Excellent are there any doc pointers describing how to set this up?
/Joe
Jeremy Zawodny wrote:
On Wed, Jul 23, 2003 at 04:47:35PM -0400, Joe Gainey wrote:
Currently we have a web based application that is mostly reads (4:1
r/w). It is using a single MySQL database server. Is there any way to
On Mon, 28 Jul 2003 22:23:06 -0700, Jeremy Zawodny used
a few recycled electrons to form:
| On Wed, Jul 23, 2003 at 04:47:35PM -0400, Joe Gainey wrote:
| >
| > Currently we have a web based application that is mostly reads (4:1
| > r/w). It is using a single MySQL database server. Is there
On Wed, Jul 23, 2003 at 04:47:35PM -0400, Joe Gainey wrote:
>
> Currently we have a web based application that is mostly reads (4:1
> r/w). It is using a single MySQL database server. Is there any way to
> have two database servers in a master/master configuration such that
> writes to
Well, the bad news is that I did not get any positive responses (that I
can recall) from the list. But I did a little digging. suppossedly in
the latest release you can do A->B->C->D->A. Something to do with the
server name encoded in the blog. I'm not much of a dba but in todays ID
sweatsh
Hi, Joe,
I have exactly the same scenario. Did you get any valuable response you
could share with me? I haven't seen any on the list.
In fact, my case is slightly more complicated; I have "N" computers, all
having their local databases, and have an additional computer, which I
call the "central"
Currently we have a web based application that is mostly reads (4:1
r/w). It is using a single MySQL database server. Is there any way to
have two database servers in a master/master configuration such that
writes to either database server are replicated to eachother. Basically
even thoug