David Barrett's Blog
Learning and Sharing One Blog Post at a Time
Site Sections
Home
Contact
Syndication
Login
Posts
16
Comments
27
Trackbacks
0
March 2008 Entries
Biztalk Configuration Error: Cloned Machines
I recently ran into an error attempting to configure a Biztalk 2006 R2 instance on a virtual machine. I had a virtual services box (where Biztalk was installed) and another virtual SQL box (where the Biztalk configuration was kept). However, I kept getting an error during the configuration deployment step:
Exception of type 'System.EnterpriseServices.TransactionProxyException' was thrown.
After googling for a bit, I ran into an
excellent article by Wade Wegner
explaining that the two virtual machines appeared to have the same CID value (basically, a unique machine identifier for MSDTC). This can occur when a virtual machine is a clone of another and the CID value isn't made unique after the clone.
I don't know the exact situation for these virtual machines, as someone else on the dev team created the virtual machines, but I do know these two virtual machines were clones of each other (or possibly another box?). I don't know if
NewSid
or
SysPrep
actually modifies this value for MSDTC, but I suspect neither was run on these virtual machines after the clone, so I suppose it doesn't really matter in my case. If anyone has confirmation on this, feel free to comment.
What I do know is that Wade's article was spot-on for resolving my issue. I followed his instructions exactly and it solved the problem. Thanks, Wade!
posted @
Tuesday, March 25, 2008 1:32 PM
|
Feedback (1)
Motorola Cable Box and DVI Error
I upgraded to HD from Comcast a few weeks ago. I received a new HD box (Motorola DCH-3200) to be able to get 1080i programming. However, when I plugged in the HDMI cable into the TV and cable box, the cable box would always power on, go through the power on self-tests, and then lock up, displaying DUI / DU1 in the display. This, I found out, is the digital display of the word 'DVI'. I googled the error, and only found a few people who experienced it, although there was enough information to infer that this appeared to be some sort of handshake issue between the components. Since HDMI is a digital spec (complete with copyright management -- yay), there is more than just a signal output from the box to the TV. The two have to speak with each other before it will work.
I'd seen issues with people putting a receiver in between the cable box and the TV, and that causing issues because the receiver didn't propagate the signal correctly between devices, but I had a straight connection. However, after much fussing and the arrival of the Comcast technician, we did try an alternate HDMI input on the back of the TV, and that worked like a champ.
I have no idea why another input would work. There is no mention of different specs for the various HDMI inputs on my TV, but all I know is HDMI1 doesn't work, while HDMI2 does. Incidentally, HDMI1 works with my DVD player, just not with the cable box. By the way, I have a Phillips LCD (I forget the exact model number).
/shrug
posted @
Monday, March 24, 2008 9:55 AM
|
Feedback (5)
Archives
July, 2008 (1)
June, 2008 (3)
May, 2008 (5)
April, 2008 (3)
March, 2008 (2)
February, 2008 (1)
November, 2007 (1)
Post Categories
WCF
SOA
Neudesic
Home
Entertain
Biztalk
Visual Studio
EntLib
TFS
VSTS
News
Copyright © 2005 David Barrett
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons License