On Oct 16, 2012, at 08:33 , paul vixie <[email protected]> wrote:

> dns anycasting can also be done solely with provider-assigned space and
> no ASN of your own. for ISC we have three anycast clouds, one for f-root
> which has its own prefix and its own ASN, one for our public benefit
> secondary service which has its own prefix adjacent to f-root, and one
> for our commercial secondary service which uses provider-assigned
> address space for each named server.
> 
> the advantage to using provider-assigned space is that the global
> routing table carries no separate burden on your behalf. i call this
> "green networking" since it's more ecologically friendly. the
> disadvantage is that if you want to change providers you have to
> renumber. renumbering in this case isn't all that painful since you are
> in control of the NS target name. there's a description at
> <http://www.isc.org/solutions/sns-anycast>.

This works, although limits your anycast nodes to a single provider.

While there is nothing wrong with single-provider anycast, I would argue having 
anycast instances in multiple providers is beneficial.

Also, it is difficult to find a network with truly global reach, limiting your 
choices if you want nodes in every corner of the globe.  Moreover, the few 
networks that are present on very continent all have restrictive peering 
policies, limiting their reach to certain networks in many places.

To be clear, using your own space doesn't guarantee global reach either.  But 
it gives you more flexibility, at the expense of greatly increased complexity, 
time, and effort.

-- 
TTFN,
patrick


> note that the term "anycast" is sometimes overloaded to mean "DNS CDN"
> where each server decides what answer to give for an A or AAAA request
> based on that server's current guess about the client's locality
> relative to various web farms. if the original question is really about
> that, then the answer will have to go beyond routing policy. (ISC does
> not do this, so my description above does not cover it.)
> 
> paul
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