I'm not sure if its what you are looking for, but I read this on Hacker News the other day: http://www.scalescale.com/rolling-your-own-cdn-build-a-3-continent-cdn-for-25-in-1-hour/ Eric On Thu, Aug 7, 2014 at 8:38 PM, Joseph Sinclair wrote: > In reference to your final sentence, you're looking for the kind of > services a CDN provides. > (e.g. geographic routing, and rapid scale). Something like one of the > following combinations may offer what you need (using the technologies > others have mentioned already): > > AWS with Amazon CloudFront (if your content is static) > AWS or ComputeEngine with LimeLight Networks (for static content it's > simple, but they can do dynamic, different for each request, as well for a > higher fee). > AWS or ComputeEngine with Akamai (same as LimeLight, simple for static or > they can also do dynamic for higher fees). > > AWS or ComputeEngine without CDN, This can be very coarse-grained in that > requests from a geographic region will (preferentially) go to the > datacenter in that region. > So you could differentiate Asia, Europe(EMEA, really), US-East, and > US-West with the AWS or GCE zones. > > Hopefully those suggestions help; there are many other combinations of > compute and CDN offerings, but those above represent the top two providers > in each category. > > If you needed to go it yourself, you could use something like the geoip > database (there are a few providers) to match IP to geography. That's not > hugely reliable, but it's about as good as you'll get on a global internet > where people travel and sometimes use things like Tor to hide their origin. > If you're on mobile, why not just tag the request with location from the > mobile device? That would be much more reliable than any of the other > options. > > If you're needing very precise control, then you could use the mobile > location information in a simple router service (something like NGinx or > similar with a basic region-to-server mapping) to redirect the request to > the correct locality server. > > If you're looking for extremely small (neighborhood or smaller) areas and > it's a mobile app, there are also geofencing services (similar to Android's > built-in services, see > http://developer.android.com/training/location/geofencing.html) that > identify fairly precise location and help serve different content based on > that. > > Hopefully one of those options helps point you in the direction of what > you need. > > On 08/06/2014 11:17 PM, David Schwartz wrote: > > Here�s something interesting for the infrastructure geeks on the list ... > > > > How would you approach setting up a service that had to sink around, oh > � say � 10-20 million small HTTP POST requests per minute throughout the > day, from sources geographically distributed around the country? > > > > To do development and get the logic working, a small server is > sufficient. But it needs to scale quickly once it�s launched. > > > > There will be a high degree of geo-locality, so servers could be set up > to handle requests from different geographic areas. HTTP requests from a > given area would be routed to whatever server is dedicated for that area. I > guess their IP address could be used for that purpose? > > > > (How granular is the location data for IP addresses on mobile devices? > Are they reliable? We could add a location geotag to the packet headers if > that would help.) > > > > Note that the servers don�t need to be physically LOCATED in the area; > rather, they're dedicated to SERVING a well-defined geographic area. > > > > There�s no need for cross-talk, either. That is, there�s no need for a > server serving, say, the LA area to cross-post with one in San Diego, > except in a very small overlapping area which is easy to address. > > > > Can this sort of routing be done with a DNS service? (eg., > DNSMadeEasy.com is one I�m familiar with) > > > > Or is something more massive needed? > > > > Also note that this would be an automated service. It has a very steady > stream of small incoming packets, peaking at various times of the day, with > limited responses. No ads, no graphics, no user interactions at all. > > > > I know there are infrastructure services in place to handle this kind of > thing, like what Amazon offers, and others. I�m looking for any specific > pointers to services that might fit this use case profile. > > > > -David > > > > > > > > --------------------------------------------------- > > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org > > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: > > http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss > > > > > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: > http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss >