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SUMMARY
The File Replication service (FRS) is a multi-threaded, multi-master replication engine that replaces the LMREPL service in the 3.x/4.0 versions of Microsoft Windows NT. Windows 2000 domain controllers and servers use FRS to replicate system policy and login scripts for Windows 2000 and down-level clients. MORE INFORMATION
FRS polls the Active Directory at regular intervals for configuration and subscriber list changes. Each time a Windows 2000 server is started or the NTFRS service is started, the computer object in the DS is polled in eight short intervals followed by eight long intervals, provided no configuration changes take place.
The FRS service waits two polling intervals, short or long, before replication takes place. Long polling intervals occur only after eight short polling intervals have finished without change. Events that reset the polling interval include:
The worst-case scenario assuming a change to the steady state for a member server is to have a single change occur 59+ minutes into a long polling interval, and then wait two more short intervals for replication to occur for a total of approximately 70 minutes. The worst-case scenario for a domain controller is approximately 15 minutes. Sample polling events in the Ntfrs_000x.log file in the %SystemRoot%\Debug folder are shown below <PollDs: 1144: 9284: S4: 18:00:19> :Nd: Begin merging Ds with Db <PollDs: 1144: 9286: S4: 18:00:19> :Nd: End merging Ds with Db <DsCsMain: 1144: 9574: S4: 18:05:19> :Nd: Polling the DS in 5 minutes Additional query words: pole query
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