Domains and DNS Articles
44 results
The following guides empower you to register a new domain, transfer an existing domain to Liquid Web, and manage your domain’s renewal settings. You will also learn how to add and edit DNS records (like ‘A’ or ‘MX’ records), change your nameservers, and set up reverse DNS (rDNS) for your server’s IP address. If you run into problems, we provide tools and guides for troubleshooting DNS propagation or flushing your local DNS cache.
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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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Change Your Domain Name Contact (WHOIS) Information
Read more: Change Your Domain Name Contact (WHOIS) InformationAnyone can access domain info via WHOIS lookup. Easily update contact details for your domain registered with Liquid Web by logging into your account portal.
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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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Checking the Status of Your Domain Transfer
Read more: Checking the Status of Your Domain TransferDomain transfers take time and checking the status can be a pain. Our new tools let you easily check your domain transfer status in your account.
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Cloudflare
Read more: CloudflareBoost your site’s speed and security with our Cloudflare integration. Get a global CDN, DDoS protection, and reduced bandwidth costs.
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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