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Migrator for Notes 20.14 - User Guide for Office 365

Section 1. Introduction Section 2. Pre-migration Activities Section 3. User Provisioning Section 4. Email Repliability Section 5. Migrating Mail Files Section 6. Rooms and Resources Database Migration Section 7. Mail-in Database Migration Section 8. Setting Migration Status Section 9. Access and Delegation Migration Section 10. All Accounts Section 11. Customer Status Reports Section 12. Logs About us Technical support resources Appendix A: Staging Replicas Appendix B: Pre-Migration Troubleshooting Appendix C: Work with Files (Import/Export) Appendix D: Item Processing Results Appendix E: Migration Result Statuses Appendix F: Recovery Process Appendix G: Automatic Migration Restart Appendix H: Folder Processing Order

Implementation and Feature Functionality

By default, this feature is enabled in the Enable Recovery setting in the Advanced tab of the migration profile used on each migration workstation. With this setting enabled, during each migration, the migration engine generates a text file, CMTUProcessedNoteIDs-[username].txt, in the temp directory. This .txt file contains all the NoteIDs processed during the migration. If a crash occurs causing the migration to fail, the last entry in the .txt file is the NoteID that caused the failure. If the migration is successful, this file is deleted during cleanup.

A migration workstation, when it first starts and between user migrations, checks the temp directory (typically c:\windows\temp\) for any existing CMTUProcessedNoteIDs-[Username].txt file(s). If a file is found, the migration workstation uploads the list of NoteIDs from the file into the migrated messages table in Migrator for Notes before starting the migration. This updates the Migrator for Notes migrated message table for the failed migration, then processes the pending queue as normal. This allows any migration workstation to run follow-up migrations.

Common Failure Types

Before restarting a failed migration, you must first examine the migration status of the user and log files from the failed migration to determine the cause of the failure. If the cause of the failure is corrupted views or database design elements, restarting the migration will not help. The migration will continue to fail until the problem is resolved and the recovery process will not allow the migration to continue past the point of failure.

If the cause of the failure is a failed physical attribute that needs correcting, then provided below are the four most common types of physical attribute failures with their corresponding example log files, and possible resolutions.

Cannot Open Mail File: “Migration initialization failed”

If the mail file does not exist at the specified location, or the migration account does not have access to the mail file, Migrator for Notes reports a status of “Migration initialization failed.” This status can appear if either the source or destination server is unavailable, or if the migration account does not have access to the message store. Regardless of the number of attempts made, this type of problem cannot be successful until it is resolved. If the log file records a similar message as the following example, “Unable to open mail file CN=SERVERNAME/OU=MS/OU=SVR/O=ONE!!mail6\harr0156,” either the mail file is not present or there is an ECL alert on the workstation that is running that user. In case of ECL alerts, click through them until they stop appearing.

Corrupt Tables:

When the log file records the following statement “NSFDbGetModifiedNoteTable returned 'No documents have been modified since specified time.' while getting Note IDs of folders to process”, the tables in the mail template are corrupt. To fix this, the common practice is to create a new copy of the mail file, then replace the database design.

 


When you create a copy or a replica of the mail file to correct corrupt tables, you must remember that the recovery log does not work as expected with the copy or the replica. This is because all the documents in the mail file now have new NoteIDs. So, when you restart the migration, all the documents in the mail file are migrated and you will end up with duplicates.

To resolve this, when you restart the migration, you must treat it as a complete redo of that user’s mail file migration, and clear the contents of the user's Exchange mailbox before proceeding.

 

Corrupt Views:

When the log file contains a statement like the one shown right before the summary “Error: NSFNoteOpen returned 'You are not authorized to perform that operation' opening view note”, some of the views in the mail template are corrupt, and you need to create a new copy of the mail file, then replace design as instructed above.

Notes Crash:

If there is a critical error in the HCL Notes client, the user’s status must be reported as “Migration Terminated Abnormally.” The can also be verified by viewing the migration log: the log file’s last statement will show this “3/2/2009 10:05:17 PM Migration preformed on workstation na svr20 workstation 1.”  To resume migration, restart the migration worker application on the Migration Workstation that is stated at the end of the log, then reset the user in Migrator for Notes and migrate again. Users in this status can be restarted and the migration will be successful.

This type of crash can be easily identified if the log file does not contain a summary of the events before ending the log with the statement “Migration performed on workstation…”. In such a case, if you restart the migration with recovery enabled, the migration is allowed to continue past the point of failure. However, if the log ends without the “Migration performed on workstation…” statement, then when you restart the migration, you will need to ensure that the migration is processed by the same workstation (that processed it earlier at the time of crash) to ensure that it properly resumes from the point of failure.

Cannot Open Mail File: “Migration initialization failed”

Common Failure Types

Before restarting a failed migration, you must first examine the migration status of the user and log files from the failed migration to determine the cause of the failure. If the cause of the failure is corrupted views or database design elements, restarting the migration will not help. The migration will continue to fail until the problem is resolved and the recovery process will not allow the migration to continue past the point of failure.

If the cause of the failure is a failed physical attribute that needs correcting, then provided below are the four most common types of physical attribute failures with their corresponding example log files, and possible resolutions.

If the mail file does not exist at the specified location, or the migration account does not have access to the mail file, Migrator for Notes reports a status of “Migration initialization failed.” This status can appear if either the source or destination server is unavailable, or if the migration account does not have access to the message store. Regardless of the number of attempts made, this type of problem cannot be successful until it is resolved. If the log file records a similar message as the following example, “Unable to open mail file CN=SERVERNAME/OU=MS/OU=SVR/O=ONE!!mail6\harr0156,” either the mail file is not present or there is an ECL alert on the workstation that is running that user. In case of ECL alerts, click through them until they stop appearing.

Corrupt Tables:

When the log file records the following statement “NSFDbGetModifiedNoteTable returned 'No documents have been modified since specified time.' while getting Note IDs of folders to process”, the tables in the mail template are corrupt. To fix this, the common practice is to create a new copy of the mail file, then replace the database design.

 


When you create a copy or a replica of the mail file to correct corrupt tables, you must remember that the recovery log does not work as expected with the copy or the replica. This is because all the documents in the mail file now have new NoteIDs. So, when you restart the migration, all the documents in the mail file are migrated and you will end up with duplicates.

To resolve this, when you restart the migration, you must treat it as a complete redo of that user’s mail file migration, and clear the contents of the user's Exchange mailbox before proceeding.

 

Corrupt Views:

When the log file contains a statement like the one shown right before the summary “Error: NSFNoteOpen returned 'You are not authorized to perform that operation' opening view note”, some of the views in the mail template are corrupt, and you need to create a new copy of the mail file, then replace design as instructed above.

Notes Crash:

If there is a critical error in the HCL Notes client, the user’s status must be reported as “Migration Terminated Abnormally.” The can also be verified by viewing the migration log: the log file’s last statement will show this “3/2/2009 10:05:17 PM Migration preformed on workstation na svr20 workstation 1.”  To resume migration, restart the migration worker application on the Migration Workstation that is stated at the end of the log, then reset the user in Migrator for Notes and migrate again. Users in this status can be restarted and the migration will be successful.

This type of crash can be easily identified if the log file does not contain a summary of the events before ending the log with the statement “Migration performed on workstation…”. In such a case, if you restart the migration with recovery enabled, the migration is allowed to continue past the point of failure. However, if the log ends without the “Migration performed on workstation…” statement, then when you restart the migration, you will need to ensure that the migration is processed by the same workstation (that processed it earlier at the time of crash) to ensure that it properly resumes from the point of failure.

Corrupt Tables:

Common Failure Types

Before restarting a failed migration, you must first examine the migration status of the user and log files from the failed migration to determine the cause of the failure. If the cause of the failure is corrupted views or database design elements, restarting the migration will not help. The migration will continue to fail until the problem is resolved and the recovery process will not allow the migration to continue past the point of failure.

If the cause of the failure is a failed physical attribute that needs correcting, then provided below are the four most common types of physical attribute failures with their corresponding example log files, and possible resolutions.

Cannot Open Mail File: “Migration initialization failed”

If the mail file does not exist at the specified location, or the migration account does not have access to the mail file, Migrator for Notes reports a status of “Migration initialization failed.” This status can appear if either the source or destination server is unavailable, or if the migration account does not have access to the message store. Regardless of the number of attempts made, this type of problem cannot be successful until it is resolved. If the log file records a similar message as the following example, “Unable to open mail file CN=SERVERNAME/OU=MS/OU=SVR/O=ONE!!mail6\harr0156,” either the mail file is not present or there is an ECL alert on the workstation that is running that user. In case of ECL alerts, click through them until they stop appearing.

Corrupt Tables:

When the log file records the following statement “NSFDbGetModifiedNoteTable returned 'No documents have been modified since specified time.' while getting Note IDs of folders to process”, the tables in the mail template are corrupt. To fix this, the common practice is to create a new copy of the mail file, then replace the database design.

 


When you create a copy or a replica of the mail file to correct corrupt tables, you must remember that the recovery log does not work as expected with the copy or the replica. This is because all the documents in the mail file now have new NoteIDs. So, when you restart the migration, all the documents in the mail file are migrated and you will end up with duplicates.

To resolve this, when you restart the migration, you must treat it as a complete redo of that user’s mail file migration, and clear the contents of the user's Exchange mailbox before proceeding.

 

Corrupt Views:

When the log file contains a statement like the one shown right before the summary “Error: NSFNoteOpen returned 'You are not authorized to perform that operation' opening view note”, some of the views in the mail template are corrupt, and you need to create a new copy of the mail file, then replace design as instructed above.

Notes Crash:

If there is a critical error in the HCL Notes client, the user’s status must be reported as “Migration Terminated Abnormally.” The can also be verified by viewing the migration log: the log file’s last statement will show this “3/2/2009 10:05:17 PM Migration preformed on workstation na svr20 workstation 1.”  To resume migration, restart the migration worker application on the Migration Workstation that is stated at the end of the log, then reset the user in Migrator for Notes and migrate again. Users in this status can be restarted and the migration will be successful.

This type of crash can be easily identified if the log file does not contain a summary of the events before ending the log with the statement “Migration performed on workstation…”. In such a case, if you restart the migration with recovery enabled, the migration is allowed to continue past the point of failure. However, if the log ends without the “Migration performed on workstation…” statement, then when you restart the migration, you will need to ensure that the migration is processed by the same workstation (that processed it earlier at the time of crash) to ensure that it properly resumes from the point of failure.

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