That would mean running a robocopy job from one server to 21 destinations
every time a user logs off, all day while people are trying to work. I could
do that, but I was hoping for something a little more elegant... :-)

2008/9/16 lists <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

>  Brute force method…
>
> Use Robocopy to copy everything everywhere everyday.
>
>
>
> Cheers.
>
>
>
> *From:* James Rankin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> *Sent:* Tuesday, September 16, 2008 7:35 AM
> *To:* NT System Admin Issues
> *Subject:* Citrix farm issue
>
>
>
> I have a farm of 22 identical cloned Citrix servers. Onto said servers, the
> powers-that-be have decided that we will have a new housing system deployed.
> This decision was taken before I started, so there's no getting away from
> it. Now, unfortunately, this POS housing system stores its reports on the
> client (i.e. when a user changes a report, a file is updated in the reports
> folder on the Citrix server, not the back-end database server). However, the
> user could log on to any one of 22 servers the next day, so we need a
> mechanism for replicating his/her changes across the farm. This also needs
> to be intelligent enough to get around the fact that we may have multiple
> users accessing the same server and possibly making changes to the same
> reports, then logging off independently of each other.
>
> I first thought of DFS, but sitting and thinking about it this doesn't
> really seem suitable. Does anyone know of any solution that might help me
> out here? The less hands-off the better :-)
>
> TIA,
>
>
>
> JRR
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>

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