> Just to clarify here - are not IMAP/POP/LMTP actions logged anyway - > using sync_log? Won't they grow forever, too? Yes, but no, because your replica is not taking IMAP/POP/LMTP/etc traffic, therefore no such actions are occurring on it. If it is taking that traffic, it's not a replica, it's a master; if it needs to replicate to somewhere else while it's acting as master, then it needs a rolling sync_client, which will consume the sync_log, and it won't grow forever. If it doesn't need to replicate anywhere else (i.e. maybe you don't have a third server in the set) then it probably wouldn't have sync_log on anyway, but if it does, you should turn it off in this situation. If your replica is accidentally taking that traffic while still being a replica for replication purposes, you have a split brain situation, which can be fiddly to clean up. So be careful to avoid this! > What is a scenario where sync_log and sync_log_chain is used > independently? What is the purpose to have sync_log and sync_log_chain > as separate options - couldn't we just use sync_log? sync_log should be enabled on _servers that need to replicate to elsewhere in approximately real time_ (let's call this "category A"), and they need to have a rolling sync_client active to do this, which consumes the sync logs sync_log_chain should be enabled on the subset of servers in category A that also receive traffic via replication from elsewhere So, sync_log and sync_log_chain cannot be interchangeable. sync_log means "i am running a rolling sync_client, and it needs a source of events", and sync_log_chain means ".... and that should also include replication events". A replica that is chaining needs _both_. In an M->R1->R2 setup, M needs "sync_log", R1 needs "sync_log" and "sync_log_chain", and R2 needs neither In an M->R1 + M->R2 setup, M needs "sync_log". R1 and R2 don't need sync configuration. They can safely have sync_log enabled because they're not receiving user traffic anyway, but they don't need it. In an M1->R1 (there is no R2) setup, M needs "sync_log". R1 doesn't need sync configuration (but can safely have sync_log enabled), and R2 doesn't exist. Presumably, you set up replication so that if something happens to your usual master server, you can restore service by carefully promoting one of your replicas into the master role. In an M->R1->R2 role, presumably you're planning to switch to R1 in an M-failed scenario, since it will have the most up-to-date data. It's already set up to replicate to R2, and while it is acting as master it won't be receiving replication traffic, so leaving sync_log_chain on won't hurt, and it will still need sync_log on to keep replicating to R2. (This also implies that, if you have multiple data centres, M and R1 should be in different data centres, R1 and R2 should be in different data centres, but R2 can be in the same data centre as M with the caveat that if you lose that whole dc, then the promoted-R1 has nowhere to replicate to. YMMV depending on the size of your deployment, your resiliency requirements, your budget, etc etc.) In an M->R1 + M->R2 setup, both replicas are reasonably up to date, and either would make a suitable failover target. You probably want to configure whichever one you promote to now replicate to the other, where previously it didn't replicate to anywhere. When you get M rebuilt after the disaster, you probably want to initially set it up as a replica in the set, so that it can be brought up to date without taking user traffic. Then, if you want to make it the master again, halt non-admin traffic to the whole set, perform a final replication to it to make sure it's exactly up to date (should be quick, since the current-master will only have a few minutes of changes to catch up on, since you already brought it up to date), then flip your configurations/dns/proxy/whatever else you need to do, and put your sync configuration back to usual. Make sure everything's fine, then re-enable non-admin traffic. > Are both types of entries - from sync_log and sync_log_chain used only > by rolling replication? Or are they used by sync_client -A too? No, the sync log (both "types") is only used by the rolling sync_client mode. The sync log is how a rolling sync_client knows what to replicate. Every other sync_client mode gets a list of "what to replicate" in its command line arguments, and only replicates what it's told. sync_log -A replicates all users. "-A" constitutes a "list of what to replicate". Thus it ignores the sync log. > Sorry for the silly questions, the replication is quite scantly documented. Have you seen this? https://www.cyrusimap.org/imap/reference/admin/sop/replication.html Pull requests appreciated, of course. > Thank you for all the explanations so far, regards, No worries, hope this is helpful. ellie ---- Cyrus Home Page: http://www.cyrusimap.org/ List Archives/Info: http://lists.andrew.cmu.edu/pipermail/info-cyrus/ To Unsubscribe: https://lists.andrew.cmu.edu/mailman/listinfo/info-cyrus