March 8, 2017 at 7:57 am
Hi, trying to restore my db for testing https://www.sqlservercentral.com/Forums/1862799/checkdb-Multiple-IAM-pages-for-object
I splitted the restore process into 2 steps, i restore full with norecovery and now a differential restore with recovery,
this is the diff restore command:
RESTORE DATABASE [dbxxxxx] FROM DISK = N'x:\file.diff' WITH FILE = 1, MOVE N'dbxxxxx' TO N'x:\dbxxxxx.mdf', MOVE ....
.... (18K+)
MAXTRANSFERSIZE=2097152,
BUFFERCOUNT=1100, STATS = 5;
The full backup restore tooks 5hours (1 TB), but the differential restore(220GB) has been ongoing for about 6 hours.
I've got the 100% completed at 11:23 uct, here some errorlog messages: (now 16.00)
2017-03-08 11:23:42.290 spid58 Recovery completed for database dbxxxxx (database ID 5) in 7 second(s) (analysis 719 ms, redo 2040 ms, undo 1863 ms.) This is an informational message only. No user action is required.
2017-03-08 11:23:42.150 spid58 Recovery is writing a checkpoint in database 'dbxxxxx' (5). This is an informational message only. No user action is required.
2017-03-08 11:22:21.600 spid58 Starting up database 'dbxxxxx'.
2017-03-08 11:20:34.110 spid58 The database 'dbxxxxx' is marked RESTORING and is in a state that does not allow recovery to be run.
2017-03-08 11:19:36.210 spid58 Starting up database 'dbxxxxx'.
--- Full Restore ends
2017-03-07 18:09:28.310 Backup RESTORE DATABASE successfully processed 951509357 pages in 15081.637 seconds (492.895 MB/sec).
What is it doing????
resource monitor shows very low disk and cpu activity, Much less than when restore is running, also file B/sec shows low activity on db files.
Restore session still in "executing..." on ssms, and in running state from sysprocesses, without wait type or locks
in ssms db isn't marks as restoring/recovering, sinply it's not accessible
sys.databases marks it as ONLINE (state_desc)
Maybe a problem with master databases?
I noticed that if I query sys.sysdatabases instead of sys.databases i get blocked by restore spid with a LCK_M_S
locks info:
<Database name="master">
<Objects>
<Object name="sysbrickfiles" schema_name="sys">
<Locks>
<Lock resource_type="KEY" index_name="clst" request_mode="S" request_status="WAIT" request_count="1" />
<Lock resource_type="OBJECT" request_mode="Sch-S" request_status="GRANT" request_count="1" />
</Locks>
</Object>
<Object name="sysdbreg" schema_name="sys">
<Locks>
<Lock resource_type="KEY" index_name="clst" request_mode="S" request_status="GRANT" request_count="1" />
<Lock resource_type="OBJECT" request_mode="Sch-S" request_status="GRANT" request_count="1" />
</Locks>
</Object>
</Objects>
</Database>
any ideas?
this is a test server, with limited resource, but this is strange.
this isnt the first time , i know it will finish in about 10 h
forgot: sql version 12.0.4100.1
March 8, 2017 at 9:50 am
What is in the log AFTER the differential restore?
And what is your full restore command? What about if you remove all of the optional arguments and just stick with the required ones? Like don't worry about the max transfer size and buffer count... do you get better performance then instead of waiting for 10 hours?
The above is all just my opinion on what you should do.
As with all advice you find on a random internet forum - you shouldn't blindly follow it. Always test on a test server to see if there is negative side effects before making changes to live!
I recommend you NEVER run "random code" you found online on any system you care about UNLESS you understand and can verify the code OR you don't care if the code trashes your system.
March 8, 2017 at 10:05 am
no new entry in errorlog, differential restore still running
this is the first rows of exec xp_readerrorlog 0,1, N'',N'',null,null,N'desc'
2017-03-08 11:23:42.290 spid58 Recovery completed for database dbxxxxx (database ID 5) in 7 second(s) (analysis 719 ms, redo 2040 ms, undo 1863 ms.) This is an informational message only. No user action is required.
2017-03-08 11:23:42.150 spid58 Recovery is writing a checkpoint in database 'dbxxxxx' (5). This is an informational message only. No user action is required.
2017-03-08 11:22:21.600 spid58 Starting up database 'dbxxxxx'.
2017-03-08 11:20:34.110 spid58 The database 'dbxxxxx' is marked RESTORING and is in a state that does not allow recovery to be run.
2017-03-08 11:19:36.210 spid58 Starting up database 'dbxxxxx'.
2017-03-07 18:09:28.310 Backup RESTORE DATABASE successfully processed 951509357 pages in 15081.637 seconds (492.895 MB/sec).
no others entries
the full restore command is the same as differential one with "norecovery" option and the full backup file name
RESTORE DATABASE [dbxxxxx] FROM DISK = N'x:\file.bak' WITH FILE = 1, MOVE N'dbxxxxx' TO N'x:\dbxxxxx.mdf', MOVE ....
.... (18K+)
NORECOVERY,
MAXTRANSFERSIZE=2097152,
BUFFERCOUNT=1100, STATS = 5;
i will try without buffers options, i use them in backup command to speed up backup process, it works, backup done in 2h instead of 8
ty
March 8, 2017 at 10:11 am
sgt500 - Wednesday, March 8, 2017 10:05 AMno new entry in errorlog, differential restore still running
this is the first rows of exec xp_readerrorlog 0,1, N'',N'',null,null,N'desc'
2017-03-08 11:23:42.290 spid58 Recovery completed for database dbxxxxx (database ID 5) in 7 second(s) (analysis 719 ms, redo 2040 ms, undo 1863 ms.) This is an informational message only. No user action is required.
2017-03-08 11:23:42.150 spid58 Recovery is writing a checkpoint in database 'dbxxxxx' (5). This is an informational message only. No user action is required.
2017-03-08 11:22:21.600 spid58 Starting up database 'dbxxxxx'.
2017-03-08 11:20:34.110 spid58 The database 'dbxxxxx' is marked RESTORING and is in a state that does not allow recovery to be run.
2017-03-08 11:19:36.210 spid58 Starting up database 'dbxxxxx'.
2017-03-07 18:09:28.310 Backup RESTORE DATABASE successfully processed 951509357 pages in 15081.637 seconds (492.895 MB/sec).no others entries
the full restore command is the same as differential one with "norecovery" option and the full backup file name
RESTORE DATABASE [dbxxxxx] FROM DISK = N'x:\file.bak' WITH FILE = 1, MOVE N'dbxxxxx' TO N'x:\dbxxxxx.mdf', MOVE ....
.... (18K+)
NORECOVERY,
MAXTRANSFERSIZE=2097152,
BUFFERCOUNT=1100, STATS = 5;i will try without buffers options, i use them in backup command to speed up backup process, it works, backup done in 2h instead of 8
ty
I agree that those options can improve both backup and restore times, but I am thinking it probably wouldn't hurt to test it with no optional arguments. Are you putting "RECOVERY" in place of "NORECOVERY" in your restore?
also what do you mean by that 18K+? Do you have 18,000 mdf files?
The above is all just my opinion on what you should do.
As with all advice you find on a random internet forum - you shouldn't blindly follow it. Always test on a test server to see if there is negative side effects before making changes to live!
I recommend you NEVER run "random code" you found online on any system you care about UNLESS you understand and can verify the code OR you don't care if the code trashes your system.
March 9, 2017 at 1:41 am
No, just remove the norecovery option,
restore ended afert 9.55 h with these messages:
Msg 3009, Level 16, State 1, Line 2
Could not insert a backup or restore history/detail record in the msdb database. This may indicate a problem with the msdb database. The backup/restore operation was still successful.
RESTORE DATABASE successfully processed 177112062 pages in 6283.694 seconds (220.202 MB/sec).
Msg 701, Level 17, State 123, Line 2
There is insufficient system memory in resource pool 'default' to run this query.
6000 seconds? really?
the errorlogs:
2017-03-08 19:22:58.490 Backup RESTORE DATABASE successfully processed 177112062 pages in 6283.694 seconds (220.202 MB/sec).
2017-03-08 19:22:38.010 Server
/****** I have omitted some memory dump information *******/
---------------------------------------- ----------
Database 36352
Simulated 8541
Target 16384000
Dirty 3024
In IO 1
Latched 0
Page Life Expectancy 91
2017-03-08 19:22:37.890 spid58 There is insufficient system memory in resource pool 'default' to run this query.
2017-03-08 19:22:37.890 spid58 Error: 701, Severity: 17, State: 123.
2017-03-08 19:22:37.550 spid38s There is insufficient system memory in resource pool 'internal' to run this query.
2017-03-08 19:22:37.550 spid38s Error: 701, Severity: 17, State: 123.
2017-03-08 19:22:37.390 Server
.........
/****** I have omitted some memory dump information *******/
Memory Manager KB
---------------------------------------- ----------
VM Reserved 22065692
VM Committed 6775348
Locked Pages Allocated 0
Large Pages Allocated 0
Emergency Memory 1024
Emergency Memory In Use 16
Target Committed 6815744
Current Committed 6775352
Pages Allocated 4274896
Pages Reserved 0
Pages Free 10016
Pages In Use 6474968
Page Alloc Potential -8
NUMA Growth Phase 0
Last OOM Factor 1
Last OS Error 0
2017-03-08 19:22:37.380 Server
Process/System Counts Value
---------------------------------------- ----------
Available Physical Memory 83431424
Available Virtual Memory 140714439229440
Available Paging File 1906311168
Working Set 6204039168
Percent of Committed Memory in WS 89
Page Faults 9479594
System physical memory high 0
System physical memory low 1
Process physical memory low 1
Process virtual memory low 0
2017-03-08 19:22:37.380 Server Failed allocate pages: FAIL_PAGE_ALLOCATION 1
2017-03-08 19:01:41.210 Backup Database changes were restored. Database: db_mn1, creation date(time): 2011/04/20(01:16:56), first LSN: 16842369:734463:8, last LSN: 16842369:3870416:1, number of dump devices: 1, device information: (FILE=1, TYPE=DISK: {'S:\SQL\Backup\db_mn1_D_20170307001521_3.diff'}). This is an informational message. No user action is required.
2017-03-08 19:01:39.350 Backup Restore is complete on database 'db_mn1'. The database is now available.
2017-03-08 19:01:32.730 spid58 CHECKDB for database 'db_mn1' finished without errors on 2017-01-19 10:12:19.417 (local time). This is an informational message only; no user action is required.
2017-03-08 11:23:42.290 spid58 Recovery completed for database db_mn1 (database ID 5) in 7 second(s) (analysis 719 ms, redo 2040 ms, undo 1863 ms.) This is an informational message only. No user action is required.
2017-03-08 11:23:42.150 spid58 Recovery is writing a checkpoint in database 'db_mn1' (5). This is an informational message only. No user action is required.
2017-03-08 11:22:21.600 spid58 Starting up database 'db_mn1'.
2017-03-08 11:20:34.110 spid58 The database 'db_mn1' is marked RESTORING and is in a state that does not allow recovery to be run.
2017-03-08 11:19:36.210 spid58 Starting up database 'db_mn1'.
got some memory dump information, i didn't paste here beacuse too long
March 9, 2017 at 7:17 am
Well, first I would add in the RECOVERY option to the restore.
Second, it sounds like you are out of resources to do the restore. how much free space do you have in MSDB and on disk?
At the time this restore is occuring, what does your memory look like?
Are you a member of the sysadmin group (this is required for a restore I believe)?
Are you manually running CHECKDB on the database post restore? It looks to me like that is what is happening and that is what is taking 8.5 hours. I do not believe that a RESTORE DATABASE normally calls CHECKDB when it is finished, but you may have some option in there that is causing that to happen.
The above is all just my opinion on what you should do.
As with all advice you find on a random internet forum - you shouldn't blindly follow it. Always test on a test server to see if there is negative side effects before making changes to live!
I recommend you NEVER run "random code" you found online on any system you care about UNLESS you understand and can verify the code OR you don't care if the code trashes your system.
March 9, 2017 at 8:04 am
> Second, it sounds like you are out of resources to do the restore. how much free space do you have in MSDB and on disk?
restore ends good at the end, msdb has 150mb free, datafile with autogrowth unlimited, disk free space is 3tb
At the time this restore is occuring, what does your memory look like?
> really underpressure, 93% (8gb ram on a vm)
>Are you a member of the sysadmin group (this is required for a restore I believe)?
yup
>Are you manually running CHECKDB on the database post restore? It looks to me like that is what is happening and that is what is taking 8.5 hours. I do not believe that a RESTORE
DATABASE normally calls CHECKDB when it is finished, but you may have some option in there that is causing that to happen.
I was deceived by the message on the check db too the first time. In reality that message indicates only the date of the last proper execution of checkdb for that db. No checkdb by the restore command was executed
March 9, 2017 at 8:20 am
Right. About the CHECKDB thing. that threw me off. But you have not run checkdb in quite some time, no? 2017-01-19 appears to be the last time it was run. Might want to do that more frequently (if possible).
But I wouldn't be surprised if putting that "RESTORE" fixes things for you. I am pretty sure that SQL likes to have a RECOVERY or NORECOVERY option or it doesn't know what to do. If you use the GUI (I know... GUIs are for non-DBA's and any real DBA wouldn't use the GUI for stuff they can script, but it is a nice way to double check things), the Recovery state is a required option. And your options are RECOVERY, NORECOVERY, or STANDBY.
I wouldn't be surprised if something was just hanging waiting for the restore to finish and it never saw it end properly.
When you say 93%, do you mean 93% free or 93% used? And when you say 8GB RAM on a VM, are you saying 8 GB used or 8 GB free or 8 GB total? Since you have 3 TB of disk space, I am assuming you mean 8 GB free. What is the max memory SQL is allowed to use and how much does that leave for the OS and other services?
I am fairly certain the RECOVERY option will fix your issue, but just trying to figure out a secondary thing it might be... how is the log free space on msdb? And how big is MSDB? is 150 MB a lot of free space for you or is that 99% full? And what is your autogrow set to? a percentage or an actual value? Values generally will auto-grow faster, but I know I don't like to autogrow unless it happens as a surprise (ie an infrequently used DB suddenly gets a lot of use due to some process change or a bug in someones code and it fills up much faster than it ever did before for example).
The above is all just my opinion on what you should do.
As with all advice you find on a random internet forum - you shouldn't blindly follow it. Always test on a test server to see if there is negative side effects before making changes to live!
I recommend you NEVER run "random code" you found online on any system you care about UNLESS you understand and can verify the code OR you don't care if the code trashes your system.
March 9, 2017 at 9:21 am
just launched the restore of the db with two commands, the first for full restore with NORECOVERY the second with diff and RECOVERY option
No buffers related options added
This is a test server, only need for this task and for:
https://www.sqlservercentral.com/Forums/1862799/checkdb-Multiple-IAM-pages-for-object
the server has only 8 GB of RAM, of which 93% occupied (now 91% without buffers option in restore command), sqlserver max memory is 6656mb.
there 's a log of disk space (15TB) to restore this 9tb database
msdb is very small 225MB with 150 free space autogrowth by 10%
just run checkdb on all system db, no errors found
in a production database i don't like autogrowth too, but this is just for testing
Tempdb has 4x2gb files only 1 with autogrowth to check if 8gb are enaugh
I interest me understand this behavior to avoid in case of emergency
I will have the results tomorrow or Monday ....
March 9, 2017 at 10:28 am
9 TB of data is a lot of data to restore, so it doesn't surprise me it takes a while especially on a system with that low of memory.
I have a nearly 800 GB set of databases and restoring that is a 1.5 to 2 hour process on a good day. Although that is a nightly full plus the hourly tlogs that I restore.
The errors I see here:
2017-03-08 19:22:37.890 spid58 There is insufficient system memory in resource pool 'default' to run this query.
2017-03-08 19:22:37.890 spid58 Error: 701, Severity: 17, State: 123.
2017-03-08 19:22:37.550 spid38s There is insufficient system memory in resource pool 'internal' to run this query.
2017-03-08 19:22:37.550 spid38s Error: 701, Severity: 17, State: 123.
to me make me think your memory got too full. SPID 58 is what is doing the restore. I am uncertain what spid 38s was doing. But I could be mistaken, but I thought the "best practice" was to use 4 GB for the OS plus extra GB for other services and the rest for SQL (it depends on what the other services are too. Like if you have SSIS or SSRS on the same box, I doubt that 8GB is going to be enough memory). You are only giving the OS and other services 2 GB to work with. That SQL instance to me looks to be memory starved and the OS likely is too. I'd get more RAM in the VM if you can as I am fairly certain that is what is causing a lot of the slowness in your restore.
The above is all just my opinion on what you should do.
As with all advice you find on a random internet forum - you shouldn't blindly follow it. Always test on a test server to see if there is negative side effects before making changes to live!
I recommend you NEVER run "random code" you found online on any system you care about UNLESS you understand and can verify the code OR you don't care if the code trashes your system.
March 10, 2017 at 2:52 am
bmg002 - Thursday, March 9, 2017 10:28 AM9 TB of data is a lot of data to restore, so it doesn't surprise me it takes a while especially on a system with that low of memory.I have a nearly 800 GB set of databases and restoring that is a 1.5 to 2 hour process on a good day. Although that is a nightly full plus the hourly tlogs that I restore.
The errors I see here:
2017-03-08 19:22:37.890 spid58 There is insufficient system memory in resource pool 'default' to run this query.
2017-03-08 19:22:37.890 spid58 Error: 701, Severity: 17, State: 123.
2017-03-08 19:22:37.550 spid38s There is insufficient system memory in resource pool 'internal' to run this query.
2017-03-08 19:22:37.550 spid38s Error: 701, Severity: 17, State: 123.to me make me think your memory got too full. SPID 58 is what is doing the restore. I am uncertain what spid 38s was doing. But I could be mistaken, but I thought the "best practice" was to use 4 GB for the OS plus extra GB for other services and the rest for SQL (it depends on what the other services are too. Like if you have SSIS or SSRS on the same box, I doubt that 8GB is going to be enough memory). You are only giving the OS and other services 2 GB to work with. That SQL instance to me looks to be memory starved and the OS likely is too. I'd get more RAM in the VM if you can as I am fairly certain that is what is causing a lot of the slowness in your restore.
the last attempt has just finished after 14h
restore full noreco + restore diff reco
RESTORE DATABASE [dbxxxxx] FROM DISK = N'x:\dbxxxxx.bak' WITH FILE = 1, MOVE N....
NORECOVERY,STATS = 5;
RESTORE DATABASE [dbxxxxx] FROM DISK = N'x:\dbxxxxx.diff' WITH FILE = 1, MOVE N....
RECOVERY,STATS = 5;
at least i got a cleaner log withour errors:
--- DIFF RESTORE (216GB COMPRESSED) DONE in about 7h
2017-03-10 07:48:30.880 Backup RESTORE DATABASE successfully processed 177112062 pages in 3715.398 seconds (372.419 MB/sec).
2017-03-10 07:24:51.430 Backup Database changes were restored. Database: dbxxxxx, creation date(time): 2011/04/20(01:16:56), first LSN: 16842369:734463:8, last LSN: 16842369:3870416:1, number of dump devices: 1, device information: (FILE=1, TYPE=DISK: {'x:\xxxxxx.diff'}). This is an informational message. No user action is required.
2017-03-10 07:24:49.840 Backup Restore is complete on database 'dbxxxx'. The database is now available.
2017-03-10 07:24:45.240 spid58 CHECKDB for database 'dbxxxx' finished without errors on 2017-01-19 10:12:19.417 (local time). This is an informational message only; no user action is required.
2017-03-10 00:00:47.130 spid37s This instance of SQL Server has been using a process ID of 1200 since 04/02/2017 00:13:06 (local) 03/02/2017 23:13:06 (UTC). This is an informational message only; no user action is required.
2017-03-09 23:44:59.050 spid58 Recovery completed for database dbxxxx (database ID 5) in 5 second(s) (analysis 259 ms, redo 1013 ms, undo 1894 ms.) This is an informational message only. No user action is required.
2017-03-09 23:44:58.880 spid58 Recovery is writing a checkpoint in database 'dbxxxx' (5). This is an informational message only. No user action is required.
2017-03-09 23:43:44.070 spid58 Starting up database 'dbxxxx'.
2017-03-09 23:41:56.120 spid58 The database 'dbxxxx' is marked RESTORING and is in a state that does not allow recovery to be run.
2017-03-09 23:40:58.090 spid58 Starting up database 'dbxxxx'.
--- FULL RESTORE (1TB COMPRESSED FILE 9TB DATABASE FILES) DONE in 6h
2017-03-09 22:31:49.120 Backup RESTORE DATABASE successfully processed 951509357 pages in 16573.453 seconds (448.528 MB/sec).
2017-03-09 22:06:32.330 Backup Database was restored: Database: dbxxxx, creation date(time): 2011/04/20(01:16:56), first LSN: 16842151:11904518:1, last LSN: 16842155:13677584:1, number of dump devices: 1, device information: (FILE=1, TYPE=DISK: {'x:\xxxxxx.bak'}). Informational message. No user action required.
2017-03-09 21:43:45.620 spid58 The database 'dbxxxx' is marked RESTORING and is in a state that does not allow recovery to be run.
2017-03-09 21:42:46.520 spid58 Starting up database 'dbxxxx'.
2017-03-09 17:09:36.360 spid56 Using 'xplog70.dll' version '2014.120.2000' to execute extended stored procedure 'xp_msver'. This is an informational message only; no user action is required.
2017-03-09 17:09:36.180 spid56 Attempting to load library 'xplog70.dll' into memory. This is an informational message only. No user action is required.
I will run it again with some traceflag on
DBCC TRACEON(3004);
DBCC TRACEON(3014);
DBCC TRACEON(3604);
DBCC TRACEON(3605);
March 10, 2017 at 7:45 am
I might have an idea - how many VLF's do you have?DBCC LogInfo(<database name>)
If you have a crazy high number of VLF's, that will greatly affect your database restore time.
Failing that, It looks like you have a 9 TB database dumping data into 1 mdf file, correct? Breaking that up into multiple mdf's across mutiple disks should improve performance. It looks like you are averaging right around 400 MB/s between both restores (eyeballing it, and it is a little over 400, but just as a rough estimate). So you have 9437184 MB of data that you are writing to disk at a rate of 400 MB/s plus after that is restored, you are then writing the changes to the database in. Since this backup is roughly 1/9 the size (in number of pages), I would expect it to complete in roughly the 1/9 the time.
BUT if you have a large number of VLF's, the "RECOVERY" step can be slow (I believe... I could be wrong on this).
One thing you could try is have both of the queries use "NORECOVERY" and do a:RESTORE DATABASE <database name> WITH RECOVERY
after and see how long that step takes. This will give you an idea on if it is something with bringing the database back online.
Also, do you have instant file initialization turned on?
The above is all just my opinion on what you should do.
As with all advice you find on a random internet forum - you shouldn't blindly follow it. Always test on a test server to see if there is negative side effects before making changes to live!
I recommend you NEVER run "random code" you found online on any system you care about UNLESS you understand and can verify the code OR you don't care if the code trashes your system.
March 13, 2017 at 3:07 am
bmg002 - Friday, March 10, 2017 7:45 AMI might have an idea - how many VLF's do you have?DBCC LogInfo(<database name>)
If you have a crazy high number of VLF's, that will greatly affect your database restore time.
Failing that, It looks like you have a 9 TB database dumping data into 1 mdf file, correct? Breaking that up into multiple mdf's across mutiple disks should improve performance. It looks like you are averaging right around 400 MB/s between both restores (eyeballing it, and it is a little over 400, but just as a rough estimate). So you have 9437184 MB of data that you are writing to disk at a rate of 400 MB/s plus after that is restored, you are then writing the changes to the database in. Since this backup is roughly 1/9 the size (in number of pages), I would expect it to complete in roughly the 1/9 the time.
BUT if you have a large number of VLF's, the "RECOVERY" step can be slow (I believe... I could be wrong on this).
One thing you could try is have both of the queries use "NORECOVERY" and do a:RESTORE DATABASE <database name> WITH RECOVERY
after and see how long that step takes. This will give you an idea on if it is something with bringing the database back online.Also, do you have instant file initialization turned on?
log file is 800gb splitted into 224 vlf, i have rebuild it and pregrown in step to reduce vlf number months ago, and instant initialization is on, that's can't apply to logfile btw.
DB is restored into 18k+ datafile
this is the log of last restore with some trace on, they gives me more informations:
2017-03-10 10:55:50.120 spid58 DBCC TRACEON 3004, server process ID (SPID) 58. This is an informational message only; no user action is required.
2017-03-10 10:55:50.240 spid58 DBCC TRACEON 3014, server process ID (SPID) 58. This is an informational message only; no user action is required.
2017-03-10 10:55:50.250 spid58 DBCC TRACEON 3604, server process ID (SPID) 58. This is an informational message only; no user action is required.
2017-03-10 10:55:50.250 spid58 DBCC TRACEON 3605, server process ID (SPID) 58. This is an informational message only; no user action is required.
--- START FULL RESTORE NO RECO
2017-03-10 10:55:50.310 spid58 RestoreDatabase: Database dbxxxx
2017-03-10 10:55:50.440 spid58 Opening backup set
2017-03-10 10:55:50.470 spid58 SetTargetRestoreAge: 0
2017-03-10 10:55:55.260 spid58 Restore: Configuration section loaded
2017-03-10 10:55:55.260 spid58 Restore: Backup set is open
2017-03-10 10:55:55.270 spid58 Restore: Planning begins
2017-03-10 10:57:22.920 spid58 Restore: Planning complete
2017-03-10 10:57:22.960 spid58 Restore: BeginRestore (offline) on dbxxxx
2017-03-10 10:57:23.010 spid58 Restore: Attached database dbxxxx as DBID=5
2017-03-10 10:57:23.010 spid58 Restore: PreparingContainers
2017-03-10 10:59:42.820 spid58 Zeroing X:\xxxxx\dbxxxx\dbxxxx_log.ldf from page 1 to 104857728 (0x2000 to 0xc800100000)
2017-03-10 11:00:43.050 spid58 Restore: Containers are ready
2017-03-10 11:00:44.070 spid58 Restore: Restoring backup set
2017-03-10 11:00:44.070 spid58 Restore: Transferring data to dbxxxx
2017-03-10 11:00:44.070 spid58 Starting MSDA in stream 0, thread 1844, length 0x70ea6200000
2017-03-10 12:13:04.360 spid58 Zeroing completed on X:\xxxxx\dbxxxx\dbxxxx_log.ldf
2017-03-10 15:34:42.440 spid58 Completed MSDA in stream 0, thread 1844
2017-03-10 15:34:42.500 spid58 Restore: Waiting for log zero on dbxxxx
2017-03-10 15:34:42.510 spid58 Restore: LogZero complete
2017-03-10 15:39:58.200 spid58 SetTargetRestoreAge: 0
2017-03-10 15:43:02.850 spid58 FileHandleCache: 0 files opened. CacheSize: 12
2017-03-10 15:43:02.850 spid58 Restore: Data transfer complete on dbxxxx
2017-03-10 15:43:04.560 spid58 Restore: Backup set restored
2017-03-10 15:43:16.640 spid58 Starting up database 'dbxxxx'.
2017-03-10 15:44:05.570 spid58 The database 'dbxxxx' is marked RESTORING and is in a state that does not allow recovery to be run.
2017-03-10 15:44:06.250 spid58 Restore-Redo begins on database dbxxxx
2017-03-10 15:44:17.680 spid58 Restore VLF headers for 224 headers on database dbxxxx
2017-03-10 15:44:19.050 spid58 Restore VLF headers completed on database dbxxxx
2017-03-10 15:44:19.180 spid58 RunOfflineRedo logIter.Init(): FirstLsn(PruId: 0): 0x100fda7:0xb5a606:0x1
2017-03-10 15:44:19.180 spid58 RunOfflineRedo logIter.Init(): LastLsn(PruId: 0): 0x100fdab:0xd0b410:0x1
2017-03-10 16:12:15.180 spid58 OfflineRollforward: StopLsn/LastLsn(PruId: 0): 0x100fdab:0xd0b410:0x1
2017-03-10 16:13:36.410 spid58 FlushCache: cleaned up 481037 bufs with 204407 writes in 81167 ms (avoided 0 new dirty bufs) for db 5:0
2017-03-10 16:13:36.410 spid58 average writes per second: 2518.35 writes/sec
average throughput: 46.30 MB/sec, I/O saturation: 65599, context switches 62078
2017-03-10 16:13:36.410 spid58 last target outstanding: 216, avgWriteLatency 0
2017-03-10 16:15:26.620 spid58 Rollforward complete on database dbxxxx
2017-03-10 16:15:28.150 spid58 Restore: Done with fixups
2017-03-10 16:15:29.530 spid58 Restore: Writing history records
2017-03-10 16:15:29.530 Backup Database was restored: Database: dbxxxx, creation date(time): 2011/04/20(01:16:56), first LSN: 16842151:11904518:1, last LSN: 16842155:13677584:1, number of dump devices: 1, device information: (FILE=1, TYPE=DISK: {'X:\xxxxx\dbxxxx_F_20170304001517_7.bak'}). Informational message. No user action required.
2017-03-10 16:17:29.580 spid58 Writing backup history records
2017-03-10 16:40:44.840 spid58 Restore: Done with MSDB maintenance
2017-03-10 16:40:44.850 Backup RESTORE DATABASE successfully processed 951509357 pages in 16938.343 seconds (438.866 MB/sec).
2017-03-10 16:40:44.900 spid58 RestoreDatabase: Finished
2017-03-10 16:40:44.900 spid58 RestoreDatabase: Database dbxxxx
2017-03-10 16:40:44.920 spid58 X-locking database: dbxxxx
-- RESTORE DIFF BACKUP RECO
2017-03-10 16:40:45.010 spid58 Opening backup set
2017-03-10 16:40:45.040 spid58 SetTargetRestoreAge: 0
2017-03-10 16:40:49.720 spid58 Restore: Configuration section loaded
2017-03-10 16:40:49.720 spid58 Restore: Backup set is open
2017-03-10 16:40:49.730 spid58 Restore: Planning begins
2017-03-10 16:43:21.450 spid58 Dismounting FullText catalogs
2017-03-10 16:43:21.450 spid58 Restore: Planning complete
2017-03-10 16:43:21.450 spid58 Restore: BeginRestore (offline) on dbxxxx
2017-03-10 16:43:33.260 spid58 Restore: PreparingContainers
2017-03-10 16:47:38.490 spid58 Zeroing X:\xxxxx\dbxxxx\dbxxxx_log.ldf from page 1 to 104857728 (0x2000 to 0xc800100000)
2017-03-10 16:47:38.890 spid58 Restore: Containers are ready
2017-03-10 16:47:39.660 spid58 Restore: Restoring backup set
2017-03-10 16:47:39.660 spid58 Restore: Transferring data to dbxxxx
2017-03-10 16:47:39.660 spid58 Starting MSDA in stream 0, thread 1844, length 0x15170e00000
2017-03-10 17:55:09.550 spid58 Zeroing completed on X:\xxxxx\dbxxxx\dbxxxx_log.ldf
2017-03-10 18:03:35.960 spid58 Completed MSDA in stream 0, thread 1844
2017-03-10 18:03:35.960 spid58 Restore: Waiting for log zero on dbxxxx
2017-03-10 18:03:35.960 spid58 Restore: LogZero complete
2017-03-10 18:03:50.780 spid58 SetTargetRestoreAge: 0
2017-03-10 18:06:58.730 spid58 FileHandleCache: 0 files opened. CacheSize: 12
2017-03-10 18:06:58.730 spid58 Restore: Data transfer complete on dbxxxx
2017-03-10 18:06:59.910 spid58 Restore: Backup set restored
2017-03-10 18:07:11.570 spid58 Starting up database 'dbxxxx'.
2017-03-10 18:07:59.980 spid58 The database 'dbxxxx' is marked RESTORING and is in a state that does not allow recovery to be run.
2017-03-10 18:08:00.690 spid58 Restore-Redo begins on database dbxxxx
2017-03-10 18:08:11.460 spid58 Restore VLF headers for 224 headers on database dbxxxx
2017-03-10 18:08:12.650 spid58 Restore VLF headers completed on database dbxxxx
2017-03-10 18:08:12.750 spid58 RunOfflineRedo logIter.Init(): FirstLsn(PruId: 0): 0x100fe81:0xb34ff:0x8
2017-03-10 18:08:12.750 spid58 RunOfflineRedo logIter.Init(): LastLsn(PruId: 0): 0x100fe81:0x3b0ed0:0x1
2017-03-10 18:09:06.420 spid58 OfflineRollforward: StopLsn/LastLsn(PruId: 0): 0x100fe81:0x3b0ed0:0x1
2017-03-10 18:09:51.060 spid58 Rollforward complete on database dbxxxx
2017-03-10 18:09:52.620 spid58 Restore: Done with fixups
2017-03-10 18:09:52.650 spid58 Restore: Transitioning database to ONLINE
2017-03-10 18:09:52.920 spid58 Restore: Restarting database for ONLINE
2017-03-10 18:10:05.590 spid58 Starting up database 'dbxxxx'.
2017-03-10 18:11:09.030 spid58 Zeroing X:\xxxxx\dbxxxx\dbxxxx_log.ldf from page 66302317 to 66302797 (0x7e762da000 to 0x7e7669a000)
2017-03-10 18:11:09.040 spid58 Zeroing completed on X:\xxxxx\dbxxxx\dbxxxx_log.ldf
2017-03-10 18:11:13.470 spid58 Recovery is writing a checkpoint in database 'dbxxxx' (5). This is an informational message only. No user action is required.
----- ???????? -----
2017-03-10 18:11:13.600 spid58 Recovery completed for database dbxxxx (database ID 5) in 5 second(s) (analysis 233 ms, redo 1127 ms, undo 1932 ms.) This is an informational message only. No user action is required.
2017-03-11 00:00:08.000 spid33s This instance of SQL Server has been using a process ID of 1200 since 04/02/2017 00:13:06 (local) 03/02/2017 23:13:06 (UTC). This is an informational message only; no user action is required.
2017-03-11 01:47:43.050 spid58 PostRestoreContainerFixups: fixups complete
----- ???????? -----
2017-03-11 01:47:43.850 spid58 CHECKDB for database 'dbxxxx' finished without errors on 2017-01-19 10:12:19.417 (local time). This is an informational message only; no user action is required.
2017-03-11 01:47:43.860 spid58 PostRestoreReplicationFixup for dbxxxx starts
2017-03-11 01:47:48.470 spid58 PostRestoreReplicationFixup for dbxxxx complete
2017-03-11 01:47:48.790 spid58 Restore: Database is restarted
2017-03-11 01:47:48.790 Backup Restore is complete on database 'dbxxxx'. The database is now available.
2017-03-11 01:47:49.410 spid58 Resuming any halted fulltext crawls
2017-03-11 01:47:50.110 spid58 Restore: Writing history records
2017-03-11 01:47:50.110 Backup Database changes were restored. Database: dbxxxx, creation date(time): 2011/04/20(01:16:56), first LSN: 16842369:734463:8, last LSN: 16842369:3870416:1, number of dump devices: 1, device information: (FILE=1, TYPE=DISK: {'X:\xxxxx\dbxxxx_D_20170307001521_3.diff'}). This is an informational message. No user action is required.
2017-03-11 01:49:37.730 spid58 Writing backup history records
2017-03-11 02:11:33.170 spid58 Restore: Done with MSDB maintenance
2017-03-11 02:11:33.180 Backup RESTORE DATABASE successfully processed 177112062 pages in 4758.936 seconds (290.755 MB/sec).
2017-03-11 02:11:33.220 spid58 RestoreDatabase: Finished
2017-03-12 00:00:36.860 spid27s This instance of SQL Server has been using a process ID of 1200 since 04/02/2017 00:13:06 (local) 03/02/2017 23:13:06 (UTC). This is an informational message only; no user action is required.
2017-03-13 00:00:05.580 spid30s This instance of SQL Server has been using a process ID of 1200 since 04/02/2017 00:13:06 (local) 03/02/2017 23:13:06 (UTC). This is an informational message only; no user action is required.
what's "PostRestoreContainerFixups: fixups complete"? it seems that this step is to take a long time, for now I haven't found anything interesting about it
iI thought it might be something related to the log file (es zeroing), in reality all the steps related to it end up in a reasonable timeframe
ps: compressed backup runs in about 2.45 h / 2h, 650-750mb/s, but on a different san
March 13, 2017 at 6:17 am
sgt500 - Wednesday, March 8, 2017 7:57 AMMAXTRANSFERSIZE=2097152,
BUFFERCOUNT=1100,
Remove the above and just go with the default transfersize and buffercount
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"Ya can't make an omelette without breaking just a few eggs" 😉
March 13, 2017 at 7:20 am
Perry Whittle - Monday, March 13, 2017 6:17 AMsgt500 - Wednesday, March 8, 2017 7:57 AMMAXTRANSFERSIZE=2097152,
BUFFERCOUNT=1100,Remove the above and just go with the default transfersize and buffercount
Hi Perry,
ll subsequent attempts, including the last, have been made without
restore ends without errors, but i can't explain the 6.30h between recovery complete and postrestorefixups:
2017-03-10 18:11:13.600 spid58 Recovery completed for database dbxxxx (database ID 5) in 5 second(s) (analysis 233 ms, redo 1127 ms, undo 1932 ms.) This is an informational message only. No user action is required.
2017-03-11 00:00:08.000 spid33s This instance of SQL Server has been using a process ID of 1200 since 04/02/2017 00:13:06 (local) 03/02/2017 23:13:06 (UTC). This is an informational message only; no user action is required.
2017-03-11 01:47:43.050 spid58 PostRestoreContainerFixups: fixups complete
what about this step?
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