Netnod’s anycast DNS: 20 years of 100% availability

March 14, 2024

Netnod’s anycast DNS: 20 years of 100% availability

By Lars-Johan Liman, Senior Systems Specialist and co-founder at Netnod

Originally published in Netnod blog

Lars-Johan Liman, Netnod’s DNS nestor, makes a few personal reflections on the 20th anniversary of Netnod’s deployment of anycast – a technology that is a crucial part of the infrastructure of Netnod’s modern DNS services.

As stewards of one of the Internet’s 13 DNS root-server clusters, Netnod employs a technology called “anycast” to make our service available from a large number of locations across the world. Netnod (or to be precise, its then daughter company, Autonomica) was a pioneer of anycast technology, and this year marks the 20th anniversary of Netnod’s first anycast deployment.

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On 22 August 2003, at 17:01 in the afternoon, I sent the historic message above to my fellow system administrators at all twelve root-server operators, after having just fired up instance number two of I-root. ‘Number one’ had been in operation for twelve years by then, but going from one to two instances was the major step, as that suddenly gave the routers on the Internet more than one path to the target. This sent ripples through the Internet’s routing fabric as the new instance of I-root was added to routing tables, BGP route selection algorithm came into play, and routers determined the best route to use, and to forward to their peers.

We chose to install the second server with our good friends at the Finnish Internet Exchange Point FICIX in ‘nearby’ Helsinki, Finland. Helsinki and Stockholm are a mere 400 km apart, but there is a troublesome amount of water in between, commonly referred to as the Baltic Sea.

At this time, Virtual Machines were not a well-known and reliable concept, so we had to install an entire stack of physical servers performing the different, necessary tasks.

The views expressed by the authors of this blog are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of LACNIC.

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