I am just a newbie but logically:
Maybe the answer to that is much simpler. 
Ask your network officer to tell you whats the bandwidth you
have on your current office and remote office. 
whats the avg:
a. website bandwidth.
b. current postgress office bandwidth.

I never used replication but it seems to me you'll need
a+2*b bandwidth at your current office and 2*b at your remote office
for the period of transition.
If your db size is C then you'll need (C/b)/3600 hrs in transition time.
do the math and if it fits great. If not, well...


Regards,
        tzahi.

> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Mike Nolan
> Sent: Friday, February 04, 2005 12:57 PM
> To: Christopher Browne
> Cc: pgsql-general@postgresql.org
> Subject: Re: [GENERAL] Is there a peer-to-peer server 
> solution with PG?
> 
> 
> > If you have so much update load that one server cannot 
> accomodate that 
> > load, then you should wonder why you'd expect that causing 
> every one 
> > of these updates to be applied to (say) 3 servers would "diminish" 
> > this burden.
> 
> The update/query load isn't the real issue here, it's that 
> these two servers will be 800 miles apart and there are some 
> advantages in having each office connect to its local 
> database rather than having one of them connect to the remote 
> master.  
> 
> The Slony-1 approach will work, assuming I've got suffient 
> network bandwidth to support it plus the traffic from the 
> remote office plus 
> exixting outside traffic from our public website.  
> 
> That's one of those things you just don't know will work 
> until you have it built, so I'm looking for other options now 
> while I have time to consider them.  Once I get on-site in 
> two weeks it'll a lot more hectic.
> --
> Mike Nolan
> 
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