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Most services, even if they aren't the size of Github, can't change their DNS provider on a dime.


It's not a question of switching; you can host your DNS records at multiple providers.


yup, that's what I meant. they can use different DNS providers, e.g. route53 AND dyn


Route53 doesn't allow using it as slave DNS. https://forums.aws.amazon.com/thread.jspa?threadID=56011


more accurately, they don't support the common standard methodologies for transferring zone data between primary and secondary name servers (like NOTIFY, AXFR, etc).

there is nothing stopping you from having Route53 and $others as NS records for your domains. You just have to make sure they stay consistent. Apparently from the linked discussion, there are people offering scripts and services to do just that.


Keeping Serial numbers in sync can be basically impossible.


Serial numbers don't matter if you're not using NOTIFY/AXFR.


Thats why you should have a different domainname

githubstatus.com instead of status.github.com

You could even through the domain on a free DNS service.


Maybe not, but you can store your records in a local place and push to both.

That's one of the reasons I setup a git -> Route53 setup at https://dns-api.com/




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