Changing Hostnames in Oracle RAC
Update: this procedure is for Linux and should work on any UNIX OS. Ron supplied how he did this on Windows in the comment below. Thanks Ron.
Sometimes there is a desperate need to change hostnames for one or all nodes of an Oracle RAC cluster. However, this operation is not officially supported. From Metalink Note 220970.1 RAC Frequently Asked Questions:
Can I change the public hostname in my Oracle Database 10g Cluster using Oracle Clusterware?
Hostname changes are not supported in Oracle Clusterware (CRS), unless you want to perform a deletenode followed by a new addnode operation.
The hostname is used to store among other things the flag files and CRS stack will not start if hostname is changed.
One way to do it is to remove a node from a cluster, change its hostname, and then add it back to the cluster as a new node. You will need to make sure that ORACLE_HOME is also added to this node as well as the database instance configuration.
If you are brave enough, there is another way to do this. It’s not described anywhere on the Metalink, but there are no major hacks needed to implement it. The idea is to simply re-run the configuration of CRS (including re-formatting OCR and voting disks) and re-create the CRS resources after that. Obviously, this is not an online operation and the whole cluster is down for the duration of rename.
I assume that we have an Oracle RAC cluster running, with database(s) running already, optionally including ASM instances.
Capture Resource Definitions
Before doing anything, we should capture resource definitions from the current CRS resources. This is an optional step, but it will simplify configuration later.
A single resource definition can be captured with a command $ORA_CRS_HOME/bincrs_stat -p . Here is a small shell script to capture that for every resource and save it into a .cap file. As you will see later these files can be used to easily recreate resources:
for res in `$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_stat -p | grep "^NAME=" | cut -d = -f 2` ; do
$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_stat -p $res >/opt/oracle/resources/$res.cap
done
Here is an example list of files created:
# ls -l /opt/oracle/resources total 52 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 813 Feb 27 12:06 ora.A.A1.inst.cap -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 813 Feb 27 12:06 ora.A.A2.inst.cap -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 789 Feb 27 12:06 ora.A.db.cap -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 809 Feb 27 12:06 ora.vs10a.ASM1.asm.cap -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 799 Feb 27 12:06 ora.vs10a.gsd.cap -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 832 Feb 27 12:06 ora.vs10a.LISTENER_VS10A.lsnr.cap -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 804 Feb 27 12:06 ora.vs10a.ons.cap -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 828 Feb 27 12:06 ora.vs10a.vip.cap -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 809 Feb 27 12:06 ora.vs11a.ASM2.asm.cap -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 799 Feb 27 12:06 ora.vs11a.gsd.cap -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 832 Feb 27 12:06 ora.vs11a.LISTENER_VS11A.lsnr.cap -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 804 Feb 27 12:06 ora.vs11a.ons.cap -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 828 Feb 27 12:06 ora.vs11a.vip.cap
Sample content from one file:
# cat /opt/oracle/resources/ora.A.db.cap NAME=ora.A.db TYPE=application ACTION_SCRIPT=/opt/oracle/A/product/10.2.0/crs/bin/racgwrap ACTIVE_PLACEMENT=0 AUTO_START=1 CHECK_INTERVAL=600 DESCRIPTION=CRS application for the Database FAILOVER_DELAY=0 FAILURE_INTERVAL=60 FAILURE_THRESHOLD=1 HOSTING_MEMBERS= OPTIONAL_RESOURCES= PLACEMENT=balanced REQUIRED_RESOURCES= RESTART_ATTEMPTS=1 SCRIPT_TIMEOUT=600 START_TIMEOUT=0 STOP_TIMEOUT=0 UPTIME_THRESHOLD=7d USR_ORA_ALERT_NAME= USR_ORA_CHECK_TIMEOUT=0 USR_ORA_CONNECT_STR=/ as sysdba USR_ORA_DEBUG=0 USR_ORA_DISCONNECT=false USR_ORA_FLAGS= USR_ORA_IF= USR_ORA_INST_NOT_SHUTDOWN= USR_ORA_LANG= USR_ORA_NETMASK= USR_ORA_OPEN_MODE= USR_ORA_OPI=false USR_ORA_PFILE= USR_ORA_PRECONNECT=none USR_ORA_SRV= USR_ORA_START_TIMEOUT=0 USR_ORA_STOP_MODE=immediate USR_ORA_STOP_TIMEOUT=0 USR_ORA_VIP=
Stop Clusterware
Now we can stop Oracle Clusterware on all nodes using $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crsctl stop crs, and then change hostnames. Note that this will stop all databases, listeners, and other resources registered within CRS, so this is the time when outage starts.
Rename Hosts
I won’t discuss changing the hostname itself it here — it’s a straight-forward SA task.
A few things to pay special attention to:
- Make sure that aliases in
/etc/hostsare amended. - Don’t forget to change aliases for VIPs and private IPs. This is not strictly required but you are better off following the standard naming convention (
-priv and -vip for interconnect and virtual IP respectively) unless you have really good reason not to. Note that at this stage you should be also able to change IP addresses as well. I didn’t try it, but it should work. - Also make sure DNS configuration is also changed by your SA, if your applications use DNS to resolve hostnames.
Modify $ORA_CRS_HOME/install/rootconfig
$ORA_CRS_HOME/install/rootconfig is called as part of the root.sh script run after Oracle Clusterware installation. We have to modify it so that it uses different host names.
Generally, you would simply change every appearance of the old hostnames to the new hostnames. If you want to do that in vi, use :%s/old_node/new_node/g. Be careful not to change existing non-relevant parts of the script matching your old hostname. The variables that should be changed are
CRS_HOST_NAME_LISTCRS_NODE_NAME_LISTCRS_PRIVATE_NAME_LISTCRS_NODELISTCRS_NODEVIPS
The latter might need modification if you also change IPs.
At this stage, you can also change your OCR and voting disks locations. The following lines should be changed:
CRS_OCR_LOCATIONS={OCR path},{OCR mirror path}
CRS_VOTING_DISKS={voting disk1 path},{voting disk2 path},{voting disk3 path}
You can also change your cluster name via the variable CRS_CLUSTER_NAME.
Cleanup OCR and Voting Disks
You should clear OCR and voting disks, otherwise, the script will refuse to format them (well, it will unless you use a special force option, but that’s more hassle). This can be done using dd. In the example below I have mirrored OCR and 3 voting disks:
dd if=/dev/zero of=bs=1024k dd if=/dev/zero of={OCR2 path} bs=1024k dd if=/dev/zero of={voting1 path} bs=1024k dd if=/dev/zero of={voting2 path} bs=1024k dd if=/dev/zero of={voting3 path} bs=1024k
“Break” Clusterware Configuration
rootconfig has some protection from idiots (as we say in Russia) built in — it checks if Clusterware has been already configured and, if it has, it exits without doing any harm. One way to “break” the configuration and make this script run for a second time is to delete the file /etc/oracle/ocr.loc. (Note that this is a Linux-specific location; other Unix variants might have different path. On HP-UX, for example, it’s something like /var/opt/oracle/ocr.log if I recall correctly.)
Run $ORA_CRS_HOME/install/rootconfig
If everything has gone alright, you should be able to run $ORA_CRS_HOME/install/rootconfig as the root user without any issues. If there are problems, follow the standard CRS troubleshooting procedure — checking /var/log/messages and $ORA_CRS_HOME/log/{nodename} et cetera.
Note that this should be done on every node one by one — sequentially. On the last node of the cluster, the script will try to configure the VIPs, and there is a known bug here if you use a private range IP for VIP. This can be easily fixed by running $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/vipca manually in graphical mode (i.e. you will need $DISPLAY configured correctly).
Verify Clusterware Configuration and Status
This is a simple check to make sure that all nodes are up and have VIP components configured correctly:
[root@vs10 bin]# $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_stat -t Name Type Target State Host ------------------------------------------------------------ ora.vs10.gsd application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora.vs10.ons application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora.vs10.vip application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora.vs11.gsd application ONLINE ONLINE vs11 ora.vs11.ons application ONLINE ONLINE vs11 ora.vs11.vip application ONLINE ONLINE vs11
Adding Listener Resources to CRS
There are two ways to do this — you can either use netca to configure the listener from scratch (you might need to clean it up from listener.ora first), or you can change the configuration manually and register it with CRS from command line. I’ll show how to that manually — obviously, the preferred way when it comes to the real environments. ;-)
First of all, we will need to change the $ORACLE_HOME/network/admin/listener.ora file, and you will probably want to change tnsnames.ora at the same time. You need to replace old node aliases with new ones, and change the IPs if they are used instead of aliases, and if you changed them above during clusterware reconfiguration.
Note that depending on how your LOCAL_LISTENER and REMOTE_LISTENER init.ora parameters are set, you might need to change them: if they reference connections descriptors from tnsname.ora, then only the latter should be changed, but if there are full connection descriptors, they should also be modified).
You should also change listener names to reflect new hostnames. Usually, listeners are named as LISTENER_{hostname}, and you should keep this convention again unless you have a very good reason not to. Do that on both nodes if you don’t have a shared ORACLE_HOME.
Now it’s time to get back to the .cap files with the CRS resource definitions we captured when we began. The files we are interested in are in format ora.{hostname}.LISTENER_{HOSTNAME}.lsnr.cap. In my case, one of them is ora.vs10a.LISTENER_VS10A.lsnr (my old hostname was vs10a). If you changed listener names above, you would need to amend it there as well — NAME=ora.vs10.LISTENER_VS10.lsnr, and rename the file according to the new host name following the same naming convention.
Your VIP name has probably changed, so this line should be modified as well: REQUIRED_RESOURCES=ora.vs10.vip. And finally, the hosting member will change: HOSTING_MEMBERS=vs10. Check the whole file carefully — you should simply modify the old hostname to the new one in both lower and upper case.
Now it’s time to register the resource — the crs_register command does just that. This command specifies the resource name to register and the directory where the .cap file is located. It should be named exactly like resource name plus a “.cap” extension. Each node’s listener can be added from the same node. It’s important that the content of the .cap file is modified appropriately. Assuming I have files ora.vs10.LISTENER_VS10.lsnr and ora.vs11.LISTENER_VS11.lsnr in directory /opt/oracle/A/resources, I run:
$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_register ora.vs10.LISTENER_VS10.lsnr -dir /opt/oracle/A/resources $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_register ora.vs11.LISTENER_VS11.lsnr -dir /opt/oracle/A/resources
Now the output from crs_stat -t should be:
Name Type Target State Host ------------------------------------------------------------ ora....10.lsnr application OFFLINE OFFLINE ora.vs10.gsd application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora.vs10.ons application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora.vs10.vip application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora....11.lsnr application OFFLINE OFFLINE ora.vs11.gsd application ONLINE ONLINE vs11 ora.vs11.ons application ONLINE ONLINE vs11 ora.vs11.vip application ONLINE ONLINE vs11
It’s now time to start the listeners:
$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/srvctl start nodeapps -n vs10 $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/srvctl start nodeapps -n vs11
crs_stat -t should show the listeners online:
Name Type Target State Host ------------------------------------------------------------ ora....10.lsnr application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora.vs10.gsd application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora.vs10.ons application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora.vs10.vip application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora....11.lsnr application ONLINE ONLINE vs11 ora.vs11.gsd application ONLINE ONLINE vs11 ora.vs11.ons application ONLINE ONLINE vs11 ora.vs11.vip application ONLINE ONLINE vs11
Adding ASM Instances to CRS
This step is optional, and it you don’t use ASM, skip it.
Unfortunately, we can’t simply use .cap files to register ASM resources. There are more pieces required and the only way I could find to register ASM instances is to use srvctl which is, actually, a more supported option. This is simple:
$ORACLE_HOME/bin/srvctl add asm -n vs10 -i ASM1 -o $ORACLE_HOME $ORACLE_HOME/bin/srvctl add asm -n vs11 -i ASM1 -o $ORACLE_HOME $ORACLE_HOME/bin/srvctl start asm -n vs10 $ORACLE_HOME/bin/srvctl start asm -n vs11
There is a catch — sometimes I had to prefix the name of the ASM instance with a “+” (i.e. making it like -i +ASM1) and sometimes no plus-sign was required. I couldn’t figure out why, so if you have a clue, let me know.
crs_stat -t should show now:
Name Type Target State Host ------------------------------------------------------------ ora....SM1.asm application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora....10.lsnr application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora.vs10.gsd application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora.vs10.ons application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora.vs10.vip application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora....SM2.asm application ONLINE ONLINE vs11 ora....11.lsnr application ONLINE ONLINE vs11 ora.vs11.gsd application ONLINE ONLINE vs11 ora.vs11.ons application ONLINE ONLINE vs11 ora.vs11.vip application ONLINE ONLINE vs11
Register Databases
For each database, you need to register a database resource. Then, for every instance, you need to register an instance resource. So for database A, my two-node cluster, I use:
$ORACLE_HOME/bin/srvctl add database -d A -o $ORACLE_HOME $ORACLE_HOME/bin/srvctl add instance -d A -i A1 -n vs10 $ORACLE_HOME/bin/srvctl add instance -d A -i A2 -n vs11 $ORACLE_HOME/bin/srvctl start database -d A
Finally, crs_stat -t should show all resources online:
Name Type Target State Host ------------------------------------------------------------ ora.A.A1.inst application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora.A.A2.inst application ONLINE ONLINE vs11 ora.A.db application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora....SM1.asm application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora....10.lsnr application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora.vs10.gsd application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora.vs10.ons application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora.vs10.vip application ONLINE ONLINE vs10 ora....SM2.asm application ONLINE ONLINE vs11 ora....11.lsnr application ONLINE ONLINE vs11 ora.vs11.gsd application ONLINE ONLINE vs11 ora.vs11.ons application ONLINE ONLINE vs11 ora.vs11.vip application ONLINE ONLINE vs11
Other Resources
If you had other resources like services, user VIPs, or user-defined resources, you will probably be fine using the crs_register command to get them back into CRS. I didn’t try it, but it should work.
Final Check
To make sure that everything is working, you should at least reboot every node and see if everything comes up.
I don’t know if that operation is considered to be supported. The only slippery bit is modifying the $ORA_CRS_HOME/install/rootconfig file, because it’s usually created by the Universal Installer. Another tricky place is the “unusual” registration of listeners. Otherwise, all the commands are pretty much usual stuff, I think. Good luck!








June 12th, 2007 at 7:22 am
I recognise those hostnames ;-)
June 12th, 2007 at 8:18 am
I bet you do! ;-)
October 18th, 2007 at 7:39 pm
I had to change a few other files in $CRS_HOME before it works for me, such as
./inventory/Components21/oracle.has.crs/10.2.0.1.0/context.xml
./inventory/Components21/oracle.crs/10.2.0.1.0/installIP1Log.xml
./inventory/Components21/oracle.crs/10.2.0.1.0/context.xml
./inventory/ContentsXML/oraclehomeproperties.xml
./install/paramfile.crs
But overall, this is a great recipe, played magics for me.
Thanks a lot!
October 19th, 2007 at 2:50 pm
Glad to hear it worked for you, Shu. Thanks for feedback!
Indeed, inventory needs to be changed as well. I don’t see you mentioned file {inventory_dir}/ContentsXML/inventory.xml - it has cluster nodes in it.
January 24th, 2008 at 3:42 am
Alex,
I have tried your method and am running into a problem with the ASM on one node. I get a “PRKS 1009: Failed to start asm interface” error and when I try to start or stop it, I get a “unrecoverable failure. Human intervention required” message. The other node is fine.
I have tried it a few times from scratch with the same result, even to the point of doing it in reverse and going back to the old hostnames. Everything comes up fine with the old hostnames. With the new hostnames, I consistently get this ASM error on one node. Can you think of anything that I might be doing wrong?
Thanks
PKumar
January 24th, 2008 at 9:35 am
PKumar,
PRKS error doesn’t provide enough details to find out what’s wrong.
First thing I would do is to try starting ASM instance manually - set your environment and use sqlplus. If that doesn’t work - you’d see the error. Maybe local_listener or remote_listener is set to an unresolvable value (I think just a hostname can be used with EZconnect) or something else host related.
If that works fine, then you need to check the trace file for ora.{nodename}.asm resource. First, make sure you are using srvctl command from ASM home (if it’s different from database home). Than in that home, see the log file $ORACLE_HOME/log/{nodename}/racg/ora.{nodename}.ora.log. You should see the real reason behind the failure. If that doesn’t uncover enough, you can enable CRS tracing on that resource. The easy way to do that would be:
crsctl debug log res ora.{nodename}.vip:1Disable tracing:
crsctl debug log res ora.node1.vip:0Let me know how it goes. Good Luck!
February 2nd, 2008 at 12:31 pm
Sorry could get nothing in the logs. I didn’t see any error anywhere other than when I tried to start it up. I couldn’t spend too much time on it and went ahead and changed the ASM instance to 3 instead of 1, and that worked. Do you know why that would happen? Is the ASM info stored somewhere, perhaps tied to the hostname, that I needed to clear?
July 10th, 2008 at 12:50 pm
Worked great, thanks Alex!
November 14th, 2008 at 3:43 pm
Can you tell me about - change in ip adress?
i installed orcle 10 g RAC- without RAC option(single node) on hp unix 11i v3.
had to change its ip adress.
now all seems ok only NETCA is not working..
am even able to create a database and connect to it…
November 16th, 2008 at 9:28 pm
rush2me:
this article addresses RAC environment. It doesn’t apply to non-RAC installations and change of IP address in single node should be a matter of changing listener configuration unless you are using more advanced features.
December 1st, 2008 at 3:47 am
Thank you for good stuff.
I used this stuff to test with 11G RAC.
December 2nd, 2008 at 10:57 am
thank you again.
I used idea on this article to change hostnames on RAC 10Gr2 (Sparc).
December 9th, 2008 at 12:11 am
Glad it helped. Please don’t forget that this is a “creative” way of doing it and might render your environment unsupported. On the other hand, pretty much all operations are “legitimate”.
December 16th, 2008 at 12:54 pm
Hi i have done the operation on a Oracle Window Cluster with the info you give us. They are some variant in the step. It work fine for us (change of all Ip address and subnet mask) it can be use for a hostname change like you have said.
Thanks.
Here we go (for a 2 nodes cluster 10.2.0.3)
Stop all Oracle service on all nodes before the change of the address, the low format of the ocrcfg and vote disk
change the address in the file host in C:\WINDOWS\system32\drivers\etc with the new address
change the ip address in the window network definition connection with the new address
ocopy \\.\ocrcfg d:\backup\ocrcfg.dmp
ocopy \\.\votedsk1 d:\backup\votedsk1.dmp
rem go to directory of the cluster binary crs\bin
cd /D D:\Oracle\Ora10g\crs/bin
rem Format raw ocrcfg and vote disk
LogPartFormat.exe \\.\ocrcfg /q
LogPartFormat.exe \\.\votedsk1 /q
rem Run in prompt mode the cluster setup
rem crssetup.exe config -nn %s_nodenumberlist% -pn %s_privatenamelist% -ch %ORA_CRS_HOME% -oh %s_OracleHome% -c %s_clustername% -l “%s_languageid%” -q %s_votedisklist% -g %s_usergroup%
rem example for 2 node
crssetup.exe config -nn host_name_node_1 ,1,host_name_node_2,2 -pn host_name_node_1-priv,1,host_name_node_2-priv,2 -ch D:\Oracle\Ora10g\crs -oh D:\Oracle\Ora10g\crs -c crs_lab -l “CANADIAN FRENCH_CANADA.WE8MSWIN1252″; -q “\\.\votedsk1″
rem ensures that all nodes are configured with the same port for the ONS
racgons.exe add_config host_name_node_1:6200 host_name_node_2:6200
rem oifcfg to direct components to use specific network interfaces
oifcfg.exe setif -global “Public”/10.200.5.0:public “Prive”/192.169.255.0:cluster_interconnect
rem to rebuild the vip address vipca in wondow componant and make the incription in the cluster (in prompt mode or online)
rem at the same time it will create the gsd and ons service
vipca.bat -silent -nodelist “host_name_node_1,host_name_node_2″ -nodevips “host_name_node_1/host_name_node_1-vip/255.255.255.0/Public,host_name_node_2/host_name_node_2-vip/255.255.255.0/Public”;
rem vipca
rem check the state of the crs services (inscription)
crs_stat -t
rem now make the registration of the listener in the cluster.
rem important don’t use the prompt command below, it will give you a crs-0223 error at the startup service
Rem to solve this problem use netca on line
rem crs_register ora.host_name_node_1.LISTENER_host_name_node_1.lsnr -dir D:\Oracle\Ora10g\crs\crs\profile
rem crs_register ora.host_name_node_2.LISTENER_host_name_node_2.lsnr -dir D:\Oracle\Ora10g\crs\crs\profile
rem srvctl start nodeapps -n host_name_node_1
ren srvctl start nodeapps -n host_name_node_2
netca
rem check the state of the crs services (inscription)
crs_stat -t
rem start oracle object service and cluster volume before registering and accessing to asm services
sc start ”Oracle Object Service” host_name_node_1
sc start OracleClusterVolumeService host_name_node_1
sc start ”Oracle Object Service” host_name_node_2
sc start OracleClusterVolumeService host_name_node_2
rem go the the rdbms directory to make the registration of asm and the database
set ORACLE_HOME=D:\Oracle\Ora10g\rdbms
rem add the service asm in the cluster in my case +asm1 and +asm2 for my 2 nodes
srvctl add asm -n host_name_node_1 -i +ASM1 -o %ORACLE_HOME%
srvctl add asm -n host_name_node_2 -i +ASM2 -o %ORACLE_HOME%
rem start the asm service on each node
srvctl start asm -n host_name_node_1
srvctl start asm -n host_name_node_2
rem check the state of the crs services (inscription)
crs_stat -t
rem go to the bin directory of rdbms directory to make the registration of the database
cd /D D:\Logiciels\Oracle\Ora10g\rdbms/bin
rem register the database (in my case labotary lab) and the to database service (lab1 and lab2) of each node
srvctl add database -d lab -o %ORACLE_HOME%
srvctl add instance -d lab -i lab1 -n host_name_node_1
srvctl add instance -d lab -i lab2 -n host_name_node_2
rem finally start the database
srvctl start database -d lab
rem go to directory of the cluster binary crs\bin
rem all the services
cd /D D:\Logiciels\Oracle\Ora10g\crs/bin
rem you can go in the database with sqlplus and check all your components
December 16th, 2008 at 5:28 pm
Good job Ron.
Thanks. I added the ref link to your commend in the main post.