In installations that contain multiple
Gateways,
you can configure up to eight Gateways as peers in a group. You can
control peers in the group from a local Gateway. The local Gateway
is the Gateway on which you make changes to the configuration,
or manage held and queued messages. In a deployment that uses Peer Gateways, any Gateway in the group can be used as the local Gateway.
Peer Gateways can:
Provide redundancy
in the event of a system failure
Share the processing
load to improve message throughput
You should only attempt to peer a Gateway operating at version 4.0 or above with an earlier Gateway if it is for the purpose of reporting. Configuration information can not be shared between Gateways in this configuration.
From the local Gateway, you can manage peers in the following ways: Show me
Create a security
policy, and apply it to all Peer Gateways
Monitor the status
of Peer Gateways
Run consolidated reports throughout the Peer Group.
Manage held and queued
messages for all Gateways, for example analyze, release and delete held
messages
Track messages across
Peer Gateways
Consolidate PMM messages
for all Peer Gateways in the group. Users then receive a single PMM
digest for messages held in PMM areas on all Gateways in the group
Consolidate report
information between peers. You can manage reports from any peer in the
group, and create custom reports that include report data from the local
peer only, all peers in the group, or any combination of peers in the
group