Hi William, Thanks a lot for your reply. That's correct - replication schedule is not enabled. No - there are definitely changes to replicate - I know, I made the change myself ( I changed the "description" attribute on an account, but it takes up to 15 mins for the change to appear in the 1.3 master. That master replicates to another master and a bunch of other hubs. Those hubs replicate amongst themselves and a bunch of consumers. The update can take up to 15 mins to make it from the 1.2 master, into the 1.3 master; but once it hits the 1.3 master, it is replicated around the 1.3 cluster within 1 sec. Only memberOf is disallowed for fractional replication. Can anyone give me any guidance as to the settings of the "backoff" and other parameters? Any doc links that may be useful? Thanks a lot, Trev On 2018-02-18, 3:32 PM, "William Brown" <william@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: On Sat, 2018-02-17 at 01:49 +0000, Fong, Trevor wrote: > Hi Everyone, > > I’ve set up a new 389 DS cluster (389-Directory/1.3.6.1 > B2018.016.1710) and have set up a replication agreement from our old > cluster (389-Directory/1.2.11.15 B2014.300.2010) to a master node in > the new cluster. Problem is that updates in the old cluster take up > to 15 mins to make it into the new cluster. We need it to be near > instantaneous, like it normally is. Any ideas what I can check? I am assuming you don't have a replication schedule enabled? In LDAP replication is always "eventual". So a delay isn't harmful. But there are many things that can influence this. Ludwig is the expert, and I expect he'll comment here. Only one master may be "replicating" to a server at a time. So if your 1.3 server is replicating with other servers, then your 1.2 server may have to "wait it's turn". There is a replication 'backoff' timer, that sets how long it tries and scales these attempts too. I'm not sure if 1.2 has this or not though. Another reason could be there are no changes to be replicated, replication only runs when there is something to do. So your 1.2 server may have no changes, or it could be eliminating the changes with fractional replication. Finally, it's very noisy but you could consider enabling replication logging to check what's happening. I hope that helps, > > Thanks a lot, > Trev > > _________________________________________________ > Trevor Fong > Senior Programmer Analyst > Information Technology | Engage. Envision. Enable. > The University of British Columbia > trevor.fong@xxxxxx | 1-604-827-5247 | it.ubc.ca > > _______________________________________________ > 389-users mailing list -- 389-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe send an email to 389-users-leave@lists.fedoraproject.o > rg -- Thanks, William Brown _______________________________________________ 389-users mailing list -- 389-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe send an email to 389-users-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ 389-users mailing list -- 389-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe send an email to 389-users-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx