Used ports and port pools in EBS R12

The used ports and port pools are in $CONTEXT_FILE – in several sections within this file.
First source the file system you are interested in.

. /d01/oracle/VIS/EBSapps.env run
# now show all lines that have the string oa_type=”PORT” or oa_type=”EXT_PORT” – note the string following label= describes the port purpose
egrep -in -e ‘oa_type=”EXT_PORT”‘ -e ‘oa_type=”PORT”‘ $CONTEXT_FILE

Here is a VIS example of the viewing SOME NOT ALL of the used ports used by the “run” file system by “viewing” the context file directly:

view $CONTEXT_FILE
<!– port information –>
<oa_ports>
<PORT_POOL oa_var=”s_port_pool”>0</PORT_POOL>
<dbport oa_var=”s_dbport” oa_type=”EXT_PORT” base=”1521″ step=”1″ range=”-1″ label=”Database Port”>1521</dbport>
<rpc_port oa_var=”s_rpcport” oa_type=”PORT” base=”1626″ step=”1″ range=”-1″ label=”RPC Port”>1626</rpc_port>
<web_ssl_port oa_var=”s_webssl_port” oa_type=”PORT” base=”4443″ step=”1″ range=”-1″ label=”Web SSL Port”>4443</web_ssl_port>
<ons_localport oa_var=”s_ons_localport” oa_type=”PORT” base=”6100″ step=”1″ range=”-1″ label=”ONS Local Port”>6100</ons_localport>
<ons_remoteport oa_var=”s_ons_remoteport” oa_type=”PORT” base=”6200″ step=”1″ range=”-1″ label=”ONS Remote Port”>6200</ons_remoteport>
<ons_requestport oa_var=”s_ons_requestport” oa_type=”PORT” base=”6500″ step=”1″ range=”-1″ label=”ONS Request Port”>6500</ons_requestport>
<web_port oa_var=”s_webport” oa_type=”PORT” base=”8000″ step=”1″ range=”-1″ label=”Web Listener Port”>8000</web_port>
<activewebport oa_var=”s_active_webport” oa_type=”DUP_PORT” base=”8000″ step=”1″ range=”-1″ label=”Active Web Port”>8000</activewebport>
<forms_port oa_var=”s_formsport” oa_type=”PORT” base=”9000″ step=”1″ range=”-1″ label=”Forms Port”>9000</forms_port>
<met_data_port oa_var=”s_metdataport” oa_type=”PORT” base=”9100″ step=”1″ range=”-1″ label=”Metrics Server Data Port”>9100</met_data_port>
<met_req_port oa_var=”s_metreqport” oa_type=”PORT” base=”9200″ step=”1″ range=”-1″ label=”Metrics Server Request Port”>9200</met_req_port>
<jtf_fulfillment_port oa_var=”s_jtfuf_port” oa_type=”PORT” base=”9300″ step=”1″ range=”-1″ label=”JTF Fulfillment Server Port”>9300</jtf_fulfillment_port>
<mwaPortNo oa_var=”s_mwaPortNo” oa_type=”PORT” base=”10200″ step=”6″ range=”6″ label=”MSCA Server Port”>10200-10205</mwaPortNo>
<mwaTelnetPortNo oa_var=”s_mwaTelnetPortNo” oa_type=”DUP_PORT” base=”10200″ step=”6″ range=”6″ increment=”2″ separator=”,” showall=”true” label=”MCSA Telnet Server Port”>10200,10202,10204</mwaTelnetPortNo>
<mwaDispatcherPort oa_var=”s_mwaDispatcherPort” oa_type=”PORT” base=”10800″ step=”3″ range=”-1″ label=”MSCA Dispatcher Port”>10800</mwaDispatcherPort>
<jcache_port oa_var=”s_java_object_cache_port” oa_type=”PORT” base=”12345″ step=”1″ range=”-1″ label=”Java Object Cache Port”>12345</jcache_port>
<fndcache_port_range oa_var=”s_fnd_cache_port_range”/>
<cmanport oa_var=”s_cmanport” label=”Oracle Connection Manager Port”>1521</cmanport>
</oa_ports>

You could just grep for them like this:

grep -i port $CONTEXT_FILE | grep port

Leave a Comment

Scroll to Top