RE: DNS resolution to Yahoo.
Yahoo uses akamai technology (bgp path analysis) to determine what content server is "closest" to a given host and bases its' dns response on that data. You could contact Akamai and, explain your network, and see if they can make the necessary adjustments, or if you are large enough ask them to drop a couple of servers in your site. (or they may want you to send them a BGP feed) -Ejay -----Original Message----- From: Alan Sato [mailto:asato@altrio.net] Sent: Friday, June 13, 2003 12:17 PM To: nanog@merit.edu Subject: DNS resolution to Yahoo. So I got 2 dns servers that resolve www.yahoo.com <http://www.yahoo.com/> differently. Server A goes to 216.109.125.69. The Server B goes to 66.218.71.92. The 66.218.71.92 is a faster route for me. How do I get Server A to resolve to 66.218.71.92? Alan
-- On Friday, June 13, 2003 13:18 -0500 -- Ejay Hire <ejay.hire@isdn.net> supposedly wrote:
Yahoo uses akamai technology (bgp path analysis) to determine what content server is "closest" to a given host and bases its' dns response on that data. You could contact Akamai and, explain your network, and see if they can make the necessary adjustments, or if you are large enough ask them to drop a couple of servers in your site. (or they may want you to send them a BGP feed)
It is a bit more complex that BGP path analysis. :) But we are happy to work with you to make things faster / better. Any particular reason you have a problem with multiple answers? We do it intentionally for several reasons (e.g. load balancing and redundancy). It is fully RFC compliant and has been working well for many years now on most of the large web sites on the Internet. -- TTFN, patrick
participants (2)
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Ejay Hire
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Patrick W. Gilmore