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In replication, a server profile sends walk data to another server
profile. The two profiles can be on different machines or they can be
on the same one. If the profiles are on different machines, the
sending and receiving profiles can have the same or different
names. If the profiles are on the same machine, use different profile
names.
Replication is supported in the full Texis product, but not Webinator-only.
Here is an example that illustrates the replication process. In this
example, the Sender profile has been set up as the sender
profile and Receiver is the receiver profile. After
Sender performs a walk, it sends the walk data to
Receiver. The Receiver profile accepts the data as-is,
without regard to its own profile settings. Only the profile that
performed the walk may send the walk data, so in this example
Receiver cannot replicate (the data it received from
Sender) to another profile.
To avoid undesired overwriting of replication walk data, you should
not allow the receiver profile to perform walks.
Before the receiver will accept replication data, the sender(s) need
to be granted permission to send the data. This permission is managed
in a cluster member list.
A good use of replication is to set up multiple machines to replicate
to a single receiving profile. For example, machines A, B, and C each
have a different profile, and they each replicate their walk data to a
profile on machine D, which is the receiver. Another use of
replication is to send walk data from multiple profiles on a machine
to a single receiver profile that is on the same machine. This
provides a means of combining walk data into a single profile. Another
use of replication is to replicate data from one sender to multiple
receivers. This way multiple machines hold the same walk data.
Copyright © Thunderstone Software Last updated: Thu Dec 22 14:38:01 EST 2011
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