If you are not sure where to find the last integer database ? You have to move 
mailboxes to a new store and so on.
In any case happened to me just once to use eseutil and isinteg and it was 
successful. The db was small (4gb) so I could easily make a copy of edb and stm 
files before operations

GuidoElia
HELPPC

-----Messaggio originale-----
Da: Andy David [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Inviato: venerdì 4 gennaio 2008 15.59
A: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Oggetto: RE: ISINTEG question.

What's complicated about running a restore?



-----Original Message-----
From: HELP_PC [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, January 04, 2008 9:50 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: R: ISINTEG question.

I don't have experience on other mail servers, but I am sure there are other 
less complicate to repair and/or restore


GuidoElia
HELPPC

-----Messaggio originale-----
Da: Andy David [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Inviato: venerdì 4 gennaio 2008 15.02
A: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Oggetto: RE: ISINTEG question.

Yeppers.
Ironically, repairing is destructive and you will lose data.
It's a salvage operation.




-----Original Message-----
From: Michael B. Smith [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, January 04, 2008 8:28 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: ISINTEG question.

Online recovery is the first resort (i.e., letting the database engine play 
back it's logfiles). I would consider recovering from backup then playing back 
logfiles to be the second resort. Finally, database repair (eseutil +
isinteg) to be the last resort.

IMHO. YMMV.

Regards,

Michael B. Smith
MCSE/Exchange MVP
http://TheEssentialExchange.com


-----Original Message-----
From: HELP_PC [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, January 04, 2008 7:57 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: R: ISINTEG question.


Yes its well known, but even for 2007 isn't a FIRST resort ?


GuidoElia
HELPPC

-----Messaggio originale-----
Da: Michael B. Smith [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Inviato: venerdì 4 gennaio 2008 13.17
A: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Oggetto: RE: ISINTEG question.

Eseutil's /p option (repair) followed by isinteg. But it should really be 
considered a "method of last resort".

Regards,

Michael B. Smith
MCSE/Exchange MVP
http://TheEssentialExchange.com


-----Original Message-----
From: HELP_PC [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, January 04, 2008 12:31 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: R: ISINTEG question.

Practically there is no real option to get a Exchange database repaired ? No 
Ese no isinteg so what ?


GuidoElia
HELPPC

-----Messaggio originale-----
Da: Michael B. Smith [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Inviato: giovedì 3 gennaio 2008 19.16
A: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Oggetto: RE: ISINTEG question.

Urg. Non-trivial to explain.

I tried to find a public document that describes some of what isinteg does on a 
technical level, but couldn't.

Historically, isinteg was a debugging tool for PSS. It allowed them to scan a 
store and in the case of corruption, basically get rid of the offending piece 
of the store. This followed the "I'd rather have part of my store than none of 
it" philosophy. After a while, it made it into the standard release.
Then, it was used primarily for patching stores that were reloaded from backup.

Today, the primary use for isinteg is to fix-up a database after it has been 
repaired.

ESEutil is not Exchange aware. Difficult to believe, huh? But eseutil just 
treats an Exchange store as any ESE database. And therefore its operations are 
generic in nature.

It's up to isinteg to make sure that a given database is ready to be used by 
Exchange. It understand the various tables and specific B+trees and the 
consistency stuff and the split factors and the duplicate roots and the long 
value blobs, etc. etc.

Under many situations isinteg can cause secondary indexes to be eliminated.
It can cause both table splits and table merges that Exchange will undo the 
next-time it accesses a particular folder (because the Exchange store itself is 
load-sensitive - but isinteg cannot be).

So...detuned. You'll have to regenerate secondary indexes (which Outlook calls 
Views). And your table structure may no longer be optimal under load, which 
Exchange will have to adjust in the future.

I don't think that there are any current recommendations from Microsoft to run 
isinteg EXCEPT after a repair (or upon the recommendation of a PSS engineer).

In fact, a quick scan of the knowledge base reveals that there are, in fact, 
problems with running isinteg on production databases - up to and including 
Exchange 2007! (Fixed in update rollup 3.)

Regards,

Michael B. Smith
MCSE/Exchange MVP
http://TheEssentialExchange.com


-----Original Message-----
From: Tom Strader [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, January 03, 2008 7:18 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: ISINTEG question.

Michael,

I guess the term "detuned" is in question.
By running isinteg, how does it "detune" the indexes?? By what means are the 
indexes kept "intune"?

I'm curious also.

Thanks,
Tom


-----Original Message-----
From: Matteson, John H Jr USA Mr USA 25th SigBN (ITT) [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, January 03, 2008 6:59 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: ISINTEG question.


 You can run isinteg on a dismounted database - pretty much ANY dismounted 
database - and it will give you warnings. This is because isinteg is a utility 
and not a database engine itself. You can tell isinteg to fix those warnings, 
and run it multiple times until there aren't any more warnings, and you've just 
detuned your indexes.

===================

Michael:

        Can you explain your statement about detuning indexes when running 
isinteg with the FIX option?

Thanks.


John H. Matteson, Jr.
Systems Administrator/ITT Systems
FOB Orgun-E
Afghanistan
DSN - 318 431 8000
VoSIP - (308) 431 - 0000
Iridium - 717.633.3823

"A man who thinks of himself as belonging to a particular national group in 
America has not yet become an American. And the man who goes among you to trade 
upon your nationality is no worthy son to live under the Stars and Stripes."  
Woodrow Wilson


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