对的,看来要找时间看看12C的官方文档了。
https://docs.oracle.com/database ... ation.htm#DBSEG3225
Only users who have the ALTER SYSTEM privilege can set the SEC_CASE_SENSITIVE_LOGON parameter. You should ensure that this parameter is set to TRUE so that case sensitivity is enforced when a user enters a password. However, you should be aware that the SEC_CASE_SENSITIVE_LOGON parameter is deprecated, but is currently retained for backward compatibility.
Ensure that the SEC_CASE_SENSITIVE_LOGON parameter is not set to FALSE if the SQLNET.ALLOWED_LOGON_VERSION_SERVER parameter is set to 12 or 12a. This is because the more secure password versions used for this mode only support case-sensitive password checking. For compatibility reasons, Oracle Database does not prevent the use of FALSE for SEC_CASE_SENSITIVE_LOGON when SQLNET.ALLOWED_LOGON_VERSION_SERVER is set to 12 or 12a. Setting SEC_CASE_SENSITIVE_LOGON to FALSE when SQLNET.ALLOWED_LOGON_VERSION_SERVER is set to 12 or 12a causes all accounts to become inaccessible. If SQLNET.ALLOWED_LOGON_VERSION_SERVER is set to 11 or a lower value, then Oracle recommends that you set SEC_CASE_SENSITIVE_LOGON to TRUE, because the more secure password versions used in Exclusive Mode (when SQLNET.ALLOWED_LOGON_VERSION_SERVER is 12 or 12a) in Oracle Database 12c do not support case insensitive password matching.