Jason Normand wrote:
we are looking to move our DNS out of house and are looking for
recommendations.
any suggestions are appreciated
While speed isn't everything, this monthly updated speed comparison is
one way to identify the top providers that take DNS infrastructure
seriously:
From: discuss-bounces+blu=nedharvey@blu.org [mailto:discuss-
bounces+blu=nedharvey@blu.org] On Behalf Of Tom Metro
While speed isn't everything, this monthly updated speed comparison is
one way to identify the top providers that take DNS infrastructure
seriously:
While I agree this
Edward Ned Harvey (blu) wrote:
The only conclusion I'm comfortable drawing is that results vary a
lot, and the biggest factor is network topology affecting roundtrip
packet latency. My results were dramatically different from those
published on SolveDNS, and the most likely explanation is
On Thu, Sep 04, 2014 at 01:34:05PM -0400, Jason Normand wrote:
we are looking to move our DNS out of house and are looking for
recommendations. currently we are managing multiple bind servers
ourselves. but most of our systems are now running in AWS, and the few
left in the colo are being
From: discuss-bounces+blu=nedharvey@blu.org [mailto:discuss-
bounces+blu=nedharvey@blu.org] On Behalf Of Jason Normand
we are looking to move our DNS out of house and are looking for
recommendations. currently we are managing multiple bind servers
ourselves. but most of our
From: discuss-bounces+blu=nedharvey@blu.org [mailto:discuss-
bounces+blu=nedharvey@blu.org] On Behalf Of Jason Normand
We are really looking to eliminate our hardware overhead. We could run a
bind box in EC2 but thats likely excessive and just a small step removed
from the hardware
we are looking to move our DNS out of house and are looking for
recommendations. currently we are managing multiple bind servers
ourselves. but most of our systems are now running in AWS, and the few
left in the colo are being dropped within the year. our needs are not
really that intensive or