Authoritative Resources for Public DNS Pinging
Mark Tinka
mark at tinka.africa
Fri Feb 11 08:21:27 UTC 2022
On 2/9/22 18:19, Joe Greco wrote:
> So what people really want is to be able to "ping internet" and so far
> the easiest thing people have been able to find is "ping 8.8.8.8" or
> some other easily remembered thing.
Pretty much - both people and "things".
> Does this mean that perhaps we should seriously consider having some
> TLD being named "internet", with maybe a global DNS redirector that lets
> service providers register appropriate upstream targets for their
> customers, and then maybe also allow for some form of registration such
> that if I wanted to provide a remote ping target for AS14536, I could
> somehow register "as14536.internet" or "solnet.internet"?
>
> Fundamentally, this is a valid issue. As the maintainer of several BGP
> networks, I can't really rely on an upstream consumer ISP to be the
> connectivity helpdesk when something is awry. It would really be nice
> to have a list of officially sanctioned testing points so that one could
> just do "ping google.internet" or "ping level3.internet" or "ping
> comcast.internet" or "ping aws.internet" and get a response.
>
> The problem with this is that someone will try to make what could be a
> relatively simple thing complicated, and we'll end up needing a special
> non-ping client and some trainwreck of names and other hard-to-grok
> garbage, and then we're perilously close to coming back to the current
> situation where people are using arbitrary targets out on the Internet
> for connectivity testing.
Totally agree - we need to be deliberate about creating something that
is not only simple, but memorable, in addition to being built for purpose.
But I also agree that this will likely create an opportunity to
over-complicate what should be simple. We'll need to put in as much
effort into resisting complexity, as we will designing a solution.
Mark.
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