Definitely the way to go if you encounter trouble when editing and publishing large sites at the same time. Are you running the latest v9 or even v10? They use the new Pagebuilder based on .Net which speeds up the publishing in most cases.
Also make sure you have set your publishing settings so that you only publish new files / pages and not the entire site every time. On 8 Jan., 06:54, TonyGayter <[email protected]> wrote: > Yes we have done exactly this when we had problems getting content > into a site whilst still developing it (we were on a very tight > timescale and we had 15 content inputters with 2 developers trying to > publish and work on the system). > > Reddot is capable of running clustered and you just tell it which is > the default publication server, it will help performance a great deal. > Ours was getting unusable and once we did this it sorted it all out. > It is also suprisingly easy to setup aswell. > > On Jan 7, 6:03 pm, Tiffany <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > Our University is considering splitting up RedDot into two production > > servers: one for editing and one for publishing. We are hoping that > > splitting the two will help the system run smoother and quicker. We > > have experienced problems with simultaneous multiple publications. > > > Has anyone split their production up between editing and publishing? > > What was your experience? Did you notice a significant increase in > > performance? What was your process of splitting the two? What problems > > did you encounter? > > > Has anyone encountered issues with migrating the system to new > > hardware? > > > Thanks for your input!
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