Configuring the Directory Server
Configuring Security in the Directory Server
Configuring Replication With dsreplication
To Enable Replication Between Two Servers
To Initialize a Replicated Server
To Initialize an Entire Topology
To Obtain the Status of a Replicated Topology
Modifying the Replication Configuration With dsconfig
Retrieving the Replication Domain Name
Changing the Replication Purge Delay
To Change the Replication Purge Delay
Changing the Heartbeat Interval
To Change the Heartbeat Interval
To Change the Isolation Policy
Configuring Encrypted Replication
To Configure Encrypted Replication
Configuring Replication Groups
To Configure A Replication Group
Configuring Assured Replication
To Configure Assured Replication in Safe Data Mode
To Configure Assured Replication in Safe Read Mode
Configuring Replication Status
To Configure the Degraded Status Threshold
Initializing a Replicated Server With Data
Initializing a Single Replicated Server
Initializing a New Replicated Topology
Adding a Directory Server to an Existing Replicated Topology
Changing the Data Set in an Existing Replicated Topology
To Change the Data Set With import-ldif or Binary Copy
Configuring Schema Replication
Replicating to a Read-Only Server
To Configure a Replica as Read-Only
Directory server replication has been designed to ensure that replicated databases remain consistent, even in the case of hardware faults, directory server restarts, or network failures. Despite these efforts, however, it is possible that hardware failures (disk errors, memory errors) or software errors (causing memory corruption) might lead to inconsistent databases.
These topics explain how to detect replication inconsistencies, and how to resolve them when they are identified.