Hi Jud,

For the time being we are lacking of disk space indeed, but this will change
soon (of course; you are right about this sparseness).

Just when you wrote this mail, I was helping someone with a corrupted
database again. I'll describe the situation:

Yesterday his database was corrupted and I repaired it for him (it is very
difficult to exit Entourage in this situation, by the way). I threw his
back-up away and rebuilt his database.
Today he has been away from his Mac for a while, say one hour, and came
back, just when I came to visit him to ask how things went. Just then we
noticed that again his database was corrupted again.
As you state in your answer there should have been some warning messages,
but nothing was the matter, what so ever.
I checked his free space on the server: 80 MB.
I threw away his back-up made yesterday. Free space after that 160 MB.
I urged him to delete as much as possible in his mail folders (actually only
Inbox and Sent Items) and hope for the best, but I'm going to throw today's
back-up away too, just to be sure. I think, however, that it is not (only)
lack of space that causes the trouble, but what?

Sincerely,
Joris


On 5/3/05 4:19 PM, "Jud Spencer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> On 5/3/05 4:13:32 AM, "Joris Lieftinck" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
>> With a couple of users we experience often trouble with the Entourage
>> database
>> to become corrupted, probably because of lack of disk space at the server
>> where everyone stores his/her data in opposite to locally on the HD. Although
>> there is space available (say abt. 50 MB average) at the server, Entourage or
>> other applications have to write temporary data to the user's area, which
>> causes the lack of disk space, I expect.
>> Does somebody know what can be done against this very annoying habit of
>> Entourage, not reallizing that updating the database at a particular moment
>> would destroy its integrety, so not checking whether updating can take place
>> without any danger? Should Entourage not notify the user before executing its
>> damaging action, or what ever? Can one anticipate somehow whether it's safe
>> to
>> use Entourage, knowing the spare space that is available? Some percentage, or
>> a secure amount of free MB's before Entourage kills itself by its own
>> reckless
>> doings?
> 
> We added a lot of code to Entourage 2004 to make sure that we didn't attempt
> to write in very low disk space situations. We have a series of warnings
> that occur in this situation.
> 
> I will say that 50MB is nothing in today's world though. Is there a reason
> they need to run this sparse?
> 
> Jud
> 

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