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Having an issue with sending an MSMQ message to the second DNS name on a server. If we send the IP for that same server, we're fine, but thats not where we are going architecturally. Any ideas as to why MSMQ would care about which name it receives?

Here is our example :

Server Information: The physical server load-int-01, has a second IP and DNS name associated with it. First ip/dns: load-int-01, with IP 10.0.10.10 Second ip/dns: load-intv, with IP 10.0.10.20

Queue Path Formats Used: FormatName:DIRECT=OS:load-int-01\private$\MyQueue -> Works Fine FormatName:DIRECT=OS:load-intv\private$\MyQueue -> Returns the error “The queue does not exist or you do not have sufficient permissions to perform this operation”

We have also tried using the IP addresses instead, and both sets of IPs work fine. FormatName:DIRECT=TCP:10.0.10.10\private$\MyQueue -> Works Fine FormatName:DIRECT=TCP:10.0.10.20\private$\MyQueue -> Works Fine

Thanks! -Bob

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Are you using transactional queues? – Igal Serban Jun 4 at 22:33
Nope, but we set up a test app and tried both transactional and non-transactional. Same results. Currently by combining the IgnoreOSNameValidation (from your answer below) registry setting with another that sets up aliasing (the Optional Names key in HKEY_Local_Machine\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\LanmanServer\Parameters), we can SEND to these queues with our naming convention, but we cannot RECEIVE on them. Without these two reg settings we cant even send. – Bob Jun 5 at 17:26

2 Answers

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From:

http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;EN-US;899611

By default, Message Queuing verifies the message that it receives to determine whether the message is intended for the local computer. If the message is not intended for the local computer, the message is rejected.

So follow the section on "IgnoreOSNameValidation" in this article and I hope it will help.

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good find. We recently tried that already however. :( This one really stinks. – Bob Jun 4 at 21:21
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We just got off the phone with Microsoft. This is a limitation of MSMQ. You can not receive on queues with aliased DNS names. You can SEND to queues with an aliased DNS name provided you use the two registry keys mentioned above, OptionalNames and IgnoreOSNameValidation.

Back to virtual ip's for us, or we might keep the virtual name for the sending connection strings (with the reg settings) and use .\ for the receiving servername...that works.

Thanks for the help.

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