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I have several of these messages:

11:36:30 Mail Conflict Resolution

11:36:30 Subject: {SU:}

11:36:30 EntryID: {CB:70, 

LPB:00000000F13DCECA469BD311B527009027654AF5070043373E82DE99D311B524009027654AF50000000003F80000A4D9C2306C47F74B89AC01C78EB52D5C0016D0EFD3C00000}

11:36:30 Checking local modifications

11:36:30 Compare property: 0x0080001F

11:36:30 Compare property: 0x0081001F

11:36:30 Getting remote properties

11:36:30 Checking remote modifications

11:36:30 Compare (conflict) property: 0x0080001F

11:36:30 Local{SU:displayed}

11:36:30 Remote{Error (0x8004010F)}

11:36:30 Not equal (conflict) property: 0x0080001F

11:36:30 Local modification: {D:18, M:6, Y:2009 H:15, M:36, S:1, MS:776}

11:36:30 Remote modification: {D:18, M:6, Y:2009 H:15, M:36, S:40, MS:204}

11:36:30 Conflict generated, remote item is winner

I'm sure they mean something to somebody, but it isn't me. I haven't been able to find a way to disable these though - any idea what causes their generation and any settings I can change? Thanks!!!

1
  • I'm still having this issue in 2023. So, I am not sure what it will take for Microsoft to fix this. May 5, 2023 at 22:02

4 Answers 4

2

This error relates to a difference between a mail item stored on the Exchange Server, and the item stored locally on the machine. Often this issue occurs when using OST files in outlook to work offline.

A common reason for this error is different timestamps on messages, modification of an email in both outlook (offline) and owa, or a out of date OST file. If its an issue with the OST file then a common solution is just to rebuild the OST file, this will ensure everything is up to date. If it is because the mail has been edited in 2 places, there's not alot you can do about that other than not do it!

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  • Do you think that verifying the time on both deviced might help? The remote devices almost certainly sync to a broadcast time service, but his internal PC or maaybe the server itself doesn't. I will check there, any thoughts?
    – Jes
    Jul 6, 2009 at 13:23
  • Yes, its worth checking, particularly if its only occurring on one machine.
    – Sam Cogan
    Jul 6, 2009 at 13:49
1

I'd guess you have two clustered ldap servers (maybe AD?) trying to synch an entry/check that an entry is synched.

I'd say that two instances representing the entry conflict for attribute 0x0080001F and the remote instance is older so it is the one that is used. I.e. the local version of 0x0080001F is synchronised (chnaged to match the value of) with the remote version.

E.g. local:

dn: ou=blah,dc=banan,dc=edu
cn=fred

remote:

dn: ou=blah,dc=banan,dc=edu
cn=freddy

Then the local copy's cn would get set to "freddy" because the remote copy is more recent.

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  • We actually do not implement ldap here. I'd guess this is either iPhone or BlackBerry related, but I haven't yet found anything helpful. I know with remote devices, conflict messages are bound to happen. What I mainly want to do is find out where these are generated and shut them off...
    – Jes
    Jun 19, 2009 at 13:01
  • Well whatever it is I'm pretty sure its just some property/value getting sync'd between 2 copies of it.
    – Jason Tan
    Jun 19, 2009 at 13:08
  • If your using Exchange, it means your using Active Directory, which means your using LDAP
    – Sam Cogan
    Jun 19, 2009 at 23:20
0

To make the reports go away if you don't want end users to receive them, create a DWORD value called EnableConflictLogging at HKEY_CURRENT_USER\ Software\Microsoft\Office\xx.0\Outlook\Options and set the value to 0. Replace “xx” with 14 if you use Outlook 2010 or 15 if you use Outlook 2013 and so forth. You can use Group Policy to create this registry item to apply to all end users.

Generally I don't find it necessary to know which copy of a modified email the synch function chooses when end users are running multiple copies of a mailbox (i.e. phone, Exchange Servers / Office 365, laptop, etc).

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I found the below answer helpful.

Lisa C Jalapeno Lisa C Sep 29, 2009 at 5:31 PM My understanding is that this is due to the Outlook clients being set up with Cached Exchange mode. With this setting enabled it will allow users to go into "offline" mode when the connection to the Exchange server is interrupted.

http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/outlook/HP010000671033.aspx?pid=CH010045991033

At the client you can turn that off in Outlook

http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/outlook/HP010223431033.aspx

On the Tools menu, click E-Mail Accounts, click View or change existing e-mail accounts, and then click Next. In the Outlook processes e-mail for these accounts in the following order list, click the Exchange Server e-mail account, and then click Change. Under Microsoft Exchange Server, clear the Use Cached Exchange Mode check box. Exit and restart Outlook. Globally you can enable/disable various settings under "Cached Exchange Mode" if you have the Exchange Admin template installed, but I have not yet found the right combination to actually work in production. One states that it will disable on new profiles only but not on existing. If anyone actually gets this to work I'd love to see the magic setting!

(I don't have an answer for why this feature doesn't work as advertised. There should never be so many conflicts IMO.)

Thank you.

Best regards, Sujith.

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  • 1
    What do you mean, you found the below answer helpful? Did you copy this post from somewhere??? If so: That's not how things work - you can't just copy and paste someone's content into your own, especially without attribution / link to original post. Plus I don't see where you added your own content. And... you're responding to a question from six years ago. With an already-accepted answer. I don't understand the objective here. Apr 24, 2016 at 11:37

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