Using The Inbox Repair Tool (Scanpst - Exe)
Using The Inbox Repair Tool (Scanpst - Exe)
Using The Inbox Repair Tool (Scanpst - Exe)
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The Inbox Repair Tool is your first-aid-kit when it comes down to corruptions in
your Outlook’s data storage file (pst-file).
A common need for running this tool is when Outlook refuses to load or is not willing to open a
pst-file and displays an error similar to;
In other cases, you might get recommended to use this tool when you are suffering from some
specific symptoms such as (but not limited to), Outlook crashing upon displaying a folder or
writing data to it, mspst.dll errors in the Event Viewer, import/export not completing, several
send/receive errors or view settings not being maintained.
This guide helps you locate the Inbox Repair Tool for your version of Outlook, walks you
through the repair process and gives recommendations what to do to when the Inbox Repair Tool
fails and how to prevent pst-file corruptions from happening in the future.
Windows XP
Note:
The “Local Settings” and “AppData” folders are hidden folders. To access these folders,
you can type the path in the Address Bar or File Name field of the Explorer dialog that
opens when pressing Browse…
The Inbox Repair Tool (scanpst.exe) with a file selected to scan.
Analysis in progress…
After the analysis scan has completed, it will present you with a scanning report and options for
the next step. You can press the Details… button for more information about the type of
corruption.
Errors were found but you are almost ready to repair them.
After pressing the Repair button, the actual repair process will start and go through the 8 phases
again. With a very large pst-file (larger than 4GB) and a slower hard disk, this process can
sometimes take longer than half an hour.
Note:
When the repair process starts, it could appear that it will hang directly (Not Responding in Title
Bar). In reality, it is not hanging but making a copy of your pst-file in the background or already
has started the repair process. Depending on the size of your pst-file and the speed of your hard
disk, this can take a while.
If it still hangs after 10 minutes (no hard disk activity either) and still hasn’t begun the actual
repair process, you might want to abort the scanpst.exe process via Task manager
(CTRL+SHIFT+ESC –> select tab Processes). Then, make a copy of your pst-file manually and
restart the Repair process but this time with the Backup option disabled. If it still fails then,
continue to the Repair process failed section.
If everything works now; you’re done but you might want to read the Prevent pst-file
corruptions section anyway ;).
If you can still open the pst-file in Outlook, then it is recommended to copy the contents to a new
Unicode pst-file.
If you can no longer open the file in Outlook, then you must use the pst2gb tool to truncate the
pst-file first.
More info:
Am I in ANSI or UNICODE format?
Migrate from ANSI to Unicode
PST2GB: Oversized PST and OST crop tool
CRC errors
When you get CRC errors upon trying to copy the pst-file in Explorer or open it in Outlook, you
usually have a failing hard disk which should be dealt with immediately. For instructions
see; CRC (Cyclic Redundancy Check) errors on pst-file
Pst-file in use
When you get a pst-file in use error, it means that Outlook is still running or another application
which integrates itself with Outlook or depends on the outlook.exe process is still running. A
quick fix might be to simply restart your computer. To troubleshoot this issue further
see; Outlook doesn’t close.
When such a corruption in a pst-file exists, it is highly recommended to start with a new pst-file
and copy over the recovered contents to that pst-file. This process is similar as in; Scanpst.exe
keeps finding issues
Preventing is better than repairing of course. While there have been a lot of
precautions built into Outlook to prevent pst-file corruptions, there are a couple of common
causes which may result in corruptions in the pst-file;
Computer/Outlook crashes
If your computer crashes while Outlook was running or even worse, writing data to your
pst-file, running scanpst.exe afterwards is highly recommended. Always try to find the root
cause of your computer crashes and make frequent backups of your pst-file when you
cannot directly find the cause (actually, making backups frequently is always
recommended).
Outlook not closing properly
If Outlook doesn’t close properly (the outlook.exe process continues to run after you close
Outlook), then Outlook will be closed forcefully when shutting down your PC which is
similar to Outlook crashing. To troubleshoot see; Outlook doesn’t close
Faulty add-ins which write corrupted data
While add-ins are great to extend the functionality of Outlook, they might not all work as
expected. If corruptions continue to occur in your pst-file, it might be good to review your
installed add-ins and see if you still need them or if an update is available. You might be
even using some without knowing. Disable them all and see if the corruptions return. If not,
test them one-by-one to find the culprit. For more info see; Enable/Disable add-ins
Storing your pst-file on a network share
Pst-files are designed to work from a local hard drive. Using pst-files from a network share
is not supported by Microsoft and could lead to poor performance, data corruption or even
data loss.
If you are using Outlook 2010 and have your My Documents folder redirected to a network
share, you might be using your pst-file from a network share without realizing it.