I have some experience with this; a few things off the top of my head:

- It’s usually best to leverage some sort of “smart” DNS  to handle CNAME 
distribution, giving you the ability to weight your CNAME distribution vs. only 
using one CDN all the time, or prefer different CDNs in various global regions. 
I’ve had decent experience with Dyn here, but Route53 has all the features 
you’d want as well. If possible, write tooling towards your DNS provider’s API 
to automate your failovers.

- Weight your distribution such that you never have one CDN turned off 
completely; you’ll want a small trickle of user traffic hitting every CDN so 
that the caches won’t be cold when you switch over to it.

- Make sure you have a distributed metrics service (ThousandEyes, WebMetrics, 
et al) testing your CDNs individually as well as the external hostname.

- Stay away from HTML- or Header-munging features when possible; stick with 
feature sets that are common (and implementable in similar ways) across your 
providers. (Similar advice goes for multi-vendor *anything*, TBH)

I could keep going, but if so, I might as well stick them into a powerpoint and 
submit a talk for Bellevue :)

-C

> On Mar 10, 2017, at 9:25 AM, Chris Grundemann <cgrundem...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Hail NANOG;
> 
> Is anyone here leveraging multiple CDN providers for resiliency and have
> best practices or other advice they'd be willing to share?
> 
> Thanks,
> ~Chris
> 
> -- 
> @ChrisGrundemann
> http://chrisgrundemann.com

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