Round-robin DNS

Round-robin DNS is a technique of load distribution, load balancing, or fault-tolerance provisioning multiple, redundant Internet Protocol service hosts, e.g., Web server, FTP servers, by managing the Domain Name System's (DNS) responses to address requests from client computers according to an appropriate statistical model.[1]

In its simplest implementation, round-robin DNS works by responding to DNS requests not only with a single potential IP address, but with a list of potential IP addresses corresponding to several servers that host identical services.[2][3] The order in which IP addresses from the list are returned is the basis for the term round robin. With each DNS response, the IP address sequence in the list is permuted.[4] Traditionally, IP clients initially attempt connections with the first address returned from a DNS query,[5] so that on different connection attempts, clients would receive service from different providers, thus distributing the overall load among servers.

Some resolvers attempt to re-order the list to give priority to numerically "closer" networks. This behaviour was standardized in RFC 3484 during the definition of IPv6, when applied to IPv4 the bug in Windows Vista and caused issues and defeated round-robin load-balancing.[6][7][8] Some desktop clients do try alternate addresses after a connection timeout of up to 30 seconds.[2]

Round-robin DNS is often used to load balance requests among a number of Web servers. For example, a company has one domain name and three identical copies of the same web site residing on three servers with three IP addresses. The DNS server will be set up so that domain name has multiple A records, one for each IP address. When one user accesses the home page it will be sent to the first IP address. The second user who accesses the home page will be sent to the next IP address, and the third user will be sent to the third IP address. In each case, once the IP address is given out, it goes to the end of the list. The fourth user, therefore, will be sent to the first IP address, and so forth.

A round-robin DNS name is, on rare occasions, referred to as a "rotor" due to the rotation among alternative A records.

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