The StartName property indicates the account name under which the service runs. Depending on the service type, the account name may be in the form of \"DomainName\\Username\".The service process will be logged using one of these two forms when it runs. If the account belongs to the built-in domain, \".\\Username\" can be specified. If NULL is specified, the service will be logged on as the LocalSystem account. For kernel or system level drivers, StartName contains the driver object name (that is, \\FileSystem\ dr or \\Driver\\Xns) which the input and output (I/O) system uses to load the device driver. Additionally, if NULL is specified, the driver runs with a default object name created by the I/O system based on the service name. Example: DWDOM\\Admin.
The start index was not valid for function SUBSTRING. The start index value must be an integer greater than zero. The start ...
The start time '{0}' of event number '{1}' is less than the start time '{2}' of event preceding it. If you need out of order ...
The start width of the range. Measured as a percentage of the size of the gauge (height for horizontal gauges, width for ...
The StartMode property indicates the start mode of the Win32 base service. \"Boot\" specifies a device driver started by ...
The StartName property indicates the account name under which the service runs. Depending on the service type, the account ...
The StartService method attempts to place the service into its startup state. It returns one of the following integer values: ...
The state indicator, {0}, was detected in the report. SQL Server 2008 Reporting Services does not support state indicators. ...
The state indicator, {0}, was removed from the report. SQL Server 2008 Reporting Services does not support state indicators. ...
The state of your SQL Server installation was not changed after the setup execution. Please review the summary.txt logs for ...