in this latest study on the impact of us server dns addresses on website access speed, we started from the dimensions of resolution delay, cache hit rate, geographical location and retry strategy, aiming to provide executable optimization directions and decision-making basis for webmasters and operation and maintenance.
the evaluation focuses on the impact of the dns address used by the us server on time to first byte (ttfb) and page load perception under different network environments. methods include multi-point concurrent query, different operator link sampling and long-term log collection to ensure that the conclusions are representative and reproducible.

dns resolution is the first step for users to request a link, and the resolution time will be directly added to the overall response time. slow parsing will increase the first byte delay, affecting the loading of the first page of the page and the triggering of resource requests, thereby affecting the user experience and search engine crawling rhythm.
the geographical location determines the network round-trip delay (rtt). accessing a dns address located in the united states from the asia-pacific region will usually bring significant resolution delays. reasonable selection of parsing nodes close to the target users or the use of anycast can significantly reduce the average response time.
ttl settings and caching strategies will affect parsing frequency and stability. a longer ttl can reduce query times and latency, but may reduce the flexibility of dns changes. combining load fluctuations and cdn strategies to formulate a reasonable ttl is conducive to overall performance balance.
the resolution failure and retry mechanism will introduce additional delays, especially when the transoceanic link is unstable. configuring reliable active and backup resolution strategies, multi-path query, and reducing failover time can effectively reduce access interruptions caused by dns problems.
shared dns services are easier to manage but may be affected by other tenants, causing greater performance fluctuations when encountering high concurrency or attacks. dedicated dns provides a higher degree of control and stability, but requires additional operation and maintenance investment; the choice should be based on traffic scale and availability requirements.
common misunderstandings include judging dns performance based on single point measurements or ignoring the combined effects of caching and cdn. actual assessments should be based on multi-node long-term data and focus on differences across network operators and client environments.
dns resolution speed and stability not only affect user perception speed, but also indirectly affect search engine crawling and indexing efficiency. stable and low-latency parsing helps improve page crawlability and ranking performance, and is part of site performance optimization.
it is recommended to select anycast or multi-region resolution nodes based on the target user distribution, reasonably configure ttl and active and backup strategies, monitor the performance of multi-operator resolution and coordinate optimization with cdn. regular evaluation and data-driven adjustments can improve access speed while ensuring stability.
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