Something a bit different now from what I posting normally, this time about common DNS errors.
One of colleagues tried to configure basic DNS load balancing over two web platforms but instead of using two A records he were using one A record and one CNAME. Ones that was configured the problems started because some DNS server (google DNS cache) were only replying with the IP of the configured CNAME, other DNS servers from service providers were replying with nothing.
Bind per default would only add the CNAME into the configuration and ignore all other records but my colleague were using TinyDNS so I cannot say if TinyDNS load the configuration with both CNAME and A records. But the main reason of the problems was that the DNS configuration got inconsistent and the RFC for common DNS errors explained it very clearly:
A CNAME record is not allowed to coexist with any other data. In other words, if suzy.podunk.xx is an alias for sue.podunk.xx, you can't also have an MX record for suzy.podunk.edu, or an A record, or even a TXT record.
Have a look at the RFC about common DNS errors, very interesting!
http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1912
From my side I would have used GSLB (Global Server Load Balancing) and not basic DNS round-robin 😉