enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. DRBD - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DRBD

    DRBD is a distributed replicated storage system for the Linux platform. It mirrors block devices between multiple hosts, functioning transparently to applications on the host systems. This replication can involve any type of block device, such as hard drives, partitions, RAID setups, or logical volumes. [3]

  3. SymmetricDS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SymmetricDS

    SymmetricDS is open source software for database and file synchronization with Multi-master replication, filtered synchronization, and transformation capabilities. [2] It is designed to scale for a large number of nodes, work across low-bandwidth connections, and withstand periods of network outage. [3]

  4. File Replication Service - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_Replication_Service

    FRS is still used for SYSVOL replication, but optionally, DFS replication may be used instead of FRS replication for SYSVOL shares, [4] and the FRS stopped. On up-level Windows Server 2008 domain controllers, SYSVOL replication is performed using DFS replication, by default [5] although NTFRS replication is also supported. On Windows Server ...

  5. Disk mirroring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disk_mirroring

    In a disaster recovery context, mirroring data over long distance is referred to as storage replication. Depending on the technologies used, replication can be performed synchronously, asynchronously, semi-synchronously, or point-in-time. Replication is enabled via microcode on the disk array controller or via server software. It is typically a ...

  6. Btrfs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Btrfs

    It was created by Chris Mason in 2007 [15] for use in Linux, and since November 2013, the file system's on-disk format has been declared stable in the Linux kernel. [ 16 ] Btrfs is intended to address the lack of pooling, snapshots , checksums , and integral multi-device spanning in Linux file systems . [ 9 ]

  7. State machine replication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_machine_replication

    In computer science, state machine replication (SMR) or state machine approach is a general method for implementing a fault-tolerant service by replicating servers and coordinating client interactions with server replicas. The approach also provides a framework for understanding and designing replication management protocols.

  8. Replication (computing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Replication_(computing)

    Data replication and computation replication both require processes to handle incoming events. Processes for data replication are passive and operate only to maintain the stored data, reply to read requests and apply updates. Computation replication is usually performed to provide fault-tolerance, and take over an operation if one component fails.

  9. Clustered file system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clustered_file_system

    A shared-disk file system uses a storage area network (SAN) to allow multiple computers to gain direct disk access at the block level.Access control and translation from file-level operations that applications use to block-level operations used by the SAN must take place on the client node.