> On 1 Oct 2020, at 05:25, Paul Whitney <paul.whitney@mac.com> wrote:
>
> Hi Eugen,
>
> I think that is what was tested by Red Hat and not necessarily a hard limit.
Correct, however Red Hat also tested up to 60 for FreeIPA. Certainly I know there is a deployment in the world that has scaled up past 1000 servers.
Generally once you get past say 8 servers, you need to think about your replication topology and how the data will flow. The largest sites I know tend to go to maximum 8 write-accepting servers, and then replicate to N hubs and replicas that are read only past that for the best performance and reliability.
>
> Regards,
>
>
> Paul M. Whitney
> paul.whitney@mac.com
>
>
> Sent from my Mac Book Pro
>
>> On Sep 30, 2020, at 9:56 AM, Eugen Lamers <eugen.lamers@br-automation.com> wrote:
>>
>> Hi,
>> We use the 389 Directory Server version 1.4.2.15.
>> In the documentation of the Red Hat Directory Server it says, as many as 20 masters are supported in an MMR. It sounds to be a hardcoded limitation defined to avoid overloaded servers and network. Shouldn't it be depending on the MMR topology, i.e. rather on the total number of replication agreements within the whole scenario? Or does "20 masters" indeed mean that the limitation of the MMR topology is the number of 380 replication agreements as shown in the "fully connected mesh" scenario (https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_directory_server/10/html/deployment_guide/designing_the_replication_process-common_replication_scenarios) with 20 masters and 20x19 replication agreements?
>> Is there someone who possibly has experience with scenarios of more than 20 master servers?
>> Thanks,
>> Eugen
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—
Sincerely,
William Brown
Senior Software Engineer, 389 Directory Server
SUSE Labs, Australia
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