CyberFox issue :-)

2012 is listed in the first bullet point at the top of the page

On 1 Apr 2017 00:53, "Kurt Buff" <[email protected]> wrote:

Thanks for this.

Firefox and Chrome displayed that page just fine, but Cyberfox didn't
like it at all. Weird. The message I get in Cyberfox is " 1
$deletedMessageForViewDocumentPage "

Good article though, even if my machine is 2012R2 and not 2008R2 or
earlier - the symptoms are the same.

Kurt


On Fri, Mar 31, 2017 at 3:11 PM, Tony Patton <[email protected]> wrote:
> Think it was this one, or one similar
>
> Creating a quiesced snapshot of a Windows virtual machine generates Event
> IDs 50, 57, 137, 140, 157, or 12289 (2006849) | VMware KB
>
> https://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?language=en_US&cmd=
displayKC&externalId=2006849
>
> On 31 Mar 2017 22:58, "Kurt Buff" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> Yes, this is a VM on vSphere 6.0. We back up using snapshots via a
>> Barracuda 995 appliance.
>>
>> This sounds like the most likely explanation.
>>
>> Just for the sake of completeness, I took all of the GUIDs from
>> 'vssadmin list shadows', and with the exception of the known GUIDs for
>> the drives there was no overlap at all with the list of GUIDs from the
>> event log.
>>
>> If you happen to run across that article, it would be nice to have,
>> but I'm going to stop my freakout now and concentrate on supporting
>> the year-end process for our finance folks.
>>
>> Thank you for the info!
>>
>> Kurt
>>
>> On Fri, Mar 31, 2017 at 2:05 PM, Tony Patton <[email protected]> wrote:
>> > I'm not at work so I don't have the reference handy, but there is a
>> > VMware
>> > article for something like that.
>> >
>> > Is the backup taken via a VM snapshot and the timings of the events
>> > match?
>> > If so, it's a known issue, blamed on VSS, and can be ignored :-)
>> >
>> > I've seen it in VMs with both NetBackup & CommVault as the backup
>> > software.
>> >
>> > It's consistent on a VM that it happens to, but another VM built
>> > identical
>> > in the same policy may not have those events.
>> >
>> > Tony
>> >
>> > On 31 Mar 2017 21:51, "Kurt Buff" <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >>
>> >> Do those show up in the event log like this?
>> >>
>> >>      Warning,2016-01-13 02:48:37,Microsoft-Windows-Ntfs,140,None,"The
>> >> system failed to flush data to the transaction log. Corruption may
>> >> occur in VolumeId: \\?\Volume{38f28236-b991-11e5-80ea-005056b43cf4},
>> >> DeviceName: \Device\HarddiskVolume15.
>> >>
>> >>      Information,2016-01-13
>> >> 02:48:32,Microsoft-Windows-Ntfs,98,None,Volume
>> >> \\?\Volume{38f28237-b991-11e5-80ea-005056b43cf4}
>> >> (\Device\HarddiskVolume16) is healthy.  No action is needed.
>> >>
>> >>      Error,2016-01-13 02:48:37,Ntfs,137,(2),The default transaction
>> >> resource manager on volume
>> >> \\?\Volume{38f28236-b991-11e5-80ea-005056b43cf4} encountered a
>> >> non-retryable error and could not start.  The data contains the error
>> >> code.
>> >>
>> >> Kurt
>> >>
>> >> On Fri, Mar 31, 2017 at 1:32 PM, Miller Bonnie L.
>> >> <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >> > Windows Volume Shadow Copies?
>> >> >
>> >> > -Bonnie
>> >> >
>> >> > -----Original Message-----
>> >> > From: [email protected]
>> >> > [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Kurt Buff
>> >> > Sent: Friday, March 31, 2017 1:19 PM
>> >> > To: ntsysadm <[email protected]>
>> >> > Subject: [NTSysADM] WTF? Way too many Volume/Disk GUIDs
>> >> >
>> >> > I've got a 2012R2 file server with some problems. It recently locked
>> >> > up,
>> >> > and we had to force boot it through the VMware interface.
>> >> >
>> >> > It's got 13 drives with letters, plus the usual system reserved
>> >> > partition.
>> >> >
>> >> > Here are the volume GUIDs from PS:
>> >> >     # GWMI -namespace root\cimv2 -class win32_volume | select
>> >> > driveletter, deviceid | sort deviceid | ft -auto
>> >> >
>> >> >     driveletter deviceid
>> >> >     ----------- --------
>> >> >     T:          \\?\Volume{0b58699a-c6d4-11e5-80ef-005056b43cf4}\
>> >> >     J:          \\?\Volume{27499b01-b5b4-43d7-98ae-17dbd948607e}\
>> >> >     G:          \\?\Volume{3e50ec99-13b5-4d52-8091-2feeb695943f}\
>> >> >                 \\?\Volume{3ec25e24-a333-11e3-80b4-806e6f6e6963}\
>> >> >     C:          \\?\Volume{3ec25e25-a333-11e3-80b4-806e6f6e6963}\
>> >> >     D:          \\?\Volume{3ec25e29-a333-11e3-80b4-806e6f6e6963}\
>> >> >     P:          \\?\Volume{410169c9-33c3-11e6-80fb-005056b43cf4}\
>> >> >     X:          \\?\Volume{515ebcdb-5c2e-11e4-80d4-005056b43cf4}\
>> >> >     K:          \\?\Volume{79470a07-567a-11e4-80d3-005056b43cf4}\
>> >> >     I:          \\?\Volume{88aa852a-1610-4875-8265-bb3c0612e5ef}\
>> >> >     W:          \\?\Volume{a94520fe-16c6-11e6-80f7-005056b43cf4}\
>> >> >     S:          \\?\Volume{cba78efd-34cd-11e6-80fb-005056b43cf4}\
>> >> >     U:          \\?\Volume{cc4e4794-f6ef-4141-980a-87a984c191b5}\
>> >> >     M:          \\?\Volume{d1ddfc3d-fa04-11e6-8109-005056b43cf4}\
>> >> >
>> >> > After the machine was back up and running, I started combing the
>> >> > system
>> >> > eventlog, and noticed something weird - there were a lot of volume
>> >> > GUIDs
>> >> > that didn't match my list above.
>> >> >
>> >> > I finally exported the system event log as a CSV file (it goes back
>> >> > as
>> >> > far as January of 2016), and cut and sorted the output, and found
>> >> > 2891
>> >> > unique volume GUIDs!
>> >> >
>> >> > That's just insane, and I have no explanation for this.
>> >> >
>> >> > Does anyone here have a clue to what this is about?
>> >> >
>> >> > Kurt
>> >> >
>> >> >
>> >>
>> >>
>> >
>>
>>
>

Reply via email to