Before you try anything make sure you backup your data. If one drive failed, another one might fail and leave you without your data. Drives that are purchases at around the same time tend to fail around the same time too.
You need to do that even if some of the data is stored in a RAID array - RAID isn't the same as a backup. If something happens to the array, your best case scenario is that you'll wait for a few hours to recover the data. Worst case, you could lose it all.
The process is described in The SQL Server Instance That Will not Start in the TempDB location does not exist
section, and other sites like Start SQL Server without tempdb.
You'll have to start SQL Server with Minimal Configuration. In that state, tempdb isn't used. You can do this with the -f
command-line parameter. You can specify this parameter in the service's property page, or by calling sqlservr.exe -f
from the command line, eg:
sqlservr -f
Another option is to use the -t3608
trace flag which starts only the master
database.
sqlservr -t3608
After that, you need to connect to the server with the sqlcmd
utility, eg :
sqlcmd -S myservername -E
to connect using Windows authentication.
Once you do this, you can go to the master database and change the file location of the tempdb files:
USE master;
GO
ALTER DATABASE tempdb
MODIFY FILE (NAME = tempdev, FILENAME = 'E:\SQLData\tempdb.mdf');
GO
ALTER DATABASE tempdb
MODIFY FILE (NAME = templog, FILENAME = 'F:\SQLLog\templog.ldf');
GO
After that, remove the parameters from the service (if you set them there) and restart the service.
Finally, you may have to reconsider the placement of TempDB. TempDB is used heavily for sorting, calculating window functions or in situations where the available RAM isn't enough. Some operations require creating intermediate results, which get stored in TempDB. In general, you should have
multiple tempdb files, although the exact number depends on the server's workload.