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Jeroen W. Pluimers on .NET, C#, Delphi, databases, and personal interests

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Archive for the ‘Cloudflare’ Category

From the #AllesIstKaput department: DNS 1.1.1.1 is unusable for many; 9.9.9.9 has government affiliation

Posted by jpluimers on 2018/04/04

Abstract from this morning’s Twitter feed:

  • 1.1.1.1 [Wayback] DNS is broken in many areas (because of for instance AT&T, Vodafone, Cisco screwing up and 1.1.1.1 historically being marked for research purposes)
  • 9.9.9.9 [Wayback] DNS has government affiliation (owned by Quad9, but the partner list below does not look nice)

So what’s left?

There are a more interesting IPv4 addresses untaken for DNS, but I’m not sure they are likable enough:

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Cloud, Cloudflare, DNS, Infrastructure, Internet, LifeHacker, Power User | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Google DNS, Open DNS or your ISP DNS servers?

Posted by jpluimers on 2017/05/26

There are various arguments for using Google DNS (8.8.8.8 or 8.8.4.4) or Open DNS servers or not. A few are listed here:

It basically comes down to two things:

  1. DNS speed
  2. CDN speed (Contend Delivery Network providers like CloudFlare, Akamai, etc)

If your DNS server isn’t close to you, it might select a CDN server that is far from you. If you rely on CDN, then you need to weight in that factor.

This is how I decide:

  • devices not needing CDN: use Google DNS or Open DNS
  • devices needing CDN: use Namebench to pick fast DNS servers that are nearby based on Namebench reports with “Recommended configuration (fastest + nearest)”

–jeroen

Posted in Akamai, CDN (Content Delivery Network), Cloud, Cloudflare, DNS, Google, Infrastructure, Internet, Power User | Leave a Comment »

The IoT strikes back again: half a million IoT devices killed DYN DNS for hours, but fixing this will be hard

Posted by jpluimers on 2016/10/22

Less than a month after The IoT strikes back: 650 Gigabit/second and 1 Terabit/second attacks by IoT devices within a week the IoT struck back again: an estimated half a million IoT devices was used to perform multiple DDoS attacks against Dyn Managed DNS that took around 11 hours to resolve.

Google DNS appears to

Google DNS appears to “live” near me in Amsterdam

High availability usually involves a mix of DNS TTL and/or BGP routing. That’s typically how CDN providers like Cloudflare work (it’s one of the reasons that global DNS servers like Google’s 8.8.8.8 appear near to you and over time routes – some MPLS – to it change). Short DNS TTL can help CDN, requires a very stable DNS infrastructure and is similar to but different fromFast Flux network.

Last months attacks were on a security researcher and a single ISP. The Dyn DNS attack affected even more internet services (not just sites like Twitter, WhatsApp, AirBnB and Github). So I’m with Bruce Schneier that Someone Is Learning How to Take Down the Internet.

Handling these attacks is hard as the DDoS mitigation firms simply cannot handle the sudden increase of attack sizes yet. BCP38 should be part of mitigation, but the puzzle is big and fixing it won’t be easy though root-causes of bugs change as a lot of research is in progress.

I’m not alone in expecting it to get worse though before getting better.

On the client side, I learned that many users could cope by changing their DNS servers to either of these Public DNS Servers:

  • OpenDNS 208.67.222.222, 208.67.220.220, 208.67.222.220, 208.67.220.222
    • OpenDNS does a good job of handing “last known good” IPs when they can’t resolve.
  • Google Public DNS 8.8.8.8, 8.8.4.4
  • Level 3 DNS 4.2.2.1, 4.2.2.2, 4.2.2.3, 4.2.2.4, 4.2.2.5, 4.2.2.6

Some more interesting tidbits on the progress and mitigation on this particular attack are the over time heat-maps of affected regions and BGP routing changes below.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in CDN (Content Delivery Network), Cloud, Cloudflare, DNS, Hardware, Infrastructure, Internet, IoT Internet of Things, Network-and-equipment, Opinions, Power User | Leave a Comment »