You have created a Route 53 latency record set from your domain to a machine in Northern Virginia and a similar record to a machine in Sydney.

You have created a Route 53 latency record set from your domain to a machine in Northern Virginia and a similar record to a machine in Sydney.

When a user located in U S visits your domain he will be routed to:
A .  Northern Virginia
B .  Sydney
C .  Both, Northern Virginia and Sydney
D .  Depends on the Weighted Resource Record Sets

Answer: A

Explanation:

If your application is running on Amazon EC2 instances in two or more Amazon EC2 regions, and if you have more than one Amazon EC2 instance in one or more regions, you can use latency-based routing to route traffic to the correct region and then use weighted resource record sets to route traffic to instances within the region based on weights that you specify.

For example, suppose you have three Amazon EC2 instances with Elastic IP addresses in the US East (Virginia) region and you want to distribute requests across all three IPs evenly for users for whom US East (Virginia) is the appropriate region. Just one Amazon EC2 instance is sufficient in the other regions, although you can apply the same technique to many regions at once.

Reference: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/Route53/latest/DeveloperGuide/Tutorials.html

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