Yes. The term sync you used in the original email is a bit confusing, as a message can be only in one broker queue at the time. They will get forwarded to the remote broker if there is demand (consumers) for that queue on the remote broker.
Regards -- Dejan Bosanac Senior Software Engineer | FuseSource Corp. dej...@fusesource.com | fusesource.com skype: dejan.bosanac | twitter: @dejanb blog: http://www.nighttale.net ActiveMQ in Action: http://www.manning.com/snyder/ On Mon, May 28, 2012 at 5:23 PM, Mohit Anchlia <mohitanch...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Mon, May 28, 2012 at 7:18 AM, Dejan Bosanac <de...@nighttale.net> wrote: > >> Hi, >> >> store and forward is massively used, but you cannot sync queues across >> brokers. In network of brokers queue is distributed over brokers and >> messages will be load balanced between brokers. >> >> Could you please elaborate? > > If I publish a message on queue A in DC1 with no consumer wouldn't it get > replicated to queue A in DC2 with consumer? Is this what you mean? > > > >> >> Regards >> -- >> Dejan Bosanac >> Senior Software Engineer | FuseSource Corp. >> dej...@fusesource.com | fusesource.com >> skype: dejan.bosanac | twitter: @dejanb >> blog: http://www.nighttale.net >> ActiveMQ in Action: http://www.manning.com/snyder/ >> >> >> On Sun, May 27, 2012 at 7:52 PM, Mohit Anchlia <mohitanch...@gmail.com> >> wrote: >> > What's the best way to sync messages between 2 DCs? Does anyone using >> store >> > forward currently between DCs? >>