Hi,

I recall it was not possible in the past to perform bidirectional 
(master-master) rolling replication, and it was warned against in the 
documentation (saying from memory, could also have been the list). I believe 
there were some parameters like sync_machineid to make things unique per 
server. This is quite some time ago, maybe when replication was just introduced 
:-)

Is that still the case, or is it now safe to do master-master replication? In a 
small test, it seems to work, without causing some kind of replication storm 
from one server to the other. Perhaps I have to worry about full 
synchronisation runs, I didn't stress test it or test every scenario.

I tried on Debian 10 with Cyrus from backports, so version 3.2.5. I did stumble 
upon some issues, for instance I had to install run a sync_server service, I 
was unable to get it to talk to the imap port even though authentication 
succeeds (tcpdump shows sync_client stops immediately after). Also, sync_client 
bails out of rolling replication and doesn't try to reconnect/restart if the 
peer disconnects, and I'd kind of expect it to resume after a hickup.

I would want to run a geographically separated cluster, and 'automatic' 
failover (by having DNS records point to one or the other host based on 
monitoring, or using a load-balancer).

Regards,
Paul?

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Cyrus: Info
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