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    Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues

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    • wirestyle22W
      wirestyle22 @Texkonc
      last edited by

      @Texkonc said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

      @wirestyle22 said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

      @Texkonc said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

      @wirestyle22 said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

      @Texkonc said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

      @wirestyle22 said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

      @momurda said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

      I dont know about speed, but i do know from my previous xp with Veeam that it is a great product. I was never not able to do restores of exchange (vm/brick level) at my last job. It was really quick to restore individual mailbox items and deleted-on-accident contacts without issue. It also provides central backup and restore services for you entire virtual infrastucture, something WSB and Cobian cant.

      Yeah I know it's good, but my issue is I can't bog down the server for 3 days again until the weekend. I'd like to resolve this sooner, but I'm kind of stuck.

      Bog it down for 3 days or trying to recover it with the massive log file db?

      That is word for word what I said to my boss. I don't have deciding power though

      What if that massive log file gets corrupt when you go down? Then you are burned even more.
      Have you measured the strain it puts on it? IF you use an enterprise backup product, will he even notice? You brought up the concerns, but you feel it is the best move. You know the environment, you know what it can handle. Your ass is on the line, even though you told mgt.

      It's not my job on the line. My boss just asked me to take a look at it for a second pair of eyes and that was my conclusion. I'm not the server administrator but I've solved a few server issues so far. I'm of the opinion that getting aggressive with my employer is just burning bridges. I let them learn it themselves and cover my ass with e-mails and paperwork.

      Oh, well in that case...

      Pointing someone in the right direction and being responsible are two very different things

      DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • DashrenderD
        Dashrender @wirestyle22
        last edited by

        @wirestyle22 said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

        @Texkonc said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

        @wirestyle22 said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

        @Texkonc said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

        @wirestyle22 said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

        @Texkonc said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

        @wirestyle22 said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

        @momurda said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

        I dont know about speed, but i do know from my previous xp with Veeam that it is a great product. I was never not able to do restores of exchange (vm/brick level) at my last job. It was really quick to restore individual mailbox items and deleted-on-accident contacts without issue. It also provides central backup and restore services for you entire virtual infrastucture, something WSB and Cobian cant.

        Yeah I know it's good, but my issue is I can't bog down the server for 3 days again until the weekend. I'd like to resolve this sooner, but I'm kind of stuck.

        Bog it down for 3 days or trying to recover it with the massive log file db?

        That is word for word what I said to my boss. I don't have deciding power though

        What if that massive log file gets corrupt when you go down? Then you are burned even more.
        Have you measured the strain it puts on it? IF you use an enterprise backup product, will he even notice? You brought up the concerns, but you feel it is the best move. You know the environment, you know what it can handle. Your ass is on the line, even though you told mgt.

        It's not my job on the line. My boss just asked me to take a look at it for a second pair of eyes and that was my conclusion. I'm not the server administrator but I've solved a few server issues so far. I'm of the opinion that getting aggressive with my employer is just burning bridges. I let them learn it themselves and cover my ass with e-mails and paperwork.

        Oh, well in that case...

        Pointing someone in the right direction and being responsible are two very different things

        The fact that they need those pointers just makes me shutter!

        JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • JaredBuschJ
          JaredBusch @Dashrender
          last edited by

          @Dashrender said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

          shutter!

          Camera or Window?

          T 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • T
            Texkonc @JaredBusch
            last edited by

            @JaredBusch said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

            @Dashrender said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

            shutter!

            Camera or Window?

            Smartass or ass?

            JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • JaredBuschJ
              JaredBusch @Texkonc
              last edited by

              @Texkonc said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

              @JaredBusch said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

              @Dashrender said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

              shutter!

              Camera or Window?

              Smartass or ass?

              Yes?

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • momurdaM
                momurda
                last edited by

                @wirestyle22
                Just curious, how long does it take your Exchange to start serving mail when you restart it for updates/changes/etc?

                T wirestyle22W Mike DavisM 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • T
                  Texkonc @momurda
                  last edited by

                  @momurda said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                  @wirestyle22
                  Just curious, how long does it take your Exchange to start serving mail when you restart it for updates/changes/etc?

                  My guess, about 45mins after the windows login 🙂

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • Mike DavisM
                    Mike Davis @wirestyle22
                    last edited by

                    @wirestyle22 said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                    I read that the Veeam backup is around 10x faster than a windows server backup. Normally this would sound like a marketing ploy but everyone here on ML seems to swear by Veeam. Can anyone confirm? The windows backup took 3 days to complete, thats why I ask.

                    I can confirm that it's way faster than ArcServe. That's what I moved to Veeam from. I can also confirm that the message level restore works well as well.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                    • wirestyle22W
                      wirestyle22 @momurda
                      last edited by

                      @momurda said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                      @wirestyle22
                      Just curious, how long does it take your Exchange to start serving mail when you restart it for updates/changes/etc?

                      I'm not sure. Anytime this is rebooted it's on the weekends and I'm not here

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • Mike DavisM
                        Mike Davis @momurda
                        last edited by

                        @momurda said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                        Just curious, how long does it take your Exchange to start serving mail when you restart it for updates/changes/etc?

                        For the exchange servers I've run, once all the exchange services have started it will pass mail. The time it takes for all the services to start depends on the hardware. The trick to a faster reboot with an Exchange server is to shut down the system attendant service first. If you just tell the server to reboot, it will shut down a service, and then another service will need to write something, so it will bring the first service back up. After a few rounds of that it will eventually shutdown.

                        DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                        • DustinB3403D
                          DustinB3403 @Mike Davis
                          last edited by

                          @Mike-Davis said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                          @momurda said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                          Just curious, how long does it take your Exchange to start serving mail when you restart it for updates/changes/etc?

                          For the exchange servers I've run, once all the exchange services have started it will pass mail. The time it takes for all the services to start depends on the hardware. The trick to a faster reboot with an Exchange server is to shut down the system attendant service first. If you just tell the server to reboot, it will shut down a service, and then another service will need to write something, so it will bring the first service back up. After a few rounds of that it will eventually shutdown.

                          Yep, I always stop the exchange services before rebooting our system. Otherwise it seems to take 10 times longer.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • Mike DavisM
                            Mike Davis
                            last edited by

                            Once the Microsoft Exchange System Attendant service is stopped, you don't need to worry about the rest. If that service is not running you won't get stuck in a loop.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • wirestyle22W
                              wirestyle22
                              last edited by wirestyle22

                              My thought is I can dismount my datastore, change the name of the log folder from Mailbox - Domain to Mailbox - Domain.old and then create a new folder named Mailbox - Domain. If the logs populate correctly I should be able to delete the old logs and do a fast full backup with the logs truncating properly.

                              Note: I just did this and it seems to be generating logs properly.

                              JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • JaredBuschJ
                                JaredBusch @wirestyle22
                                last edited by

                                @wirestyle22 said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                My thought is I can dismount my datastore, change the name of the log folder from Mailbox - Domain to Mailbox - Domain.old and then create a new folder named Mailbox - Domain. If the logs populate correctly I should be able to delete the old logs and do a fast full backup with the logs truncating properly.

                                Note: I just did this and it seems to be generating logs properly.

                                This was horribly risky, but is something I have done before too. I would certainly have tried other means first, but you seem to have some really odd constraints.

                                wirestyle22W momurdaM 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • wirestyle22W
                                  wirestyle22 @JaredBusch
                                  last edited by wirestyle22

                                  @JaredBusch said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                  @wirestyle22 said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                  My thought is I can dismount my datastore, change the name of the log folder from Mailbox - Domain to Mailbox - Domain.old and then create a new folder named Mailbox - Domain. If the logs populate correctly I should be able to delete the old logs and do a fast full backup with the logs truncating properly.

                                  Note: I just did this and it seems to be generating logs properly.

                                  This was horribly risky, but is something I have done before too. I would certainly have tried other means first, but you seem to have some really odd constraints.

                                  I'm talking to Microsoft right now and they basically just told me I have two options in this situation, after reading my logs. 1. Turn on circular logging which will increase my CPU utilization significantly (this server sits at 70%+ utilization consistently) which would most likely seize it or do what I did. I considered each option and spoke to my boss. We are running out of space rapidly and he said at this point we unfortunately are going to have to take the risk. This realistically should have been fixed a year ago, but from what I understand they were running around putting out fires.

                                  scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • scottalanmillerS
                                    scottalanmiller @wirestyle22
                                    last edited by

                                    @wirestyle22 said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                    @JaredBusch said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                    @wirestyle22 said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                    My thought is I can dismount my datastore, change the name of the log folder from Mailbox - Domain to Mailbox - Domain.old and then create a new folder named Mailbox - Domain. If the logs populate correctly I should be able to delete the old logs and do a fast full backup with the logs truncating properly.

                                    Note: I just did this and it seems to be generating logs properly.

                                    This was horribly risky, but is something I have done before too. I would certainly have tried other means first, but you seem to have some really odd constraints.

                                    I'm talking to Microsoft right now and they basically just told me I have two options in this situation, after reading my logs. 1. Turn on circular logging which will increase my CPU utilization significantly (this server sits at 70%+ utilization consistently) which would most likely seize it or do what I did. I considered each option and spoke to my boss. We are running out of space rapidly and he said at this point we unfortunately are going to have to take the risk. This realistically should have been fixed a year ago, but from what I understand they were running around putting out fires.

                                    The logs are going to the same box? Why not send logs to a central service?

                                    wirestyle22W DashrenderD JaredBuschJ 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • wirestyle22W
                                      wirestyle22 @scottalanmiller
                                      last edited by

                                      @scottalanmiller said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                      @wirestyle22 said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                      @JaredBusch said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                      @wirestyle22 said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                      My thought is I can dismount my datastore, change the name of the log folder from Mailbox - Domain to Mailbox - Domain.old and then create a new folder named Mailbox - Domain. If the logs populate correctly I should be able to delete the old logs and do a fast full backup with the logs truncating properly.

                                      Note: I just did this and it seems to be generating logs properly.

                                      This was horribly risky, but is something I have done before too. I would certainly have tried other means first, but you seem to have some really odd constraints.

                                      I'm talking to Microsoft right now and they basically just told me I have two options in this situation, after reading my logs. 1. Turn on circular logging which will increase my CPU utilization significantly (this server sits at 70%+ utilization consistently) which would most likely seize it or do what I did. I considered each option and spoke to my boss. We are running out of space rapidly and he said at this point we unfortunately are going to have to take the risk. This realistically should have been fixed a year ago, but from what I understand they were running around putting out fires.

                                      The logs are going to the same box? Why not send logs to a central service?

                                      The only exchange server I've personally managed was a standalone box in which the logs were stored locally, but this is an inherited server (all of them are). I question a lot of their logic honestly

                                      scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • DashrenderD
                                        Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                                        last edited by

                                        @scottalanmiller said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                        @wirestyle22 said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                        @JaredBusch said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                        @wirestyle22 said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                        My thought is I can dismount my datastore, change the name of the log folder from Mailbox - Domain to Mailbox - Domain.old and then create a new folder named Mailbox - Domain. If the logs populate correctly I should be able to delete the old logs and do a fast full backup with the logs truncating properly.

                                        Note: I just did this and it seems to be generating logs properly.

                                        This was horribly risky, but is something I have done before too. I would certainly have tried other means first, but you seem to have some really odd constraints.

                                        I'm talking to Microsoft right now and they basically just told me I have two options in this situation, after reading my logs. 1. Turn on circular logging which will increase my CPU utilization significantly (this server sits at 70%+ utilization consistently) which would most likely seize it or do what I did. I considered each option and spoke to my boss. We are running out of space rapidly and he said at this point we unfortunately are going to have to take the risk. This realistically should have been fixed a year ago, but from what I understand they were running around putting out fires.

                                        The logs are going to the same box? Why not send logs to a central service?

                                        Does exchange logging work that way?

                                        scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • wirestyle22W
                                          wirestyle22
                                          last edited by

                                          I personally would've loved to make this a priority earlier before we were in this position but I wasn't here yet. Exchange is typically the most visible and universal server in my experience and as such I like to make it a higher priority, but not highest.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • scottalanmillerS
                                            scottalanmiller @wirestyle22
                                            last edited by

                                            @wirestyle22 said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                            @scottalanmiller said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                            @wirestyle22 said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                            @JaredBusch said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                            @wirestyle22 said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                            My thought is I can dismount my datastore, change the name of the log folder from Mailbox - Domain to Mailbox - Domain.old and then create a new folder named Mailbox - Domain. If the logs populate correctly I should be able to delete the old logs and do a fast full backup with the logs truncating properly.

                                            Note: I just did this and it seems to be generating logs properly.

                                            This was horribly risky, but is something I have done before too. I would certainly have tried other means first, but you seem to have some really odd constraints.

                                            I'm talking to Microsoft right now and they basically just told me I have two options in this situation, after reading my logs. 1. Turn on circular logging which will increase my CPU utilization significantly (this server sits at 70%+ utilization consistently) which would most likely seize it or do what I did. I considered each option and spoke to my boss. We are running out of space rapidly and he said at this point we unfortunately are going to have to take the risk. This realistically should have been fixed a year ago, but from what I understand they were running around putting out fires.

                                            The logs are going to the same box? Why not send logs to a central service?

                                            The only exchange server I've personally managed was a standalone box in which the logs were stored locally, but this is an inherited server (all of them are). I question a lot of their logic honestly

                                            You can always start shipping logs "now". Just because it wasn't done in the past doesn't mean you can't do it in the future.

                                            DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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