|
Home
>> www.HostWrap.com
>> DNS Administration
DNS
Administration
From
the main Administrator menu, click the "DNS Administration"
link. You will see a page that looks like this:

The
DNS administration menu allows you to modify the DNS settings of any
domain name hosted on the server. Click on the domain name you
want to edit. In this example, we will click on garys-site.com

Important:
There are two ways to enter a hostname:
1.
The full hostname followed by a period: full.hostname.com.
2.
The subdomain alone: full
For
example, the first record in the table above can read:
ftp
A 66.51.122.139 or
ftp.garys-site.com.
A 66.51.122.139
Both
records do the exact same thing. The sections below may discuss
only one method but either is acceptable.
Hint:
If you are unsure how to enter a record, look at the existing records in
the table for guidance.
Records
Explained: A, CNAME, NS, MX, and PTR.
A
RECORDS
Address
(A) records direct a hostname to a numerical IP address.
For example, if you want mycomputer.yourdomain.com to point to
your home computer (which is, for example, 192.168.0.3), you would enter
a record that looks like:

Important:
You must put a period after the hostname. Do not put periods after
IP addresses.
CNAME
RECORDS
CNAME
allows a machine to be known by one or more hostnames.
There must always be an A record first, and this is known as the
canonical or official name. For
example:
yourdomain.com.
A 192.168.0.1
Using
CNAME, you can point other hostnames to the canonical (A record)
address. For example:
ftp.yourdoman.com.
CNAME yourdomain.com.
mail.yourdomain.com.
CNAME yourdomain.com.
ssh.yourdomin.com.
CNAME yourdomain.com.
CNAME
records make it possible to access your domain through
ftp.yourdomain.com, mail.yourdomain.com,
etc. Without a proper CNAME
record, you will not be able to connect to your server using such
addresses.
Entering
a CNAME record
If
we wanted home.site-helper.com to point to site-helper.com, we could
enter the record in two ways:

The
first method allows you to simply enter the subdomain. Do not put
a period after the subdomain name.

The
second method requires you to enter the entire hostname, followed by a
period.
NAMESERVER
(NS) RECORDS
NS
records specify the authoritative nameservers for the domain.
Entering
a NS record
The
first step is to delete the old NS records from the table above.
Then,
enter two new nameservers records. Be sure that the nameserver
hostname is followed by a period, as in this example:

Be
sure to put a period after the nameserver hostname in a NS record
(ns1.newnameserver.com. and not ns1.newnameserver.com ).
MX
RECORDS
Free
e-mail services such as everyone.net require that MX changes be made in
order for their software to work. This change allows mail destined
for your domain to be directed to their server. Please note that
changing MX records will prevent your current POP3 accounts, forwarders,
autoresponders, and mailing lists from functioning.
To
change the MX record, first access the "E-Mail Menu" from the
control panel. Then, click the "MX Records" icon.

First,
delete the old MX record by clicking the checkbox to next to the record
name and click "Delete Selected." There should now be no
MX records listed.
Next,
type in the hostname, followed by a period, given to you by the e-mail
provider. Then select the priority level (usually 10) from the
dropdown box on the right. The priority level will also be given
to you by the e-mail provider. Click "Add."
Note:
Be sure to put a period at the
end of the hostname.
To
restore the original MX settings, enter yourdomain.com. and priority 0
after deleting the other MX record.
PTR
RECORDS
Pointer
records (PTR) are used for reverse lookups. For example, to make
192.168.0.1 resolve to www.yourdomain.com, the record would look like:
1.0.168.192.in-addr.arpa PTR
www.yourdomain.com.
Note:
The IP address is reversed in the first field. Please use a period
after your hostname (second field).
The
“in-addr-arpa” method is the most frequently used.
Important:
PTR records are effective only if your site has its own IP address
Important:
PTR records are only effective if named.conf
is manually edited and the proper zone information is added. This
can only be done by a root user (the server Admin).
Need
more help?
Please
contact your hosting company for more assistance, or visit the
DirectAdmin support forum at http://www.directadmin.com/forum.
|