We've been having some issues with a SharePoint instance in a test environment. Thankfully this is not production ;) The problems started when the disk with the SQL Server databases and search index ran out of space. Following this, the search service would not run and search settings in the SSP were not accessible. Reclaiming the disk space did not resolve the issue. So rather than restoring the VM, we decided to try to fix the issue.
We created a new SSP and changed the association of all services to the new SSP. The old SSP and it's databases were then deleted. Search results for PDF files are no longer appearing, but the search works fine otherwise. MySites also works OK.
Following the implementation of this change, these problems occur:
1) An audit failure message started appearing in the application event log, for 'DOMAIN\SPMOSSSvc' which is the MOSS farm account.
Event Type: Failure Audit
Event Source: MSSQLSERVER
Event Category: (4)
Event ID: 18456
Date: 8/5/2008
Time: 3:55:19 PM
User: DOMAIN\SPMOSSSvc
Computer: dastest01
Description:
Login failed for user 'DOMAIN\SPMOSSSvc'. [CLIENT: <local machine>]
2) SQL Server profiler is showing queries from SharePoint that reference the old (deleted) SSP database.
So...
As Daniel McPherson said, this is caused when SSPs are deleted but the associated
job are not and attempt to communicate with the deleted database.
If the SSP
database has been deleted or a problem occurred when deleting an SSP, the job may
not be deleted. When the job attempts to run, it will fail since the database no
longer exists.
Follow the steps Daniel mentioned:
1. Go to SQL Server Management Studio
2. Disable the job called SSPNAME_JobDeleteExpiredSessions, right click and choose Disable Job.