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MSSQLSERVER_17207

Applies to: SQL Server

Details

Attribute Value
Product Name SQL Server
Event ID 17207
Event Source MSSQLSERVER
Component SQLEngine
Symbolic Name DBLKIO_OS2DISKERROR
Message Text %ls: Operating system error %ls occurred while creating or opening file '%ls'. Diagnose and correct the operating system error, and retry the operation.

Explanation

SQL Server was unable to open the specified file because of the specified OS error.

You may see error 17207 in the Windows Application Event or the SQL Server Error log when SQL Server cannot open a database and/or transaction log files. Here is an example of what the error may look like.

Error: 17207, Severity: 16, State: 1.
FileMgr::StartSecondaryDataFiles: Operating system error 2(The system cannot find the file specified.) occurred while creating or opening file 'F:\MSSQL\DATA\MyDB_FG1_1.ndf'. Diagnose and correct the operating system error, and retry the operation.

You may see these errors during the SQL Server instance startup process or any database operation that attempts to start the database (for example, ALTER DATABASE). In some scenarios, you may see both 17207 and 17204 errors and in other occasions you might just see one of them.

If a user database runs into these errors, that database will be left in the RECOVERY_PENDING state, and applications cannot access the database. If a system database encounters these errors, the SQL Server instance will not start and you cannot connect to this instance of SQL Server. This could also result in a SQL Server failover cluster resource to go offline.

If the problem is related to your SQL Server FileStream filegroup, then you will notice that only the full directory path is listed instead of a file name. Here is an example.

Error: 17207, Severity: 16, State: 1.
STREAMFCB::Startup: Operating system error 2(The system cannot find the file specified.) occurred while creating or opening file 'C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\MSSQL13.SQL2016\MSSQL\DATA\bpa_files_test_fs_1\bpa_files_test_fs_1'. Diagnose and correct the operating system error, and retry the operation.

Cause

Before any SQL Server database can be used, the database needs to be started. The database startup process involves initializing various data structures that represent the database and the database files, opening all the files that belong to the database, and finally running recovery on the database. SQL Server uses the CreateFile Windows API function to open the files that belong to a database.

Messages 17207 (and 17204) indicate that an error was encountered while SQL Server attempted to open the database files during the startup process.

These error messages contain the following information:

  1. Name of the SQL Server function that is attempting to open the file. The function name that you normally observe in these error messages is one of the following:

    • FCB::Open - file has encountered an error when SQL Server attempts to open it
    • FileMgr::StartPrimaryDataFiles - a primary data file or a file belonging to the primary file group
    • FileMgr::StartSecondaryDataFiles - a file belonging to a secondary file group
    • FileMgr::StartLogFiles - a transaction log file
    • STREAMFCB::Startup - SQL FileStream container
    • FCB::RemoveAlternateStreams
  2. The state information distinguishes multiple locations within a function that can generate this error message.

  3. The full physical path for the file.

  4. The file ID corresponding to the file.

  5. The operating system error code and error description. In some instances, you'll see only the error code.

The operating system error information printed in these error messages is the root cause leading to error 17204. Common causes for these error messages are a permission issue or an incorrect path to the file.

User action

  1. Resolving error 17207 involves understanding the associated operating system error code and diagnosing that error. Once the operating system error condition is resolved, then you can attempt to restart the database (using ALTER DATABASE SET ONLINE, for example) or the SQL Server instance to bring the affected database online. In some cases, you may not be able to resolve the operating system error, so you will have to take specific corrective actions. We'll discuss these actions in this section.

  2. If the 17207 error message contains only an error code and not an error description, then you can try resolving the error code using the command from an operating system shell: net helpmsg <error code> . If you are getting an 8-digit status code as the error code, then you can refer to the information sources like How do I convert an HRESULT to a Win32 error code? to decode what these status codes into OS errors.

  3. If you are getting the Access is Denied operating system error = 5, consider these methods:

    • Check the permissions that are set on the file by looking at the properties of the file in Windows Explorer. SQL Server uses Windows groups to provision access control on the various file resources. Make sure the appropriate group (with names like SQLServerMSSQLUser$ComputerName$MSSQLSERVER or SQLServerMSSQLUser$ComputerName$InstanceName) has the required permissions on the database file that is mentioned in the error message. Review Configure File System Permissions for Database Engine Access for more details. Ensure that the Windows group actually includes the SQL Server service startup account or the service SID.

    • Review the user account under which the SQL Server service is currently running. You can use the Windows Task Manager to get this information. Look for the "User Name" value for the executable "sqlservr.exe". Also if you recently changed the SQL Server service account, know that the supported way to do this operation is to use the SQL Server Configuration Manager utility. More information on this is available at SQL Server Configuration Manager.

    • Depending on the type of operation (opening databases during server startup, attaching a database, database restore, and so on), the account that is used for impersonation and accessing the database file may vary. Review the topic Securing Data and Log Files to understand which operation sets what permission and to which accounts. Use a tool like Windows SysInternals Process Monitor to understand if the file access is happening under the security context of the SQL Server instance service startup account (or Service SID) or an impersonated account.

      If SQL Server is impersonating the user credentials of the login that executes the ALTER DATABASE or CREATE DATABASE operation, you will notice the following information in the Process Monitor tool (an example).

      Date & Time:      3/27/2010 8:26:08 PM
      Event Class:        File System
      Operation:          CreateFile
      Result:                ACCESS DENIED
      Path:                  C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\MSSQL13.SQL2016\MSSQL\DATA\attach_test.mdf
      TID:                   4288
      Duration:             0.0000366
      Desired Access:Generic Read/Write
      Disposition:        Open
      Options:            Synchronous IO Non-Alert, Non-Directory File, Open No Recall
      Attributes:          N
      ShareMode:       Read
      AllocationSize:   n/a
      Impersonating: DomainName\UserName
      
  4. If you are getting The system cannot find the file specified OS error = 3:

    • Review the complete path from the error message.
    • Ensure the disk drive and the folder path is visible and accessible from Windows Explorer.
    • Review the Windows Event log to find out if any problems exist with this disk drive.
    • If the path is incorrect and if this database already exists in the system, you can change the database file paths using the methods explained in the Move Database Files article. You may have to use this procedure, especially for system database files which encounter 17204 or 17207 and you are working through a disaster recovery scenario where the specified disk drives are unavailable. This topic also explains how you can identify the current location of the various system databases [master, model, tempdb, msdb and mssqlsystemresource].
    • If you see this error because the database files are missing, you have to restore the database from a valid backup:
      • If the database file associated with the error belongs to a secondary filegroup, then you can optionally mark that filegroup offline, bring the database online, and then perform a restore of that filegroup alone. For more information, refer to the OFFLINE section of the topic ALTER DATABASE File and Filegroup Options (Transact-SQL).
      • If the file that produced the error is a transaction log file, review the information under the sections "FOR ATTACH" and "FOR ATTACH_REBUILD_LOG" of the topic CREATE DATABASE (Transact-SQL) to understand how you can recreate the missing transaction log files.
    • Ensure that any disk or network location [like iSCSI drive] is available before SQL Server attempts to access the database files on these locations. If needed create the required dependencies in Cluster Administrator or Service Control Manager.
  5. If you're getting the The process cannot access the file because it is being used by another process operating system error = 32:

    • Use a tool like Process Explorer or Handle from Windows Sysinternals to find out if another process or service has acquired exclusive lock on this database file.
    • Stop that process from accessing SQL Server Database files. Common examples include anti-virus programs (see guidance for file exclusions in the following KB article).
    • In a cluster environment, make sure that the sqlservr.exe process from the previous owning node has actually released the handles to the database files. Normally this doesn't occur, but misconfigurations of the cluster or I/O paths can lead to such issues.