Can anyone point me to an Oracle document that actually states that production use of the Oracle client is covered by the server license?

All of the documents I've found talk about how database is licensed, but nothing ever actually states that the client software is covered by the server license. I've found lots of posts where people say the client is covered by the server, but no response by a person who works for Oracle.

I have an Oracle database server I need to connect to on production. We need to use orapki to create the Oracle wallet for use with Oracle Data Access Component (ODAC). The DB server admin told me to download the full client from -windows-downloads.html, but the license agreement that shows up when you do the download explicitly states that it may not be used on production.

I asked the server admin to provide the Client software and they stated they can't because their licenses are for their use, but I suspect they didn't actually check what their license covered. I'm hoping if I point to a document that states the client is covered by the database license they will provide the client software since it's their license covering it.

I've attempted to get a response to my licensing issue by contacting Oracle multiple times over the past couple weeks using multiple email addresses and the most I've got out of that is that someone will contact me back, but that hasn't happened yet.

I'd appreciate any help anyone can provide. Of course, if someone knows a better way to get orapki I'd love to know that too. I'm also looking into the openSSL solution, but that's proving harder than getting an answer to the client license question.

Instant Client RPM packages for Oracle Linux can now be installed from yum.oracle.com for Oracle Linux 8 and Oracle Linux 7. Older releases are available for Oracle Linux 8, Oracle Linux 7 and Oracle Linux 6.


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Oracle recommends using the latest 19c Release Update of Oracle Instant Clientor Oracle Database Client. This is a Long Term Release.

Alternatively you can use the latest 21c Release Update if you require clientfeatures introduced in this Innovation Release.

DigiCert retired the Organizational Unit (OU) field for all public TLS/SSLcertificates to comply with industry standards as of August 2022. This meansthat public TLS/SSL certificates issued by DigiCert will no longer have an OUfield. Refer to MOS note 2911553.1for details.


To avoid disruption to applications connecting to Oracle Autonomous Database onShared Exadata Infrastructure (ADB-S) during the server side certificatechange, you must use hostname based matching of the server certificate.


The following versions of Oracle Instant Client automatically support hostnamebased matching:


Versions: 18.19 (or later), 19.2 (or later), 21 (base release or later)

Oracle Call Interface (OCI), Oracle C++ Call Interface (OCCI) or ODBCapplications must use one of the above client versions.Oracle Database drivers based on Oracle Instant Client or Oracle DatabaseClient (e.g ODPI-C, python-oracledb Thick mode, cx_Oracle, node-oracledb,godror, PHP OCI8, PHP PDO_OCI, ruby-oci8, ROracle, and rust-oracle) must usethe driver with a compatible client version from the list above.An additional step is required if you have changed the ADB-S connection string.


ADB-S connection strings contain a hostname "...(HOST=xyz)..." which depends onthe region. For example, in the Chicago region the hostname would be"adb.us-chicago-1.oraclecloud.com". If you have replaced the default hostnamewith an IP address or a custom hostname, then hostname based DN matching willfail. The solution is to add a new entry to your /etc/hosts file using theoriginal ADB-S domain suffix. Your connection string should then use this newname. For example an entry "localtunnel.adb.us-chicago-1.oraclecloud.com"could be created and used.

I have oracle client 11.2.0.1.0 installed on a 64-bit windows 7 computer. I need to connect to my oracle database from MS Visio. Previously I had Visio 32-bit installed, but have since uninstalled and re-installed 64-bit. I'm unable to see my database or create an ODBC to it. I don't even have the option of the oracle driver in "ODBC Data Source Administrator".

I downloaded instantclient-odbc-win-x86-64-11.2.0.1.0.zip from oracle but it says I have to unzip it in the same directory as my instant client. This is the path of where the instant client is but there are many folders and I'm not sure where I should unzip it?

We are having some difficulties getting a new application to connect to Oracle with little help, so far, from the vendor (TIBCO). All they have recommended is installing ODAC, despite our reply that we already have the client installed. Here is our problem (and this may get lengthy as I will provide all we have done so far to resolve):

Right now we're just trying to install the new application on a limited number of developer computers. These computers all have both the 32 and 64-bit Oracle 11.2 client install (with the Administrator option selected). According to the OUI inventory, they have all the seemingly necessary components: ODBC Driver, Oracle Provider for OLE DB, Oracle Data Provider for .NET, and Oracle Providers for ASP.NET. Since the vendor has suggested ODAC, a coworker went ahead and installed it on top of the Oracle client. While it did fix the issue, it appears to have messed up Visual Studio. I'm hesitant to install ODAC simply because I've already got the 32 & 64 bit clients and I don't want to mess up the path variables and registry with unnecessary installs. Not to mention that whatever the final fix is will have to be deployed to dozens of machines, so I'd like to keep it simple.This co-worker sent me a screenshot of the files created by ODAC (12c). I found that all the OLEDB files were already in by BIN directory. However, some files were missing (like oramts.dll). After some googling, I found that the administrator install for the client doesn't exactly install everything. I reran OUI and installed the Oracles Services for Microsoft Transaction Server product, which created the missing files in by BIN directory. So now, I have the 11g version of every file contained in the ODAC screenshow my coworker provided and the application still doesn't recognize it. I have played with my path variable (the ODAC readme suggests putting both the home folder and the BIN folder at the front of the path variable) and done all sorts of combinations (32-bit first, 64-bit first). Also, my registry seems to be in order. HKLM\Software\Oracle\ODP.NET\2.112.1.0 - the DllPath setting is pointing to the 64-bit client BIN directory; Oracle\KEY_OraClient11g_home1 is pointing to 64-bit directory.

I have a system running an Oracle database (12c, 64bit) and I need to have ArcMap running on this same system connect to the database. ArcMap is 32bit so I also have the 32bit Oracle 12c instant client on the system. The user I was connected as when I set all of this up works fine having the 64bit oracle server path first in the environment variables. But any other user on this system gets the "Failed to connect to database ... database client software failed to load..." error. All of the discussions on this topic seem to focus on the environment path which I did in order to get the first user to work. But everything is setup the same for the other users yet it doesn't work for them. Is there anything else that could cause the Oracle client to fail to load? Is there any other logs or checks you can perform to see where the problem is coming from?

Was this ever resolved? I think I have the same issue. I am reading this as a permissions issue. One machine. 2 clients. We have done this successfully for years. For some reason a user who, like me has the same administrator permissions, can't access the 32 bit client but CAN access the 64bit. I install them side by side in the same Oracle Directory - sub 12c32 and 12c64. I know the path is right and am not worried due to years of success on a documented process. User can not access the Oracle/12c32 folder structure or run SQL Plus from start menu or command prompt, I am fine. Of course can't connect in Catalog. All permissions seem to be the same and inherit applied through the entire drive (which happens to be a drive, but I have another user with a C: drive issue so I don't think the drive is the issue). I truly feel this is a Windows permission issue. I spent over 1 hour on the phone with support yesterday, no success. I was hoping my issue truly is the same and that your issue was resolved. Any help is appreciated!

I never got it to work. In the end, I setup a VM on the same hardware to act as the "client" while the physical system acted as the server. Then I didn't have to try to work around having the server and client software running on the same windows installation.

Thank you. I did get it to work. I had to remove access to the folder for an Oracle user set up at during client install. This is new crap that happens with the administrator client at 12c. It has been a while since I noticed this causing a problem. Then I had to reapply my folder permissions at the top-level directory including inheritance and all so that "authenticated users" had access to these directories. Not sure why things were jacked up but they were.

For our Oracle connections I use the instant client. This unzips to a directory of your choosing. I then add a reference to that directory in the PATH system environment variable. You will probably have to reboot for the path variable to be added. (or add it manually...)

Asrujit, I downloaded the Instant Client Basic V 12.1.0.2.0. Would this be the correct client? I just read in the ArcGIS Pro help that you can download the Oracle Instant Client from My Esri but I was unable to find it on an Esri site so defaulted to the Oracle site. Thank you for your help. ff782bc1db

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