Not sure if the idea has come up but while at GeeCON last week I was discussing 
to one of the attendees about state transfer improvements in replicated 
environments:

The idea is that in a replicated environment, if a cache manager shuts down, it 
would dump its memory contents to a cache store (i.e. a local filesystem) and 
when it starts up, instead of going over the network to do state transfer, it 
would load the state from the local filesystem which would be much quicker. 
Obviously, at times the cache manager would crash or have some failure dumping 
the memory contents, so in that case it would fallback on state transfer over 
the network. I think it's an interesting idea since it could reduce the amount 
of state transfer to be done. It's true though that there're other tricks if 
you're having issues with state transfer, such as the use of a cluster cache 
loader.

WDYT?
--
Galder Zamarreño
Sr. Software Engineer
Infinispan, JBoss Cache


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