[AccessD] Can anyone help me with this

John Colby jwcolby at gmail.com
Sun Oct 15 19:25:04 CDT 2017


Not on shutdown.  Yes on boot back up.  "Unexpected shutdown" kind of log.


On 10/15/2017 3:06 PM, Martin Reid wrote:
> John
>
> Do you have windows event logs when this happens?
>
> Martin
>
> Sent from my Windows Phone
> ________________________________
> From: Jim Dettman<mailto:jimdettman at verizon.net>
> Sent: ‎15/‎10/‎2017 19:36
> To: Access Developers discussion and problem solving<mailto:accessd at databaseadvisors.com>
> Cc: Jim Lawrence<mailto:accessd at shaw.ca>
> Subject: Re: [AccessD] Can anyone help me with this
>
> If it's an older server (more than a few years), reseat all the memory and consider running a memory dish.
>
> Jim
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
>> On Oct 15, 2017, at 11:19 AM, John Colby <jwcolby at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> The machine just reboots.  It does not put anything in any log. The log as it comes back up says "unexpected shutdown" kind of thing.  So what is bizarre is that it will stay running as long as I keep a core running something.  NEVER reboots as long as it is kept active.  Which is my "solution" at this point.  The reboots are at random times.  Sometimes once every few days, normally a few times a day, sometimes 10 times in a day.  But if overheating or other "hardware" issue, why will it NOT reboot as long as it is kept active.  I run long queries maxing out all 16 cores for hours and it works just fine.  NEVER reboots if kept active.  Let it go idle and it starts rebooting.
>>
>> Puzzling and frustrating.
>>
>> In the end, keeping a single core busy keeps it alive so it is no longer a problem that I feel pressed to deal with, but I'd like to have my core back. ;)
>>
>>> On 10/14/2017 2:20 PM, Jim Lawrence wrote:
>>> Hi John:
>>>
>>> You have probably gone through all these checks but I will post them anyways. Have you checked your logs? Is there an exact time when this reboot occurs? Is the reboot spawned by something like an "exceptions error" or a system process? Considering that all your software is probably up to date could it be a hardware error? A failing piece of equipment or some new hardware that was introduced?
>>>
>>> One comment I have seen is that an active SQL server eventually runs out of address space and if possible it is quicker and cleaner to just do an "idle time" reboot than to run the "garbage collection" routine. If that is the case there should be some option setting that would control the activation and timing?
>>>   Jim
>>>
>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>> From: "John Colby" <jwcolby at gmail.com>
>>> To: "Access Developers discussion and problem solving" <accessd at databaseadvisors.com>
>>> Sent: Saturday, October 14, 2017 7:45:46 AM
>>> Subject: [AccessD] Can anyone help me with this
>>>
>>> My SQL Server (Windows 2008) reboots periodically.  Periodically implies
>>> on a schedule so perhaps sporadically is a better description.  This has
>>> been going on for years.  It will do so several times a day.
>>>
>>> What I have discovered is that if I keep one of the cores busy, and I
>>> use a script in SQL Server to do that, then it never reboots.
>>>
>>> I read that Windows 2008 can be led to believe (accidentally in my case)
>>> that it needs to reboot to finish an install or something of that
>>> nature, and it will do so when the system is "idle".  By keeping a core
>>> active, the system never does that reboot thing.  I do not know for sure
>>> that this is what is going on but it absolutely makes sense.  In he
>>> meantime I have to do this "keep a core active" thing or my server
>>> reboots.  If anyone out there understands what is really going on and
>>> how to tell Windows to knock it off, please contact me.
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>>
>> --
>> John W. Colby
>>
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-- 
John W. Colby



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