Troubleshooting Routing and Message Delivery
This section provides suggestions to correct common problems related to routing and message delivery.
Technique: Diagnosing Message Delivery
If messages are not successfully delivered between two services, use the ssbdiagnose utility to generate a runtime report of a conversation. The runtime report will display any errors encountered by the conversation operations. If errors are encountered, ssbdiagnose will also analyze the configuration between the services and report any configuration problems it finds. For more information, see ssbdiagnose Utility.
Problem: Messages Remain in the Transmission Queue
Ensure that Service Broker message delivery is activated in the database. The is_broker_enabled column of sys.databases shows whether broker message delivery is activated, as shown in the following sample:
SELECT is_broker_enabled FROM sys.databases
WHERE database_id = DB_ID() ;
Broker message delivery can be deactivated to prevent messages from being delivered to the wrong database. For more information about Service Broker message delivery, see Managing Service Broker Identities. For more information about how to activate Service Broker message delivery, see How to: Activate Service Broker Message Delivery in Databases (Transact-SQL).
If Service Broker message delivery is active, check the transmission_status column in the sys.transmission_queue catalog view for the messages. Common error messages include the following:
Message |
Description |
---|---|
No route for service. |
Service Broker could not locate a route to the service specified. |
The target Service Broker is unreachable. |
Service Broker could not deliver the message to the target Service Broker. |
Transport layer is unavailable. |
No Service Broker endpoint exists in the instance, or the Service Broker endpoint did not start successfully. |
Target queue is disabled. |
The queue that the destination service uses has the STATUS option set to OFF. Service Broker does not add new messages to a queue with a STATUS of OFF. |
An error occurred while receiving data: '10054(An existing connection was forcibly closed by the remote host.)'. |
The remote side of the conversation accepted the TCP/IP connection, but closed the connection before a message could be sent. |
(None) |
Service Broker has not yet tried to send the message. If the enqueue_time column shows the message has been in the queue a long time, Service Broker message delivery might not be activated in the database. |
Problem: Route Exists, Transmission Status Shows No Route For Service
The most common causes for this problem are the following:
The SEND statement created the message when no route existed to successfully deliver the message.
The route was then created, but Service Broker has not yet tried to resend the message.
For more information about retries, see Service Broker Routing and Networking.
Ensure that the service name specified in the message exactly matches the service name specified in the route. Service Broker uses a byte-by-byte binary comparison to match service names. If a route that specifies the service name exists, you can compare the names by running the following query:
SELECT N'No Exact Match' = tq.to_service_name
FROM sys.transmission_queue AS tq
WHERE NOT EXISTS
(SELECT remote_service_name
FROM sys.routes AS routes
WHERE tq.to_service_name = routes.remote_service_name) ;
Note
Some service names might appear in the result set even though they do match a route. A route that does not specify a service name (remote_service_name = NULL) will match the service name used with any message.
For more information about Service Broker routes, see Service Broker Routing.
If the message specifies a broker instance identifier, verify either that the route specifies the same broker instance identifier, or that the route does not specify a broker instance identifier at all.
Check that the route has not expired. The lifetime column of the sys.routes catalog view contains the expiration date and time for the route.
Problem: Transmission Status Shows Target Service Broker Unreachable
The destination did not accept the message. This can indicate that the service name specified does not match the name of a service that the destination SQL Server instance hosts. It might also indicate that the destination does not contain a route for the service. To troubleshoot this problem, check the routing and service configuration for the destination.
Problem: Transmission Status Shows Transport Layer Unavailable
Verify that a Service Broker endpoint exists. If no endpoint exists, create one. If an endpoint does exist, verify that the state of the endpoint is STARTED. For more information, see Service Broker Endpoints. For more information about how to create an endpoint, see How to: Activate Service Broker Networking (Transact-SQL).
Problem: Transmission Status Shows “An Existing Connection Was Forcibly Closed By the Remote Host”
Transport security might be incorrectly configured, or the TCP/IP address for the route specifies a port that is being used by a service other than Service Broker.
Note
The port specified in the route must correspond to the port that is used by the Service Broker endpoint on the remote instance of the Database Engine. Service Broker uses the Service Broker communications protocols to transmit messages, not the Tabular Data Stream protocol that is used to transmit Transact-SQL batches and results. Therefore, the port that is used by a Service Broker endpoint differs from the port that is used to transmit Transact-SQL.
Check the Service Broker endpoint configuration to ensure that the two instances have compatible network security settings. If the Service Broker endpoint for one instance specifies REQUIRED or ENABLED, the Service Broker endpoint for the other instance cannot specify NONE.
Check certificates, users, and permissions for Service Broker transport security. For more information, see Service Broker Transport Security.
See Also