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Change the DNS info on for your domain name
You need to basically tell your domain name to
"point" to the OzHosted.com
servers. This is done by changing the DNS information
for that domain name.
You will need to access
the site that you purchased your domain name from and
there should be a member's section. This will require a
Username and Password [that you received when you bought
the domain name]
Then find the section that says
something like "Change or Update DNS info". You then
replace the information that is currently there with the
nameserver information that came with your welcome
email. You'll see 2 nameservers and 2 IP addresses.
By entering this information, you are
instructing that requests for your domain name are
directed to the OzHosted.com servers. It could
take up to 3 days for your domain to be fully propagated
and for your site to be accessible via your domain name.
If you can't find a Member's section on the site
that you purchased the domain name from, email their
support staff and tell them what you want to do etc.
By redelegating your DNS info for your domain
name, you are in effect hooking your domain name up with
the OzHosted.com servers
and any requests for your domain name will be routed to
the OzHosted.com
servers.
Access your domain before propagation
To access your sites before the domain has
propagated, simply access via the server's IP address
and the ~username of the account. So, that would be
http://serverIP/~username
.
Details of your
server's main IP are in your welcome
email.
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Domain
Propagation antics!!
A lot of support requests that we receive at the
Helpdesk
is about domain propagation and
clients not being able to view their newly
created sites. This article will go about trying to
explain what is happening and why you can't view your
new site whereas someone else can view your
site.
You've just opened your
new account here and you've gone along to your
domain register and you've updated the DNS info for that
domain so that it now points to your account on the
OzHosted.com
server that you're on. Your site will
not become visible by the domain name for probably
48 hours. Why is this taking so
long, you ask? Basically all the ISPs around the net
have to update their DNS cache and this takes time
.
Why does it take so long? There are various
reasons, but some studies have suggested that there are
literally millions of DNS Servers that need to be
notified of the new information!
Propagation
takes two forms, changes to your DNS Zone and changes to
your WHOIS information. The WHOIS is the master record
that tells every DNS Server in the world which is the
authoritative server for your domain. A change to your
WHOIS information (done my your domain registrar) can
take up to 72 hours to propagate fully. A change to your
DNS Zone information typically affects only a handful of
servers, and so is done much more
quickly.
You can also access the site via the http://SERVERIP/~username.
Check the "SERVERIP" from your welcome
email.
A common question we get is that
why can I access the site but my client cannot access
the new site. The answer to this is that your ISP has
updated its DNS information and the ISP of your client
has not yet updated their DNS info. Hence you are
looking at the new location of the domain name, whereas
your client will still be looking at the old
location.
Use this page to check the whois and
other nameserver checks for your domains - http://www.verisign-grs.com/whois/
. Just because you can see the updated
information on this page, this doesn't mean that your
site is viewable at its new location by everyone from
around the net. True domain propagation takes up to 72
hours, maybe even longer.
So, hang in there and
ride out the domain propagation waiting
game.
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Tell me all about DNS and how it works
http://www.zoneedit.com/doc/dns-basics.html
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What is
Propagation?
Merriam-Webster defines propagation as:
the act or action of propagating : as a :
increase (as of a kind of organism) in numbers b : the
spreading of something (as a belief) abroad or into new
regions c : enlargement or extension (as of a crack) in
a solid body
For our purposes, definition B is
most appropriate. Quite literally, propagation is the
time during which your DNS Zone information is spread
abroad to servers that didn't know about it before.
Why does it take so long? There are various
reasons, but some studies have suggested that there are
literally millions of DNS Servers that need to be
notified of the new information!
Propagation
takes two forms, changes to your DNS Zone and changes to
your WHOIS information. The WHOIS is the master record
that tells every DNS Server in the world which is the
authoritative server for your domain. A change to your
WHOIS information (done my your domain registrar) can
take up to 72 hours to propagate fully. A change to your
DNS Zone information typically affects only a handful of
servers, and so is done much more
quickly.
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