Publications
Cache Me If You Can: Effects of DNS Time-to-Live
Abstract
DNS depends on extensive caching for good performance, and every DNS zone owner must set Time-to-Live (TTL) values to control their DNS caching. Today there is relatively little guidance backed by research about how to set TTLs, and operators must balance conflicting demands of caching against agility of configuration. Exactly how TTL value choices affect operational networks is quite challenging to understand due to interactions across the distributed DNS service, where resolvers receive TTLs in different ways (answers and hints), TTLs are specified in multiple places (zones and their parent's glue), and while DNS resolution must be security-aware. This paper provides the first careful evaluation of how these multiple, interacting factors affect the effective cache lifetimes of DNS records, and provides recommendations for how to configure DNS TTLs based on our findings. We provide recommendations in …
- Date
- July 21, 2019
- Authors
- Giovane CM Moura, John Heidemann, Ricardo de O Schmidt, Wes Hardaker
- Conference
- Proceedings of the Internet Measurement Conference
- Pages
- 101-115
- Publisher
- ACM