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opennic:tier2 [2017-10-15T22:30:24Z] – [[Other Questions]] rouben | opennic:tier2 [2017-11-22T23:30:10Z] (current) – [Can I run it from home?] fusl | ||
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We don't recommend you run it from a home connection, unless you have a high bandwidth and **low latency connection** with no bandwidth caps. Low WAN latency is important for running a DNS server, because the server itself is in charge of lookups, and high latency (e.g. on a home connection) can slow down requests dramatically compared to a server hosted with a low-latency connection in a datacenter. This graphic is a vast oversimplification of the DNS process but demonstrates why hosting at home is rarely a good idea: | We don't recommend you run it from a home connection, unless you have a high bandwidth and **low latency connection** with no bandwidth caps. Low WAN latency is important for running a DNS server, because the server itself is in charge of lookups, and high latency (e.g. on a home connection) can slow down requests dramatically compared to a server hosted with a low-latency connection in a datacenter. This graphic is a vast oversimplification of the DNS process but demonstrates why hosting at home is rarely a good idea: | ||
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The first graphic is an example of a Tier 2 server hosted at home. It needs to make numerous requests to " | The first graphic is an example of a Tier 2 server hosted at home. It needs to make numerous requests to " |