nanog mailing list archives

Re: Content Delivery Networks


From: "Chris L. Morrow" <christopher.morrow () verizonbusiness com>
Date: Tue, 14 Aug 2007 14:57:08 +0000 (GMT)




On Tue, 14 Aug 2007, [iso-8859-1] Bjørn Mork wrote:

"Chris L. Morrow" <christopher.morrow () verizonbusiness com> writes:

This is still a client issue as, hopefully, the cache-resolvers don't
funnel their business through nscd save when applications on them need
lookups... (things like ping/telnet/traceroute/blah)

nscd may represent a problem if the application in question is a
http-proxy without it's own resolver.  There's also a number of
more-or-less broken http-proxies doing their own resolver caching
regardless of actual TTL.

that's fine, that's still a client problem, not a cache-resolver
problem... These devices look 'upstream' for a cache-resolver to do their
dirty work, these just add an extra layer of indirection for the CDN to
figure out (my client is in SFO, my proxy is in IAD, my cache-resolver is
in CHI).


Such applications represent a problem wrt any DNS-based load balancing,
including CDNs, since they can serve a large number of end-users,
redirecting them to the "wrong" address long after the TTL should have
expired.

Yup, people should be aware of what the systems in their path are doing,
or as was mentioned earlier, have lots of exceptions on the CDN side.


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