Event ID 4193 — Transactions Processing

Event ID 4193 — Transactions Processing

Updated: February 22, 2008

Applies To: Windows Server 2008

The Microsoft Distributed Transaction Coordinator service (MSDTC) can coordinate transactions for a variety of protocols.

Event Details

Product: Windows Operating System
ID: 4193
Source: Microsoft-Windows-MSDTC
Version: 6.0
Symbolic Name: IDS_DTC_E_TMREENLISTMENTCOMPLETE_INDOUBT
Message: A resource manager performed recovery and called ReenlistmentComplete indicating that recovery was complete. However, there is at least one transaction that was enlisted with the resource manager whose state is still “In Doubt”%0

Resolve
Resolve the In Doubt transactions

The Microsoft Distributed Transaction Coordinator service (MSDTC) reported that the outcome for a transaction has a status of In Doubt. This means that there is no information available about the outcome of this transaction. This can happen if the connection between the MSDTC proxy and the transaction manager that is acting as the commit coordinator was lost. The transaction may have committed or not. MSDTC lost communication with that transaction manager after preparing, but before receiving, the information about the transaction’s outcome.

The transaction remains prepared and in doubt until communication is restored with the superior transaction manager. The system administrator can force the transaction to commit manually by using the Component Services administrative tool.

Ensure that all Resource Managers (RM) that enlist in MSDTC transactions are consistent. RMs operate with relational databases, Message Queuing, transactional files, and object-oriented databases. After you are sure that all RMs are consistent, commit the transaction manually.

To perform this procedure, you must have membership in Administrators, or you must have been delegated the appropriate authority.

To commit the transaction manually:

  1. Click Start, and then click Run.
  2. Type comexp.msc, and then click OK. If the User Account Control dialog box appears, confirm that the action it displays is what you want, and then click Continue.
  3. Click Component Services, click Computers, click My Computer, and then click Distributed Transaction Coordinator.
  4. Click Local DTC, and then click Transaction List.
  5. In the Transaction List, right-click the transaction with the status of In Doubt, point to Resolve, and then click Commit.

    When a transaction’s Commit outcome is forced (that is, when the transaction is committed manually), the transaction is designated as Forced Commit.

Verify

To perform this procedure, you must have membership in Administrators, or you must have been delegated the appropriate authority.

To verify that the Microsoft Distributed Transaction Coordinator service (MSDTC) is running properly:

  1. Click Start, and then click Command Prompt.
  2. At the command prompt, type sc query msdtc, and then press ENTER.
  3. The system responds with information about the service. Confirm that these two items appear: SERVICE_NAME: msdtc and STATE : 4 RUNNING.

Related Management Information

Transactions Processing

Application Server

Related:

Unable to read the configured IP addresses for adapter %2. IP interfaces will not be initialized on this adapter.

Details
Product: Windows Operating System
Event ID: 4193
Source: Tcpip
Version: 5.0
Component: System Event Log
Symbolic Name: EVENT_TCPIP_NO_ADDRESS_LIST
Message: Unable to read the configured IP addresses for adapter %2. IP interfaces will not be initialized on this adapter.
   
Explanation

Both the adapter and another device are using the address specified. Each device should have a unique address.

   
User Action

To correct this problem:

1. Contact the person with administrative rights on your computer.
2. Check the configuration of the network adapter using Network and Dial-up Connections in Control Panel.
3. Make sure the network adapter is configured according to the manufacturer’s specifications and that the configuration does not conflict with the configurations of other hardware.

Related:

WINS could not create the notification socket. Make sure the TCP/IP driver is installed and running properly.

Details
Product: Windows Operating System
Event ID: 4193
Source: Wins
Version: 5.2
Symbolic Name: WINS_EVT_CANT_CREATE_UDP_SOCK
Message: WINS could not create the notification socket. Make sure the TCP/IP driver is
installed and running properly.
   
Explanation

This event record indicates that WINS was unable to send a packet.

   
User Action

The steps to correct this problem are:

1. Stop the WINS service.
2. Click Start, point to Settings, and then click Network and Dial-up Connections.
3. Right-click Local Area Connection, and then click Status.
4. Check to see that the connection is operating correctly.
5. If the connection is not operating, click Properties and see if Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) is being used. If not, install the Internet Protocol (TCP/IP).
6. Restart WINS.

Related: