Oracle9i SQL Reference Release 2 (9.2) Part Number A96540-02 |
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Use the NOAUDIT
statement to stop auditing previously enabled by the AUDIT
statement.
The NOAUDIT
statement must have the same syntax as the previous AUDIT
statement. Further, it reverses the effects only of that particular statement. For example, suppose one AUDIT
statement (statement A) enables auditing for a specific user. A second (statement B) enables auditing for all users. A NOAUDIT
statement to disable auditing for all users (statement C) reverses statement B. However, statement C leaves statement A in effect and continues to audit the user that statement A specified.
See Also:
AUDIT for more information on auditing |
To stop auditing of SQL statements, you must have the AUDIT
SYSTEM
system privilege.
To stop auditing of schema objects, you must be the owner of the object on which you stop auditing or you must have the AUDIT
ANY
system privilege. In addition, if the object you chose for auditing is a directory, then even if you created it, you must have the AUDIT
ANY
system privilege.
noaudit::=
auditing_by_clause::=
auditing_on_clause::=
Use the sql_statement_clause
to stop auditing of a particular SQL statement.
For statement_option
, specify the statement option for which auditing is to be stopped.
See Also:
Table 12-1 and Table 12-2 for a list of the statement options and the SQL statements they audit |
Specify ALL
to stop auditing of all statement options currently being audited.
For system_privilege
, specify the system privilege for which auditing is to be stopped.
See Also:
Table 17-1 for a list of the system privileges and the statements they authorize |
Specify ALL
PRIVILEGES
to stop auditing of all system privileges currently being audited.
Use the auditing_by_clause
to stop auditing only those SQL statements issued by particular users. If you omit this clause, then Oracle stops auditing all users' statements.
BY
user
to stop auditing only for SQL statements issued by the specified users in their subsequent sessions. If you omit this clause, then Oracle stops auditing for all users' statements, except for the situation described for WHENEVER
SUCCESSFUL
.BY
proxy
to stop auditing only for the SQL statements issued by the specified proxy, on behalf of a specific user or any user.Use the schema_object_clause
to stop auditing of a particular database object.
For object_option
, specify the type of operation for which auditing is to be stopped on the object specified in the ON
clause.
See Also:
Table 12-3 for a list of these options |
Specify ALL
as a shortcut equivalent to specifying all object options applicable for the type of object.
The auditing_on_clause
lets you specify the particular schema object for which auditing is to be stopped.
object
with schema
, then Oracle assumes the object is in your own schema.
See Also:
AUDIT for information on auditing specific schema objects |
DIRECTORY
clause lets you specify the name of the directory on which auditing is to be stopped.DEFAULT
to remove the specified object options as default object options for subsequently created objects.Specify WHENEVER
SUCCESSFUL
to stop auditing only for SQL statements and operations on schema objects that complete successfully.
Specify WHENEVER
NOT
SUCCESSFUL
to stop auditing only for statements and operations that result in Oracle errors.
If you omit this clause, then Oracle stops auditing for all statements or operations, regardless of success or failure.
If you have chosen auditing for every SQL statement that creates or drops a role, then you can stop auditing of such statements by issuing the following statement:
NOAUDIT ROLE;
If you have chosen auditing for any statement that queries or updates any table issued by the users hr
and oe
, then you can stop auditing for queries by hr
by issuing the following statement:
NOAUDIT SELECT TABLE BY hr;
The preceding statement stops auditing only queries by hr
, so Oracle continues to audit queries and updates by oe
as well as updates by hr
.
To stop auditing on all statements that are authorized by DELETE
ANY
TABLE
system privilege, issue the following statement:
NOAUDIT DELETE ANY TABLE;
If you have chosen auditing for every SQL statement that queries the employees
table in the schema hr
, then you can stop auditing for such queries by issuing the following statement:
NOAUDIT SELECT ON hr.employees;
You can stop auditing for queries that complete successfully by issuing the following statement:
NOAUDIT SELECT ON hr.employees WHENEVER SUCCESSFUL;
This statement stops auditing only for successful queries. Oracle continues to audit queries resulting in Oracle errors.