This push and pull of nostalgia and the need for narrative progression puts the series in an interesting place. So now, as the new season gets underway with 'Legacy,' Arrow finds itself in a tricky predicament in which it wants to thematically go back to a time when its storytelling was more grounded and gritty, but at the same time acknowledge everything that has come before – especially the events of season 4, which saw Oliver become mayor of Star City and the death of long-time supporting player Laurel Lance, who by that time had become Black Canary. It's no surprise, then, that all this talk of "back to basics" has given rise to (considering the evidence supplied by the cast and crew of the series) hopes that season 5 will see a return to that sophomore season's style in more ways than one. Its first season was not without wrinkles in need of some ironing, but it inspired more than a few converts who then got to witness the series' biggest success to date in the aforementioned second season. After all, it had to overcome the chilly skepticism of not-yet fans long before The Flash, Legends of Tomorrow, or Supergirl were a twinkle in The CW's eye. The indications they gave, in addition the many, many offseason additions made to the cast, were the sort of thing that certainly inspires hope among those continuing to watch a show that, in its second season, set a high bar in terms of what the then-nascent Arrowverse was capable of.īut being on the ropes and having to meet exorbitant expectations is definitely in Arrow's wheelhouse.
In the offseason (and a little before season 4 ended) Stephen Amell and showrunner Wendy Mericle had a lot to say about where the series was headed after two more or less disappointing seasons hinted that The CW's flagship series in its shared DC TV Universe was in decline. If there's a central administration site and multiple primary sites in your environment, repeat steps 6 and 7 on all site servers so that you can create media from any site server.Ĭreate the standalone or prestaged media by using the Create Task Sequence Media Wizard.So much has been made about the "back to basics" approach to Arrow season 5 that you could be forgiven for having incredibly high expectations for the premiere. On the site server, create a backup of the \AdminConsole\bin\i386\CreateMedia.exe file.Ĭopy the modified version of CreateMedia.exe from the computer that has Visual Studio installed to the \AdminConsole\bin\i386 folder on the site server. In the Developer Command Prompt, run the following command to enable Createmedia.exe to handle addresses that are larger than 2 GB: editbin.exe /largeaddressaware createmedia.exeįor more information about the /LARGEADDRESSAWARE EDITBIN option, see /LARGEADDRESSAWARE. If you see the following result under FILE HEADER VALUES, go to step 6:Īpplication can handle large (>2GB) addresses In the Developer Command Prompt, go to the directory where the CreateMedia.exe file is located, and then run the following command to check whether CreateMedia.exe can handle addresses that are larger than 2 GB: dumpbin.exe /headers CreateMedia.exeįor more information about the /HEADERS DUMPBIN option, see /HEADERS. On the computer that has Visual Studio installed, open the Developer Command Prompt as an elevated Command Prompt window. You can locate the CreateMedia.exe file on the site server under the \AdminConsole\bin\i386 folder.
We recommend that you install Visual Studio on a client computer instead of on a site server.Ĭopy the CreateMedia.exe file to the computer that has Visual Studio installed. Select the Desktop development with C++ workload when you install Visual Studio.
If Microsoft Visual Studio isn't already available in your environment, download and install Visual Studio. If the media contains a large system image, CreateMedia.exe may exceed the 2 GB memory limit and generate the error that is mentioned in the Symptoms section.
Unable to load volume image 1 (0x80070008)ĬreateTsMedia failed with error 0x80070008, details=''ĬreateMedia.exe finished with error code 80070008 CauseĬreateMedia.exe is a 32-bit executable that's used to create media in Configuration Manager. Refer to CreateTsMedia.log file to find more details.Īdditionally, the following error entries are logged in CreateTSMedia.log: Media creation failed with error message: 'Not enough memory resources are available to process this command.' When you try to create the media, you receive the following error message:
In Configuration Manager, you use the Create Task Sequence Media Wizard to create standalone or prestaged media that contain a large system image.
Original product version: Configuration Manager Original KB number: 4511621 Symptoms This article fixes an issue in which you receive the Not enough memory resources error when you create standalone or prestaged media in Configuration Manager.