I have a customer who has a NetWare 5.1 network with 26 remote branches. All sites are connected via T1. I am in the process of getting all sites up to date with SP7 and setting up TCP/IP along with DHCP.
Right now "All" Master copies of partitions are at the HQ location on one central server (HQ only has one NW server) with R/W partitions spread throughout the network according to the (4) partitions they currently have setup. I thought this was a poor design since all replication with the Master partitions had to route back to the central office, so I was going to recommend moving the Master partitions back to some of the remote offices, so not to have one single point of failure. However, I found out that their Frame Relay cloud is not MESH, so all sites have to come back to the corporate site to route to other remote sites <not sure if I am using the correct terminology in talking about the WAN connectivity>.
So, I am not certain if I should change the NDS partition structure at all. I was trying to reduce the NDS replication traffic back to HQ and to get away from a single point of failure, but don't think I can do that with their current FR configuration.
NDS partition right now is this:
NDS_TREE - Root(Master for All 4 parts)(2 R/W Sites 1 HQ)
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-- Partition 1 (4 R/W Sites/ 2 SR / 1 Master HQ)
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-- Partition 2 (2 R/W Sites / 1 SR / 1 Master HQ)
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-- Partition 3 (5 R/W Sites / 2 SR / 1 Master HQ)
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-- Partition 4 (13 R/W Sites / 3 SR / 1 Master HQ)
* Partition 4 is the largest it has 13 new sites and is growing * It is structure along their buisness
On top of this all sites have a bindery context set - some application that they run will not run without a bindery context being set.
Any ideas from you other guys would greatly be appreciated!
Still in the thinking mode right now. Also, I am changing the IPX routing protocol to RLSP and getting all servers setup on TCP/IP with SLP DA setup at HQ. Eventually we will remove IPX all together.
Right now "All" Master copies of partitions are at the HQ location on one central server (HQ only has one NW server) with R/W partitions spread throughout the network according to the (4) partitions they currently have setup. I thought this was a poor design since all replication with the Master partitions had to route back to the central office, so I was going to recommend moving the Master partitions back to some of the remote offices, so not to have one single point of failure. However, I found out that their Frame Relay cloud is not MESH, so all sites have to come back to the corporate site to route to other remote sites <not sure if I am using the correct terminology in talking about the WAN connectivity>.
So, I am not certain if I should change the NDS partition structure at all. I was trying to reduce the NDS replication traffic back to HQ and to get away from a single point of failure, but don't think I can do that with their current FR configuration.
NDS partition right now is this:
NDS_TREE - Root(Master for All 4 parts)(2 R/W Sites 1 HQ)
|
|
-- Partition 1 (4 R/W Sites/ 2 SR / 1 Master HQ)
|
|
-- Partition 2 (2 R/W Sites / 1 SR / 1 Master HQ)
|
|
-- Partition 3 (5 R/W Sites / 2 SR / 1 Master HQ)
|
|
-- Partition 4 (13 R/W Sites / 3 SR / 1 Master HQ)
* Partition 4 is the largest it has 13 new sites and is growing * It is structure along their buisness
On top of this all sites have a bindery context set - some application that they run will not run without a bindery context being set.
Any ideas from you other guys would greatly be appreciated!
Still in the thinking mode right now. Also, I am changing the IPX routing protocol to RLSP and getting all servers setup on TCP/IP with SLP DA setup at HQ. Eventually we will remove IPX all together.