Thank you for your help. Unfortunately the wizard still fails with the same
error messages, although apparently now when starting to migrate the database.
When I checked, the network service user had read and write access tothis
folder, but not access to modify or execute. I gave if full access tothe
folder and also checked access to the individual files and the temporary
sub-folder.
As I said, the wizard is still failing, so I would still be grateful for
more help.
Alan Watson
:
On Apr 27, 11:03 pm, Alan Watson
Raul,
Thanks for your interest. If I try to use the existing database, the process
stops apparently during the backup phase, giving me the error message
'Database migration was unsuccessful'. If I try to create a new database, the
process stops immediately with the error message 'Database creation was
unsuccessful'.
I should add that I can happily go into SQL Server Management Studio Express
and back up the BCM database or create new databases, and that the upgrade
wizard is plainly looking at the right instance of SQL server
(ALAN-PC\MSSMLBIZ) and can see the database (MSBusinessContactManager).
I am really at a loss. I wonder whether there is any risk that, although I
have opened Outlook as administrator, the upgrade wizard is trying to log on
as some other user. If so, a) what user might this be so that I can make sure
it has the rights it needs or b) can I open the wizard directly as
administrator to get around the problem. Alternatively, can I avoid the
wizard altogether and do the various tasks one at a time? If so, how?
Thanks in advance for your help.
Alan Watson
:
What errors do you get when creating a new database
--
Regards
Rahul Thomas [MSFT]
https://blogs.msdn.com/rathomas
After overcoming more problems than I could ever have imagined, I now have
BCM 2003 SP4 installed on my newish Vista PC. But when I openOutlook,
even
running as administrator, the Startup Wizard fails either to convert the
existing database or create a new one.
This looks like a problem of the Wizard not having sufficientrights, but
having already started Outlook as administrator, I am not sure what else
to
do. I can see the BCM database using SQL Server Management Studio and
can't
see anything that should stop it working. What can I do?
Alan Watson- Hide quoted text -
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Sql Server 2005 doesn't run as administrator, as earlier version did,
but as builtin user Network Services. The issue is probably that user
Network Services doesn't have permissions to write files to the BCM
folder, C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Business Contact
Manager- Hide quoted text -
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