Microsoft KB Archive/176239

= XADM: Database Won't Start; Circular Logging Deleted Log File Too Soon =

Article ID: 176239

Article Last Modified on 10/28/2006

-

APPLIES TO


 * Microsoft Exchange Server 5.5 Standard Edition

-



This article was previously published under Q176239





SYMPTOMS
With circular logging enabled, the database may not restart after an abnormal stop, and a JET_errFileNotFound error may be displayed numerically in any of the following forms:
 * -1811
 * 4294965485
 * 0xfffff8ed

In the application event log, events 1120 and 5000 contain the hexadecimal version (0xfffff8ed) of the error.

NOTE: Events 1120 and 5000 are generic database start errors; you must interpret the code in their descriptions to understand the exact reason that the database stopped responding.



CAUSE
This may be caused by a problem in the checkpoint file. If this is the case, and you delete the Edb.chk file, the database starts. However, pay close attention to the cautions listed in the "Resolution" section of this article before you delete the checkpoint file.

If circular logging is enabled, Exchange Server deletes transaction log files as soon as all of the data in them has been written out to the main database files. This process is tracked by the checkpoint. The actual checkpoint that the database uses is held in memory, but it is frequently written out to the Edb.chk file.

Another process may hold open the Edb.chk file, which prevents Exchange Server from updating the checkpoint file when the checkpoint advances. Applications such as virus scanners and backup programs may "steal" the checkpoint file temporarily. Exchange Server continues to function normally, and to update the checkpoint in memory, while it waits for the other process to release the Edb.chk file.

If the Edb.chk file is locked against Exchange Server for more than a short period of time, the log file listed in it may be deleted before the Edb.chk file is updated. If the database stops suddenly, the checkpoint in memory is lost. When the database is restarted, it must rely on the checkpoint recorded in the Edb.chk file. Because the Edb.chk file points to a nonexistent transaction log file, the database does not start, and a JET_errFileNotFound error is displayed.



RESOLUTION
Remove the Edb.chk file, and then restart the database service.

If the Edb.chk file is gone, Exchange Server scans through all the available log files, and then begins recovery using the first log file that it finds.

Cautions
Do not remove the Edb.chk file unless you know exactly why you need to remove it, and unless you know that you can safely remove it in your current circumstances. Removing the Edb.chk file in certain circumstances may irreparably damage the database. For more information about the checkpoint, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:

240145 How to remove Exchange Server transaction log files

If you are experiencing the conditions described here, and if all of the following statements are true, you can safely delete the Edb.chk file:
 * You have not moved, renamed, deleted, replaced, or otherwise tampered with the database or transaction logs after the abnormal shutdown. For recovery to succeed, the database and transaction logs must be in exactly the same state that they were in when the database stopped.
 * If you ran the eseutil /r command against the database, and you used the /is or /ds switches to run it. (The eseutil /r /is command is for the information store, and the eseutil /r /ds command is for the directory service.)

If you omit the /is or /ds switches, the soft recovery assumes that the log files are in the folder that you ran Eseutil from. If the log files are elsewhere, as they usually are, soft recovery creates a new Edb.log file and tries to recover against the wrong set of log files. You can still delete the Edb.chk file after such an event, but the database still may not start, and you may need to restore it from a backup.
 * You have circular logging enabled. If circular logging was disabled at the time of the abnormal shutdown, none of the recommendations in this article apply. If circular logging is disabled, transaction log files are not automatically deleted when the checkpoint advances. This means that the cause of the restart problem is different than the cause described here.

Keywords: kbprb kbusage KB176239

-

[mailto:TECHNET@MICROSOFT.COM Send feedback to Microsoft]

© Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.