Watermark (data synchronization)

Watermark describes an object of a predefined format which provides a point of reference for two systems/datasets attempting to establish delta/incremental synchronization; any object in the queried data source which was created, modified/changed, and/or deleted after the watermark value was established will be qualified as "above watermark" and could/should be returned to a delta-querying partner

Methodology

Watermark term is often used in Directory Synchronization software development projects. For example, products such as Microsoft Exchange Server, Active Directory, Active Directory Application Mode (ADAM), and Microsoft Identity Integration Server 2003/ Microsoft Identity Lifecycle Manager Server 2007, as well as Cisco Unified Communications Manager or Sun Microsystems IPlanet and other LDAP-based directory products are using DirSync and consequently will consume "watermark" object to provide efficient synchronization between directories. Watermark object sometimes can be referred as "cookie". DirSync control implementation can differ from product to product, however concept of watermark will allow any product to read changes in the directory incrementally.

The DirSync control is a Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) server extension that enables a program to search an Active Directory partition for objects that have changed. When a program performs a DirSync search, the program creates a cookie that identifies the directory state at the time of an earlier DirSync query. With the first search, the program creates an empty cookie and Active Directory returns all objects that satisfy the query. Active Directory also returns an updated cookie that can be passed to the next search to obtain changes that are made since the first search. This process is repeated for each search.

MSDN, from "How to poll for object attribute changes in Active Directory on Windows 2000 and Windows Server 2003 May 23, 2007
gollark: `is-thirteen` actually includes a machine learning classifier to detect if a picture is thirteen.
gollark: There is also `is-thirteen`, which detects if something is thirteen.
gollark: No, it really exists, though `is-number` is much more popular.
gollark: It was only picked up because they foolishly used a deprecated function to do this.
gollark: https://schneider.dev/blog/event-stream-vulnerability-explained/

See also

References

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