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Revisiting Comparative Performance of DNS Resolvers in the IPv6 and ECS Era

This paper revisits the issue of the performance of DNS resolution services available to Internet users. While several prior studies addressed this important issue, significant developments, namely, the IPv6 finally getting traction and the adoption of the ECS extension to DNS by major DNS resolution services, warrant a reassessment under these new realities. We find that DNS resolution services differ drastically -- by an order of magnitude in some locations -- in their query response time. We also find established resolvers (Google DNS and OpenDNS) to lag far behind relative newcomers (Cloudflair and Quad9) in terms of DNS latency, and trace the cause to drastically lower cache hit rates, which we further trace to less cache sharing within the resolver platform. In addition, we find that public resolvers have largely closed the gap with ISP resolvers in the quality of CDNs' client-to-edge-server mappings as measured by latency. Finally, in most locations, we observe IPv6 penalty in the latency of client-to-CDN-edge-server mappings produced by the resolvers. Moreover, this penalty, while often significant, still does not rise above typical thresholds employed by the Happy Eyeballs algorithm for preferring IPv4 communication. resolvers. Thus, dual-stacked clients in these locations may experience suboptimal performance.

preprint2020arXivOpen access

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