How DNS finds a website in 20ms
Four servers you've never heard of answer a question you ask thousands of times a day. And four caches in between will happily give you yesterday's answer.
Jodo
Apr 29, 2026 · 9 min read

Most explanations of domain resolution start with a diagram you can't read and a wall of acronyms. This one starts with the question you actually asked, then builds the answer piece by piece until how dns finds a website in 20ms feels obvious instead of intimidating.
How to read this
Every code block runs as-is. Copy it, change a number, watch what breaks. That's where the understanding comes from, not the prose.
Start with the problem
Before any of the machinery makes sense, you have to feel the problem it solves. So forget the official terminology for a second and look at what goes wrong without it.
// The naive version — works on your machine, fails in production
async function handle(req: Request) {
const data = await db.query(req.body.id)
return Response.json(data)
}Now the real version
Once the failure mode is clear, the fix stops looking like ceremony and starts looking like the only reasonable thing to do. Notice that nothing here is clever. It's just careful.
async function handle(req: Request) {
const id = parse(req) // validate at the edge
const data = await db
.query(id)
.catch(() => fallback(id)) // degrade, don't crash
return Response.json(data, { headers: cacheHeaders })
}- Validate at the boundary so bad input never reaches your core.
- Have a plan for the moment a dependency is slow or down.
- Measure the real path before you optimize the imagined one.
“You don't understand a system until you can predict how it fails.”
— every on-call engineer, eventually
Where to go next
You now have the mental model. The fastest way to lock it in is to break something on purpose: change a value, pull a cable, kill a process, and watch how the system reacts. The recovery is the lesson.
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