Last night my desktop crashed and my Access database shut down abruptly. Now when I try to open it I get these, "Invalid Bookmark error", and won't open.
I tried to compact and repair but when I select the database it won't accept it. Does anyone know how to fix this error? Your help is greatly appreciated.
Tried to compact and repair but when I select the database it won't accept it.
Related
Yesterday I upgraded Sql server 2014 to Sql server 2016 RTM.
When i go to reporting services web portal i get error popup
"Could not load folder contents
Something went wrong. Please try again later. "
I tried:
Repair instalation
Restore database
Restart reporting service
Restart PC
Restore encryption key
but nothing helped.
Do anyone know what could happen ?
Thanks
EDIT: When i use http://<server>/reportserver i see all my reports and they work fine.
To me, it seems like you have a path with an invalid character. I would try running the following query against the ReportServer database:
SELECT c.[Path] FROM [ReportServer]..[Catalog] c
ORDER BY c.[Path]
From there, you should be able to review each path and confirm whether you have something with an illegal character.
Cumulative update 1 (CU1) solved issue.. Today is available also (CU4)
I came over this serious problem.
My WordPress website was running all right. suddenly It showed the page of WordPress installation. so, I quickly registered a user and so on. Then it showed "db connection error". I went to my server and tried to log into my phpmyadmin but the password didn't work. This kept happening for 5 mins. then thing worked normal again.
1- is this a hacker attack?
2- how do I prevent the page of WP installation from showing up if the db connection goes down again? because this is a desaster
how do I prevent wp-admin from showing the name of my db in the db connection error ? Better preventing any error report from my website when anything is down?
thanks
Nobody can tell you whether it was hacker related without a lot more information. There should be logs on the machine hosting your site--I would check them first to see if you can tell if the database went down and why. If you don't admin your own site you can ask your hosting provider what the problem was--they may have been rebooting a database machine, for example.
I would also do a full backup of your site and database in case there is any hardware trouble you don't know about.
In the meantime, if you administer the site yourself, take a look at advice for hardening Wordpress: http://codex.wordpress.org/Hardening_WordPress
when right click on any database (when i am connected) and select "script database as" and try to select any options(eg. to create). i get (Discover dependencies failed, microsoft.sqlserver.smo) error. i was able to do it a while ago and could not figure out what went wrong. please help me out.
Try to Repair sqlserver using its utility(Installer)...
or if you already have created other login to your
server try to use it and if error occurs again i think...try to re-install it again.
Regards
Simply restarting the SQL Server service fixed this problem for me.
we have an application running on an IIS 6/ASP.NET 2.0 backed by a SQL Server 2005 STD edition X64. From time to time, the application crashes with some silly messages (some of the fileds are not found into a "select firled1, filed2.. from mytable"). I obtained a trace of the activity from the sql server taken while the application reported the errors. Note: the crash is encountered only during some heavy load on that server, like creating some reports simmultaneously by several users.
The question is: how can I use the trace file to solve the situation? How can I detect what goes wrong?
Thanks
I've got a video tutorial on getting started with Profiler at SQLServerPedia. In a nutshell, you'll want to export that trace file into a table, and then step through it in order looking at the errors that popped up. Profiler's trace files or trace tables by themselves won't say, "Here's what you need to fix in order to avoid this error" any more than a dump file will tell you "Here's the bad line of code" - you'll still need an experienced DBA to interpret the results. You may want to take the trace file to your local SQL Server User Group meeting and see if someone can help you.
OK, you need to get the trace data into a form that you can interrogate, i.e. a table.
Here are the details on how to load a trace file into a SQL Server table.
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/270599
You then need to identify the events that are responsible for your issue. Search the trace for events that occurred within the database that you are interested in and that also occurred around the time of the error you experienced.
The following link provides a good starting point for SQL Server Profiler/Trace information.
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms187929.aspx
Have a read through this and if you get stuck let me know.
Cheers,
Occasionally, on a ASP (classic) site users will get this error:
[DBNETLIB][ConnectionRead (recv()).]General network error.
Seems to be random and not connected to any particular page. The SQL server is separated from the web server and my guess is that every once and a while the "link" goes down between the two. Router/switch issue... or has someone else ran into this problem before?
Using the same setup as yours (ie separate web and database server), I've seen it from time to time and it has always been a connection problem between the servers - typically when the database server is being rebooted but sometimes when there's a comms problem somewhere in the system. I've not seen it triggered by any problems with the ASP code itself, which is why you're seeing it apparently at random and not connected to a particular page.
I'd seen this error many times. It could be caused by many things including network errors too :).
But one of the reason could be built-in feature of MS-SQL.
The feature detects DoS attacks -- in this case too many request from web server :).
But I have no idea how we fixed it :(.
SQL server configuration Manager
Disable TCP/IP , Enable Shared Memory & Named Pipes
Good Luck !
Not a solution exactly and not the same environment. However I get this error in a VBA/Excel program, and the problem is I have a hanging transaction which has not been submitted in SQL Server Management Studio (SSMS). After closing SSMS, everything works. So the lesson is a hanging transaction can block sprocs from proceeding (obvious fact, I know!). Hope this help someone here.
open command prompt - Run as administrator and type following command on the client side
netsh advfirewall set allprofiles state off
FWIW, I had this error from Excel, which would hang on an EXEC which worked fine within SSMS. I've seen queries with problems before, which were also OK within SSMS, due to 'parameter sniffing' and unsuitable cached query plans. Making a minor edit to the SP cured the problem, and it worked OK afterwards in its orginal form. I'd be interested to hear if anyone has encountered this scenario too. Try the good old OPTION (OPTIMIZE FOR UNKNOWN) :)