I haven't had time to check here in a while, obviously, but no, not a bad mood.
When you ask a question seeking someone else's help, you cannot just toss out the ideas the way they make sense to you at the moment. You've got to step outside your box, look at the situation, and say, "how would SOMEONE ELSE see it?"
For instance, here you said:
I need to see who is removing licenses and converting mailboxes to shared. Where is the log file for that?
Well, MAYBE someone here has dealt specifically with that, but maybe not. I think it would help you if you were to type out your question elsewhere, read it, think about it, then make some edits, and then maybe post it. Just like writing a paper in school. First draft is usually not that great.
I've had to do the same thing before, so I know what I'm talking about.
Also, once you start a trend of never marking items helpful when they actually were, some of those who DO know the answer may just simply choose not to share, since you don't seem interested in following-up or at least let folks know what was or was not helpful.
In this situation, here your question sits 17 days later with not a hint of help. Ever stopped to ask why? Frankly, I could only guess as to what you're after from your one line. Can some questions be that simple? Yes. But also just as likely if it's that simple, then you can simply search your question online and find the answer more quickly anyway.
I hope you can get it cleared up and sorted out, but that won't help. You've got to dig in and think about it. What is the situation? What have you tried? Etc Etc... Better to provide too much detail than practically no detail.
"But thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ." 1 Corinthians 15:57