We've had two SCSI HDD fail on our SQL Server 2000 absolutely bring it to its knees. No data could be recovered, it's allllllllll gone.
I've set up a new server, win 2000. Installed SQL Server 2000, with SQL Slammer patches applied (exactly the same patches were aplied to the old server). I've restore all the various db's from tape, switched to single user mode from a dos prompt (sqlservr.exe -m -c)
But... when I try to restore the master SQL Server tells me that I cannot restore the master db from a different version. It then gives me some long winded number like 21342567 and tells me that the old version is something like 2134632 (I'm at home now and don't have the exact numbers in front of me)
What's up? They were both SQL Server 2000, same patches... Although they may have been installed from different CDROM's.
Anyway around this or is it all gooooonnnneee?
I'm specifically after all the DTS packages in the master db, nothing else.
Any thoughts
As always, I'm incredibly grateful to the tek-tips community for their remarkable support and encouragement in solving problems like this. You guys are great...
Cheers,
Peter
I've set up a new server, win 2000. Installed SQL Server 2000, with SQL Slammer patches applied (exactly the same patches were aplied to the old server). I've restore all the various db's from tape, switched to single user mode from a dos prompt (sqlservr.exe -m -c)
But... when I try to restore the master SQL Server tells me that I cannot restore the master db from a different version. It then gives me some long winded number like 21342567 and tells me that the old version is something like 2134632 (I'm at home now and don't have the exact numbers in front of me)
What's up? They were both SQL Server 2000, same patches... Although they may have been installed from different CDROM's.
Anyway around this or is it all gooooonnnneee?
I'm specifically after all the DTS packages in the master db, nothing else.
Any thoughts
As always, I'm incredibly grateful to the tek-tips community for their remarkable support and encouragement in solving problems like this. You guys are great...
Cheers,
Peter