On 2013-05-02, at 11:51, Jay Ashworth <jra@baylink.com> wrote:
But since Perry's problem is *inability to resolve names in google's public zones*, the *path to the ZONE servers* is the thing diagnostics would require a trace to, no?
Blair's problem, I think. Perry was just being helpful. Blair's point was that if Google DNS is not able to resolve Google domains, then you know something is wrong.
If 8.8.8.8 doesn't *answer* for "google.com" (and no one's told me it has), then how you get there is irrelevant.
Well, if you're trying to troubleshoot the performance or functionality of a service that is deployed using anycast, knowing what anycast node is giving problems is pretty useful. I say this as someone who has to help troubleshoot problems with anycast DNS services pretty regularly. Since there's no obvious way (in the draft-jabley-dnsop-anycast-mapping sense) to identify a Google DNS anycast node in-band, traceroute and RTT are pretty much what we're left with. Joe