Oracle® Database SQL Language Reference 11g Release 2 (11.2) Part Number E10592-02 |
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Purpose
Use the CREATE
DIRECTORY
statement to create a directory object. A directory object specifies an alias for a directory on the server file system where external binary file LOBs (BFILE
s) and external table data are located. You can use directory names when referring to BFILE
s in your PL/SQL code and OCI calls, rather than hard coding the operating system path name, for management flexibility.
All directories are created in a single namespace and are not owned by an individual schema. You can secure access to the BFILE
s stored within the directory structure by granting object privileges on the directories to specific users.
See Also:
"Large Object (LOB) Data Types" for more information on BFILE
objects
GRANT for more information on granting object privileges
external_table_clause ::= of CREATE
TABLE
Prerequisites
You must have CREATE
ANY
DIRECTORY
system privilege to create directories.
When you create a directory, you are automatically granted the READ
and WRITE
object privileges on the directory, and you can grant these privileges to other users and roles. The DBA can also grant these privileges to other users and roles.
WRITE
privileges on a directory are useful in connection with external tables. They let the grantee determine whether the external table agent can write a log file or a bad file to the directory.
For file storage, you must also create a corresponding operating system directory, an Oracle Automatic Storage Management (Oracle ASM) disk group, or a directory within an Oracle ASM disk group. Your system or database administrator must ensure that the operating system directory has the correct read and write permissions for Oracle Database processes.
Privileges granted for the directory are created independently of the permissions defined for the operating system directory, and the two may or may not correspond exactly. For example, an error occurs if sample user hr
is granted READ
privilege on the directory object but the corresponding operating system directory does not have READ
permission defined for Oracle Database processes.
Syntax
create_directory::=
Semantics
Specify OR
REPLACE
to re-create the directory database object if it already exists. You can use this clause to change the definition of an existing directory without dropping, re-creating, and regranting database object privileges previously granted on the directory.
Users who had previously been granted privileges on a redefined directory can still access the directory without being regranted the privileges.
See Also:
DROP DIRECTORY for information on removing a directory from the databasedirectory
Specify the name of the directory object to be created. The maximum length of directory
is 30 bytes. You cannot qualify a directory object with a schema name.
Oracle Database does not verify that the directory you specify actually exists. Therefore, take care that you specify a valid directory in your operating system. In addition, if your operating system uses case-sensitive path names, then be sure you specify the directory in the correct format. You need not include a trailing slash at the end of the path name.
Do not refer to a parent directory in the directory name. For example, the following syntax is valid:
CREATE DIRECTORY mydir AS '/scratch/file_data';
However, the following syntax is not valid:
CREATE DIRECTORY mydir AS '/scratch/data/../file_data';
path_name
Specify the full path name of the operating system directory of the server where the files are located. The single quotation marks are required, with the result that the path name is case sensitive.
Example
Creating a Directory: Examples The following statement creates a directory database object that points to a directory on the server:
CREATE DIRECTORY admin AS 'oracle/admin';
The following statement redefines directory database object bfile_dir
to enable access to BFILE
s stored in the operating system directory /usr/bin/bfile_dir
:
CREATE OR REPLACE DIRECTORY bfile_dir AS '/usr/bin/bfile_dir';