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  2. 3. You don't need to point the NS records to your hosting providers name server. You can if you want to manage DNS together with your Web space, but it is also perfectly fine to manage your DNS externally. Just make sure, MX records point to your mail server and A/AAAA records to your web server's IP. If you are using some sort of management ...

  3. In light of the GoDaddy outage we updated our name server list for our domain to include an additional name server provider. The list looks something like this: ns61.domaincontrol.com. ns54.domaincontrol.com. ns1.dreamhost.com. ns2.dreamhost.com. Both Godaddy and Dreamhost have zone entries to handle the A and MX records.

  4. Can I use three different free DNS hosting providers as namesevers for the same domain? I can't pay for DNS hosting and so after some research I've found three different free DNS providers. None of them have a perfect uptime record though (understandably) and reliability is important to me. I wondered if I could set three different namerservers ...

  5. email - Two mail providers for the same domain - Server Fault

    serverfault.com/.../two-mail-providers-for-the-same-domain

    5. you cant have two different providers for the same exact domain, but you can have a different subdomain for some emails. you could have the important email at google , for emails@yourdomainname.tld , pointing the MX records of yourdomainname.tld to google MX servers and less important emails on another , cheaper provider for emails@mail ...

  6. domain name system - Configure proper DNS records for separate...

    serverfault.com/questions/381741/configure-proper-dns...

    Separating your domain registration and DNS services from your web hosting provider ensures that your web host won't have an incentive to make it difficult for you to switch providers. Specialized e-mail offerings like Google Apps and Office 365 are far superior to the e-mail accounts that are bundled with web hosting accounts.

  7. 2. All you'll need to do is choose a new provider, get their service set up to accept mail for all your domains, and then create (or change) MX records for all your domains to point to the IP address of the new service's SMTP handler. They should be able to tell you the IP address when you sign up for their services. Share.

  8. At my domains registrar I have set up two name servers. They look like this: NS1: xx123456.ip-11-111-111.eu. NS2: ns1.XX.net. I know that first one is quite strange but I cannot do anything about it. On hosting provider that owns those name servers I changed DNS records to point some IP for different provider (location of new website).

  9. 17. You can add as many DNS servers as NS records for a domain, but they need to fulfill two conditions: They must host an authoritative copy of the DNS zone. They must be kept in sync. So, no, you can't add any random DNS server around the world (such as Google's ones), because they would not be authoritative for that zone and so they could ...

  10. 2. You can only have one registrar per domain name. That is the company that will have the contract with the relevant TLD registry for the provision of your domain name. You could have multiple independent domain hosters for your domain, but you had better be damned sure they always have the same information in their copy of the domain, or ...

  11. increased performance. Edit to address the follow-on question: Your domain nameservers are stored and configured in the root nameservers. Here's an example. First, we inquire against my resolver which are the root nameservers for the com domain. $ dig -t ns com. ; <<>> DiG 9.8.3-P1 <<>> -t ns com. ;; global options: +cmd.