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Measures reported by ADRepTraFrmTest Used in the Active Directory to express proximity of network connection, a site is defined as an IP subnetwork. A site consists of one or more subnets (unique network segments). Client machines use site information to find nearby DCs for logon operations. The Active Directory uses site information to help users find the closest machine that offers a needed network or a third-party service. The Active Directory provides two methods of replication within the Active Directory environment: intrasite replication and intersite replication. Intrasite replication is replication within an Active Directory site. It is based assumption that the IP subnets within a site are well connected and that bandwidth is considered freely available and inexpensive. Because of this assumption, data is sent without compression. Inter-site replication is replication between Active Directory sites. It is based on the assumption that the WAN is connected by slower links, so it is designed to minimize traffic rather than CPU cycles. Before being sent out, data is compressed to about 10% to 15% of original volume. By monitoring the replication data flowing into each site, the ADRepTraFrmTest test helps determine the nature of the inbound traffic handled by every site - whether inter-site or intrasite, and reveals what type of inbound traffic is high on a site. Using this information, administrators can determine whether or not the replication data has been compressed enough to optimize bandwidth usage, and accordingly decide if more data compression is required at the source. This test applies only to Active Directory Servers installed on Windows 2008. The measures made by this test are as follows:
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