Provider DNS

Latency Global + AWS Route 53

Connect your AWS Route 53 DNS to Latency Global for automated GeoDNS failover. When our probes detect that your origin server is down in a region, we automatically update Route 53 records to reroute traffic to a healthy endpoint — no manual intervention required.

Disponibile su: Piano Pro e superiore

Come impostare

1

Create an IAM user in AWS with Route 53 permissions

2

In Latency Global, go to DNS Providers and add Route 53

3

Enter your AWS access key and secret key

4

Test the connection to verify permissions

5

Create a DNS Policy mapping monitors to Route 53 hosted zones

Casi d'uso

Automatic Failover

When a monitor detects your primary server is down, automatically update Route 53 records to point to your failover server. Traffic is rerouted in seconds.

Latency-Based Routing

Use monitoring data to update Route 53 latency-based routing policies, directing users to the fastest available endpoint.

Multi-Region Resilience

Monitor endpoints in multiple regions and automatically remove unhealthy regions from your DNS rotation.

Altre integrazioni

Domande frequenti

The IAM user needs route53:ListHostedZones, route53:GetHostedZone, route53:ChangeResourceRecordSets, and route53:ListResourceRecordSets permissions.

Latency Global updates Route 53 records within seconds of detecting an outage. DNS propagation depends on your TTL settings — we recommend 60-second TTLs for failover records.

GeoDNS features are available on Pro ($25/month) and Business ($99/month) plans.

Inizia con AWS Route 53

Configura l'integrazione AWS Route 53 in pochi minuti. Piani da $ 5 al mese con tutte le integrazioni incluse.

5 monitor inclusi • Tutte le oltre 70 sedi (+40 a breve) • Nessun contratto