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How to troubleshoot a memory leak or an out-of-memory exception in the BizTalk Server process

This article describes how to troubleshoot a memory leak or an out-of-memory exception in the BizTalk Server process of Microsoft BizTalk Server.

Original product version:   BizTalk Server 2010, 2009
Original KB number:   918643

Summary

Memory leaks are a common issue. You may have to try several steps to find the specific cause of a memory leak or an out-of-memory (OOM) exception in Microsoft BizTalk Server. This article discusses important things to consider when you evaluate memory usage and possible memory-related issues. These considerations include the following things:

  • Physical RAM
  • Large message processing
  • Use of the /3GB switch
  • Use of custom components
  • Which version of the Microsoft .NET Framework the system is running
  • The number of processors

The BizTalk Server process may be experiencing a memory leak when memory usage in Microsoft Windows Task Manager consumes more than 50 percent of the physical RAM. A memory leak may cause an out-of-memory exception when memory usage increases until the process runs out of system memory or until the process stops functioning. For this issue, consider the following:

Physical RAM and memory usage

Because it may be expected behavior for a process to use about half the physical RAM, use the memory usage as a guideline. For example, if the BizTalk Server has 4 gigabytes (GB) of RAM, and the BizTalk Server process uses about 500 megabytes (MB) of RAM, there may not be leak. If the BizTalk Server process uses about 1 GB of RAM, there might be a memory leak or a high memory situation. The memory consumption may be caused by a long-running stored procedure or orchestration. Make sure that you know how much memory the BizTalk host typically uses to determine whether a memory leak or high memory condition is occurring.

Large messages

When BizTalk Server processes large messages, the system seems to have a memory leak. However, the messages may be using a large amount of memory.

Also, consider that high memory usage may be expected if BizTalk Server is processing large messages. You may want to upgrade your hardware to meet the performance requirements of BizTalk Server in your environment.

How long it takes to reproduce the memory leak

Memory leaks can occur immediately or they may accumulate over time. Both scenarios are common.

Use of the /3GB switch on 32-bit computers

Typically, a process can access 2 GB of virtual address space. The /3GB switch is an option for systems that require more addressable memory. This option may improve memory usage for processing messages. However, the /3GB switch allows for only 1 GB of addressable memory for kernel mode operations. Additionally, this switch may increase the risk of running out of pool memory.

When the /3GB switch is enabled on a 32-bit version of Windows, the process can access 3 GB of virtual address space if the process is large-address aware. A process is large-address aware when the executable has the IMAGE_FILE_LARGE_ADDRESS_AWARE flag set in the image header. Because the BizTalk process is large-address aware, BizTalk will benefit from the /3GB switch.

If a 32-bit BizTalk host instance is running on a 64-bit version of Windows (AMD64), the BizTalk process benefits from the 4-GB memory address space because BizTalk is large-address aware. Therefore, moving your high memory applications to a 64-bit server may be the best solution.

A 64-bit BizTalk process on a 64-bit version of Windows (AMD64) has 8 TB of addressable memory.

You should also consider the virtual bytes and the private bytes used by the process. A BizTalk host instance (which is a .NET Framework application) may receive an out of memory error before the Virtual Bytes value reaches 2 GB. This situation can occur even though the maximum memory addressable by a process on a 32-bit version of Windows (without the /3GB switch) is 2 GB. For an explanation of why this situation can occur, visit the following Microsoft Developer Network (MSDN) website:
ASP.NET Performance Monitoring, and When to Alert Administrators

The /3GB switch also increases the maximum private bytes of the BizTalk process from 800 MB to 1800 MB. For more information about .NET Framework application performance with the /3GB switch enabled, visit Chapter 17—Tuning .NET Application Performance.

The following table summarizes this information and includes the practical limits for virtual bytes and private bytes.

Process Windows Addressable memory (with a large address-aware process) Practical limit for virtual bytes Practical limit for private bytes
32-bit 32-bit 2 GB 1400 MB 800 MB
32-bit 32-bit with /3GB 3 GB 2400 MB 1800 MB
32-bit 64-bit 4 GB 3400 MB 2800 MB
64-bit 64-bit 8 TB Not applicable Not applicable

For more information about the addressable memory for 32-bit vs. 64-bit Windows, visit Memory Limits for Windows and Windows Server Releases.

The following table lists PAE and 3 GB supportability for different versions of BizTalk Server.

Product PAE 3 GB
BizTalk Server 2004 Yes No
BizTalk Server 2006 Yes Yes
BizTalk Server 2006 R2 Yes Yes
BizTalk Server 2009 Yes Yes

If you must enable the /3GB switch to meet the performance requirements of a computer that is running BizTalk Server, you may want to consider adding servers to the BizTalk group. This enables you to scale out the memory-intensive host instances.

BizTalk components that run inside an Internet Information Services (IIS) process may also benefit when the /3GB switch is enabled.

The /3GB switch is not supported on computers that are running Windows SharePoint Services 2.0 or later versions or SharePoint Portal Server 2003 SP2 or later versions. The Windows Server 2003 /3GB switch is not supported in Windows SharePoint Services 2.0 or in later versions or in SharePoint Portal Server 2003 Service Pack 2 or in later versions.

Use of custom components

If you use custom components, such as pipelines or service components, you must know what these components do. You should also know the potential effect of these components on memory usage. A common memory problem occurs when a component is transforming a document. The transform operation is a memory-intensive operation. When a document is transformed, BizTalk Server passes the message stream to the Microsoft .NET Framework XslTransform class within the BizTalk process.

Another common issue occurs when there is intensive string manipulation. Intensive string manipulation can consume lots of memories. For more information about ways to improve performance, visit Improving Managed Code Performance.

Version of the .NET Framework

The Microsoft .NET Framework 2.0 and the .NET Framework 1.1 have different memory behavior. So you may see varying results between them. If you are using the .NET Framework, confirm that the latest .NET Framework Service Pack 1 is installed. This service packs address several known memory issues.

Number of processors

The common language runtime (CLR) has the following garbage collectors (GCs):

  • Workstation (Mscorwks.dll)
  • Server (Mscorsvr.dll)

If the computer that is running BizTalk Server is a multiprocessor system, the .NET Framework uses the Server version of the execution engine. This is the default behavior. The Server garbage collector is designed for maximum throughput. Additionally, the Server garbage collector scales to provide high performance. This garbage collector allocates memory and then later frees memory to provide high performance on the system. Therefore, a computer that is running BizTalk Server together with some .NET Framework components seems to have a memory leak. However, in this scenario, high memory usage is the expected behavior. If the computer runs out of system memory, or if the process stops working because of insufficient addressable memory, a memory leak condition may exist.

If the computer that is running BizTalk Server is a single processor system, the .NET Framework uses the Workstation version of the execution engine. It is the default behavior. The Workstation garbage collector allocation algorithm is not designed for scaling or for maximum throughput. This garbage collector uses concurrent garbage collector methods. These methods are designed for applications that have complex user interfaces. Such applications may require more aggressive garbage collection.

Important

This section, method, or task contains steps that tell you how to modify the registry. But serious problems might occur if you modify the registry incorrectly. Thus make sure that you follow these steps carefully. For added protection, back up the registry before you modify it. Then, you can restore the registry if a problem occurs. For more information about how to back up and restore the registry, see How to back up and restore the registry in Windows.

Sometimes, it may be appropriate to run the Workstation version of the execution engine on a multiprocessor system. You can use the following registry key to switch to the Workstation version of the execution engine.

BizTalk 2006 and later versions

Create the following CRL Hosting String registry key with the corresponding values:

  • Key: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\BTSSvc$BizTalkHostName\CLR Hosting
  • Value name: Flavor
  • Value data: wks

BizTalk 2004

Create the following CRL Host String registry key with the corresponding values:

  • Key: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\BTSSvc{GUID }\CLR Hosting
  • Value name: Flavor
  • Value data: wks

For more information, visit Performance Considerations for Run-Time Technologies in the .NET Framework.

The following are common causes and resolutions:

Process and physical memory usage throttling thresholds

The Process memory usage and Physical memory usage throttling thresholds can be changed in BizTalk Server 2006 and in later versions.

  • By default, the Process memory usage throttling threshold is set to 25. If this value is exceeded and the BizTalk process memory usage is more than 300 MB, a throttling condition may occur. On a 32-bit server, you can increase the Process memory usage value to 50. On a 64-bit server, you can increase this value to 100. This allows for more memory consumption by the BizTalk process before throttling occurs.

  • The Physical memory usage throttling threshold has a default value of 0. This threshold measures total system memory. Therefore, if a value other than 0 is configured, a throttling condition can occur if a non-BizTalk process is using high memory.

Dehydration throttling thresholds

The default memory dehydration thresholds may cause too much dehydration when orchestrations are run on a 64-bit host. For more information about this issue, see Dehydration Default Properties.

Note

64-bit hosts are supported in BizTalk Server 2006 and later versions.

On equivalent hardware in a 32-bit host instance, observed dehydration is nominal when the same orchestrations are run by using the default memory dehydration throttling thresholds.

Because 64-bit architecture provides expanded memory address space (16 TB instead of 4 GB), 64-bit host instances are allocated more memory than 32-bit host instances. This can cause the default memory throttling thresholds to be exceeded.

To work around this behavior, change the VirtualMemoryThrottlingCriteria and PrivateMemoryThrottlingCriteria values in the BTSNTSvc64.exe.config file. Use the \Process\Virtual Bytes and the \Process\Private Bytes Performance Monitor counters to determine the largest amount of memory that is being allocated by an orchestration instance.

  • Set the OptimalUsage value for both properties based on the following:

    • VirtualMemoryThrottlingCriteria: \Process\Virtual Bytes value + 10%
    • PrivateMemoryThrottlingCriteria: \Process\Private Bytes value + 10%
  • Set MaximalUsage for both properties to the OptimalUsage value + 30%

For example, if the \Process\Virtual Byte Performance Monitor counter value for an orchestration instance is 5,784,787,695 bytes (5,517 MB), set the OptimalUsage value for VirtualMemoryThrottlingCriteria to 6,069 MB (5,784,787,695 * 1.10 = 6,363,266,464.5 bytes).

Set the MaximalUsage value for VirtualMemoryThrottlingCriteria to 7,889 MB (6,363,266,464.5 * 1.30 = 8,272,246,403.85 bytes).

If the \Process\Private Bytes Performance Monitor counter value is 435689400 bytes (415 MB), set the OptimalUsage value for PrivateMemoryThrottlingCriteria to 457 MB (435689400 * 1.10 = 479258340 bytes).

Set the MaximalUsage value for PrivateMemoryThrottlingCriteria to 594 MB (479258340 * 1.30 = 623035842).

For this example, the following values would be specified in the BTSNTSvc64.exe.config file to reduce throttling.

Performance Monitor counter Memory allocated OptimalUsage MaximalUsage
\Process\Virtual Bytes 5,784,787,695 bytes (5517 MB) 6069 7889
\Process\Private Bytes 435,689,400 bytes (415 MB) 457 594

These values would then be represented in the BTSNTSvc64.exe.config file as follows:

<xlangs>
    <Configuration>
       <Dehydration>
         <VirtualMemoryThrottlingCriteria OptimalUsage="6069" MaximalUsage="7889" IsActive="true" />
         <PrivateMemoryThrottlingCriteria OptimalUsage="457" MaximalUsage="594" IsActive="true" />
       </Dehydration>
    </Configuration>
</xlangs>

To determine which host instance is running the orchestration, you can match the ID Process from the \BizTalk: Messaging\ID Process and \Process\ID Process Performance Monitor counters. Then, check the Average value displayed for the corresponding \Process\Virtual Bytes and \Process\Private Bytes Performance Monitor counters.

Note

Information the user should notice even if skimmingThe high dehydration may cause a significant decrease in performance when the BizTalkMsgBoxDb database is running on SQL Server 2008.

BizTalk Server service packs and cumulative updates

BizTalk Server service packs and cumulative updates include the latest fixes. These include those that affect known System.OutOfMemoryException issues.

HeapDeCommitFreeBlockThreshold

By default, the HeapDeCommitFreeBlockThreshold registry key value is 0. A value of 0 means that the heap manager de-commits each 4 kilobytes (KB) page that becomes available. De-commit operations can cause virtual memory fragmentation. The size of the HeapDeCommitFreeBlockThreshold setting in the heap manager will depend on the kind of work that the system is doing. A size of 0x00040000 is a recommended starting value.

Consider the following information before you change the value of the HeapDeCommitFreeBlockThreshold registry key:

  • This change only applies to memory fragmentation problems.
  • This change is system-wide. Therefore, most processes will use more memory on startup.
  • Only consider this change for systems that have BizTalk Server as their primary mission.

To help reduce virtual memory fragmentation, you can increase the size of the HeapDeCommitFreeBlockThreshold setting in the heap manager by changing the value of the following registry key under HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Session Manager:

  • Value name: HeapDeCommitFreeBlockThreshold
  • Value type: REG_DWORD
  • Value data: 0x00040000 (It is the recommended starting value.)
  • Value default: not present

Transform operations

When BizTalk Server performs XML transform operations on fairly large messages in a receive port, in a send port, or in XLANG, XSL transforms load the whole message in memory.

To resolve this issue, use one of the following methods:

  • Reduce the number of messages that BizTalk Server processes at the same time.
  • Reduce the size of the XML message that is being transformed.

The System.Policy.Security.Evidence object is frequently used in transforms and can consume much memory. When a map contains a scripting functoid that uses inline C# (or any other inline language), the assembly is created in memory. The System.Policy.Security.Evidence object uses the object of the actual calling assembly. This situation creates a rooted object that is not deleted until the BizTalk service is restarted.

Most of the default BizTalk functoids are implemented as inline script. These items can cause System.Byte[] objects to collect in memory. To minimize memory consumption, we recommend that you put any map that uses these functoids into a small assembly. Then, reference that assembly. Use the following chart to determine which functoids use inline script and which functoids do not use inline script.

In the second column, Yes means that this functoid is implemented as inline script, and that it will cause System.Byte[] objects to collect in memory. No means that this functoid is not implemented as inline script, and that it will not cause System.Byte[] objects to collect in memory.

Functoids Inline script?
All String Functoids Yes
All Mathematical Functoids Yes
All Logical Functoids except IsNil Yes
Logical IsNil Functoid No
All Date/Time Functoids Yes
All Conversion Functoids Yes
All Scientific Functoids Yes
All Cumulative Functoids Yes
All Database Functoids No
Advanced Functoids Inline script?
Looping Functoid No
Value-Mapping Flattening Functoid No
Assert Functoid No
Table Extractor Functoid No
Table Looping Functoid No
Scripting Functoid with Inline C# Yes
Scripting Functoid with Inline JScript.NET Yes
Scripting Functoid with Inline Visual Basic .NET Yes
Scripting Functoid with Inline XSLT No
Scripting Functoid with Inline XSLT Call Template No
Scripting Functoid calling External Assembly No
Nil Value Functoid No
Value Mapping Functoid No
Mass Copy Functoid No
Iteration Functoid No
Index Functoid No
Record Count Functoid No

BizTalk Server 2006 and later versions significantly improve memory management for large documents. To do this, BizTalk Server implements a configurable message size threshold for loading documents into memory during transform operations. The default message size threshold is 1 MB. For more information about the TransformThreshold setting, visit How BizTalk Server Processes Large Messages.

Large attribute values and large element values

When BizTalk Server executes a receive pipeline or a send pipeline on an XML document, the payload is processed in memory if the document contains one or more of the following entities:

  • Large attribute values
  • Large element values
  • Large attribute or element tags

To resolve this issue, limit the size of these entities. If this method isn't possible, make sure that your BizTalk HOST instance doesn't process multiple documents such as these at the same time.

Custom pipeline components

You are using a custom pipeline component that loads the whole stream into memory. All the components that are included with BizTalk Server, except transforms, support streaming. These components do not use as much memory during streaming. However, custom pipeline components may not support streaming.

Streaming under heavy stress

Send hosts run out of memory when they operate under heavy stress. BizTalk Server sends pipelines and sends adapters support streaming. In streaming, each component loads a small fragment of the stream into memory. Because each message includes other data structures, together with a message context that can be significant or small, this behavior affects the behavior of BizTalk Server under heavy stress.

The behavior of BizTalk Server is affected because the engine loads a pre-configured number of messages. The number of messages that the engine loads is based on the values that appear in the LowWaterMark field and the HighWaterMark field of the Adm_serviceClass table. The Adm_serviceClass table is in the BizTalk Management Database. These values control the number of messages that BizTalk Server processes or sends at the same time.

The HighWaterMark value is the total number of messages that the engine processes at the same time. The default value is 200 messages per CPU. Therefore, on an 8-processor server, the send host will try to process 1,600 messages (200 * 8) at the same time.

If you assume that each message is 50 KB, the messages equal 80 MB (1,600 * 50=80,000 KB).

To resolve this issue, you can change the HighWaterMark value and the LowWaterMark value in the database. The values that you use depend on the size of the messages. For BizTalk Server 2006 and later versions, you can change the default host throttling settings.

Try to simplify the issue

If you have identified a memory leak, try to determine the cause by removing custom components or by simplifying a map. Also, try to reproduce the issue by using a simple orchestration or a simple solution. Typically, you should create separate receive hosts for receive adapters. You should also create separate send hosts for send adapters. When you use this method, each adapter can run in a separate process. Therefore, if your BizTalk Server process experiences an out-of-memory condition, you will know which components are involved.

Troubleshooting steps

To troubleshoot an out-of-memory condition, use the Debug Diagnostics tool to monitor memory allocations over time. The Debug Diagnostics tool can create and analyze a memory leak dump file (.dmp). When you troubleshoot memory leaks, the goal is to attach Leaktrack.dll before the high memory condition reproduces to capture memory growth over time. Leaktrack.dll is included with the Debug Diagnostics tool.

  1. Install the Debug Diagnostics Tool.

    The following file is available for download from the Microsoft Download Center:
    Download the Debug Diagnostic Tool package now

    For more information about how to download Microsoft support files, see How to obtain Microsoft support files from online services.

    Microsoft scanned this file for viruses. Microsoft used the most current virus-detection software that was available on the date that the file was posted. The file is stored on security-enhanced servers that help prevent any unauthorized changes to the file.

  2. Use Performance Monitor to collect data about system performance. This data may provide important indicators about the efficiency of your BizTalk Server environment. The goal is to capture process performance over time. Therefore, enable Performance Monitor logging before the memory leak occurs.

How to use Performance Monitor logging

The following sections describe how to use performance monitor logging.

Select the data to log

To select the data to log, use the method that is appropriate for your operating system:

  • For Windows Server 2008 and Windows Server 2008 R2
    1. In Administrative Tools, open Reliability and Performance Monitor.

    2. Right-click Performance Monitor, click New and then click Data Collector Set.

    3. In the Name box, type a descriptive name, and then click Next.

    4. Note the Root directory, and then click Next.

    5. Click Start this data collector set now, and then click Finish.

    6. Expand Data Collector Sets, expand User Defined and then select your file.

    7. Right-click System Monitor Log, and then click Properties.

    8. Click Add on the Performance Counters tab. Select the following objects, and then click Add after you select each object:

      • .Net CLR Exceptions
      • .Net CLR Memory
      • BizTalk: Messaging
      • BizTalk: TDDS
      • Memory
      • Process
      • Processor
      • XLANG/s Orchestrations

      If SQL Server is local, also add the following objects:

      • SQLServer: Databases
      • SQLServer: General Statistics
      • SQLServer: Memory Manager
    9. Click OK.

    10. Change the Sample Interval value box to 5 seconds.

      Note

      The Sample Interval value and the time to start to monitor are subjective. These values depend on when the memory leak is reproduced. Because the log file can be large, specify an interval in which you can obtain the information that you must have without overwhelming the server.

    11. Click OK.

To stop collecting data, click Stop on the Action menu.

  • For Windows Server 2003 or for Windows XP

    1. Expand Performance Logs and Alerts.

    2. Right-click Counter Logs, and then click New Log Settings. The New Log Settings dialog box appears.

    3. In the Name box, type a descriptive name, and then click OK.

    4. Note the log file location. (You can also click the Log Files tab, and then click Configure to change the log file location.)

    5. Click Add Counters.

    6. Select All counters and All instances.

    7. In the Performance object list, select the following objects. Click Add after you select each object.

      • .Net CLR Exceptions
      • .Net CLR Memory
      • BizTalk: Messaging
      • BizTalk: TDDS
      • Memory
      • Process
      • Processor
      • XLANG/s Orchestrations

      If SQL Server is local, also add the following objects:

      • SQLServer: Databases
      • SQLServer: General Statistics
      • SQLServer: Memory Manager
    8. Click Close.

    9. Change the value in Data Sampling Interval to 5 seconds.

      Note

      The Data Sampling Interval value and the time to start to monitor are subjective. These values depend on when the memory leak is reproduced. Because the log file can be large, specify an interval in which you can obtain the information that you must have without overwhelming the server.

    10. Click OK. To stop collecting data, right-click the name of the counter log and then click Stop.

Obtain the dump file

To obtain the dump file, use one of the following methods:

Method 1: Automatic

Creating a Memory and Handle Leak rule with DebugDiag is the recommended approach to capture a memory dump. The Memory and Handle Leak rule automatically attaches Leaktrack.dll. This is used to track memory allocations. To create the Memory and Handle Leak rule, follow these steps:

  1. Start Debug Diagnostics Tool 1.1.

  2. Select Memory and Handle Leak, and then click Next.

  3. Select the Btsntsvc.exe process, and then click Next.

  4. On the Configure Leak Rule page, follow these steps:

    1. Click to select the Start memory tracking immediately when rule is activated check box. Otherwise, you can specify a warm-up time before LeakTrack.dll is injected in the BTSNTSvc.exe process.

    2. Click Configure, and then do the following:

      • Confirm that Autocreate a crash rule is selected. By selecting this option, a memory dump will be created automatically if the BTSNTSvc.exe process stops.

      • Click to select the Generate a userdump when virtual bytes reach check box, and keep the default value of 1024.

      • Click to select the and each additional check box, and keep the default of 200. By selecting the virtual bytes reach option, a memory dump will automatically be created when virtual bytes use 1024 MB. If virtual bytes increases by 200 MB, another memory dump will automatically be created.

    3. Click Save & Close.

    4. Click Next.

    5. On the Select Dump Location And Rule Name page, click Next.

      Note

      You can also change the path of the dump file in the Userdump Location box on this page.

    6. Click Finish to make the rule active now.

      Note

      The rule status is now Tracking. Every time that a memory dump is created, the value will increase in the Userdump Count column on the Rules tab. The default memory dump location is C:\Program Files\DebugDiag\Logs.

Method 2: Manual

You can also manually attach Leaktrack.dll and manually obtain the memory dump file. This enables you to control when the memory dump is created. To do this, follow these steps:

  1. Start Debug Diagnostics Tool 1.1.
  2. Click the Processes tab.
  3. Right-click the Btsntsvc.exe process, and then click Monitor For Leaks.
  4. In the Debug Diagnostics Tool dialog box, click Yes, and then click OK.

Create a crash rule to monitor the same Btsntsvc.exe process in case the process stops before you can create the memory dump:

  1. Start Debug Diagnostics Tool 1.1.
  2. Select Crash, and then click Next.
  3. Select a specific process, and then click Next.
  4. Select the same Btsntsvc.exe process, and then click Next.
  5. On the Advanced Configuration (Optional) page, click Next.
  6. In the Select Dump Location And Rule Name (Optional) dialog box, click Next.
  7. Select Activate the rule now, and then click Finish.

When the process reaches 60 percent to 80 percent of RAM, right-click the Btsntsvc.exe process, and then click Create Full Userdump. If the BizTalk process stops before you can create the user dump, the Crash rule should take effect and create the memory dump.

Stop Performance Monitor logging

If you are capturing a memory dump and Performance Monitor data, stop Performance Monitor logging about two minutes after the memory dump is created.

Analyze the dump file

To help determine the cause of a memory leak, you can use the Debug Diagnostics tool to analyze the dump file. To do this, follow these steps:

  1. Click the Advanced Analysis tab.
  2. Click Add Data Files, and then locate the .dmp file.
  3. Select the Memory Pressure Analysis script, and then click Start Analysis.

By default, an analysis report file (the .mht file) will be created in the C:\Program Files\DebugDiag\Reports folder when the analysis is finished. The report file will also be displayed in your browser. The report file contains the results of the analysis. Additionally, the report file may contain recommendations for how to resolve the memory leak.

If you use custom DLLs, you can add the symbol path of the custom .pdb files for analysis. To do this, follow these steps:

  1. Open the Debug Diagnostics tool.
  2. On the Tools menu, click Options and Settings.
  3. In the Symbol Search Path For Debugging box, type the symbol path.

If you want help with analyzing the dump file, contact Microsoft Customer Support Services. For a complete list of Customer Support Services telephone numbers and information about support costs, visit the Contact Support.

Before you contact Customer Support Services, compress the dump file, the Performance Monitor log, the analysis report file, and the updated event logs (.evt files). You may have to send these files to a BizTalk Server support engineer.