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        Amazon Launches DNS Hosting Service
        
        
        
        
		Amazon Web Services today launched the beta of a  programmable and purportedly scalable hosted Domain Name System service aimed  at letting users of its cloud services create, modify and delete DNS zone  files. 
The service, called Route 53, manages DNS names and answers  DNS queries, said Amazon CTO Werner Vogels, in  a blog post. "Route 53 provides authoritative DNS functionality  implemented using a world-wide network of highly-available DNS servers,"  he noted. 
Route 53, can be used to route users to multiple Amazon  services such as EC2, Elastic Load Balancer or S3, as well as infrastructure  outside of the company's purview. Route 53 will give developers and IT  administrators a way to route queries to Web apps by translating names of sites  to numeric IP addresses.
"DNS is one of the fundamental building blocks of Internet  applications and was high on the wish list of our customers for some time  already," Vogles noted. "Route 53 has the business properties that  you have come to expect from an AWS service: fully self-service and  programmable, with transparent pay-as-you-go pricing and no minimum usage  commitments."
Route 53 introduces the concept of what Amazon calls Hosted  Zones, which are the equivalent of a DNS zone file (DNS zones are subsets of  domains and DNS files describe those zones). 
"Each record in a Hosted Zone can refer to AWS or  non-AWS resources as desired," wrote Jeff Barr, Amazon's lead Web services  evangelist, in  a blog post. "This means that you can use Route 53 to provide DNS  services for any desired combination of traditional and cloud-based resources,  and that you can switch back and forth quickly and easily."
Users can access Route 53 using a small set of REST APIs,  Barr added, noting a toolkit and AWS Management Console support is in the  works.
Route 53 supports up to 100 Hosted Zones per AWS account,  though customers can request more, if needed. Route 53 is priced at $1 per  month per Hosted Zone, $0.50 per million queries for the first billion queries  per month, and subsequently $0.25 per million queries. 
The beta is available  immediately. 
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Jeffrey Schwartz is editor of Redmond magazine and also covers cloud computing for Virtualization Review's Cloud Report. In addition, he writes the Channeling the Cloud column for Redmond Channel Partner. Follow him on Twitter @JeffreySchwartz.