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Oracle Database 12c Security Cookbook

You're reading from  Oracle Database 12c Security Cookbook

Product type Book
Published in Jun 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782172123
Pages 388 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Authors (2):
Zoran Pavlovic Zoran Pavlovic
Profile icon Zoran Pavlovic
Maja Veselica Maja Veselica
Profile icon Maja Veselica
View More author details

Table of Contents (18) Chapters

Oracle Database 12c Security Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Basic Database Security 2. Security Considerations in Multitenant Environment 3. PL/SQL Security 4. Virtual Private Database 5. Data Redaction 6. Transparent Sensitive Data Protection 7. Privilege Analysis 8. Transparent Data Encryption 9. Database Vault 10. Unified Auditing 11. Additional Topics 12. Appendix – Application Contexts

Column encryption - encrypting existing column


It is common case that organizations first create database and later decide that they want to implement encryption. In this recipe, you're going to encrypt an existing column using TDE column encryption.

Getting ready

It is assumed that a keystore is opened and a master key is created.

How to do it...

  1. Connect to the database as a user who can read data from the OE.CUSTOMERS table (for example, the oe user):

    $ sqlplus oe
    
  2. Select data from column you want to encrypt (for example, cust_email), just to verify that the user can view it.

    Figure 18 - A test query

  3. Connect to the database as a user who has administer key privilege or SYSKM privilege (for example, maja):

    SQL> connect maja
    
  4. Encrypt the cust_email column in the oe.customers table using the default encryption algorithm (AES192) and no salt.

    Figure 19 - Encrypting an existing column, which has an index

  5. Execute steps 1 and 2 again to verify that there is no change in the way user/application views...

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