Here’s something interesting for the infrastructure geeks on the list ...

How would you approach setting up a service that had to sink around, oh … say … 
10-20 million small HTTP POST requests per minute throughout the day, from 
sources geographically distributed around the country?

To do development and get the logic working, a small server is sufficient. But 
it needs to scale quickly once it’s launched.

There will be a high degree of geo-locality, so servers could be set up to 
handle requests from different geographic areas.  HTTP requests from a given 
area would be routed to whatever server is dedicated for that area. I guess 
their IP address could be used for that purpose? 

(How granular is the location data for IP addresses on mobile devices? Are they 
reliable? We could add a location geotag to the packet headers if that would 
help.)

Note that the servers don’t need to be physically LOCATED in the area; rather, 
they're dedicated to SERVING a well-defined geographic area.

There’s no need for cross-talk, either. That is, there’s no need for a server 
serving, say, the LA area to cross-post with one in San Diego, except in a very 
small overlapping area which is easy to address.

Can this sort of routing be done with a DNS service?  (eg., DNSMadeEasy.com is 
one I’m familiar with)

Or is something more massive needed? 

Also note that this would be an automated service. It has a very steady stream 
of small incoming packets, peaking at various times of the day, with limited 
responses. No ads, no graphics, no user interactions at all.

I know there are infrastructure services in place to handle this kind of thing, 
like what Amazon offers, and others. I’m looking for any specific pointers to 
services that might fit this use case profile.

-David



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