Your Own Name Servers
I've gotten downright tired of moving my site again and again. It seems there
are no competent hosting companies anywhere on the planet. I don't ask for much.
In addition to the usual features for a paid web host, I just want my site to
be up and relatively quick. Downtime should be measured in hours per year,
and at it's slowest the site should respond in less than half a second.
So far I haven't found a single hosting company that even comes close. I've
tried about a dozen different firms, and they've all come up short. In fact,
the most important rule of any web host is violated on a regular basis time
and again. The sites are down and very slow. Virtually anything else can be
tolerated,
except for downtime.
Finally I sat back one day and thought long and hard about my options. I was
getting very frustrated with my current hosting company because the server was
timing out on occasion, causing my sites to become unavailable for a few minutes
here and a few minutes there.
I started looking for hosts and saw a word that caught my eye. The word was
"dedicated". Now that was a thought - a whole machine all to myself.
There was some appeal to that thought, but the price was too high, or at least
I thought so at the time.
Looking closer into the concept, I found a dedicated hosting service that was
actually reasonably priced. For a couple of hundred dollars a month I had a
web and mail server all to myself. Yes, I know that sounds high when compared
to a shared hosting service, but remember this included an incredible amount
of bandwidth, lots of disk space and plenty of power.
I paid for the first month and soon discovered the server had it's own name
server software. This meant I no longer had to deal with an ISP for name server
services.
What's so good about that? Well, as an example, some time ago I wanted to install
Bigmailbox on a site. This would have allowed my visitors to have a mailbox
named "theirname@renaissancefaire.org". I thought this would be a
pretty cool service to offer my visitors.
The ISP would not make the change necessary to install this feature. The change
requires about 1 minute, yet they would not do it. Not even for a charge. With
access to my own name server I could have made this change myself. It's very
simple really. Just a one line modification.
Another thing I wanted to do on occasion is create subdomains. For example,
wallpaper.renaissancefaire.org. This would allow me to create sites within sites
in a logical, easy to remember format.
Most of my previous ISPs would not allow me to make these changes. One of them
wanted to charge $10 per change. Ten dollars for a one minute modification.
Now I can do this kind of thing myself, as often as I want.
Another change that I've wanted to make also involved subdomains, but with
a twist. I wanted to create a subdomain of search.renaissancefaire.org which
called up a search engine on everyone.net. My old ISPs would not make this change
- not one of them. Yet it was a simple one line entry in the nameserver. Now
I can make these changes myself.
But a problem soon introduced itself. You see, the name server is actually
entered into the domain definition at the domain registrar. This more or less
informs the internet where to find your site, email server, subdomains and so
on.
Registrars require at least two name servers. My site only had one. I could
have defined two by asking my dedicated hosting company for another IP address,
but this had a problem. The reason for requiring two name servers is redundancy.
If both IP addresses are on the same machine, then that redundancy does not
exist.
I needed another name server somewhere else on the internet. A little searching
and I found one.
http://soa.granitecanyon.com/
This is a free service which allows people with exactly the same problem that
I was facing to create their own name server entries. You simply enter the domain
name, your email address and the raw DNS server table for the domain. These
DNS server tables are a little tricky to set up, but the service provides
excellent documentation and will not allow an invalid entry to be set up.
So what do you do? You create your entries at this service, then modify your
domain at the registrar to use them (wait a couple of days after defining them,
however).
I believe you can use this service even if you host your site on a normal shared
host (and possibly even a free host). You would need to set up your site normally
and get the ISP to set up their name servers as appropriate. Once that was done,
you could go to granitecanyon.com and define your own name server entries, then
proceed to the registrar a couple of days later to use those entries. Theoretically
this should work fine.
What is the bottom line? If you are using a dedicated host or you want to gain
some measure of control over your name servers, you can now do so. This will
enable you to do what you need without paying high costs or begging your ISP
for a favor.
About the author:
Richard Lowe Jr. is the webmaster of Internet Tips And Secrets at http://www.internet-tips.net
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