I have to warn you:
Authoritative server selection in DNS is not standardized, and thus it
is not guaranteed to be stable even between BIND releases.
If you need to make static and/or optimal routing then you need to reach
into IP routing layer for that.
Petr Špaček
On 08. 05. 22 18:57, Ben Croswell wrote:
On the closest server question it will prefer the closest but a certain
percentage will go to servers further away. Additionally depending on
the version of BIND and the distance it could lead to the servers
further away taking more traffic in high QPS situations.
If you are getting high QPS you could fire off a large amount of queries
to the "slower" server before it responds and resets its SRTT. I believe
newer BIND versions have moved away from a static decrement value and
has fixed the issue but even fixes some queries will go out of region.
On Sun, May 8, 2022, 12:47 PM Bob McDonald <bmcdonal...@gmail.com
<mailto:bmcdonal...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Thanks for the answers. A couple more questions and then I'll
stand down.
First, it's Ben Croswell. Just pointing that out.
Second, my reading of the definition of a static-stub zone in the
Bvarmindicates that its use is to allow a local copy of the NS list
which may differ from the primary zone. I'm not sure that's what I'm
looking for. I think I'm ok with the NS list from the primary zone.
Lei me take another swing and try to be a bit more pedantic to see
if that helps.
I wish to define a global internal DNS environment.
At the level closest to the client would be a global network of
recursive DNS servers which would handle all internal and external
DNS requests. The internal DNS zones would be housed on a
global network of authoritative only DNS servers. The NS list for
the internal DNS zones on these authoritative only servers would be
known to the recursive servers via stub zones. My question is, if a
client in Mumbai submits a DNS request to his local recursive server
for an internal authoritative only zone defined by a stub zone
statement, which authoritative only server does the recursive server
pick from the NS list and will that eventually be the "closest"
server. I'm assuming a global distribution of the authoritative
servers. E.g. Hong Kong, London, US East, US West, South Amer, etc.
The use of the stub zones in this case is to eliminate the need for
an internal root. I want to avoid lookups for example from clients
in Asia being sent to authoritative only servers in South Amer.
Bob
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