__ specific feature that can reduce the latency in round-trips to the database after a connection has been established. This feature is only available with certain versions of ADB-S. This value is used in both python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is False. If the ``handle`` parameter is specified, it must be of type OCISvcCtx\* and is only of use when embedding Python in an application (like PowerBuilder) which has already made the connection. The connection thus created should *never* be used after the source handle has been closed or destroyed. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode and is ignored in the Thin mode. It should be used with extreme caution. The default value is 0. .. versionchanged:: 2.1.0 The ``pool_boundary`` and ``use_tcp_fast_open`` parameters were added. .. versionchanged:: 2.0.0 The ``ssl_context`` and ``sdu`` parameters were added. .. versionchanged:: 1.4.0 The ``connection_id_prefix`` parameter was added.
.. function:: connect_async(dsn=None, pool=None, conn_class=None, params=None, \ user=None, proxy_user=None, password=None, newpassword=None, \ wallet_password=None, access_token=None, host=None, port=1521, \ protocol="tcp", https_proxy=None, https_proxy_port=0, \ service_name=None, sid=None, server_type=None, cclass=None, \ purity=oracledb.PURITY_DEFAULT, expire_time=0, retry_count=0, \ retry_delay=0, tcp_connect_timeout=60.0, ssl_server_dn_match=True, \ ssl_server_cert_dn=None, wallet_location=None, events=False, \ externalauth=False, mode=oracledb.AUTH_MODE_DEFAULT, \ disable_oob=False, stmtcachesize=oracledb.defaults.stmtcachesize, \ edition=None, tag=None, matchanytag=False, \ config_dir=oracledb.defaults.config_dir, appcontext=[], \ shardingkey=[], supershardingkey=[], debug_jdwp=None, \ connection_id_prefix=None, ssl_context=None, sdu=8192, \ pool_boundary=None, use_tcp_fast_open=False, handle=0) Constructor for creating a connection to the database. Returns an :ref:`AsyncConnection Object <asyncconnobj>`. All parameters are optional and can be specified as keyword parameters. See :ref:`standaloneconnection` information about connections. .. versionadded:: 2.0.0 Some values, such as the database host name, can be specified as parameters, as part of the connect string, and in the params object. The precedence is that values in the ``dsn`` parameter override values passed as individual parameters, which themselves override values set in the ``params`` parameter object. Similar precedence rules also apply to other values. The ``dsn`` (data source name) parameter can be a string in the format ``user/password@connect_string`` or can simply be the connect string (in which case authentication credentials such as the username and password need to be specified separately). See :ref:`connstr` for more information. The ``pool`` parameter is expected to be an AsyncConnectionPool object. The use of this parameter is the equivalent of calling :meth:`AsyncConnectionPool.acquire()`. The ``conn_class`` parameter is expected to be AsyncConnection or a subclass of AsyncConnection. The ``params`` parameter is expected to be of type :ref:`ConnectParams <connparam>` and contains connection parameters that will be used when establishing the connection. If this parameter is not specified, the additional keyword parameters will be used to create an instance of ConnectParams. If both the params parameter and additional keyword parameters are specified, the values in the keyword parameters have precedence. Note that if a ``dsn`` is also supplied, then the values of the parameters specified (if any) within the ``dsn`` will override the values passed as additional keyword parameters, which themselves override the values set in the ``params`` parameter object. The ``user`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the name of the user to connect to. The ``proxy_user`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the name of the proxy user to connect to. If this value is not specified, it will be parsed out of user if user is in the form "user[proxy_user]". The ``password`` parameter expected to be a string which indicates the password for the user. The ``newpassword`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the new password for the user. The new password will take effect immediately upon a successful connection to the database. The ``wallet_password`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the password to use to decrypt the PEM-encoded wallet, if it is encrypted. The ``access_token`` parameter is expected to be a string or a 2-tuple or a callable. If it is a string, it specifies an Azure AD OAuth2 token used for Open Authorization (OAuth 2.0) token based authentication. If it is a 2-tuple, it specifies the token and private key strings used for Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) Identity and Access Management (IAM) token based authentication. If it is a callable, it returns either a string or a 2-tuple used for OAuth 2.0 or OCI IAM token based authentication and is useful when the pool needs to expand and create new connections but the current authentication token has expired. The ``host`` parameter is expected to be a string which specifies the name or IP address of the machine hosting the listener, which handles the initial connection to the database. The ``port`` parameter is expected to be an integer which indicates the port number on which the listener is listening. The default value is 1521. The ``protocol`` parameter is expected to be one of the strings "tcp" or "tcps" which indicates whether to use unencrypted network traffic or encrypted network traffic (TLS). The default value is tcp. The ``https_proxy`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the name or IP address of a proxy host to use for tunneling secure connections. The ``https_proxy_port`` parameter is expected to be an integer which indicates the port that is to be used to communicate with the proxy host. The default value is 0. The ``service_name`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the service name of the database. The ``sid`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the SID of the database. It is recommended to use ``service_name`` instead. The ``server_type`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the type of server connection that should be established. If specified, it should be one of `dedicated`, `shared`, or `pooled`. The ``cclass`` parameter is expected to be a string that identifies the connection class to use for Database Resident Connection Pooling (DRCP). The ``purity`` parameter is expected to be one of the :ref:`oracledb.PURITY_* <drcppurityconsts>` constants that identifies the purity to use for DRCP. The purity will internally default to :data:`~oracledb.PURITY_SELF` for pooled connections. For standalone connections, the purity will internally default to :data:`~oracledb.PURITY_NEW`. The ``expire_time`` parameter is expected to be an integer which indicates the number of minutes between the sending of keepalive probes. If this parameter is set to a value greater than zero it enables keepalive. The default value is 0. The ``retry_count`` parameter is expected to be an integer that identifies the number of times that a connection attempt should be retried before the attempt is terminated. The default value is 0. The ``retry_delay`` parameter is expected to be an integer that identifies the number of seconds to wait before making a new connection attempt. The default value is 0. The ``tcp_connect_timeout`` parameter is expected to be a float that indicates the maximum number of seconds to wait for establishing a connection to the database host. The default value is 60.0. The ``ssl_server_dn_match`` parameter is expected to be a boolean that indicates whether the server certificate distinguished name (DN) should be matched in addition to the regular certificate verification that is performed. Note that if the ``ssl_server_cert_dn`` parameter is not provided, host name matching is performed instead. The default value is True. The ``ssl_server_cert_dn`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the distinguished name (DN) which should be matched with the server. This value is ignored if the ``ssl_server_dn_match`` parameter is not set to the value True. The ``wallet_location`` parameter is expected to be a string that identifies the directory where the wallet can be found. In python-oracledb Thin mode, this must be the directory of the PEM-encoded wallet file, ewallet.pem. The ``events`` parameter is ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``externalauth`` parameter is ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. If the ``mode`` parameter is specified, it must be one of the :ref:`connection authorization modes <connection-authorization-modes>` which are defined at the module level. The default value is :data:`oracledb.AUTH_MODE_DEFAULT`. The ``disable_oob`` parameter is expected to be a boolean that indicates whether out-of-band breaks should be disabled. This value has no effect on Windows which does not support this functionality. The default value is False. The ``stmtcachesize`` parameter is expected to be an integer which specifies the initial size of the statement cache. The default is the value of :attr:`defaults.stmtcachesize`. The ``edition`` parameter is ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``tag`` parameter is ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``matchanytag`` parameter is ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``config_dir`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the directory in which configuration files (tnsnames.ora) are found. The default is the value of :attr:`defaults.config_dir`. The ``appcontext`` parameter is ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``shardingkey`` parameter and ``supershardingkey`` parameters are ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``debug_jdwp`` parameter is expected to be a string with the format `host=<host>;port=<port>` that specifies the host and port of the PL/SQL debugger. This allows using the Java Debug Wire Protocol (JDWP) to debug PL/SQL code called by python-oracledb. The ``connection_id_prefix`` parameter is expected to be a string and is added to the beginning of the generated ``connection_id`` that is sent to the database for `tracing <https://www.oracle.com/pls/topic/lookup? ctx=dblatest&id=GUID-B0FC69F9-2EBC-44E8-ACB2-62FBA14ABD5C>`__. The ``ssl_context`` parameter is expected to be an SSLContext object used for connecting to the database using TLS. This SSL context will be modified to include the private key or any certificates found in a separately supplied wallet. This parameter should only be specified if the default SSLContext object cannot be used. The ``sdu`` parameter is expected to be an integer that returns the requested size of the Session Data Unit (SDU), in bytes. The value tunes internal buffers used for communication to the database. Bigger values can increase throughput for large queries or bulk data loads, but at the cost of higher memory use. The SDU size that will actually be used is negotiated down to the lower of this value and the database network SDU configuration value. See the `SQL*Net documentation <https://www.oracle. com/pls/topic/lookup?ctx=dblatest&id=GUID-86D61D6F-AD26-421A-BABA- 77949C8A2B04>`__ for more details. The default value is 8192 bytes. The ``pool_boundary`` parameter is expected to be one of the strings "statement" or "transaction" which indicates when pooled DRCP or PRCP connections can be returned to the pool. If the value is "statement", then pooled DRCP or PRCP connections are implicitly released back to the DRCP or PRCP pool when the connection is stateless (that is, there are no active cursors, active transactions, temporary tables, or temporary LOBs). If the value is "transaction", then pooled DRCP or PRCP connections are implicitly released back to the DRCP or PRCP pool when either one of the methods :meth:`AsyncConnection.commit()` or :meth:`AsyncConnection.rollback()` are called. This parameter requires the use of DRCP or PRCP with Oracle Database 23c (or later). See :ref:`implicitconnpool` for more information. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``use_tcp_fast_open`` parameter is expected to be a boolean which indicates whether to use an `Oracle Autonomous Database Serverless (ADB-S) <https://docs.oracle.com/en/cloud/paas/autonomous-database/serverless/ adbsb/adbsb-overview.html#GUID-A7435462-9D74-44B4-8240-4A6F06E92348>`__ specific feature that can reduce the latency in round-trips to the database after a connection has been established. This feature is only available with certain versions of ADB-S. This value is used in both python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is False. The ``handle`` parameter is ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. .. versionchanged:: 2.1.0 The ``pool_boundary`` and ``use_tcp_fast_open`` parameters were added. .. versionchanged:: 2.0.0 The ``ssl_context`` and ``sdu`` parameters were added. .. versionchanged:: 1.4.0 The ``connection_id_prefix`` parameter was added.
.. function:: ConnectParams(user=None, proxy_user=None, password=None, \ newpassword=None, wallet_password=None, access_token=None, host=None, \ port=1521, protocol="tcp", https_proxy=None, https_proxy_port=0, \ service_name=None, sid=None, server_type=None, cclass=None, \ purity=oracledb.PURITY_DEFAULT, expire_time=0, retry_count=0, \ retry_delay=0, tcp_connect_timeout=60.0, ssl_server_dn_match=True, \ ssl_server_cert_dn=None, wallet_location=None, events=False, \ externalauth=False, mode=oracledb.AUTH_MODE_DEFAULT, \ disable_oob=False, stmtcachesize=oracledb.defaults.stmtcachesize, \ edition=None, tag=None, matchanytag=False, \ config_dir=oracledb.defaults.config_dir, appcontext=[], \ shardingkey=[], supershardingkey=[], debug_jdwp=None, \ connection_id_prefix=None, ssl_context=None, sdu=8192, \ pool_boundary=None, use_tcp_fast_open=False, handle=0) Contains all the parameters that can be used to establish a connection to the database. Creates and returns a :ref:`ConnectParams Object <connparam>`. The object can be passed to :meth:`oracledb.connect()`. All the parameters are optional. The ``user`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the name of the user to connect to. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and :ref:`Thick <enablingthick>` modes. The ``proxy_user`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the name of the proxy user to connect to. If this value is not specified, it will be parsed out of user if user is in the form "user[proxy_user]". This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``password`` parameter expected to be a string which indicates the password for the user. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``newpassword`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the new password for the user. The new password will take effect immediately upon a successful connection to the database. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``wallet_password`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the password to use to decrypt the PEM-encoded wallet, if it is encrypted. This value is only used in python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``wallet_password`` parameter is not needed for cwallet.sso files that are used in the python-oracledb Thick mode. The ``access_token`` parameter is expected to be a string or a 2-tuple or a callable. If it is a string, it specifies an Azure AD OAuth2 token used for Open Authorization (OAuth 2.0) token based authentication. If it is a 2-tuple, it specifies the token and private key strings used for Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) Identity and Access Management (IAM) token based authentication. If it is a callable, it returns either a string or a 2-tuple used for OAuth 2.0 or OCI IAM token based authentication and is useful when the pool needs to expand and create new connections but the current authentication token has expired. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``host`` parameter is expected to be a string which specifies the name or IP address of the machine hosting the listener, which handles the initial connection to the database. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``port`` parameter is expected to be an integer which indicates the port number on which the listener is listening. The default value is 1521. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``protocol`` parameter is expected to be one of the strings "tcp" or "tcps" which indicates whether to use unencrypted network traffic or encrypted network traffic (TLS). The default value is tcp. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``https_proxy`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the name or IP address of a proxy host to use for tunneling secure connections. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``https_proxy_port`` parameter is expected to be an integer which indicates the port that is to be used to communicate with the proxy host. The default value is 0. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``service_name`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the service name of the database. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``sid`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the SID of the database. It is recommended to use ``service_name`` instead. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``server_type`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the type of server connection that should be established. If specified, it should be one of "dedicated", "shared", or "pooled". This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``cclass`` parameter is expected to be a string that identifies the connection class to use for Database Resident Connection Pooling (DRCP). This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``purity`` parameter is expected to be one of the :ref:`oracledb.PURITY_* <drcppurityconsts>` constants that identifies the purity to use for DRCP. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The purity will internally default to :data:`~oracledb.PURITY_SELF` for pooled connections . For standalone connections, the purity will internally default to :data:`~oracledb.PURITY_NEW`. The ``expire_time`` parameter is expected to be an integer which indicates the number of minutes between the sending of keepalive probes. If this parameter is set to a value greater than zero it enables keepalive. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is 0. The ``retry_count`` parameter is expected to be an integer that identifies the number of times that a connection attempt should be retried before the attempt is terminated. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is 0. The ``retry_delay`` parameter is expected to be an integer that identifies the number of seconds to wait before making a new connection attempt. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is 0. The ``tcp_connect_timeout`` parameter is expected to be a float that indicates the maximum number of seconds to wait for establishing a connection to the database host. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is 60.0. The ``ssl_server_dn_match`` parameter is expected to be a boolean that indicates whether the server certificate distinguished name (DN) should be matched in addition to the regular certificate verification that is performed. Note that if the ``ssl_server_cert_dn`` parameter is not provided, host name matching is performed instead. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is True. The ``ssl_server_cert_dn`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the distinguished name (DN) which should be matched with the server. This value is ignored if the ``ssl_server_dn_match`` parameter is not set to the value True. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``wallet_location`` parameter is expected to be a string that identifies the directory where the wallet can be found. In python-oracledb Thin mode, this must be the directory of the PEM-encoded wallet file, ewallet.pem. In python-oracledb Thick mode, this must be the directory of the file, cwallet.sso. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``events`` parameter is expected to be a boolean that specifies whether the events mode should be enabled. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode. This parameter is needed for continuous query notification and high availability event notifications. The default value is False. The ``externalauth`` parameter is a boolean that specifies whether external authentication should be used. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode. The default value is False. For standalone connections, external authentication occurs when the ``user`` and ``password`` attributes are not used. If these attributes are not used, you can optionally set the ``externalauth`` attribute to True, which may aid code auditing. The ``mode`` parameter is expected to be an integer that identifies the authorization mode to use. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes.The default value is :data:`oracledb.AUTH_MODE_DEFAULT`. The ``disable_oob`` parameter is expected to be a boolean that indicates whether out-of-band breaks should be disabled. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thin mode and has no effect on Windows which does not support this functionality. The default value is False. The ``stmtcachesize`` parameter is expected to be an integer that identifies the initial size of the statement cache. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default is the value of :attr:`defaults.stmtcachesize`. The ``edition`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the edition to use for the connection. This parameter cannot be used simultaneously with the ``cclass`` parameter. This value is used in the python-oracledb Thick mode. The ``tag`` parameter is expected to be a string that identifies the type of connection that should be returned from a pool. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode. The ``matchanytag`` parameter is expected to be a boolean specifying whether any tag can be used when acquiring a connection from the pool. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode when acquiring a connection from a pool. The default value is False. The ``config_dir`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the directory in which configuration files (tnsnames.ora) are found. This value is only used in python-oracledb Thin mode. The default is the value of :attr:`defaults.config_dir`. For python-oracledb Thick mode, use the ``config_dir`` parameter of :func:`oracledb.init_oracle_client()`. The ``appcontext`` parameter is expected to be a list of 3-tuples that identifies the application context used by the connection. This parameter should contain namespace, name, and value and each entry in the tuple should be a string. This value is only used inthe python-oracledb Thick mode. The ``shardingkey`` parameter is expected to be a list of strings, numbers, bytes or dates that identifies the database shard to connect to. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode. The ``supershardingkey`` parameter is expected to be a list of strings, numbers, bytes or dates that identifies the database shard to connect to. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode. The ``debug_jdwp`` parameter is expected to be a string with the format `host=<host>;port=<port>` that specifies the host and port of the PL/SQL debugger. This allows using the Java Debug Wire Protocol (JDWP) to debug PL/SQL code invoked by python-oracledb. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thin mode. For python-oracledb Thick mode, set the ``ORA_DEBUG_JDWP`` environment variable which has the same syntax. For more information, see :ref:`applntracing`. The ``connection_id_prefix`` parameter is expected to be a string and is added to the beginning of the generated ``connection_id`` that is sent to the database for `tracing <https://www.oracle.com/pls/topic/lookup? ctx=dblatest&id=GUID-B0FC69F9-2EBC-44E8-ACB2-62FBA14ABD5C>`__. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``ssl_context`` parameter is expected to be an `SSLContext object <https://docs.python.org/3/library/ssl.html#ssl-contexts>`__ which is used for connecting to the database using TLS. This SSL context will be modified to include the private key or any certificates found in a separately supplied wallet. This parameter should only be specified if the default SSLContext object cannot be used. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``sdu`` parameter is expected to be an integer that returns the requested size of the Session Data Unit (SDU), in bytes. The value tunes internal buffers used for communication to the database. Bigger values can increase throughput for large queries or bulk data loads, but at the cost of higher memory use. The SDU size that will actually be used is negotiated down to the lower of this value and the database network SDU configuration value. See the `SQL*Net documentation <https://www.oracle. com/pls/topic/lookup?ctx=dblatest&id=GUID-86D61D6F-AD26-421A-BABA- 77949C8A2B04>`__ for more details. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is 8192 bytes. The ``pool_boundary`` parameter is expected to be one of the strings "statement" or "transaction" which indicates when pooled DRCP or PRCP connections can be returned to the pool. If the value is "statement", then pooled DRCP or PRCP connections are implicitly released back to the DRCP or PRCP pool when the connection is stateless (that is, there are no active cursors, active transactions, temporary tables, or temporary LOBs). If the value is "transaction", then pooled DRCP or PRCP connections are implicitly released back to the DRCP or PRCP pool when either one of the methods :meth:`Connection.commit()` or :meth:`Connection.rollback()` are called. This parameter requires the use of DRCP or PRCP with Oracle Database 23c (or later). See :ref:`implicitconnpool` for more information. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``use_tcp_fast_open`` parameter is expected to be a boolean which indicates whether to use an `Oracle Autonomous Database Serverless (ADB-S) <https://docs.oracle.com/en/cloud/paas/autonomous-database/serverless/ adbsb/adbsb-overview.html#GUID-A7435462-9D74-44B4-8240-4A6F06E92348>`__ specific feature that can reduce the latency in round-trips to the database after a connection has been established. This feature is only available with certain versions of ADB-S. This value is used in both python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is False. The ``handle`` parameter is expected to be an integer which represents a pointer to a valid service context handle. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode. It should be used with extreme caution. The default value is 0. .. versionchanged:: 2.1.0 The ``pool_boundary`` and ``use_tcp_fast_open`` parameters were added. .. versionchanged:: 2.0.0 The ``ssl_context`` and ``sdu`` parameters were added. .. versionchanged:: 1.4.0 The ``connection_id_prefix`` parameter was added.
.. function:: create_pool(dsn=None, pool_class=oracledb.ConnectionPool, \ params=None, min=1, max=2, increment=1, \ connectiontype=oracledb.Connection, \ getmode=oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_WAIT, homogeneous=True, timeout=0, \ wait_timeout=0, max_lifetime_session=0, session_callback=None, \ max_sessions_per_shard=0, soda_metadata_cache=False, ping_interval=60, \ user=None, proxy_user=None, password=None, newpassword=None, \ wallet_password=None, access_token=None, host=None, port=1521, \ protocol="tcp", https_proxy=None, https_proxy_port=0, \ service_name=None, sid=None, server_type=None, cclass=None, \ purity=oracledb.PURITY_DEFAULT, expire_time=0, retry_count=0, \ retry_delay=0, tcp_connect_timeout=60.0, ssl_server_dn_match=True, \ ssl_server_cert_dn=None, wallet_location=None, events=False, \ externalauth=False, mode=oracledb.AUTH_MODE_DEFAULT, \ disable_oob=False, stmtcachesize=oracledb.defaults.stmtcachesize, \ edition=None, tag=None, matchanytag=False, \ config_dir=oracledb.defaults.config_dir, appcontext=[], \ shardingkey=[], supershardingkey=[], debug_jdwp=None, \ connection_id_prefix=None, ssl_context=None, sdu=8192, \ pool_boundary=None, use_tcp_fast_open=False, handle=0) Creates a connection pool with the supplied parameters and returns the :ref:`ConnectionPool object <connpool>` for the pool. See :ref:`Connection pooling <connpooling>` for more information. This function is the equivalent of the `cx_Oracle.SessionPool() <https://cx-oracle.readthedocs.io/en/latest/api_manual/module.html#cx_Oracle.SessionPool>`__ function. The use of ``SessionPool()`` has been deprecated in python-oracledb. Not all parameters apply to both python-oracledb Thin and :ref:`Thick <enablingthick>` modes. Some values, such as the database host name, can be specified as parameters, as part of the connect string, and in the params object. If a ``dsn`` (data source name) parameter is passed, the python-oracledb Thick mode will use the string to connect, otherwise a connection string is internally constructed from the individual parameters and params object values, with the individual parameters having precedence. In python-oracledb's default Thin mode, a connection string is internally used that contains all relevant values specified. The precedence in Thin mode is that values in any ``dsn`` parameter override values passed as individual parameters, which themselves override values set in the ``params`` parameter object. Similar precedence rules also apply to other values. The ``user``, ``password``, and ``dsn`` parameters are the same as for :meth:`oracledb.connect()`. The ``pool_class`` parameter is expected to be a :ref:`ConnectionPool Object <connpool>` or a subclass of ConnectionPool. The ``params`` parameter is expected to be of type :ref:`PoolParams <poolparam>` and contains parameters that are used to create the pool. If this parameter is not specified, the additional keyword parameters will be used to create an instance of PoolParams. If both the params parameter and additional keyword parameters are specified, the values in the keyword parameters have precedence. Note that if a ``dsn`` is also supplied, then in the python-oracledb Thin mode, the values of the parameters specified (if any) within the ``dsn`` will override the values passed as additional keyword parameters, which themselves override the values set in the ``params`` parameter object. The ``min``, ``max`` and ``increment`` parameters control pool growth behavior. A fixed pool size where ``min`` equals ``max`` is :ref:`recommended <connpoolsize>` to help prevent connection storms and to help overall system stability. The ``min`` parameter is the number of connections opened when the pool is created. The default value of the ``min`` parameter is 1. The ``increment`` parameter is the number of connections that are opened whenever a connection request exceeds the number of currently open connections. The default value of the ``increment`` parameter is 1. The ``max`` parameter is the maximum number of connections that can be open in the connection pool. The default value of the ``max`` parameter is 2. If the ``connectiontype`` parameter is specified, all calls to :meth:`ConnectionPool.acquire()` will create connection objects of that type, rather than the base type defined at the module level. The ``getmode`` parameter determines the behavior of :meth:`ConnectionPool.acquire()`. One of the constants :data:`oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_WAIT`, :data:`oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_NOWAIT`, :data:`oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_FORCEGET`, or :data:`oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_TIMEDWAIT`. The default value is :data:`oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_WAIT`. The ``homogeneous`` parameter is a boolean that indicates whether the connections are homogeneous (same user) or heterogeneous (multiple users). The default value is True. The ``timeout`` parameter is the length of time (in seconds) that a connection may remain idle in the pool before it is terminated. This applies only when the pool has more than ``min`` connections open, allowing it to shrink to the specified minimum size. If the value of this parameter is 0, then the connections are never terminated. The default value is 0. The ``wait_timeout`` parameter is the length of time (in milliseconds) that a caller should wait when acquiring a connection from the pool with ``getmode`` set to :data:`oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_TIMEDWAIT`. The default value is 0. The ``max_lifetime_session`` parameter is the length of time (in seconds) that connections can remain in the pool. If the value of this parameter is 0, then the connections may remain in the pool indefinitely. The default value is 0. The ``session_callback`` parameter is a callable that is invoked when a connection is returned from the pool for the first time, or when the connection tag differs from the one requested. The ``max_sessions_per_shard`` parameter is the maximum number of connections that may be associated with a particular shard. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode and is ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The default value is 0. The ``soda_metadata_cache`` parameter is a boolean that indicates whether or not the SODA metadata cache should be enabled. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode and is ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The default value is False. The ``ping_interval`` parameter is the length of time (in seconds) after which an unused connection in the pool will be a candidate for pinging when :meth:`ConnectionPool.acquire()` is called. If the ping to the database indicates the connection is not alive a replacement connection will be returned by :meth:`~ConnectionPool.acquire()`. If ``ping_interval`` is a negative value, then the ping functionality will be disabled. The default value is 60 seconds. The ``proxy_user`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the name of the proxy user to connect to. If this value is not specified, it will be parsed out of user if user is in the form "user[proxy_user]". This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``newpassword`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the new password for the user. The new password will take effect immediately upon a successful connection to the database. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``wallet_password`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the password to use to decrypt the PEM-encoded wallet, if it is encrypted. This value is only used in python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``wallet_password`` parameter is not needed for cwallet.sso files that are used in the python-oracledb Thick mode. The ``access_token`` parameter is expected to be a string or a 2-tuple or a callable. If it is a string, it specifies an Azure AD OAuth2 token used for Open Authorization (OAuth 2.0) token based authentication. If it is a 2-tuple, it specifies the token and private key strings used for Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) Identity and Access Management (IAM) token based authentication. If it is a callable, it returns either a string or a 2-tuple used for OAuth 2.0 or OCI IAM token based authentication and is useful when the pool needs to expand and create new connections but the current authentication token has expired. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``host`` parameter is expected to be a string which specifies the name or IP address of the machine hosting the listener, which handles the initial connection to the database. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``port`` parameter is expected to be an integer which indicates the port number on which the listener is listening. The default value is 1521. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``protocol`` parameter is expected to be one of the strings "tcp" or "tcps" which indicates whether to use unencrypted network traffic or encrypted network traffic (TLS). The default value is tcp. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``https_proxy`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the name or IP address of a proxy host to use for tunneling secure connections. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``https_proxy_port`` parameter is expected to be an integer which indicates the port that is to be used to communicate with the proxy host. The default value is 0. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``service_name`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the service name of the database. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``sid`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the SID of the database. It is recommended to use ``service_name`` instead. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``server_type`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the type of server connection that should be established. If specified, it should be one of `dedicated`, `shared`, or `pooled`. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``cclass`` parameter is expected to be a string that identifies the connection class to use for Database Resident Connection Pooling (DRCP). This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``purity`` parameter is expected to be one of the :ref:`oracledb.PURITY_* <drcppurityconsts>` constants that identifies the purity to use for DRCP. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The purity will internally default to :data:`~oracledb.PURITY_SELF` for pooled connections. The ``expire_time`` parameter is expected to be an integer which indicates the number of minutes between the sending of keepalive probes. If this parameter is set to a value greater than zero it enables keepalive. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is 0. The ``retry_count`` parameter is expected to be an integer that identifies the number of times that a connection attempt should be retried before the attempt is terminated. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is 0. The ``retry_delay`` parameter is expected to be an integer that identifies the number of seconds to wait before making a new connection attempt. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is 0. The ``tcp_connect_timeout`` parameter is expected to be a float that indicates the maximum number of seconds to wait for establishing a connection to the database host. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is 60.0. The ``ssl_server_dn_match`` parameter is expected to be a boolean that indicates whether the server certificate distinguished name (DN) should be matched in addition to the regular certificate verification that is performed. Note that if the ``ssl_server_cert_dn`` parameter is not provided, host name matching is performed instead. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is True. The ``ssl_server_cert_dn`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the distinguished name (DN) which should be matched with the server. This value is ignored if the ``ssl_server_dn_match`` parameter is not set to the value True. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``wallet_location`` parameter is expected to be a string that identifies the directory where the wallet can be found. In python-oracledb Thin mode, this must be the directory of the PEM-encoded wallet file, ewallet.pem. In python-oracledb Thick mode, this must be the directory of the file, cwallet.sso. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``events`` parameter is expected to be a boolean that specifies whether the events mode should be enabled. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode and is ignored in the Thin mode. This parameter is needed for continuous query notification and high availability event notifications. The default value is False. The ``externalauth`` parameter is a boolean that determines whether to use external authentication. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode and is ignored in the Thin mode. The default value is False. If the ``mode`` parameter is specified, it must be one of the :ref:`connection authorization modes <connection-authorization-modes>` which are defined at the module level. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes.The default value is :data:`oracledb.AUTH_MODE_DEFAULT`. The ``disable_oob`` parameter is expected to be a boolean that indicates whether out-of-band breaks should be disabled. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thin mode and has no effect on Windows which does not support this functionality. The default value is False. The ``stmtcachesize`` parameter is expected to be an integer which specifies the initial size of the statement cache. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default is the value of :attr:`defaults.stmtcachesize`. The ``edition`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the edition to use for the connection. This parameter cannot be used simultaneously with the ``cclass`` parameter. This value is used in the python-oracledb Thick mode and is ignored in the Thin mode. The ``tag`` parameter is expected to be a string that identifies the type of connection that should be returned from a pool. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode and is ignored in the Thin mode. The ``matchanytag`` parameter is expected to be a boolean specifying whether any tag can be used when acquiring a connection from the pool. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode when acquiring a connection from a pool. This value is ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The default value is False. The ``config_dir`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the directory in which configuration files (tnsnames.ora) are found. This value is only used in python-oracledb Thin mode. The default is the value of :attr:`defaults.config_dir`. For python-oracledb Thick mode, use the ``config_dir`` parameter of :func:`oracledb.init_oracle_client()`. The ``appcontext`` parameter is expected to be a list of 3-tuples that identifies the application context used by the connection. This parameter should contain namespace, name, and value and each entry in the tuple should be a string. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode and is ignored in the Thin mode. The ``shardingkey`` parameter and ``supershardingkey`` parameters, if specified, are expected to be a sequence of values which identifies the database shard to connect to. The key values can be a list of strings, numbers, bytes, or dates. These values are only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode and are ignored in the Thin mode. The ``debug_jdwp`` parameter is expected to be a string with the format `host=<host>;port=<port>` that specifies the host and port of the PL/SQL debugger. This allows using the Java Debug Wire Protocol (JDWP) to debug PL/SQL code invoked by python-oracledb. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thin mode. For python-oracledb Thick mode, set the ``ORA_DEBUG_JDWP`` environment variable which has the same syntax. For more information, see :ref:`applntracing`. The ``connection_id_prefix`` parameter is expected to be a string and is added to the beginning of the generated ``connection_id`` that is sent to the database for `tracing <https://www.oracle.com/pls/topic/lookup? ctx=dblatest&id=GUID-B0FC69F9-2EBC-44E8-ACB2-62FBA14ABD5C>`__. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``ssl_context`` parameter is expected to be an `SSLContext object <https://docs.python.org/3/library/ssl.html#ssl-contexts>`__ which is used for connecting to the database using TLS. This SSL context will be modified to include the private key or any certificates found in a separately supplied wallet. This parameter should only be specified if the default SSLContext object cannot be used. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``sdu`` parameter is expected to be an integer that returns the requested size of the Session Data Unit (SDU), in bytes. The value tunes internal buffers used for communication to the database. Bigger values can increase throughput for large queries or bulk data loads, but at the cost of higher memory use. The SDU size that will actually be used is negotiated down to the lower of this value and the database network SDU configuration value. See the `SQL*Net documentation <https://www.oracle. com/pls/topic/lookup?ctx=dblatest&id=GUID-86D61D6F-AD26-421A-BABA- 77949C8A2B04>`__ for more details. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is 8192 bytes. The ``pool_boundary`` parameter is expected to be one of the strings "statement" or "transaction" which indicates when pooled DRCP or PRCP connections can be returned to the pool. If the value is "statement", then pooled DRCP or PRCP connections are implicitly released back to the DRCP or PRCP pool when the connection is stateless (that is, there are no active cursors, active transactions, temporary tables, or temporary LOBs). If the value is "transaction", then pooled DRCP or PRCP connections are implicitly released back to the DRCP or PRCP pool when either one of the methods :meth:`Connection.commit()` or :meth:`Connection.rollback()` are called. This parameter requires the use of DRCP or PRCP with Oracle Database 23c (or later). See :ref:`implicitconnpool` for more information. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``use_tcp_fast_open`` parameter is expected to be a boolean which indicates whether to use an `Oracle Autonomous Database Serverless (ADB-S) <https://docs.oracle.com/en/cloud/paas/autonomous-database/serverless/ adbsb/adbsb-overview.html#GUID-A7435462-9D74-44B4-8240-4A6F06E92348>`__ specific feature that can reduce the latency in round-trips to the database after a connection has been established. This feature is only available with certain versions of ADB-S. This value is used in both python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is False. If the ``handle`` parameter is specified, it must be of type OCISvcCtx\* and is only of use when embedding Python in an application (like PowerBuilder) which has already made the connection. The connection thus created should *never* be used after the source handle has been closed or destroyed. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode and is ignored in the Thin mode. It should be used with extreme caution. The default value is 0. In the python-oracledb Thick mode, connection pooling is handled by Oracle's `Session pooling <https://www.oracle.com/pls/topic/lookup? ctx=dblatest&id=GUID-F9662FFB-EAEF-495C-96FC-49C6D1D9625C>`__ technology. This allows python-oracledb applications to support features like `Application Continuity <https://www.oracle.com/pls/topic/lookup? ctx=dblatest&id=GUID-A8DD9422-2F82-42A9-9555-134296416E8F>`__. .. versionchanged:: 2.1.0 The ``pool_boundary`` and ``use_tcp_fast_open`` parameters were added. .. versionchanged:: 2.0.0 The ``ssl_context`` and ``sdu`` parameters were added. .. versionchanged:: 1.4.0 The ``connection_id_prefix`` parameter was added.
.. function:: create_pool_async(dsn=None, pool_class=oracledb.AsyncConnectionPool, \ params=None, min=1, max=2, increment=1, \ connectiontype=oracledb.AsyncConnection, \ getmode=oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_WAIT, homogeneous=True, timeout=0, \ wait_timeout=0, max_lifetime_session=0, session_callback=None, \ max_sessions_per_shard=0, soda_metadata_cache=False, ping_interval=60, \ user=None, proxy_user=None, password=None, newpassword=None, \ wallet_password=None, access_token=None, host=None, port=1521, \ protocol="tcp", https_proxy=None, https_proxy_port=0, \ service_name=None, sid=None, server_type=None, cclass=None, \ purity=oracledb.PURITY_DEFAULT, expire_time=0, retry_count=0, \ retry_delay=0, tcp_connect_timeout=60.0, ssl_server_dn_match=True, \ ssl_server_cert_dn=None, wallet_location=None, events=False, \ externalauth=False, mode=oracledb.AUTH_MODE_DEFAULT, \ disable_oob=False, stmtcachesize=oracledb.defaults.stmtcachesize, \ edition=None, tag=None, matchanytag=False, \ config_dir=oracledb.defaults.config_dir, appcontext=[], \ shardingkey=[], supershardingkey=[], debug_jdwp=None, \ connection_id_prefix=None, ssl_context=None, sdu=8192, \ pool_boundary=None, use_tcp_fast_open=False, handle=0) Creates a connection pool with the supplied parameters and returns the :ref:`AsyncConnectionPool object <asyncconnpoolobj>` for the pool. ``create_pool_async()`` is a synchronous method. See :ref:`Connection pooling <asyncconnpool>` for more information. .. versionadded:: 2.0.0 Some values, such as the database host name, can be specified as parameters, as part of the connect string, and in the params object. The precedence is that values in the ``dsn`` parameter override values passed as individual parameters, which themselves override values set in the ``params`` parameter object. Similar precedence rules also apply to other values. The ``user``, ``password``, and ``dsn`` parameters are the same as for :meth:`oracledb.connect_async()`. The ``pool_class`` parameter is expected to be an :ref:`AsyncConnectionPool Object <asyncconnpoolobj>` or a subclass of AsyncConnectionPool. The ``params`` parameter is expected to be of type :ref:`PoolParams <poolparam>` and contains parameters that are used to create the pool. If this parameter is not specified, the additional keyword parameters will be used to create an instance of PoolParams. If both the params parameter and additional keyword parameters are specified, the values in the keyword parameters have precedence. Note that if a ``dsn`` is also supplied, then the values of the parameters specified (if any) within the ``dsn`` will override the values passed as additional keyword parameters, which themselves override the values set in the ``params`` parameter object. The ``min``, ``max`` and ``increment`` parameters control pool growth behavior. A fixed pool size where ``min`` equals ``max`` is :ref:`recommended <connpoolsize>` to help prevent connection storms and to help overall system stability. The ``min`` parameter is the number of connections opened when the pool is created. The default value of the ``min`` parameter is 1. The ``increment`` parameter is the number of connections that are opened whenever a connection request exceeds the number of currently open connections. The default value of the ``increment`` parameter is 1. The ``max`` parameter is the maximum number of connections that can be open in the connection pool. The default value of the ``max`` parameter is 2. If the ``connectiontype`` parameter is specified, all calls to :meth:`AsyncConnectionPool.acquire()` will create connection objects of that type, rather than the base type defined at the module level. The ``getmode`` parameter determines the behavior of :meth:`AsyncConnectionPool.acquire()`. One of the constants :data:`oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_WAIT`, :data:`oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_NOWAIT`, :data:`oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_FORCEGET`, or :data:`oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_TIMEDWAIT`. The default value is :data:`oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_WAIT`. The ``homogeneous`` parameter is a boolean that indicates whether the connections are homogeneous (same user) or heterogeneous (multiple users). The default value is True. The ``timeout`` parameter is the length of time (in seconds) that a connection may remain idle in the pool before it is terminated. This applies only when the pool has more than ``min`` connections open, allowing it to shrink to the specified minimum size. If the value of this parameter is 0, then the connections are never terminated. The default value is 0. The ``wait_timeout`` parameter is the length of time (in milliseconds) that a caller should wait when acquiring a connection from the pool with ``getmode`` set to :data:`oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_TIMEDWAIT`. The default value is 0. The ``max_lifetime_session`` parameter is the length of time (in seconds) that connections can remain in the pool. If the value of this parameter is 0, then the connections may remain in the pool indefinitely. The default value is 0. The ``session_callback`` parameter is a callable that is invoked when a connection is returned from the pool for the first time, or when the connection tag differs from the one requested. The ``max_sessions_per_shard`` parameter is ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``soda_metadata_cache`` parameter is ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``ping_interval`` parameter is the length of time (in seconds) after which an unused connection in the pool will be a candidate for pinging when :meth:`AsyncConnectionPool.acquire()` is called. If the ping to the database indicates the connection is not alive a replacement connection will be returned by :meth:`~AsyncConnectionPool.acquire()`. If ``ping_interval`` is a negative value, then the ping functionality will be disabled. The default value is 60 seconds. The ``proxy_user`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the name of the proxy user to connect to. If this value is not specified, it will be parsed out of user if user is in the form "user[proxy_user]". The ``newpassword`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the new password for the user. The new password will take effect immediately upon a successful connection to the database. The ``wallet_password`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the password to use to decrypt the PEM-encoded wallet, if it is encrypted. The ``access_token`` parameter is expected to be a string or a 2-tuple or a callable. If it is a string, it specifies an Azure AD OAuth2 token used for Open Authorization (OAuth 2.0) token based authentication. If it is a 2-tuple, it specifies the token and private key strings used for Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) Identity and Access Management (IAM) token based authentication. If it is a callable, it returns either a string or a 2-tuple used for OAuth 2.0 or OCI IAM token based authentication and is useful when the pool needs to expand and create new connections but the current authentication token has expired. The ``host`` parameter is expected to be a string which specifies the name or IP address of the machine hosting the listener, which handles the initial connection to the database. The ``port`` parameter is expected to be an integer which indicates the port number on which the listener is listening. The default value is 1521. The ``protocol`` parameter is expected to be one of the strings "tcp" or "tcps" which indicates whether to use unencrypted network traffic or encrypted network traffic (TLS). The default value is tcp. The ``https_proxy`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the name or IP address of a proxy host to use for tunneling secure connections. The ``https_proxy_port`` parameter is expected to be an integer which indicates the port that is to be used to communicate with the proxy host. The default value is 0. The ``service_name`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the service name of the database. The ``sid`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the SID of the database. It is recommended to use ``service_name`` instead. The ``server_type`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the type of server connection that should be established. If specified, it should be one of `dedicated`, `shared`, or `pooled`. The ``cclass`` parameter is expected to be a string that identifies the connection class to use for Database Resident Connection Pooling (DRCP). The ``purity`` parameter is expected to be one of the :ref:`oracledb.PURITY_* <drcppurityconsts>` constants that identifies the purity to use for DRCP. The purity will internally default to :data:`~oracledb.PURITY_SELF` for pooled connections. The ``expire_time`` parameter is expected to be an integer which indicates the number of minutes between the sending of keepalive probes. If this parameter is set to a value greater than zero it enables keepalive. The default value is 0. The ``retry_count`` parameter is expected to be an integer that identifies the number of times that a connection attempt should be retried before the attempt is terminated. The default value is 0. The ``retry_delay`` parameter is expected to be an integer that identifies the number of seconds to wait before making a new connection attempt. The default value is 0. The ``tcp_connect_timeout`` parameter is expected to be a float that indicates the maximum number of seconds to wait for establishing a connection to the database host. The default value is 60.0. The ``ssl_server_dn_match`` parameter is expected to be a boolean that indicates whether the server certificate distinguished name (DN) should be matched in addition to the regular certificate verification that is performed. Note that if the ``ssl_server_cert_dn`` parameter is not provided, host name matching is performed instead. The default value is True. The ``ssl_server_cert_dn`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the distinguished name (DN) which should be matched with the server. This value is ignored if the ``ssl_server_dn_match`` parameter is not set to the value True. The ``wallet_location`` parameter is expected to be a string that identifies the directory where the wallet can be found. In python-oracledb Thin mode, this must be the directory of the PEM-encoded wallet file, ewallet.pem. The ``events`` parameter is ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``externalauth`` parameter is ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. If the ``mode`` parameter is specified, it must be one of the :ref:`connection authorization modes <connection-authorization-modes>` which are defined at the module level. The default value is :data:`oracledb.AUTH_MODE_DEFAULT`. The ``disable_oob`` parameter is expected to be a boolean that indicates whether out-of-band breaks should be disabled. This value has no effect on Windows which does not support this functionality. The default value is False. The ``stmtcachesize`` parameter is expected to be an integer which specifies the initial size of the statement cache. The default is the value of :attr:`defaults.stmtcachesize`. The ``edition`` parameter is ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``tag`` parameter is ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``matchanytag`` parameter is ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``config_dir`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the directory in which configuration files (tnsnames.ora) are found. The default is the value of :attr:`defaults.config_dir`. The ``appcontext`` parameter is ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``shardingkey`` parameter and ``supershardingkey`` parameters are ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``debug_jdwp`` parameter is expected to be a string with the format `host=<host>;port=<port>` that specifies the host and port of the PL/SQL debugger. This allows using the Java Debug Wire Protocol (JDWP) to debug PL/SQL code invoked by python-oracledb. The ``connection_id_prefix`` parameter is expected to be a string and is added to the beginning of the generated ``connection_id`` that is sent to the database for `tracing <https://www.oracle.com/pls/topic/lookup? ctx=dblatest&id=GUID-B0FC69F9-2EBC-44E8-ACB2-62FBA14ABD5C>`__. The ``ssl_context`` parameter is expected to be an SSLContext object used for connecting to the database using TLS. This SSL context will be modified to include the private key or any certificates found in a separately supplied wallet. This parameter should only be specified if the default SSLContext object cannot be used. The ``sdu`` parameter is expected to be an integer that returns the requested size of the Session Data Unit (SDU), in bytes. The value tunes internal buffers used for communication to the database. Bigger values can increase throughput for large queries or bulk data loads, but at the cost of higher memory use. The SDU size that will actually be used is negotiated down to the lower of this value and the database network SDU configuration value. See the `SQL*Net documentation <https://www.oracle. com/pls/topic/lookup?ctx=dblatest&id=GUID-86D61D6F-AD26-421A-BABA- 77949C8A2B04>`__ for more details. The default value is 8192 bytes. The ``pool_boundary`` parameter is expected to be one of the strings "statement" or "transaction" which indicates when pooled DRCP or PRCP connections can be returned to the pool. If the value is "statement", then pooled DRCP or PRCP connections are implicitly released back to the DRCP or PRCP pool when the connection is stateless (that is, there are no active cursors, active transactions, temporary tables, or temporary LOBs). If the value is "transaction", then pooled DRCP or PRCP connections are implicitly released back to the DRCP or PRCP pool when either one of the methods :meth:`AsyncConnection.commit()` or :meth:`AsyncConnection.rollback()` are called. This parameter requires the use of DRCP or PRCP with Oracle Database 23c (or later). See :ref:`implicitconnpool` for more information. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``use_tcp_fast_open`` parameter is expected to be a boolean which indicates whether to use an `Oracle Autonomous Database Serverless (ADB-S) <https://docs.oracle.com/en/cloud/paas/autonomous-database/serverless/ adbsb/adbsb-overview.html#GUID-A7435462-9D74-44B4-8240-4A6F06E92348>`__ specific feature that can reduce the latency in round-trips to the database after a connection has been established. This feature is only available with certain versions of ADB-S. This value is used in both python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is False. The ``handle`` parameter is ignored in the python-oracledb Thin mode. .. versionchanged:: 2.1.0 The ``pool_boundary`` and ``use_tcp_fast_open`` parameters were added. .. versionchanged:: 2.0.0 The ``ssl_context`` and ``sdu`` parameters were added. .. versionchanged:: 1.4.0 The ``connection_id_prefix`` parameter was added.
.. function:: Cursor(connection) Constructor for creating a cursor. Returns a new :ref:`cursor object <cursorobj>` using the connection. .. note:: This method is an extension to the DB API definition.
.. function:: Date(year, month, day) Constructs an object holding a date value.
.. function:: DateFromTicks(ticks) Constructs an object holding a date value from the given ticks value (number of seconds since the epoch; see the documentation of the standard Python time module for details).
.. function:: init_oracle_client(lib_dir=None, config_dir=None, \ error_url=None, driver_name=None) Enables python-oracledb Thick mode by initializing the Oracle Client library, see :ref:`enablingthick`. The method must be called before any standalone connection or pool is created. If a connection or pool is first created in Thin mode, then ``init_oracle_client()`` will raise an exception and Thick mode cannot be enabled. The ``init_oracle_client()`` method can be called multiple times in each Python process as long as the arguments are the same each time. See :ref:`initialization` for more information. If the ``lib_dir`` parameter is not None or the empty string, the specified directory is the only one searched for the Oracle Client libraries; otherwise, the standard way of locating the Oracle Client library is used. If the ``config_dir`` parameter is not None or the empty string, the specified directory is used to find Oracle Client library configuration files. This is equivalent to setting the environment variable ``TNS_ADMIN`` and overrides any value already set in ``TNS_ADMIN``. If this parameter is not set, the standard way of locating Oracle Client library configuration files is used. If the ``error_url`` parameter is not None or the empty string, the specified value is included in the message of the exception raised when the Oracle Client library cannot be loaded; otherwise, the :ref:`installation` URL is included. If the ``driver_name`` parameter is not None or the empty string, the specified value can be found in database views that give information about connections. For example, it is in the ``CLIENT_DRIVER`` column of ``V$SESSION_CONNECT_INFO``. The standard is to set this value to ``"<name> : version>"``, where <name> is the name of the driver and <version> is its version. There should be a single space character before and after the colon. If this value is not specified, then the default value in python-oracledb Thick mode is like "python-oracledb thk : <version>". .. note:: This method is an extension to the DB API definition.
.. function:: is_thin_mode() Returns a boolean indicating if Thin mode is in use. Immediately after python-oracledb is imported, this function will return True indicating that python-oracledb defaults to Thin mode. If :func:`oracledb.init_oracle_client()` is called, then a subsequent call to ``is_thin_mode()`` will return False indicating that Thick mode is enabled. Once the first standalone connection or connection pool is created, or a call to ``oracledb.init_oracle_client()`` is made, then python-oracledb’s mode is fixed and the value returned by ``is_thin_mode()`` will never change for the lifetime of the process. The attribute :attr:`Connection.thin` can be used to check a connection's mode. .. note:: This method is an extension to the DB API definition. .. versionadded:: 1.1.0
.. function:: makedsn(host, port, sid=None, service_name=None, region=None, \ sharding_key=None, super_sharding_key=None) Returns a string suitable for use as the ``dsn`` parameter for :meth:`~oracledb.connect()`. This string is identical to the strings that are defined by the Oracle names server or defined in the tnsnames.ora file. .. deprecated:: python-oracledb 1.0 Use :ref:`ConnectParams class <connparam>` instead. .. note:: This method is an extension to the DB API definition.
.. function:: PoolParams(min=1, max=2, increment=1, connectiontype=None, \ getmode=oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_WAIT, homogeneous=True, timeout=0, \ wait_timeout=0, max_lifetime_session=0, session_callback=None, \ max_sessions_per_shard=0, soda_metadata_cache=False, \ ping_interval=60, user=None, proxy_user=Nonde, password=None, \ newpassword=None, wallet_password=None, access_token=None, host=None, \ port=1521, protocol="tcp", https_proxy=None, https_proxy_port=0, \ service_name=None, sid=None, server_type=None, cclass=None, \ purity=oracledb.PURITY_DEFAULT, expire_time=0, retry_count=0, \ retry_delay=0, tcp_connect_timeout=60.0, ssl_server_dn_match=True, \ ssl_server_cert_dn=None, wallet_location=None, events=False, \ externalauth=False, mode=oracledb.AUTH_MODE_DEFAULT, \ disable_oob=False, stmtcachesize=oracledb.defaults.stmtcachesize, \ edition=None, tag=None, matchanytag=False, \ config_dir=oracledb.defaults.config_dir, appcontext=[], \ shardingkey=[], supershardingkey=[], debug_jdwp=None, \ connection_id_prefix=None, ssl_context=None, sdu=8192, \ pool_boundary=None, use_tcp_fast_open=False, handle=0) Creates and returns a :ref:`PoolParams Object <poolparam>`. The object can be passed to :meth:`oracledb.create_pool()`. All the parameters are optional. The ``min`` parameter is the minimum number of connections that the pool should contain. The default value is 1. The ``max`` parameter is the maximum number of connections that the pool should contain. The default value is 2. The ``increment`` parameter is the number of connections that should be added to the pool whenever a new connection needs to be created. The default value is 1. The ``connectiontype`` parameter is the class of the connection that should be returned during calls to :meth:`ConnectionPool.acquire()`. It must be a Connection or a subclass of Connection. The ``getmode`` parameter determines the behavior of :meth:`ConnectionPool.acquire()`. One of the constants :data:`oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_WAIT`, :data:`oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_NOWAIT`, :data:`oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_FORCEGET`, or :data:`oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_TIMEDWAIT`. The default value is :data:`oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_WAIT`. The ``homogeneous`` parameter is a boolean that indicates whether the connections are homogeneous (same user) or heterogeneous (multiple users). The default value is True. The ``timeout`` parameter is the length of time (in seconds) that a connection may remain idle in the pool before it is terminated. This applies only when the pool has more than ``min`` connections open, allowing it to shrink to the specified minimim size. If the value of this parameter is 0, then the connections are never terminated. The default value is 0. The ``wait_timeout`` parameter is the length of time (in milliseconds) that a caller should wait when acquiring a connection from the pool with ``getmode`` set to :data:`oracledb.POOL_GETMODE_TIMEDWAIT`. The default value is 0. The ``max_lifetime_session`` parameter is the length of time (in seconds) that connections can remain in the pool. If the value of this parameter is 0, then the connections may remain in the pool indefinitely. The default value is 0. The ``session_callback`` parameter is a callable that is invoked when a connection is returned from the pool for the first time, or when the connection tag differs from the one requested. The ``max_sessions_per_shard`` parameter is the maximum number of connections that may be associated with a particular shard. The default value is 0. The ``soda_metadata_cache`` parameter is a boolean that indicates whether or not the SODA metadata cache should be enabled. The default value is False. The ``ping_interval`` parameter is the length of time (in seconds) after which an unused connection in the pool will be a candidate for pinging when :meth:`ConnectionPool.acquire()` is called. If the ping to the database indicates the connection is not alive a replacement connection will be returned by :meth:`ConnectionPool.acquire()`. If ping_interval is a negative value, then the ping functionality will be disabled. The default value is 60 seconds. The ``user`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the name of the user to connect to. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``proxy_user`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the name of the proxy user to connect to. If this value is not specified, it will be parsed out of user if user is in the form "user[proxy_user]". This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``password`` parameter expected to be a string which indicates the password for the user. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``newpassword`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the new password for the user. The new password will take effect immediately upon a successful connection to the database. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``wallet_password`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the password to use to decrypt the PEM-encoded wallet, if it is encrypted. This value is only used in python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``wallet_password`` parameter is not needed for cwallet.sso files that are used in the python-oracledb Thick mode. The ``access_token`` parameter is expected to be a string or a 2-tuple or a callable. If it is a string, it specifies an Azure AD OAuth2 token used for Open Authorization (OAuth 2.0) token based authentication. If it is a 2-tuple, it specifies the token and private key strings used for Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) Identity and Access Management (IAM) token based authentication. If it is a callable, it returns either a string or a 2-tuple used for OAuth 2.0 or OCI IAM token based authentication and is useful when the pool needs to expand and create new connections but the current authentication token has expired. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``host`` parameter is expected to be a string which specifies the name or IP address of the machine hosting the listener, which handles the initial connection to the database. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``port`` parameter is expected to be an integer which indicates the port number on which the listener is listening. The default value is 1521. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``protocol`` parameter is expected to be one of the strings "tcp" or "tcps" which indicates whether to use unencrypted network traffic or encrypted network traffic (TLS). The default value is tcp. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``https_proxy`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the name or IP address of a proxy host to use for tunneling secure connections. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``https_proxy_port`` parameter is expected to be an integer which indicates the port that is to be used to communicate with the proxy host. The default value is 0. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``service_name`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the service name of the database. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``sid`` parameter is expected to be a string which indicates the SID of the database. It is recommended to use ``service_name`` instead. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``server_type`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the type of server connection that should be established. If specified, it should be one of `dedicated`, `shared`, or `pooled`. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``cclass`` parameter is expected to be a string that identifies the connection class to use for Database Resident Connection Pooling (DRCP). This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``purity`` parameter is expected to be one of the :ref:`oracledb.PURITY_* <drcppurityconsts>` constants that identifies the purity to use for DRCP. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. Internally pooled connections will default to a purity of :data:`~oracledb.PURITY_SELF`. The ``expire_time`` parameter is expected to be an integer which indicates the number of minutes between the sending of keepalive probes. If this parameter is set to a value greater than zero it enables keepalive. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is 0. The ``retry_count`` parameter is expected to be an integer that identifies the number of times that a connection attempt should be retried before the attempt is terminated. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is 0. The ``retry_delay`` parameter is expected to be an integer that identifies the number of seconds to wait before making a new connection attempt. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is 0. The ``tcp_connect_timeout`` parameter is expected to be a float that indicates the maximum number of seconds to wait for establishing a connection to the database host. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is 60.0. The ``ssl_server_dn_match`` parameter is expected to be a boolean that indicates whether the server certificate distinguished name (DN) should be matched in addition to the regular certificate verification that is performed. Note that if the ssl_server_cert_dn parameter is not provided, host name matching is performed instead. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is True. The ``ssl_server_cert_dn`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the distinguished name (DN) which should be matched with the server. This value is ignored if the ssl_server_dn_match parameter is not set to the value True. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``wallet_location`` parameter is expected to be a string that identifies the directory where the wallet can be found. In python-oracledb Thin mode, this must be the directory of the PEM-encoded wallet file, ewallet.pem. In python-oracledb Thick mode, this must be the directory of the file, cwallet.sso. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``externalauth`` parameter is a boolean that determines whether to use external authentication. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode. The default value is False. The ``events`` parameter is expected to be a boolean that specifies whether the events mode should be enabled. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode. This parameter is needed for continuous query notification and high availability event notifications. The default value is False. The ``mode`` parameter is expected to be an integer that identifies the authorization mode to use. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes.The default value is :data:`oracledb.AUTH_MODE_DEFAULT`. The ``disable_oob`` parameter is expected to be a boolean that indicates whether out-of-band breaks should be disabled. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thin mode and has no effect on Windows which does not support this functionality. The default value is False. The ``stmtcachesize`` parameter is expected to be an integer that identifies the initial size of the statement cache. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default is the value of :attr:`defaults.stmtcachesize`. The ``edition`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the edition to use for the connection. This parameter cannot be used simultaneously with the ``cclass`` parameter. This value is used in the python-oracledb Thick mode. The ``tag`` parameter is expected to be a string that identifies the type of connection that should be returned from a pool. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode. The ``matchanytag`` parameter is expected to be a boolean specifying whether any tag can be used when acquiring a connection from the pool. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode when acquiring a connection from a pool. The default value is False. The ``config_dir`` parameter is expected to be a string that indicates the directory in which configuration files (tnsnames.ora) are found. This value is only used in python-oracledb Thin mode. The default is the value of :attr:`defaults.config_dir`. For python-oracledb Thick mode, use the ``config_dir`` parameter of :func:`oracledb.init_oracle_client()`. The ``appcontext`` parameter is expected to be a list of 3-tuples that identifies the application context used by the connection. This parameter should contain namespace, name, and value and each entry in the tuple should be a string. This value is only used inthe python-oracledb Thick mode. The ``shardingkey`` parameter is expected to be a list of strings, numbers, bytes or dates that identifies the database shard to connect to. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode. The ``supershardingkey`` parameter is expected to be a list of strings, numbers, bytes or dates that identifies the database shard to connect to. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode. The ``debug_jdwp`` parameter is expected to be a string with the format `host=<host>;port=<port>` that specifies the host and port of the PL/SQL debugger. This allows using the Java Debug Wire Protocol (JDWP) to debug PL/SQL code invoked by python-oracledb. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thin mode. For python-oracledb Thick mode, set the ``ORA_DEBUG_JDWP`` environment variable which has the same syntax. For more information, see :ref:`jdwp`. The ``connection_id_prefix`` parameter is expected to be a string and is added to the beginning of the generated ``connection_id`` that is sent to the database for `tracing <https://www.oracle.com/pls/topic/lookup? ctx=dblatest&id=GUID-B0FC69F9-2EBC-44E8-ACB2-62FBA14ABD5C>`__. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``ssl_context`` parameter is expected to be an `SSLContext object <https://docs.python.org/3/library/ssl.html#ssl-contexts>`__ which is used for connecting to the database using TLS. This SSL context will be modified to include the private key or any certificates found in a separately supplied wallet. This parameter should only be specified if the default SSLContext object cannot be used. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thin mode. The ``sdu`` parameter is expected to be an integer that returns the requested size of the Session Data Unit (SDU), in bytes. The value tunes internal buffers used for communication to the database. Bigger values can increase throughput for large queries or bulk data loads, but at the cost of higher memory use. The SDU size that will actually be used is negotiated down to the lower of this value and the database network SDU configuration value. See the `SQL*Net documentation <https://www.oracle. com/pls/topic/lookup?ctx=dblatest&id=GUID-86D61D6F-AD26-421A-BABA- 77949C8A2B04>`__ for more details. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is 8192 bytes. The ``pool_boundary`` parameter is expected to be one of the strings "statement" or "transaction" which indicates when pooled DRCP or PRCP connections can be returned to the pool. If the value is "statement", then pooled DRCP or PRCP connections are implicitly released back to the DRCP or PRCP pool when the connection is stateless (that is, there are no active cursors, active transactions, temporary tables, or temporary LOBs). If the value is "transaction", then pooled DRCP or PRCP connections are implicitly released back to the DRCP or PRCP pool when either one of the methods :meth:`Connection.commit()` or :meth:`Connection.rollback()` are called. This parameter requires the use of DRCP or PRCP with Oracle Database 23c (or later). See :ref:`implicitconnpool` for more information. This value is used in both the python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The ``use_tcp_fast_open`` parameter is expected to be a boolean which indicates whether to use an `Oracle Autonomous Database Serverless (ADB-S) <https://docs.oracle.com/en/cloud/paas/autonomous-database/serverless/ adbsb/adbsb-overview.html#GUID-A7435462-9D74-44B4-8240-4A6F06E92348>`__ specific feature that can reduce the latency in round-trips to the database after a connection has been established. This feature is only available with certain versions of ADB-S. This value is used in both python-oracledb Thin and Thick modes. The default value is False. The ``handle`` parameter is expected to be an integer which represents a pointer to a valid service context handle. This value is only used in the python-oracledb Thick mode. It should be used with extreme caution. The default value is 0. .. versionchanged:: 2.1.0 The ``pool_boundary`` and ``use_tcp_fast_open`` parameters were added. .. versionchanged:: 2.0.0 The ``ssl_context`` and ``sdu`` parameters were added. .. versionchanged:: 1.4.0 The ``connection_id_prefix`` parameter was added.
.. function:: Time(hour, minute, second) Constructs an object holding a time value. .. note:: The time only data type is not supported by Oracle. Calling this function will raise a NotSupportedError exception.
.. function:: TimeFromTicks(ticks) Constructs an object holding a time value from the given ticks value (number of seconds since the epoch; see the documentation of the standard Python time module for details). .. note:: The time only data type is not supported by Oracle. Calling this function will raise a NotSupportedError exception.
.. function:: Timestamp(year, month, day, hour, minute, second) Constructs an object holding a time stamp value.
.. function:: TimestampFromTicks(ticks) Constructs an object holding a time stamp value from the given ticks value (number of seconds since the epoch; see the documentation of the standard Python time module for details).
Objects of this class are returned by :ref:`SODA <soda>` in the _id
attribute of documents stored in native collections when using Oracle Database
23.4 (and later). It is a subclass of the bytes class.
.. versionadded:: 2.1.0
Special object that contains attributes which control the behavior of python-oracledb, allowing for opting in for new features.
Note
This method is an extension to the DB API definition.
.. data:: apilevel String constant stating the supported DB API level. Currently '2.0'.
.. data:: paramstyle String constant stating the type of parameter marker formatting expected by the interface. Currently 'named' as in 'where name = :name'.
.. data:: threadsafety Integer constant stating the level of thread safety that the interface supports. Currently 2, which means that threads may share the module and connections, but not cursors. Sharing means that a thread may use a resource without wrapping it using a mutex semaphore to implement resource locking.
.. data:: version
.. data:: __version__ String constant stating the version of the module. Currently '|release|'. .. note:: This attribute is an extension to the DB API definition.
These constants are extensions to the DB API definition. They are possible
values for the :attr:`~DeqOptions.deliverymode` attribute of the
:ref:`dequeue options object <deqoptions>` passed as the options
parameter
to the :meth:`Queue.deqone()` or :meth:`Queue.deqmany()` methods as well as the
:attr:`~EnqOptions.deliverymode` attribute of the
:ref:`enqueue options object <enqoptions>` passed as the options
parameter
to the :meth:`Queue.enqone()` or :meth:`Queue.enqmany()` methods. They are also
possible values for the :attr:`~MessageProperties.deliverymode` attribute of
the :ref:`message properties object <msgproperties>` passed as the
msgproperties
parameter to the :meth:`Queue.deqone()` or
:meth:`Queue.deqmany()` and :meth:`Queue.enqone()` or :meth:`Queue.enqmany()`
methods.
.. data:: MSG_BUFFERED This constant is used to specify that enqueue/dequeue operations should enqueue or dequeue buffered messages.
.. data:: MSG_PERSISTENT This constant is used to specify that enqueue/dequeue operations should enqueue or dequeue persistent messages. This is the default value.
.. data:: MSG_PERSISTENT_OR_BUFFERED This constant is used to specify that dequeue operations should dequeue either persistent or buffered messages.
These constants are extensions to the DB API definition. They are possible
values for the :attr:`~DeqOptions.mode` attribute of the
:ref:`dequeue options object <deqoptions>`. This object is the options
parameter for the :meth:`Queue.deqone()` or :meth:`Queue.deqmany()` methods.
.. data:: DEQ_BROWSE This constant is used to specify that dequeue should read the message without acquiring any lock on the message (equivalent to a select statement).
.. data:: DEQ_LOCKED This constant is used to specify that dequeue should read and obtain a write lock on the message for the duration of the transaction (equivalent to a select for update statement).
.. data:: DEQ_REMOVE This constant is used to specify that dequeue should read the message and update or delete it. This is the default value.
.. data:: DEQ_REMOVE_NODATA This constant is used to specify that dequeue should confirm receipt of the message but not deliver the actual message content.
These constants are extensions to the DB API definition. They are possible
values for the :attr:`~DeqOptions.navigation` attribute of the
:ref:`dequeue options object <deqoptions>`. This object is the options
parameter for the :meth:`Queue.deqone()` or :meth:`Queue.deqmany()` methods.
.. data:: DEQ_FIRST_MSG This constant is used to specify that dequeue should retrieve the first available message that matches the search criteria. This resets the position to the beginning of the queue.
.. data:: DEQ_NEXT_MSG This constant is used to specify that dequeue should retrieve the next available message that matches the search criteria. If the previous message belongs to a message group, AQ retrieves the next available message that matches the search criteria and belongs to the message group. This is the default.
.. data:: DEQ_NEXT_TRANSACTION This constant is used to specify that dequeue should skip the remainder of the transaction group and retrieve the first message of the next transaction group. This option can only be used if message grouping is enabled for the current queue.
These constants are extensions to the DB API definition. They are possible
values for the :attr:`~DeqOptions.visibility` attribute of the
:ref:`dequeue options object <deqoptions>`. This object is the options
parameter for the :meth:`Queue.deqone()` or :meth:`Queue.deqmany()` methods.
.. data:: DEQ_IMMEDIATE This constant is used to specify that dequeue should perform its work as part of an independent transaction.
.. data:: DEQ_ON_COMMIT This constant is used to specify that dequeue should be part of the current transaction. This is the default value.
These constants are extensions to the DB API definition. They are possible
values for the :attr:`~DeqOptions.wait` attribute of the
:ref:`dequeue options object <deqoptions>`. This object is the options
parameter for the :meth:`Queue.deqone()` or :meth:`Queue.deqmany()` methods.
.. data:: DEQ_NO_WAIT This constant is used to specify that dequeue not wait for messages to be available for dequeuing.
.. data:: DEQ_WAIT_FOREVER This constant is used to specify that dequeue should wait forever for messages to be available for dequeuing. This is the default value.
These constants are extensions to the DB API definition. They are possible
values for the :attr:`~EnqOptions.visibility` attribute of the
:ref:`enqueue options object <enqoptions>`. This object is the options
parameter for the :meth:`Queue.enqone()` or :meth:`Queue.enqmany()` methods.
.. data:: ENQ_IMMEDIATE This constant is used to specify that enqueue should perform its work as part of an independent transaction.
.. data:: ENQ_ON_COMMIT This constant is used to specify that enqueue should be part of the current transaction. This is the default value.
These constants are extensions to the DB API definition. They are possible
values for the :attr:`~MessageProperties.state` attribute of the
:ref:`message properties object <msgproperties>`. This object is the
msgproperties
parameter for the :meth:`Queue.deqone()` or
:meth:`Queue.deqmany()`, and :meth:`Queue.enqone()` or :meth:`Queue.enqmany()`
methods.
.. data:: MSG_EXPIRED This constant is used to specify that the message has been moved to the exception queue.
.. data:: MSG_PROCESSED This constant is used to specify that the message has been processed and has been retained.
.. data:: MSG_READY This constant is used to specify that the message is ready to be processed.
.. data:: MSG_WAITING This constant is used to specify that the message delay has not yet been reached.
These constants are extensions to the DB API definition. They are special constants used in advanced queuing.
.. data:: MSG_NO_DELAY This constant is a possible value for the :attr:`~MessageProperties.delay` attribute of the :ref:`message properties object <msgproperties>` passed as the ``msgproperties`` parameter to the :meth:`Queue.deqone()` or :meth:`Queue.deqmany()` and :meth:`Queue.enqone()` or :meth:`Queue.enqmany()` methods. It specifies that no delay should be imposed and the message should be immediately available for dequeuing. This is also the default value.
.. data:: MSG_NO_EXPIRATION This constant is a possible value for the :attr:`~MessageProperties.expiration` attribute of the :ref:`message properties object <msgproperties>` passed as the ``msgproperties`` parameter to the :meth:`Queue.deqone()` or :meth:`Queue.deqmany()` and :meth:`Queue.enqone()` or :meth:`Queue.enqmany()` methods. It specifies that the message never expires. This is also the default value.
These constants are extensions to the DB API definition and have deprecated the
authorization modes used in cx_Oracle 8.3. They are
possible values for the mode
parameter of the :meth:`connect()` method.
.. data:: AUTH_MODE_DEFAULT This constant is used to specify that default authentication is to take place. This is the default value if no mode is passed at all. .. note:: This constant can be used for standalone and pooled connections in the python-oracledb Thin mode, and for standalone connections in the Thick mode. This constant deprecates the ``DEFAULT_AUTH`` constant that was used in cx_Oracle 8.3.
.. data:: AUTH_MODE_PRELIM This constant is used to specify that preliminary authentication is to be used. This is needed for performing database startup and shutdown. .. note:: This constant can only be used in the python-oracledb Thick mode for standalone connections. This constant deprecates the ``PRELIM_AUTH`` constant that was used in cx_Oracle 8.3.
.. data:: AUTH_MODE_SYSASM This constant is used to specify that SYSASM access is to be acquired. .. note:: This constant can be used for standalone and pooled connections in the python-oracledb Thin mode, and for standalone connections in the Thick mode. This constant deprecates the ``SYSASM`` constant that was used in cx_Oracle 8.3.
.. data:: AUTH_MODE_SYSBKP This constant is used to specify that SYSBACKUP access is to be acquired. .. note:: This constant can be used for standalone and pooled connections in the python-oracledb Thin mode, and for standalone connections in the Thick mode. This constant deprecates the ``SYSBKP`` constant that was used in cx_Oracle 8.3.
.. data:: AUTH_MODE_SYSDBA This constant is used to specify that SYSDBA access is to be acquired. .. note:: This constant can be used for standalone and pooled connections in the python-oracledb Thin mode, and for standalone connections in the Thick mode. This constant deprecates the ``SYSDBA`` constant that was used in cx_Oracle 8.3.
.. data:: AUTH_MODE_SYSDGD This constant is used to specify that SYSDG access is to be acquired. .. note:: This constant can be used for standalone and pooled connections in the python-oracledb Thin mode, and for standalone connections in the Thick mode. This constant deprecates the ``SYSDGD`` constant that was used in cx_Oracle 8.3.
.. data:: AUTH_MODE_SYSKMT This constant is used to specify that SYSKM access is to be acquired. .. note:: This constant can be used for standalone and pooled connections in the python-oracledb Thin mode, and for standalone connections in the Thick mode. This constant deprecates the ``SYSKMT`` constant that was used in cx_Oracle 8.3.
.. data:: AUTH_MODE_SYSOPER This constant is used to specify that SYSOPER access is to be acquired. .. note:: This constant can be used for standalone and pooled connections in the python-oracledb Thin mode, and for standalone connections in the Thick mode. This constant deprecates the ``SYSOPER`` constant that was used in cx_Oracle 8.3.
.. data:: AUTH_MODE_SYSRAC This constant is used to specify that SYSRAC access is to be acquired. .. note:: This constant can be used for standalone and pooled connections in the python-oracledb Thin mode, and for standalone connections in the Thick mode. This constant deprecates the ``SYSRAC`` constant that was used in cx_Oracle 8.3.
These constants are extensions to the DB API definition. They are possible
values for the mode
parameter of the :meth:`Connection.shutdown()` method.
.. data:: DBSHUTDOWN_ABORT This constant is used to specify that the caller should not wait for current processing to complete or for users to disconnect from the database. This should only be used in unusual circumstances since database recovery may be necessary upon next startup.
.. data:: DBSHUTDOWN_FINAL This constant is used to specify that the instance can be truly halted. This should only be done after the database has been shutdown with one of the other modes (except abort) and the database has been closed and dismounted using the appropriate SQL commands.
.. data:: DBSHUTDOWN_IMMEDIATE This constant is used to specify that all uncommitted transactions should be rolled back and any connected users should be disconnected.
.. data:: DBSHUTDOWN_TRANSACTIONAL This constant is used to specify that further connections to the database should be prohibited and no new transactions should be allowed. It then waits for all active transactions to complete.
.. data:: DBSHUTDOWN_TRANSACTIONAL_LOCAL This constant is used to specify that further connections to the database should be prohibited and no new transactions should be allowed. It then waits for only local active transactions to complete.
These constants are extensions to the DB API definition. They are possible values for the :attr:`Message.type` attribute of the messages that are sent for subscriptions created by the :meth:`Connection.subscribe()` method.
.. data:: EVENT_AQ This constant is used to specify that one or more messages are available for dequeuing on the queue specified when the subscription was created.
.. data:: EVENT_DEREG This constant is used to specify that the subscription has been deregistered and no further notifications will be sent.
.. data:: EVENT_NONE This constant is used to specify no information is available about the event.
.. data:: EVENT_OBJCHANGE This constant is used to specify that a database change has taken place on a table registered with the :meth:`Subscription.registerquery()` method.
.. data:: EVENT_QUERYCHANGE This constant is used to specify that the result set of a query registered with the :meth:`Subscription.registerquery()` method has been changed.
.. data:: EVENT_SHUTDOWN This constant is used to specify that the instance is in the process of being shut down.
.. data:: EVENT_SHUTDOWN_ANY This constant is used to specify that any instance (when running RAC) is in the process of being shut down.
.. data:: EVENT_STARTUP This constant is used to specify that the instance is in the process of being started up.
These constants are extensions to the DB API definition. They are possible
values for the operations
parameter for the :meth:`Connection.subscribe()`
method. One or more of these values can be OR'ed together. These values are
also used by the :attr:`MessageTable.operation` or
:attr:`MessageQuery.operation` attributes of the messages that are sent.
.. data:: OPCODE_ALLOPS This constant is used to specify that messages should be sent for all operations.
.. data:: OPCODE_ALLROWS This constant is used to specify that the table or query has been completely invalidated.
.. data:: OPCODE_ALTER This constant is used to specify that messages should be sent when a registered table has been altered in some fashion by DDL, or that the message identifies a table that has been altered.
.. data:: OPCODE_DELETE This constant is used to specify that messages should be sent when data is deleted, or that the message identifies a row that has been deleted.
.. data:: OPCODE_DROP This constant is used to specify that messages should be sent when a registered table has been dropped, or that the message identifies a table that has been dropped.
.. data:: OPCODE_INSERT This constant is used to specify that messages should be sent when data is inserted, or that the message identifies a row that has been inserted.
.. data:: OPCODE_UPDATE This constant is used to specify that messages should be sent when data is updated, or that the message identifies a row that has been updated.
These constants are extensions to the DB API definition and have deprecated the
Session Pool Get Modes constants that were used in cx_Oracle
8.3. They are possible values for the getmode
parameter of the
:meth:`oracledb.create_pool()` method.
.. data:: POOL_GETMODE_FORCEGET This constant is used to specify that a new connection will be returned if there are no free sessions available in the pool. .. note:: This constant deprecates the ``SPOOL_ATTRVAL_FORCEGET`` constant that was used in cx_Oracle 8.3.
.. data:: POOL_GETMODE_NOWAIT This constant is used to specify that an exception should be raised if there are no free sessions available in the pool. .. note:: This constant deprecates the ``SPOOL_ATTRVAL_NOWAIT`` constant that was used in cx_Oracle 8.3.
.. data:: POOL_GETMODE_WAIT This constant is used to specify that the caller should wait until a session is available if there are no free sessions available in the pool. This is the default value. .. note:: This constant deprecates the ``SPOOL_ATTRVAL_WAIT`` constant that was used in cx_Oracle 8.3.
.. data:: POOL_GETMODE_TIMEDWAIT This constant is used to specify that the caller should wait for a period of time (defined by the ``wait_timeout`` parameter) for a session to become available before returning with an error. .. note:: This constant deprecates the ``SPOOL_ATTRVAL_TIMEDWAIT`` constant that was used in cx_Oracle 8.3.
These constants are extensions to the DB API definition and have deprecated the
Session Pool Purity constants that were used in cx_Oracle 8.3.
They are possible values for the purity
parameter of the :meth:`connect()`
method, which is used in Database Resident Connection Pooling (DRCP).
.. data:: PURITY_DEFAULT This constant is used to specify that the purity of the session is the default value identified by Oracle (see Oracle's documentation for more information). This is the default value. .. note:: This constant deprecates the ``ATTR_PURITY_DEFAULT`` constant that was used in cx_Oracle 8.3.
.. data:: PURITY_NEW This constant is used to specify that the session acquired from the pool should be new and not have any prior session state. .. note:: This constant deprecates the ``ATTR_PURITY_NEW`` constant that was used in cx_Oracle 8.3.
.. data:: PURITY_SELF This constant is used to specify that the session acquired from the pool need not be new and may have prior session state. .. note:: This constant deprecates the ``ATTR_PURITY_SELF`` constant that was used in cx_Oracle 8.3.
These constants are extensions to the DB API definition. They are possible
values for the groupingClass
parameter of the :meth:`Connection.subscribe()`
method.
.. data:: SUBSCR_GROUPING_CLASS_TIME This constant is used to specify that events are to be grouped by the period of time in which they are received.
These constants are extensions to the DB API definition. They are possible
values for the groupingType
parameter of the :meth:`Connection.subscribe()`
method.
.. data:: SUBSCR_GROUPING_TYPE_SUMMARY This constant is used to specify that when events are grouped a summary of the events should be sent instead of the individual events. This is the default value.
.. data:: SUBSCR_GROUPING_TYPE_LAST This constant is used to specify that when events are grouped the last event that makes up the group should be sent instead of the individual events.
These constants are extensions to the DB API definition. They are possible
values for the namespace
parameter of the :meth:`Connection.subscribe()`
method.
.. data:: SUBSCR_NAMESPACE_AQ This constant is used to specify that notifications should be sent when a queue has messages available to dequeue.
.. data:: SUBSCR_NAMESPACE_DBCHANGE This constant is used to specify that database change notification or query change notification messages are to be sent. This is the default value.
These constants are extensions to the DB API definition. They are possible
values for the protocol
parameter of the :meth:`Connection.subscribe()`
method.
.. data:: SUBSCR_PROTO_CALLBACK This constant is used to specify that notifications will be sent to the callback routine identified when the subscription was created. It is the default value and the only value currently supported.
.. data:: SUBSCR_PROTO_HTTP This constant is used to specify that notifications will be sent to an HTTP URL when a message is generated. This value is currently not supported.
.. data:: SUBSCR_PROTO_MAIL This constant is used to specify that notifications will be sent to an e-mail address when a message is generated. This value is currently not supported.
.. data:: SUBSCR_PROTO_OCI This constant is used to specify that notifications will be sent to the callback routine identified when the subscription was created. It is the default value and the only value currently supported. .. deprecated:: python-oracledb 1.0 Use :data:`~oracledb.SUBSCR_PROTO_CALLBACK` instead.
.. data:: SUBSCR_PROTO_SERVER This constant is used to specify that notifications will be sent to a PL/SQL procedure when a message is generated. This value is currently not supported.
These constants are extensions to the DB API definition. They are possible
values for the qos
parameter of the :meth:`Connection.subscribe()` method.
One or more of these values can be OR'ed together.
.. data:: SUBSCR_QOS_BEST_EFFORT This constant is used to specify that best effort filtering for query result set changes is acceptable. False positive notifications may be received. This behaviour may be suitable for caching applications.
.. data:: SUBSCR_QOS_DEREG_NFY This constant is used to specify that the subscription should be automatically unregistered after the first notification is received.
.. data:: SUBSCR_QOS_QUERY This constant is used to specify that notifications should be sent if the result set of the registered query changes. By default, no false positive notifications will be generated.
.. data:: SUBSCR_QOS_RELIABLE This constant is used to specify that notifications should not be lost in the event of database failure.
.. data:: SUBSCR_QOS_ROWIDS This constant is used to specify that the rowids of the inserted, updated or deleted rows should be included in the message objects that are sent.
.. data:: BINARY This type object is used to describe columns in a database that contain binary data. The database types :data:`DB_TYPE_RAW` and :data:`DB_TYPE_LONG_RAW` will compare equal to this value. If a variable is created with this type, the database type :data:`DB_TYPE_RAW` will be used.
.. data:: DATETIME This type object is used to describe columns in a database that are dates. The database types :data:`DB_TYPE_DATE`, :data:`DB_TYPE_TIMESTAMP`, :data:`DB_TYPE_TIMESTAMP_LTZ` and :data:`DB_TYPE_TIMESTAMP_TZ` will all compare equal to this value. If a variable is created with this type, the database type :data:`DB_TYPE_DATE` will be used.
.. data:: NUMBER This type object is used to describe columns in a database that are numbers. The database types :data:`DB_TYPE_BINARY_DOUBLE`, :data:`DB_TYPE_BINARY_FLOAT`, :data:`DB_TYPE_BINARY_INTEGER` and :data:`DB_TYPE_NUMBER` will all compare equal to this value. If a variable is created with this type, the database type :data:`DB_TYPE_NUMBER` will be used.
.. data:: ROWID This type object is used to describe the pseudo column "rowid". The database types :data:`DB_TYPE_ROWID` and :data:`DB_TYPE_UROWID` will compare equal to this value. If a variable is created with this type, the database type :data:`DB_TYPE_VARCHAR` will be used.
.. data:: STRING This type object is used to describe columns in a database that are strings. The database types :data:`DB_TYPE_CHAR`, :data:`DB_TYPE_LONG`, :data:`DB_TYPE_NCHAR`, :data:`DB_TYPE_NVARCHAR` and :data:`DB_TYPE_VARCHAR` will all compare equal to this value. If a variable is created with this type, the database type :data:`DB_TYPE_VARCHAR` will be used.
All of these types are extensions to the DB API definition. They are found in query and object metadata. They can also be used to specify the database type when binding data.
Also see the table :ref:`supporteddbtypes`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_BFILE Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type BFILE. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`BINARY`. .. note:: DB_TYPE_BFILE database type is only supported in the python-oracledb Thick mode. See :ref:`enablingthick`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_BINARY_DOUBLE Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type BINARY_DOUBLE. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`NUMBER`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_BINARY_FLOAT Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type BINARY_FLOAT. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`NUMBER`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_BINARY_INTEGER Describes attributes or array elements in a database that are of type BINARY_INTEGER. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`NUMBER`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_BLOB Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type BLOB. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`BINARY`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_BOOLEAN Describes attributes or array elements in a database that are of type BOOLEAN. It is only available in Oracle 12.1 and higher and only within PL/SQL.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_CHAR Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type CHAR. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`STRING`. Note that these are fixed length string values and behave differently from VARCHAR2.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_CLOB Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type CLOB. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`STRING`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_CURSOR Describes columns in a database that are of type CURSOR. In PL/SQL, these are known as REF CURSOR.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_DATE Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type DATE. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`DATETIME`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_INTERVAL_DS Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type INTERVAL DAY TO SECOND.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_INTERVAL_YM Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type INTERVAL YEAR TO MONTH. This database type is not currently supported by python-oracledb.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_JSON Describes columns in a database that are of type JSON (with Oracle Database 21 or later).
.. data:: DB_TYPE_LONG Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type LONG. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`STRING`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_LONG_RAW Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type LONG RAW. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`BINARY`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_LONG_NVARCHAR This constant can be used in output type handlers when fetching NCLOB columns as a string. (Note a type handler is not needed if :ref:`oracledb.defaults.fetch_lobs <defaults>` is set to False). For IN binds, this constant can be used to create a bind variable in :meth:`Cursor.var()` or via :meth:`Cursor.setinputsizes()`. The ``DB_TYPE_LONG_NVARCHAR`` value won't be shown in query metadata since it is not a database type. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`STRING`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_NCHAR Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type NCHAR. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`STRING`. Note that these are fixed length string values and behave differently from NVARCHAR2.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_NCLOB Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type NCLOB. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`STRING`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_NUMBER Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type NUMBER. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`NUMBER`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_NVARCHAR Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type NVARCHAR2. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`STRING`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_OBJECT Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are an instance of a named SQL or PL/SQL type.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_RAW Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type RAW. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`BINARY`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_ROWID Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type ROWID or UROWID. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`ROWID`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_TIMESTAMP Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type TIMESTAMP. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`DATETIME`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_TIMESTAMP_LTZ Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type TIMESTAMP WITH LOCAL TIME ZONE. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`DATETIME`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_TIMESTAMP_TZ Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`DATETIME`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_UNKNOWN Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of an unknown type.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_UROWID Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type UROWID. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`ROWID`. .. note:: This type is not supported in python-oracledb Thick mode. See :ref:`querymetadatadiff`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_VARCHAR Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type VARCHAR2. It will compare equal to the DB API type :data:`STRING`.
.. data:: DB_TYPE_XMLTYPE Describes columns, attributes or array elements in a database that are of type SYS.XMLTYPE. .. versionadded:: 2.0.0
All of the following constants are deprecated and will be removed in a future version of python-oracledb.
.. data:: BFILE A synonym for :data:`DB_TYPE_BFILE`. .. deprecated:: cx_Oracle 8.0
.. data:: BLOB A synonym for :data:`DB_TYPE_BLOB`. .. deprecated:: cx_Oracle 8.0
.. data:: BOOLEAN A synonym for :data:`DB_TYPE_BOOLEAN`. .. deprecated:: cx_Oracle 8.0
.. data:: CLOB A synonym for :data:`DB_TYPE_CLOB`. .. deprecated:: cx_Oracle 8.0
.. data:: CURSOR A synonym for :data:`DB_TYPE_CURSOR`. .. deprecated:: cx_Oracle 8.0
.. data:: FIXED_CHAR A synonym for :data:`DB_TYPE_CHAR`. .. deprecated:: cx_Oracle 8.0
.. data:: FIXED_NCHAR A synonym for :data:`DB_TYPE_NCHAR`. .. deprecated:: cx_Oracle 8.0
.. data:: INTERVAL A synonym for :data:`DB_TYPE_INTERVAL_DS`. .. deprecated:: cx_Oracle 8.0
.. data:: LONG_BINARY A synonym for :data:`DB_TYPE_LONG_RAW`. .. deprecated:: cx_Oracle 8.0
.. data:: LONG_STRING A synonym for :data:`DB_TYPE_LONG`. .. deprecated:: cx_Oracle 8.0
.. data:: NATIVE_FLOAT A synonym for :data:`DB_TYPE_BINARY_DOUBLE`. .. deprecated:: cx_Oracle 8.0
.. data:: NATIVE_INT A synonym for :data:`DB_TYPE_BINARY_INTEGER`. .. deprecated:: cx_Oracle 8.0
.. data:: NCHAR A synonym for :data:`DB_TYPE_NCHAR`. .. deprecated:: cx_Oracle 8.0
.. data:: NCLOB A synonym for :data:`DB_TYPE_NCLOB`. .. deprecated:: cx_Oracle 8.0
.. data:: OBJECT A synonym for :data:`DB_TYPE_OBJECT`. .. deprecated:: cx_Oracle 8.0
.. data:: TIMESTAMP A synonym for :data:`DB_TYPE_TIMESTAMP`. .. deprecated:: cx_Oracle 8.0
All of these types are extensions to the DB API definition.
.. data:: ApiType This type object is the Python type of the database API type constants :data:`BINARY`, :data:`DATETIME`, :data:`NUMBER`, :data:`ROWID` and :data:`STRING`.
.. data:: DbType This type object is the Python type of the :ref:`database type constants <dbtypes>`.
.. data:: LOB This type object is the Python type of :data:`DB_TYPE_BLOB`, :data:`DB_TYPE_BFILE`, :data:`DB_TYPE_CLOB` and :data:`DB_TYPE_NCLOB` data that is returned from cursors.
The constants for the two-phase commit (TPC) functions :meth:`~Connection.tpc_begin()` and :meth:`~Connection.tpc_end()` are listed below.
.. data:: TPC_BEGIN_JOIN Joins an existing TPC transaction.
.. data:: TPC_BEGIN_NEW Creates a new TPC transaction.
.. data:: TPC_BEGIN_PROMOTE Promotes a local transaction to a TPC transaction.
.. data:: TPC_BEGIN_RESUME Resumes an existing TPC transaction.
.. data:: TPC_END_NORMAL Ends the TPC transaction participation normally.
.. data:: TPC_END_SUSPEND Suspends the TPC transaction.
See :ref:`exception` for usage information.
.. exception:: Warning Exception raised for important warnings and defined by the DB API but not actually used by python-oracledb.
.. exception:: Error Exception that is the base class of all other exceptions defined by python-oracledb and is a subclass of the Python StandardError exception (defined in the module exceptions).
.. exception:: InterfaceError Exception raised for errors that are related to the database interface rather than the database itself. It is a subclass of Error. Exception messages of this class will have the prefix DPY and an error number in the range 1000 - 1999.
.. exception:: DatabaseError Exception raised for errors that are related to the database. It is a subclass of Error. Exception messages of this class will have the prefix DPY and an error number in the range 4000 - 4999.
.. exception:: DataError Exception raised for errors that are due to problems with the processed data. It is a subclass of DatabaseError. Exception messages of this class are generated by the database and will have a prefix such as ORA
.. exception:: OperationalError Exception raised for errors that are related to the operation of the database but are not necessarily under the control of the programmer. It is a subclass of DatabaseError. Exception messages of this class will have the prefix DPY and an error number in the range 6000 - 6999.
.. exception:: IntegrityError Exception raised when the relational integrity of the database is affected. It is a subclass of DatabaseError. Exception messages of this class are generated by the database and will have a prefix such as ORA
.. exception:: InternalError Exception raised when the database encounters an internal error. It is a subclass of DatabaseError. Exception messages of this class will have the prefix DPY and an error number in the range 5000 - 5999.
.. exception:: ProgrammingError Exception raised for programming errors. It is a subclass of DatabaseError. Exception messages of this class will have the prefix DPY and an error number in the range 2000 - 2999.
.. exception:: NotSupportedError Exception raised when a method or database API was used which is not supported by the database. It is a subclass of DatabaseError. Exception messages of this class will have the prefix DPY and an error number in the range 3000 - 3999.
See :ref:`exception` for usage information.
Note
PEP 249 (Python Database API Specification v2.0) says the following about exception values:
[...] The values of these exceptions are not defined. They should give the user a fairly good idea of what went wrong, though. [...]
With python-oracledb every exception object has exactly one argument in the
args
tuple. This argument is an oracledb._Error
object which has
the following six read-only attributes.
.. attribute:: _Error.code Integer attribute representing the Oracle error number (ORA-XXXXX).
.. attribute:: _Error.offset Integer attribute representing the error offset when applicable.
.. attribute:: _Error.full_code String attribute representing the top-level error prefix and the code that is shown in the :attr:`_Error.message`.
.. attribute:: _Error.message String attribute representing the Oracle message of the error. This message may be localized by the environment of the Oracle connection.
.. attribute:: _Error.context String attribute representing the context in which the exception was raised.
.. attribute:: _Error.isrecoverable Boolean attribute representing whether the error is recoverable or not. This is False in all cases unless both Oracle Database 12.1 (or later) and Oracle Client 12.1 (or later) are being used.