At the end of this video, the student will learn how to repair an Exchange database that has failed to mount. The Exchange database is where all of the email and other data is made available to the clients. When a database is down, there is no access to the Exchange server for users on that database. This is an important skill for an Exchange administrator to keep the Exchange server available to clients.
- [Instructor] The Exchange database is where…all of the email and other data…is made available to clients.…When a database is down, there is no access…to the Exchange server for users on that database.…Knowing how to fix database problems is an important skill…for an Exchange administrator to keep the Exchange server…available to clients.…We'll look at several different ways on how to get…Exchange databases back up and running.…The first one is we're going to use…the Exchange Admin Center to view…what databases may be down and to try to remount them.…
We can try remounting them a couple different ways.…One is through the Exchange Admin Center…and another is a forced mount we can do…through the Exchange Power Shell.…And the last thing we can do is we can run Eseutil commands…to repair a database that may be broken…if we don't have a good backup to restore.…We're in our Exchange Admin Center under servers…and databases and you can see we have several databases…in the list and most of them are mounted.…
Let's go ahead and choose a database from the list.…
Author
Released
9/22/2016Need to set up Exchange Server for the first time? Check out Robert's previous course, Deploying Exchange Server 2016.
Note: This course maps to the certification exam for Exchange Server 2016. Review the course and exam blueprint for the Exchange Server 13 exam here and here.
- Reviewing the Exchange Control Panel
- Managing the Mailbox role
- Configuring permissions and delegates
- Managing and troubleshooting mail transport
- Troubleshooting SMTP mail flow and domain security
- Designing an Exchange SLA
- Backup and recovery
- Planning high availability
- Troubleshooting connectivity
Skill Level Intermediate
Duration
Views
Related Courses
-
Migrating from Exchange Server 2010 to 2013
with David Elfassy2h 23m Intermediate -
Windows Server 2012 R2: Manage Group Policy
with Ed Liberman1h 46m Intermediate
-
Introduction
-
Welcome58s
-
-
1. Using the Exchange Control Panel
-
Create mailbox types6m 57s
-
Create distribution lists4m 37s
-
Configure email moderation7m 39s
-
2. Managing the Mailbox Role
-
Set up site mailboxes2m 50s
-
Set up automapping3m 45s
-
Global mailbox role changes4m 33s
-
3. Managing Transport
-
Manage transport rules6m 1s
-
Troubleshoot SMTP mail flow8m 17s
-
4. Exchange SLA
-
Plan for Exchange updates6m 38s
-
Design SLA around RPO/RTO8m 43s
-
-
5. Backup and Recovery
-
6. High Availability
-
Plan for Exchange clustering4m 23s
-
Replicate databases in a DAG3m 19s
-
Manage lagged copies6m 12s
-
-
7. Troubleshooting Connectivity
-
Conclusion
-
Next steps53s
-
- Mark as unwatched
- Mark all as unwatched
Are you sure you want to mark all the videos in this course as unwatched?
This will not affect your course history, your reports, or your certificates of completion for this course.
CancelTake notes with your new membership!
Type in the entry box, then click Enter to save your note.
1:30Press on any video thumbnail to jump immediately to the timecode shown.
Notes are saved with you account but can also be exported as plain text, MS Word, PDF, Google Doc, or Evernote.
Share this video
Embed this video
Video: Troubleshoot database failures