tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4262690568972857623.post8008210569902919199..comments2024-03-11T18:00:51.306+00:00Comments on Lets Exchange: Microsoft DirSync Force Directory SynchronizationNuno Motahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02579565400597081970noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4262690568972857623.post-11160893890159686692014-07-10T09:22:12.779+01:002014-07-10T09:22:12.779+01:00Thank you for the warning, glad I never came acros...Thank you for the warning, glad I never came across it!Nuno Motahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02579565400597081970noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4262690568972857623.post-78729185786876629462014-07-09T18:09:18.282+01:002014-07-09T18:09:18.282+01:00Scheduled Sync interrupts the manual sync and leav...Scheduled Sync interrupts the manual sync and leaves it unfinished. This caused a serious problem for us when the initial sync had too many objects to sync in 3 hours - I read somewhere 5,000 objects per hour. Checking with PSS on increasing the interval or alternative when creating thousands of objects in AD.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4262690568972857623.post-74951492574261530432012-10-23T13:08:19.657+01:002012-10-23T13:08:19.657+01:00Hi,
I personally wouldn’t set it to less than 1h....Hi,<br /><br />I personally wouldn’t set it to less than 1h. If you are doing tests like me, you can easily force it to sync using PowerShell.<br />If in your environment there are constant changes to user accounts that you would like to sync as soon as possible, I would set it to 1h and inform users/ServiceDesk that changes might take up to 1h to get “replicated”. At the end, it’s a commitment between performance/network load and usability and it varies from environment to environment...<br /><br />Regarding what happens when “a new scheduled sync time arrives while an existing sync is underway” I am not sure to be honest... No matter if it cancels the new sync or simply runs it once the first one finishes, the end result should be practically the same (unless we are talking about a huge environment with many changes where a sync takes a long time to run).<br />Once my lab environment is up and running again, I will try to test this to see what happens.<br /><br />Regards,<br />NunoNuno Motahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02579565400597081970noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4262690568972857623.post-39524344104343367192012-10-18T16:11:15.401+01:002012-10-18T16:11:15.401+01:00Thanks for the exhaustive article.
Is there a max...Thanks for the exhaustive article. <br />Is there a maximum frequency that should not be surpassed? What happens if a new scheduled sync time arrives while an existing sync is underway?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com