Abdul,
what type of replication are you using?
Rgds,
Paul Ibison, SQL Server MVP, WWW.Replicationanswers.Com
(recommended sql server 2000 replication book:
http://www.nwsu.com/0974973602p.html)
Thank you Paul, I'm using merge replication
"Paul Ibison" wrote:
> Abdul,
> what type of replication are you using?
> Rgds,
> Paul Ibison, SQL Server MVP, WWW.Replicationanswers.Com
> (recommended sql server 2000 replication book:
> http://www.nwsu.com/0974973602p.html)
>
|||Abdul,
in your first post you mention "Then I recreate the subscription but I find
that the record does not replicate on the other subscriber and publisher. ".
Merge replication is not normally continuous, rather the merge agent is run
on a schedule. You could have a schedule of once a minute and enter records
on the subscriber between synchronizations. To simulate a broken connection,
you could disconnect the network card, or set one of the databases to
read-only, then synchronize. Dropping the subscription as you have done is
something else entirely and is a simulation of a subscriber exceeding the
maximum retention period. In this case you could run sp_removedbreplication,
resubscribe as a noinit subscription and do a dummy update. However, I think
that this isn't what you really require.
Rgds,
Paul Ibison, SQL Server MVP, WWW.Replicationanswers.Com
(recommended sql server 2000 replication book:
http://www.nwsu.com/0974973602p.html)
Thursday, February 16, 2012
Adding data from disconnected subscriber
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