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Checking Windows Event Log for issues with computer environment

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Introduction

Acronis software may give errors, freeze or produce other undesired effects when there are issues with parts of the computer environment it operates in:

Hardware/Firmware

Disk partitions, file systems

Operating system, software

disks

disk controllers

RAID controllers

network interface controllers

optical discs drives

tape devices

disk adapters

data and power cables

ports/connectors

other physical and virtual hardware used to store, transfer, manipulate data

RAM

firmware of the above devices, BIOS/UEFI

partition table (e.g. MBR, GPT)

disk partitions

disk volumes

file systems

Windows drivers

Volume Shadow Copy Service (VSS)

VSS providers

VSS writers

Windows Registry configuration

Windows user accounts

Permissions for files/folders

Windows Management Interface (WMI)

Examples of error messages in Acronis software, when you would want to check the environment:

Unable to create volume snapshot

Failed to read snapshot

Failed to read from sector...

Failed to read from disk...

Failed to write the snapshot manager volume

Various types of read and write errors

Input/Output (I/O) errors

Errors referencing \\?\GLOBALROOT\Device\...

Cyclic redundancy check (CRC) error

Failed to enumerate directory

WMI ExecQuery failed

MFT bitmap corrupted

Solution

Acronis has developed a free tool that automates the process of checking the environment particularly for Volume Shadow Copy Service (VSS)-related issues: Acronis VSS Doctor. This tool saves time on gathering and analyzing diagnostic information from various sources, including Windows Event Log, but it does not cover all possible root causes and applies to VSS-related issues only.

A more universal approach consists in checking Windows Event Log for issues with computer environment using Windows Event Viewer:

1. Open Windows Start Menu.

2. Type Event Viewer and press Enter:

If Windows Search does not find Event Viewer by name, press the combination of the button with Windows logo on keyboard and R, and run the command evenvwr.msc

3. Windows Event Viewer will open:

4. Navigate to Windows Logs - System:

5. Click Filter Current Log... on the right panel:

6. Mark Critical, Error and Warning checkboxes in the upper part of the window, click OK to apply the filter:

7. At this point you can click OK and review the recent warnings and errors, recorded in the System event log, and look for any information related to the issue observed in Acronis software. Pay special attention to events registered at the time the issue occurred, or just before that:

8. As there may be many unrelated events, you can narrow the search further, by applying the following suggested filter. Click Filter Current Log.. again:

9. Expand Event sources list:

10. Scroll through the list and mark the following items:

Short list (most popular sources of errors):

disk

Disk

Ntfs

Ntfs (Microsoft-Windows-Ntfs)

Ntfs (Ntfs)

11. Click OK and review the filtered list of events. Your further actions will depend on what parts of the environment were reported to have issues and on their current status:

12. When troubleshooting a VSS or WMI-related issue, it is useful to also check warnings, errors and critical events under Windows Logs - Application section. In addition to troubleshooting issues with Windows environment, Application logs are also used to detect application crash and hang events.

Further troubleshooting

Look up the detailed error/warning text, as well as the Event ID number on the Internet. Issues with environment are common and are likely to have a solution or a workaround already documented or described.

If you are not sure if the found errors and warnings could be the cause of the issue with Acronis software, contact Acronis Customer Central with a system report and screenshots of the issue with Acronis, log of the operation in Acronis (if any) and the found records in Windows Event Log.

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