Difference between revisions of "Hosting a domain not registered with XMission"

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(Name Servers)
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==Name Servers==
 
==Name Servers==
If you want XMission to handle your DNS completely, you need to point the '''Name Servers''' of your domain to us.  This can be done through the control panel your registrar offers.  Locate the section used to declare the name servers, and set them as follows:
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In order for XMission to handle your DNS completely, you need to point the '''Name Servers''' of your domain to us.  This can be done through the control panel your registrar offers.  Locate the section used to declare the name servers, and set them as follows:
  
 
'''Primary:''' ns.xmission.com<br>
 
'''Primary:''' ns.xmission.com<br>

Revision as of 13:44, 22 March 2018

If domains are registered with XMission, hosting will work automatically. If a domain is not registered with XMission, a little bit more work is necessary.

Name Servers

In order for XMission to handle your DNS completely, you need to point the Name Servers of your domain to us. This can be done through the control panel your registrar offers. Locate the section used to declare the name servers, and set them as follows:

Primary: ns.xmission.com
Secondary: ns1.xmission.com, ns2.xmission.com

This will point the name servers at XMission, and after that information has propagated (15-30 minutes usually), any DNS you have with XMission will take effect.

Web Hosting Only

If you're happy with your registrar controlling your DNS, or have the name servers pointed elsewhere already, but still want to have XMission host your website, we need to update the DNS itself.

In your registrars DNS control panel, you will want to add an A record for your website, pointing at the IP address of your server (found under Websites and Domains, next to IP Address in your hosting control panel for your domain). Typically, the A record is formatted as follows:

Record Type: A
Domain/Record Name: @
IP Address: The IP address of your shared hosting.