Basic Concepts
- Static content
Static content is the same every time it is delivered to users. It includes images, videos, HTML, CSS, and JS files on websites, software installation packages, APK files, and compressed packages.
- Dynamic content
Dynamic content changes every time it is served to users. It includes ASP, JSP, PHP, PERL, and CGI files on websites, APIs, and database interaction requests.
- Acceleration domain name
Acceleration domain names are provided by you for CDN acceleration. A domain name is an identification string that defines a realm of administrative autonomy, authority, or control within the Internet, such as a website, an email address, or an FTP server.
- CNAME record
A Canonical Name record (CNAME record) is a type of resource record in the Domain Name System (DNS) that maps one domain name (an alias) to another (the canonical name).
Example:
- You have a server that stores some files. Users can access the files through file.example.com, but you want users to access them through data.example.com.
- You add a CNAME record to your domain's DNS records to point data.example.com to file.example.com.
- Then all requests for data.example.com are redirected to file.example.com, and users get the same content.
- CNAME
On the CDN console, after a domain name is added, the system will assign a CNAME (in the form of *.*.c.cdnhwc1.com) to the domain name. Then, add this CNAME to your domain's DNS records and point the domain name to it. After the CNAME record takes effect, all the requests for your domain name will be redirected to CDN PoPs.
- Origin Server
An origin server is the customer's service server, the source of the data accelerated for delivery.
- Domain Name Service (DNS)
DNS translates human readable domain names into IP addresses. With DNS, users can access servers using their assigned domain names.
For example, when you access xxx.abc.com, the domain name is converted into xxx.xxx.1.1 (an IP address) through DNS. You can use Huawei Cloud DNS or a DNS service from other providers.
- Point of presence (PoP)
PoPs are also known as CDN nodes or cache nodes, which users need the fewest intermediate steps to connect to. Compared with other nodes, PoPs provide users with faster response and connection.
- Origin pull
If a CDN PoP does not cache origin content or if cached content has expired, the CDN PoP obtains the requested content from the origin server and returns it to the client.
For example, if you access a URL and the CDN PoP does not cache the content, your request will be sent to the origin server and a response will be returned based on the URL.
- Host
The origin server determines the IP address of the origin server that an origin pull request is sent to. The host determines which site the origin pull request is sent to.
Example 1: If the origin domain is www.origin.com but the host is www.abc.com, origin pull requests actually go to www.abc.com.
Example 2: If the origin IP address is 192.168.1.1 but the host is www.abc.com, origin pull requests actually go to www.abc.com.
- Secure Sockets Layer (SSL)/Transport Layer Security (TLS)
SSL is a cryptographic protocol designed to provide communications security over a computer network. TLS is an improved version of SSL and has now replaced SSL.
- URL Parameter Filtering
Enable this configuration item based on your service needs, to filter out parameters after the question mark (?) in a URL and improve the cache hit ratio.
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