Types of load balancers
3 min read
With Cloudflare, you can choose between three types of load balancers:
- Layer 7 (HTTP/HTTPS) (most common)
- DNS-only
- Layer 4 (TCP)
Layer 7 load balancing
Layer 7 load balancers direct traffic to specific servers based on information present in each HTTP/HTTPS request (HTTP headers, URI, cookies, type of data, etc.).
When a client visits your application, Cloudflare directs their request to a healthy origin server (determined by your traffic steering policy and origin weights).
Cloudflare performs layer 7 load balancing when traffic to your hostname is proxied through Cloudflare. In the Load Balancing dashboard, these load balancers are marked with an orange cloud.
Benefits
In comparison to DNS-only load balancing, layer 7 load balancing:
- Protects origin servers from DDoS attacks by hiding their IP addresses.
- Offers faster failover and more accurate routing, which can otherwise be affected by DNS caching.
- Integrates with other Cloudflare features such as caching, Workers, and the WAF.
- Reduces authoritative queries against Cloudflare, which can potentially save money for customers with usage-based billing.
- Supports customized session affinity and origin drain.
- More accurately geo-locates traffic, using the data center associated with the user making the request instead of the data center associated with a user’s recursive resolver.
DNS-only load balancing
DNS-only load balancers route traffic by returning specific IP addresses in response to a client’s DNS query.
When a client visits your application, Cloudflare provides the address for a healthy origin server (determined by your traffic steering policy and origin-level steering policy). However, Cloudflare relies on DNS resolvers respecting the short TTL to re-query Cloudflare’s DNS for an updated list of healthy addresses. If a client has a cached DNS response, they will go to their previous destination, potentially ignoring your load balancer.
Cloudflare performs DNS-only load balancing when traffic to your hostname is not proxied through Cloudflare. In the Load Balancing dashboard, these load balancers are marked with a gray cloud.
Benefits
If your load balancer is attached to a hostname used for an MX
or SRV
record — and not an A
, AAAA
, or CNAME
record — its proxy mode should be DNS-only.
Limitations
In comparison to proxied, layer 7 load balancing, DNS-only load balancing:
- Does not hide the IP addresses of your origin servers, leaving them vulnerable to DDoS attacks.
- Performs slower failover and less accurate routing, because it has to rely on DNS resolvers and cache settings.
- Cannot integrate with other Cloudflare features such as caching, Workers, and the WAF.
- Increases authoritative queries against Cloudflare, which can potentially cost more for customers with usage-based billing.
- Supports standard session affinity.
- Geo-locates traffic based on the data center associated with the ECS source address, if available. If not available, geo-locates based a user’s recursive resolver, which can sometimes cause issues with latency-based steering.
Layer 4 load balancing
Layer 4 load balancers route traffic by forwarding traffic to certain ports or IP addresses.
Cloudflare currently only supports layer 4 load balancing as part of Cloudflare Spectrum.
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