I get error 0x8007000E in Outlook 2003 when sending/recieving

G

Guest

I get an exchange server error 0x8007000E when I am sending/recieving in
Outlook 2003. Any ideas?
 
G

Guest

I fixed this (well got it to work again):
I attempted all fixes presented in KB911084 - none worked.
Used ExMerge to remove Mailbox (with empty option) did not fix it.
I thought is was a workstation problem - reformatted - did not fix it
(problem appeared after virus/spyware outbreak on his system and needed a
good swipe anyway)

Here's what worked:
Remove user from Domain
Remove mailbox (Exch 2000) Run Cleanup Agent - Purge (Make sure you save
email!!! Uncheck Cached Mode from Outlook to see all email, copy down to
local .PST before Purging mailbox from Exch2000)
Added user back and created new mailbox, copied data back in from PST.

Things to try BEFORE removing user (things I thought of later)
1. Try this - KB898785 - I didn't because we really use Public Folders a ton
and it was more work and it just didn't seem suspect.
2. Just save email and purge mailbox (Use AD -> rt click -> Exchange Tasks
-> Delete Mailbox {BACKUP UP EMAIL FIRST TO .PST} and run Cleanup Agent in
Exch2000/2003 then Purge. Same steps to add back. I should have tried that
first before removing entire user.

All the best,
Stephen - old MCSE
 
A

art_fonger

We had the same error with several users in cached mode. How we
determined the problem was to first create a new PST file, connect to
it, then sync each mailbox older individually (click on the folder and
press Shift +F9), when you see the memory error, you've discovered the
problem folder(s). This is where it gets tricky, find the offending
item and move it to the PST file if you can and resync that folder. The
folder itself could be corrupt too. Repeat this for all the folders in
the mailbox. You may have offending items in other folders. If you
don't get that error you've found the offending item. Our offending
item was an internal email. It was 2mb w/o attachments. Once we deleted
it, the memory problem went away. Don't get discouraged, it'll take
time. What I did was to put the end user in non-cached mode and
recreated the mail profile on a test box in cached mode to troubleshoot
the problem.

Good luck and practice safe computing!


Art
MCSE
"Remember, there's nothing we can solve"
 

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