
“In addition to this DNS synchronization, you can publish DNS configurations to your Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3) bucket. As you implement DNS changes, the S3 bucket will automatically update. The ability to store multiple configurations in your S3 bucket allows you to choose the most appropriate restore point if required,” AWS stated.
Also, when XFR transfers are unavailable, many teams rely on manual scripts or custom tooling to align DNS configurations across environments — approaches that are error-prone, dependent on job synchronization and difficult to maintain, IBM stated.
IBM Cloud Sync currently requires an NS1 Connect Managed DNS account to synchronize configurations to/from Amazon Route 53. Customers can use an NS1 Connect free edition account for this purpose, although a paid license may be required if query volumes exceed the free edition thresholds, according to AWS.
Future releases of IBM Cloud Sync are expected to support Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud, Cloudflare, and other premium DNS services, according to IBM.
Translating network configurations and data from one cloud to another is a heavy lift. Cloud Sync from the IBM NS1 Connect portfolio is a promising solution for solving this engineering challenge, wrote Shamus McGillicuddy, vice president of research with Enterprise Management Associates in the white paper, “Network Config Synchronization Across Multi-Cloud Networks Application Resilience and Security.”
Enterprises told EMA that their top priorities for network data synchronization across clouds are: DNS configurations and data (56%), firewall configurations and rules (54%), subnet and VLAN configurations (51%), and NAT configurations (48%). Multi-vendor complexity is at the heart of synchronization difficulty, and that complexity is growing. For instance, 59% of enterprises have three or more cloud networking providers (including both cloud providers and network software vendors) and 57% expect that number to continue growing, McGillicuddy wrote.





















