Domanda

I am using SSIS with VS2010 (shell) and databases going from SQL Server 2005 (32 bit)to SQL Server 2012 (64 bit). I am developing directly on the destination server (not optimal, but it works).

When I try to use the Transfer database task, it gives me an error message as follows: "Error: The Execute method on the task returned error code 0x80131500 (An error occurred while transferring data. See the inner exception for details.). The Execute method must succeed, and indicate the result using an "out" parameter." Error message

Here is the problem... how do I view an "inner exception"?? it is a GUI interface with no way to step through the code! I even tried setting up logging - it just logs the same useless error message.

Microsoft has no information for this error code in their reference docs (that I could find).

After googleing the error code, I saw others have this error code along with messages having to do with users, roles, and creating them.

  • I double checked that I have sysadmin rights on both servers, and
    logins on both.
  • I tried the same Transfer Database task from each server to itself (with changeing database name) and that worked fine for both by themselves.
  • I tried both DatabaseOnline and DatabaseOffline options. (same error both ways)
  • I tried doing a "Transfer Logins" task before doing the transfer database task, that task worked, but not the Transfer databases task. Then it started throwing errors saying that the databases don't exist - which implies that I need to transfer logins AFTER I transfer databases.

Here are my settings:enter image description here

What am I doing wrong? OR how can I get the "inner exception" message?

Also, follow my post to Microsoft's forums here: http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/sqlintegrationservices/thread/cda53c80-8da6-4ed1-898a-9f3ff8464ae2

È stato utile?

Soluzione

This answer makes me sick to my stomach... I hope I save someone else this hassle. The problem was this:

  1. First and foremost: the error message was not descriptive enough. The error should be handed to the interface.
  2. Under "edit" on a "Transfer Database" task, the destination file paths are "auto-populated" with the file paths of the source database. They look right at first (and second, and third...) cursory glance. Upon further inspection the file paths were wrong. This makes sense if you are going from version to version - the folders are named with subtle differences according to version (MSSQL.1 vs. MSSQL11.<instanceName>).

In summary, the error was caused by the folder not existing because the path was set wrong. I imagine other low-level exceptions like this are also eaten by the interface with the same cryptic error message.

Altri suggerimenti

This is old but I bumped in the same cryptic message with SSMS 17.2. I tried and checked all the suggestions above to no avail. In my case the issue was related to the TargetServerVersion property of the SSIS project in Visual studio 2017. By default this was set to SQL Server 2017, while my local server was SQL Server 2014 - once changed to the same version everything went smooth.

We ran into this where someone told us a valid date would always exist in the column in a MySQL database and we found out later that there were dates like '0000-00-00 00:00:00' and '0001-01-01 00:00:00'.

We handled it in the query that pulls in the data using a case statement to convert the bad date into a date SSIS can use :

CASE WHEN Product.PurchaseDate < '1900-01-01 00:00:00' THEN '1900-01-01 00:00:00' ELSE Product.PurchaseDate END AS PurchaseDate

Of course, you can set it to null also, your choice.

I have also had this same issue and it turned out to be an access issues. Try giving these access to the folder where the mdf and ldf files will be landing: NT Service\MSSQLSERVER, Owner Creator, System

"which implies that I need to transfer logins AFTER I transfer databases."

not really, logins are on a server (instance) level so you can transfer logins and then the database. You would need to worry about users later, of course

a point here, I dont think SSIS would be prepared to transfer 2005 -> 2012. I mean, It wouldn't make sense to "skip" a version. You said you are using VS 2012, so it would be SSIS 2012. It think it can read only 2008 databases. The fact that you tested on the same server and it worked also makes this point stronger.

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