Hello,
I have a basic question regarding Internet link failover and DNS. Assuming I can successfully reroute traffic to an alternate ISP following a service outage with my primary ISP, how do external DNS databases get updated following the change?
I have internal web servers that are mapped on a firewall to ISP-A’s IP addresses. When a failover occurs, I can map those same servers to ISP-B’s IPs, but this covers only outbound traffic. How do external DNS servers become aware of those changes so that remote users know where to go?
As basic as this question seems to be, I cannot find the answer anywhere. I don’t necessarily need to know the details of how to do this, only the general idea. The only solution I can come up with is that I’d need to have the cooperation of the two ISPs, who would update their databases in response to (if nothing else) a phone call from me, following an outage.
But can DNS list alternate host records that can somehow automatically become primary records when the primary address cannot be reached? This question is probably a big ‘duh’ to a lot of people. Any DNS experts out there?
Thank you.
I have a basic question regarding Internet link failover and DNS. Assuming I can successfully reroute traffic to an alternate ISP following a service outage with my primary ISP, how do external DNS databases get updated following the change?
I have internal web servers that are mapped on a firewall to ISP-A’s IP addresses. When a failover occurs, I can map those same servers to ISP-B’s IPs, but this covers only outbound traffic. How do external DNS servers become aware of those changes so that remote users know where to go?
As basic as this question seems to be, I cannot find the answer anywhere. I don’t necessarily need to know the details of how to do this, only the general idea. The only solution I can come up with is that I’d need to have the cooperation of the two ISPs, who would update their databases in response to (if nothing else) a phone call from me, following an outage.
But can DNS list alternate host records that can somehow automatically become primary records when the primary address cannot be reached? This question is probably a big ‘duh’ to a lot of people. Any DNS experts out there?
Thank you.