What is a CDN?
According to Cloudflare a CDN is:
A content delivery network (CDN) refers to a geographically distributed group of servers which work together to provide fast delivery of Internet content.
A CDN allows for the quick transfer of assets needed for loading Internet content including HTML pages, javascript files, stylesheets, images, and videos. The popularity of CDN services continues to grow, and today the majority of web traffic is served through CDNs, including traffic from major sites like Facebook, Netflix, and Amazon.
A properly configured CDN may also help protect websites against some common malicious attacks, such as Distributed Denial of Service (DDOS) attacks.
tl;dr A CDN is a network of computers around the world that deliver content efficiently.
What Can a CDN Provide?
- Caching to reduce the load on my webserver
- Geographic Distribution for speedy delivery regardless of where you are
- DDoS Protection from sudden spikes in traffic
- Compression of files for faster delivery for user on slow internet
Why Did I Want a CDN?
I often find myself needing to host public static files. I want to do so in a way that is fast, efficient, reliable, and scalable.
Recently an article of mine hit #1 on the HN main page.
I also found out it was trending on Reddit and who knows where else. So long story short. My domain had a load of traffic in the blink of an eye.
I was lucky enough to have recently moved joel.net to Hashnode just weeks earlier. My previous web host would not have been able to handle that amount of traffic. Even during this blast of traffic joel.net was online the entire time.
Since I also host other files, I better be prepared. So I plan on going full CDN.
Cloudflare
This is where Cloudflare comes in. I use them to host the DNS for joel.net. Cloudflare will provide these CDN features by default through their DNS offering, which is also FREE. 🔥
Now all I need is a place to host static files.
AWS Simple Cloud Storage (S3)
You could use any static web host, but I'm choosing S3 for this because it's what I am already familiar with.
It just needs to be online and also allow a custom domain name.
Setting Up My S3 Bucket
The S3 bucket name must match the domain name. In this case, I am using cdn.joel.net
for my bucket name.
Click Next a bunch of times until you see this screen.
Be sure to uncheck Block all public access. Then check the acknowledge popup above.
Keep clicking Next until you can click Create Bucket.
Now I need to configure this bucket for Public access. So I head over to Permissions, then Bucket Policy.
I insert my bucket name, cdn.joel.net
, into Resource
and then paste this into the Bucket policy editor.
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Sid": "PublicReadGetObject",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Principal": "*",
"Action": "s3:GetObject",
"Resource": "arn:aws:s3:::cdn.joel.net/*"
}
]
}
Next, I setup Static website hosting under Properties.
I check Use this bucket to host a website and set up my index.html
and also my 404/404.html. I will create a directory for my 404 so that I can host assets related to the 404 in there as well.
At this point, I can upload a file and make sure it works by accessing the Endpoint from this page.
Configuring Cloudflare
The last step is to set up my Cloudflare DNS to point to my freshly created S3 bucket.
I do this by adding a new CNAME record with the name cdn
and the target set as the domain for the S3 bucket.
At this point, I should be able to access my bucket using my custom domain name. So let's test my 404 page http://cdn.joel.net. Looks like it's working!
Now just to check one last thing, I open the Developer Console, click the Network tab, click the request cdn.joel.net
and go to Headers.
Here I can see content-encoding: br
. That means the HTML was compressed using the Brotli compression algorithm all automatically for me by Cloudflare.
End
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Top comments (20)
I would definitely re-title this article. "How I setup my own personal CDN" sounds like you're building your own network of servers to cache and serve content, while instead you're configuring a commercially available CDN.
May I suggest something along the lines of "How I sped up my website with a CDN"? I think it would better reflect the content of your otherwise very interesting article
Agree. Came here expecting a DIY CDN setup but not cloudflare and static S3.
Title adjusted to add clarity as recommended 👍
Thank you very much, Joel!
Everyone was right. Totally agree about the title! Cheers 👍🍻
The title is a bit misleading, it sounds like you setup a DIY CDN on your own without using a hosted service like Cloudflare.
Title adjusted to add clarity as recommended 👍
👎 So you DIDN'T create your own personal CDN. You used a shared CDN, one of the most popular ones at that.
Title adjusted to add clarity as recommended 👍
Gonna have to agree with the other comments here and say that this title is a bit too much clickbait
Title adjusted to add clarity as recommended 👍
Agree on the misleading title. If you are however interested in building your own CDN, I recommend investigating trafficcontrol.apache.org/. I use it daily to build CDN from scratch.
While click baits are somewhat normalized, this article title is a pretty good example of notorious click baiting and an absolute waste of time.
Title adjusted to add clarity as recommended 👍
Just curious. Why cloudfare over aws cloudfront? With AWS Cloudfront you could assign a role, and then you would not have to make your S3 bucket private.
There are many options to do this. AWS Cloudfront is also a good solution. Same as the S3 back-end. It could have been any static host.
What I mean is that Cloudfront is configured to pull from S3. So, what benefits did you have by using a different service provider such as Cloudfare? Was it cheaper? Easier to configure? Did you find it faster. or was this one of those "becasue I can" type of things?
For me, this piece with Cloudflare was easier than Cloudfront because there was no setup. All I had to do was change my DNS. If I used Cloudfront, I'd have to add that service and configure it. Cloudfront is also a good option, I just didn't need it for my specific use case.
You are basically serving from one single region. This is not geographically distributed. So a user from Europe gets the content from all the way across the Atlantic.
Because I am using Cloudflare, the requests are proxied through their CDN so it is also geographically distributed!