Rich- Actually, there has... Perform a few traceroutes from various route-servers to UDNS1.ULTRADNS.NET. They are announcing the same netblock from various locales, so basically it will take you to the closest server. To actually traceroute to a few of their specific boxen in various locales, change your destination to ns1.east.ultradns.net, ns1.west.ultradns.net, ns1.jp.ultradns.net, etc. This was laid out in detail somewhere on their site during the very generous free trial of their service while in Beta. -troy On Fri, 26 Jan 2001 richb@pioneer.ci.net wrote:
Christian Nielsen <cnielsen@nielsen.net> wrote:
ultradns does this and has a great product.
Interesting to read the faq on UltraDNS's website:
Q. I read that your service is supposed to make use of several servers all over the world, but you only give people two server addresses to provide to their registrar. How do I make use of all the other servers?
A. The two server addresses you supply your registrar when you set up a domain on the Managed DNS Service system are actually 'virtual' addresses that will route to the best possible server on our network, based on a number of factors. This highly intelligent mechanism allows you to achieve full redundancy and reliability with only two name server addresses actually listed. In fact, if the registrar would allow you to do so, you could achieve the same level of reliability with only one name server address.
Looks to me like most of their hiring lately has been in marketing and business-dev. How could an engineer make statements like the above with a straight face?
Or maybe there have been a few extensions to BGP which I haven't learned about...;-)
-rich