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To enable anycast for DNS queries, you configure two or more DNS servers within the AS routing domain with the same anycast address. When you select OSPF as the routing protocol, the upstream router determines the nearest server within the group of servers configured with that anycast address. (The "nearest" DNS server may not necessarily be the geographically closest DNS server; it is the DNS server with the lowest cost associated with its reachability from the current node. This is calculated through the OSPF routing algorithm, a discussion of which is far beyond the scope of this manual.) The nearest DNS server configured with the correct anycast address then responds to the DNS query. In the case where the nearest server becomes unavailable, the next nearest server responds to the query. OSPF anycast provides a dynamically routed failover to ensure that DNS can always resolve client requests within the AS. From the client perspective, anycasting is transparent and the group of DNS servers with the anycast address appears to be a single DNS server.

OSPF determines the nearest server within the intranet or enterprise network. The desktop sends a DNS query to 10.128.1.12, the anycast address. (The example also shows a configured IPv6 Anycast address.) Many servers can possess the anycast address. The routing protocol selects the nearest server (based on metrics generated from the routing algorithm), and that server receives and processes the query and sends back the response. The Client sends a DNS query via intranet to various DNS servers.Image Modified

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