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Danil Tunev2020-05-20 18:53:18
Domain Name System
Danil Tunev, 2020-05-20 18:53:18

How to put a and ns-record in public dns servers?

Perhaps I will seem a little illiterate to you, but is it possible to do all this for free? Question number two: the domain name registrar receives a fee for the domain, asks for a DNS server(s), and what happens next? Let's say there is dns.xxx.ru, I will naturally indicate it, but how the hell will the link to it end up in public servers like Google's 8.8.8.8 or others, because browsers make requests for them? Why can't you register a record on these servers yourself? There seems to be some kind of legal background here?

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4 answer(s)
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Yakov, 2020-05-20
Svetsky @jamessvetsky

ns-records can be registered with any registrar, at least with which I have come across.
But the rest, alas, not everyone can be prescribed for free.
Examples from ours are nic.ru, where a paid DNS-master service was created for this, and atex.ru, where, despite the lowest prices for ru and rf domains, you also have to use third-party dns hosting.
Of the free dns-hostings, I can advise three:
mail.ru - you can simultaneously create mail for a domain in Mile ru for business
cishost.ru - you can also do a free redirect
there dns.he.net - just a convenient free DNS hosting

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Dmitry Krymtsev, 2020-05-20
@krimtsev

SmartApe has free DNS, then you can renew.
At the registrar, point the domain to the NS servers:
ns1.smartape.ru
ns2.smartape.ru

Proof:
5ec56031da43e093835891.png

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Viktor Taran, 2020-05-20
@shambler81

1. almost all registrars have such an opportunity, for free
Nic.ru - uporot to the state of insanity, it is several times more expensive for them than owning a domain.
2. Delegate to Yandex Connect and enjoy. there and mail for one is available and the editor of dns zones is full-fledged. of the
minuses 1 time you have to delegate somewhere to confirm your account.

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Saboteur, 2020-06-19
@saboteur_kiev

Perhaps I will seem a little illiterate to you, but is it possible to do all this for free?

In some domain zones you can find free domain allocation. But it is clear that not in .com and the like.
Question number two: the domain name registrar receives a fee for the domain, asks for a DNS server(s), and what happens next?

It may not ask you to specify the DNS server (more correctly NS), it may provide them yourself. But it is accepted that the storage of your record should lie on at least two NS servers, one of which is primary, secondary may be more. The registrar makes this record in a higher-level domain, for which "mutual responsibility" is used - that is, only registrars can make such records. To become a registrar, you can try to apply, but a private person will not succeed.
Let's say there is dns.xxx.ru, I will naturally indicate it, but how the hell will the link to it end up in public servers like Google's 8.8.8.8 or others, because browsers make requests for them?

You must first go to dns.xxx.ru and put the resource records file for your domain there, and then you can already register this NS server for your domain with the registrar.

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