If you get a warning there, then obviously something in wrong in the database. If everything is fine, the Terminal will return 'OK' usr/bin/sqlite3 ~/Library/Group\ Containers/UBF8T346G9.Office/Outlook/Outlook\ 15\ Profiles/Main\ Profile/Data/Outlook.sqlite 'PRAGMA integrity_check' (triple-click the command to select all, then copy) You can check the integrity of the database with the command: You can't run anything safely on the identity if it's still in use in Outlook itself. That are in the ~/Library/Group Containers/UBF8T346G9.Office/Outlook/Outlook 15 Profiles/Main Profile/Data folder.Ģ) QUIT Outlook. ********* NONE OF THIS IS PUBLISHED/APPROVED/SUPPORTED BY MICROSOFT FOR OUTLOOK FOR MAC *********Īs none of this is officially supported, I would recommend While there is very little we can run from the app itself in terms of maintenance or troubleshooting, in theory we should be able to tap straight into the database through sqlite3 itself. Outlook 2016 now uses a sqlite3 databases for its identity (just like Mail). Outlook 2011 had a proprietary database format and we (as users) had very few options to work with it.
Rebuild the database for Outlook 2016 7.1.