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Considerations for DNS Host Name Aliases
Considerations for DNS Host Name Aliases
These DNS Host Name Alias standards are:
- used with disaster recovery procedures to coordinate fail-over resources
- used with disaster recovery procedures to eliminate resource conflicts
- used with high availability procedures to coordinate fail-over resources
- used with high availability procedures to eliminate resource conflicts
- used with manual fail-over procedures to coordinate fail-over resources
- used with manual fail-over procedures to eliminate resource conflicts
- consistent and repeatable procedures
- compatible with standalone, high availability, disaster
recovery, business continuity, and virtualized environments
Multiple DNS Aliases may be configured to point to a host name, and
these aliases may consist of a variable number of characters, and be
names requested by the users or application administrators. However,
each DNS alias MUST be an Enterprise Wide Unique (EWU)
value to eliminate conflicts during outages, fail-overs, tests, etc. It
is recommended that at least one DNS Alias be created using the
resource group name which will be
used for fail-over procedures.
The reason for using DNS aliases rather than host names is for ease
of configuration during fail-overs, either planned or unplanned.
Aliases allow the system administrator to easily and quickly redirect
users to desired business functions anywhere in the enterprise. This
does not require changing IP addresses or renaming resources on any
system. It is a simple DNS change and business functions become
available. This is especially useful during disaster recovery testing
and implementations where fail-over resources may be already provisioned
and attached to a network in a remote location. A DNS alias permits the
system administrator to point users from one data center to another to
reacquire business functions.
The DNS alias name based on the RG name shall consist of exactly 8
characters as shown in table 1:
Application Code
|
+
|
Environment
|
+
|
Function
|
+
|
Company
|
+
|
RG Sequence ID
|
3 char
|
+
|
1 char
|
+
|
1 char
|
+
|
2 char
|
+
|
1 char
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Table 1: DNS Alias Name Structure based on RG Name
Table 1 illustrates the structure for a DNS Alias naming standard.
This structure identifies a DNS Alias name that is 8 characters in
length and corresponds with the
resource group
name associated with this DNS Alias. Some example DNS Alias names are
illustrated in Table 2.
Application Code
|
Environment
|
Function
|
Company Code
|
Sequence ID
|
Example Resource Group Name
|
Example DNS Alias Name
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ora
|
p
|
d
|
mx
|
0
|
orapdmx0
|
orapdmx0
|
ora
|
p
|
d
|
mx
|
1
|
orapdmx1
|
orapdmx1
|
db2
|
a
|
d
|
ib
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0
|
db2adib0
|
db2adib0
|
tib
|
t
|
a
|
hp
|
8
|
tibtahp8
|
tibtahp8
|
web
|
d
|
a
|
ib
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4
|
webdaib4
|
webdaib4
|
apa
|
a
|
a
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ci
|
3
|
apaaaci3
|
apaaaci3
|
pag
|
p
|
u
|
mx
|
0
|
pagpumx0
|
pagpumx0
|
Table 2: Example DNS Alias Names
The policies, guidelines, standards, and procedures set forth in
this document for your consideration are as follows:
Policies:
- All DNS Alias names shall be Enterprise Wide Unique values.
- At least one DNS Alias name will be defined per system for user and
application access, whose name will correspond with the resource group
name
- DNS Alias names shall use alpha-numeric characters only
Guidelines:
- More than one DNS alias may be configured per system, depending
upon the user and application requirements, however any additional alias
names must also be Enterprise Wide Unique values.
Standards:
- This document defines a DNS alias naming standard.
Procedures:
- Implementation of this standard requires access to
the enterprise DNS, and the ability to create CNAME records. This
duty may be delegated to a DNS administrator.
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