I thought about NFS but the problem is there's no failover with that, the share goes down and every server is rendered useless, also I anticipate a lot more reads than writes and having the data available locally is going to be much faster. A minute of two delay is ok. I'm going to take a look at DRDB and incron, This is for a high traffic web app that has some disk storage, I need the folder syntonization so we can load balance among multiple servers. Thanks, Scott -----Original Message----- From: tclug-list-bounces at mn-linux.org on behalf of Tony Yarusso Sent: Wed 3/24/2010 12:45 AM To: TCLUG Mailing List Subject: Re: [tclug-list] Folder Synchronization The suggestions of NFS or AFS make sense. If you did want to stick with a syncing approach instead, you could use incron to trigger a sync based on filesystem events rather than each hour. ie. whenever a file is changed, you do the sync immediately. - Tony Yarusso _______________________________________________ TCLUG Mailing List - Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota tclug-list at mn-linux.org http://mailman.mn-linux.org/mailman/listinfo/tclug-list -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/ms-tnef Size: 3224 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://mailman.mn-linux.org/pipermail/tclug-list/attachments/20100324/b416820f/attachment.bin