Quickly Switching Your Servers to Backups?
moogoogaipan writes "After a few days thinking about the quickest way to bring my website back to the internet users, I am still stuck at DNS. From experience, even if I set the TTL for my DNS zone file as low as 5 minutes, there are still DNS servers out there won't update until a few days later (Yeah. I'm looking at you, AOL). Here is my situation. Say that I have my web servers and database servers at a remote backup location, ready to serve. If we get hit by an earthquake at our main location, what can I do in a few hours to get everyone to go to our backup location?"
Hi, An alternative is to forget the all-or-nothing view, and make sure that with some simple round-robin DNS and enough geographically-separated servers for the DNS and HTTP/whatever, then even if one is taken out by a quake or Act of Congress (ewwww, those nature programmes), *most* users will still get through just fine. Any clients/proxies that are smart and that can try out multiple A records for one URL will always get through if even one of your servers is reachable. Example: my main UK server failed strangely yesterday morning, but only about 30% of my visitors can even have noticed, and the other servers worldwide took up some of the load. Just simple and reliable and cheap round-robin DNS. Rgds Damon
http://m.earth.org.uk/