DNS Management Articles
26 results
Find clear, step-by-step instructions for common DNS tasks. Use the guides below to manage your DNS records with confidence.
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Adding and Editing DNS Records
Read more: Adding and Editing DNS RecordsThis article explains how to add and edit DNS records in your Liquid Web account.
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Adding IP Addresses to Your Server
Read more: Adding IP Addresses to Your ServerRequest additional IPs for Cloud VPS or Dedicated servers. This guide covers justification requirements, pricing, and the setup process.
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Adding IPv6 to Your Server
Read more: Adding IPv6 to Your ServerIPv6 adoption is growing to accommodate more internet devices. To get an IPv6 address on your Liquid Web server, you need WHM 11.4, Plesk 10.2, or a compatible OS. Request via support case.
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Changing Your Website’s Nameservers
Read more: Changing Your Website’s NameserversNameservers are crucial for DNS, matching domain names with IPs. Changing DNS hosting requires updating nameservers to direct traffic correctly.
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Configuring DNS for your OpenStack Server
Read more: Configuring DNS for your OpenStack ServerBecause your OpenStack Server infrastructure utilizes a Load Balancer, DNS for your domain should point to the Load Balancer’s IP address. When you are ready for the domain to go live on your OpenStack Server, the A record for the domain will need to be added with the IP address of the Load Balancer
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Disable DNS Zone Transfers
Read more: Disable DNS Zone TransfersDNS zone transfers aid in managing redundant DNS servers, but if your LiquidWeb server isn’t a DNS server, they pose a security risk. Best practice is to disable them by adding a line to the named.conf file in the /etc folder.
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DNS Hosting – NameServers
Read more: DNS Hosting – NameServersYour domain’s designated NameServers (NS) serve DNS records that guide visitors directly to your server when they enter your domain name into a browser so it is important to know where they are hosted, and how to make adjustments, if needed.
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DNS Tool – Dig
Read more: DNS Tool – DigLearn to use the `dig` command to query DNS servers. Understand its output, common queries like A, MX, NS, and advanced options like +trace.