I ran the check disk on my hard drive last night and woke up to discover that it had rebooted, without giving me any information about
the number of bad sectors, or anything like that. I'm wondering if
maybe a log file is made but just stored in an odd location?
Alternatively, is there a way I could make it so log files are made?
Re: SQL Server 2000 Performance - 10K vs. 15K ... Anyway, what about moving the tempdb log file, since it is on the ... I'm getting a message in event viewer that the tempdb log file is ... plenty of disk space.... >>> the client on the server, and still have to same issue. ... (microsoft.public.sqlserver.setup)
Re: Balance I/O ... Is it a good idea to decrease the disks which are near 100% busy?... files on the same disk spindle?...Redo log file switch frequency (only need to execute this the last ... session to determine the SQL statements executed by the session, ... (comp.databases.oracle.server)
RE: RAM usage during I/O ... > another hard disk?... Specify a name for the log file and click OK. ... > Windows uses all available physical RAM.... (microsoft.public.windowsxp.help_and_support)
Re: Data lost after rebuilding new txn log after disk failure ... Have you performed LOG file backup?... When the disk is faild you was be able to run BACKUP LOG file WITH NO ... > Is there anything I should be checking on the server?... (microsoft.public.sqlserver.server)
Re: How to change DC for Exchange server ... I'd take a look at the following article and use the section on Disk... more as it overwrites the log file when it gets to the end. ... If you have a server problem that requires you to restore ... the Exchange log files are sequential writes. ... (microsoft.public.exchange.admin)