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    Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues

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    • 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
                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                    last edited by

                    @Dashrender 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?

                    Does exchange logging work that way?

                    https://www.splunk.com/en_us/solutions/solution-areas/it-operations-management/microsoft-infrastructure-monitoring/splunk-app-for-microsoft-exchange.html

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

                      @scottalanmiller said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                      @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.

                      How does Log cleanup work in this situation with backups?
                      Heck, how do you replay those logs in a restore/repair situation?

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

                        @Dashrender 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:

                        @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.

                        How does Log cleanup work in this situation with backups?

                        I'd imagine you just need to run a custom backup of the log locations on that specific server instead of exchange

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

                          @scottalanmiller said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                          @Dashrender 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?

                          Does exchange logging work that way?

                          https://www.splunk.com/en_us/solutions/solution-areas/it-operations-management/microsoft-infrastructure-monitoring/splunk-app-for-microsoft-exchange.html

                          OK makes sense for tracking, etc... but what about recovery?

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

                            @Dashrender said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                            @scottalanmiller said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                            @Dashrender 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?

                            Does exchange logging work that way?

                            https://www.splunk.com/en_us/solutions/solution-areas/it-operations-management/microsoft-infrastructure-monitoring/splunk-app-for-microsoft-exchange.html

                            OK makes sense for tracking, etc... but what about recovery?

                            Recovery of the logs, or recovery of email?

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

                              @scottalanmiller said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

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

                              WTF? This is not how Exchange is designed. These are DB rollback logs. Not usage logs. They do not get shipped out for monitoring.

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

                                @scottalanmiller said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                @Dashrender said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                @scottalanmiller said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                @Dashrender 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?

                                Does exchange logging work that way?

                                https://www.splunk.com/en_us/solutions/solution-areas/it-operations-management/microsoft-infrastructure-monitoring/splunk-app-for-microsoft-exchange.html

                                OK makes sense for tracking, etc... but what about recovery?

                                Recovery of the logs, or recovery of email?

                                recovery of email in case of a failure - it's my understanding that you restore you IS, then replay the logs to get the newer data back.

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

                                  @JaredBusch said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                  @scottalanmiller said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

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

                                  WTF? This is not how Exchange is designed. These are DB rollback logs. Not usage logs. They do not get shipped out for monitoring.

                                  Oh, sorry, didn't realize what logs we were discussing.

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

                                    @Dashrender said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                    @scottalanmiller said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                    @Dashrender said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                    @scottalanmiller said in Exchange 2010 Hard Drive Space Issues:

                                    @Dashrender 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?

                                    Does exchange logging work that way?

                                    https://www.splunk.com/en_us/solutions/solution-areas/it-operations-management/microsoft-infrastructure-monitoring/splunk-app-for-microsoft-exchange.html

                                    OK makes sense for tracking, etc... but what about recovery?

                                    Recovery of the logs, or recovery of email?

                                    recovery of email in case of a failure - it's my understanding that you restore you IS, then replay the logs to get the newer data back.

                                    Right, now I see, these are the DB logs, not the application logs.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                    • wirestyle22W
                                      wirestyle22 @JaredBusch
                                      last edited by wirestyle22

                                      @JaredBusch Can you explain some of the risks associated with what I did just for my own knowledge? I did verify clean shutdown in powershell.

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

                                        @wirestyle22 you could have potentially been unable to mount the database again.

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                        • momurdaM
                                          momurda @JaredBusch
                                          last edited by

                                          @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 am confused here, how did this solve the problem? Youre just cutting out all those old log files and starting over? Since when can you do that in Exchange? Last time i did that(years ago) very bad things happened, like total loss of mail db. If these log files arent actually needed for Exchange to serve mail wtf are they for?

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

                                            @momurda 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 am confused here, how did this solve the problem? Youre just cutting out all those old log files and starting over? Since when can you do that in Exchange? Last time i did that(years ago) very bad things happened, like total loss of mail db. If these log files arent actually needed for Exchange to serve mail wtf are they for?

                                            You have always been able to do that in exchange. These log files are not needed once the data in the log is wrote to the Exchange DB.

                                            Exchange writes first to the log file and then to the DB.

                                            In theory, the files could even be deleted with everything running because they are no longer needed once the DB is updated.

                                            The system is designed to handle it all behind the scenes though. and not with manual interaction.

                                            Their problem was never using the correct backup method that would cause the system to auto remove the files.

                                            wirestyle22W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
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