Hello, is it possible to apply a strategy of horizontal fragmentation into the Active Directory? I mean, to store some amount of data in another DC, for example when the first DC is "full" Any idea? Felipe.
Hello Felipe, Am 14.06.2016 um 20:56 schrieb Felipe_G0NZÁLEZ_SANTIAG0:> is it possible to apply a strategy of horizontal > fragmentation into the Active Directory? > I mean, to store some amount of data in another DC, > for example when the first DC is "full"What do you mean with "the first DC is full"? You mean that one DC is totally busy? In that case the clients automatically use other DCs they find via DNS queries. Regards, Marc
Hello Marc, I'm referring to divide/fragment de Database AD (if possible). Trying to store a set of Data in a DC and another set of data in other DC... something like this. I ask that, because I've been asked for a strategy or mechanism related to the scalability which based on the horizontal fragmentation of AD. Then, Does AD have some type of mechanism for supporting the horizontal fragmentation? Thanks for reply. FelipeGS6 . ----- Original Message -----> Hello Felipe,> Am 14.06.2016 um 20:56 schrieb Felipe_G0NZÁLEZ_SANTIAG0: > > is it possible to apply a strategy of horizontal > > fragmentation into the Active Directory? > > I mean, to store some amount of data in another DC, > > for example when the first DC is "full"> What do you mean with "the first DC is full"?> You mean that one DC is totally busy? In that case the clients > automatically use other DCs they find via DNS queries.> Regards, > Marc
On Tue, 2016-06-14 at 14:56 -0400, Felipe_G0NZÁLEZ_SANTIAG0 wrote:> Hello, > is it possible to apply a strategy of horizontal fragmentation into > the Active Directory? > I mean, to store some amount of data in another DC, for example when > the first DC is "full" > > Any idea?Not really - except when we get trusted domains working properly, but even then we will need a GC with all the objects. However, I have good news. My team at Catalyst have been taking on some of the silly limitations in our AD DC, with remarkable success. For example, we have significantly reduced the time it takes to export and import large numbers of linked attributes, just by applying the linux perf tool to an extreme example. I can't give exact numbers (we will hopefully calculate these later), but I expect Samba 4.5 to scale much better than previous releases, based on the success of our quick wins so far, let alone any larger re -work we might manage in the next month. The great thing is that Samba's AD DC has gone past the 'does it work' stage, and is now at the 'please make it work faster' stage. Andrew Bartlett -- Andrew Bartlett http://samba.org/~abartlet/ Authentication Developer, Samba Team http://samba.org Samba Developer, Catalyst IT http://catalyst.net.nz/services/samba