DNS Customization Guide
You can access this free service through your Account Manager under "Additional
Services." A detailed DNS Help Menu is available in the Account Manager.
The DNS customization tool enables customers with advanced technical domain knowledge to make and manage unlimited changes to a Domain Name Zone File. Be aware that your name servers must be pointing to DomainPeople's name servers in order to use this service.
What You Can Do
The Domain Name Zone File is a text file stored on a name server that
contains all the information pertaining to a domain. The Customizable
DNS service allows you to specify the following zone file additions and
modifications:
- A records
- CNAME records
- MX records
- Sub domains
- TTL of each record
- Special host entries (No-host and Catch-all)
A RECORDS
These records are the basis of the zone. They are used to set an IP address
to correspond with a web host. The purpose of this is to set where the
host will be "redirected", such as setting the "your-domain.com"
host to point to the IP of the web server where the files are stored.
They are also used with MX records to set up a host, "mail.your-domain.com,"
that points to the IP address of the mail server that will be accepting
e-mail related to this domain.
CNAME RECORDS
Creates an alias of a host name. The alias gains all properties of the
original, including IP addresses and mail routes. An example of a CNAME
record would be "www.your-domain.com," which would point to
"your-domain.com."
MX RECORDS
MX Records set the location of the server that all electronic mail will
be sent to. A domain name can have multiple mail routes, each one with
its own entry, and each given a numerical priority. The lower the number,
the higher the priority. If one fails, the request goes to the next in
the list. MX records can only point to a host, never an IP.
SUB DOMAINS
A sub domain, such as "whatever.your-domain.com" is set to an
IP, using an A record, or a host, using a CNAME record. Two examples that
almost all domains have set up are "www.your-domain.com" (typically,
this is set up, and the "your-domain.com" record is not) and
"mail.your-domain.com".
TTL OF EACH RECORD
Time To Live (TTL) refers to the number of seconds remaining on a cached
record before it is purged. The act of caching involves recording the
response of DNS record queries to increase speed of delivery for future
reference.
SPECIAL HOST ENTRIES (No-host
and Catch-all)
The No-Host option enables requests for specific sub domains to be forwarded
to a specific page. For example, "ftp.your-domain.com" can be
set to forward to a page that explains that this service is not supported.
The Catch-all option forwards any non-existing hostname to a specific
location.

