Troubleshooting Guide
Maintain a history of reported problems and the actions you took to
identify or resolve them. This information may help you isolate later
problems and anticipate or avoid others. In particular, you should
record the following information related to a problem:
- The problem description, including:
- The problem symptoms.
- A complete description of any messages that are received, including SQL
codes, associated reason codes, or system error codes.
- Any SQL state received. SQL states are useful for diagnosing
problems, because they are consistent across all platforms. For a list
of SQL states, see the Message Reference.
- What was happening at the time. By recording information such as
the following, you can spot patterns should a problem occur again:
- The actions that led up to the problem
- Any applications that were running at the time
- Any SQL statements running at the time, including information on whether
they were dynamic or static, and Data Definition Language (DDL) or Data
Manipulation Language (DML)
- The type of hardware and software running on your system, and their
configuration
- The service level installed on each system, and any fix packs applied
- The results of any corrective actions
- The problem resolution
- The number assigned to the problem, if you contacted DB2 Customer
Service.
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