shadow9449
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Thanks, shadow9449, I had forgotten that setting, but it could also have that effect.
Holy cow! a Like from Doc_Man! That's like 10 likes from normal people!
Thanks, shadow9449, I had forgotten that setting, but it could also have that effect.
@kevnaff, there is an old Bugs Bunny cartoon where Elmer Fudd has a recipe for hassenpfeffer, the first instruction of which is to "catch the rabbit." If you cannot catch the rabbit, no hassenpfeffer. The best hope of making headway here is to note an instance of this network interruption and try to get a time of day at which it happens. If you can get a time within a minute, that makes the detective work fairly easy.
Click on the Windows START Icon (lower left on screen, far left of bottom bar.) In the "Search" box type EV and then when it gives you a list of things you could run, select Event Viewer. IF you can open this at all on the machine that experienced the interruption you can perhaps find more info. If even THAT utility is tied down and inaccessible, you are in a really tight situation and debugging this will be quite hard.
When on the control panel of Event Viewer, to the left will be a "navigator" panel that lets you choose which subset of events to view. Network events will PROBABLY be in the System event list. Open that (just click on it once on the navigator panel) and then use up & down arrow to scroll the entries to the time that you determined was the approximate time of the last network hiccup.
It is POSSIBLE (though not very likely) that the Application log could contain the event instead. I doubt that either the Setup log or the Security log will be helpful. However, there is an "Applications and Services" section that if you expand it (click on the > symbol) includes Hardware event logs.
The event logs are ALWAYS presented in order of "most recent event on top" i.e. descending time order - so regardless of which log you are viewing, it should be easy to go through those logs and see if there is a network event logged for that time of day. Your goal, if Event Viewer is allowed, is to find a log of that event.
Note also that if you have the system date/time display in the right-hand side of the task bar (lower right of screen), that is the same clock used by the logging subsystem, so if you noticed the time of day on that clock display, that time should match up with the event log. If you use THAT time, the logged event will be no more than 1 minute either way from the time you noted.
If the .ACCDB file is opened in Exclusive Mode it does not open a lock file. Did you INTEND to open it exclusively?
Three ways, 2 of which are "set and forget"How easy is it to open it exclusively?
Three ways, 2 of which are "set and forget"
1. When the file opened in any version of Access that has a ribbon (after AC 2003 ?), use File >> Options >> Current Database and go through the list of options you can set. One of them is "Open Exclusively" which will remain set until you change it.
2. From a command line activation, use /EXCL opton
Command-line switches for Microsoft Office products - Microsoft Support
Use command-line switches to customize the startup process for Microsott Office programs: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and Access.support.microsoft.com
3, Edit the icon for your application (NOT FOR ACCESS ITSELF) to include the /EXCL option.
Does this mean that the database has always been opened exclusively by each user as it contains the /Excl option?
Holy cow! a Like from Doc_Man! That's like 10 likes from normal people!![]()