Setting up DNS Services on cPanel
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cPanel is a commercial web-based control panel for server systems. It can help ease the burden of common system administration tasks such as website creation, database deployment and management, and more. This guide shows you how to set up your cPanel server to serve DNS records. These instructions should be done through your root WHM interface.
Nameserver Selection
In the root WHM, under the Service Configuration section, click Nameserver Selection. The following page appears:
You can choose from BIND, MyDNS or NSD; the advantages and disadvantages for each are displayed. If you are unfamiliar with any of them, select BIND, which is the easiest to work with.
Nameserver Records
To use your own nameservers, for example ns1.example.com
, ns2.example.com
, create those entries at your registrar first. The process for adding nameservers can vary based on which registrar you are using. If you are unsure how to set up these entries, you should contact your registrar’s support and ask them how to do so. You also need to add A records for your nameservers on your Linode through WHM. To do that, you need to log into your WHM as root, then navigate to the DNS Functions section, click Nameserver Record Report, click Edit Zones.
Click the domain you used when you set up your nameservers at your registrar and click the + A Record button to add A records for your nameservers. Add the name and IP address:
Just make sure you use Linode’s IP address. You can add more than two nameservers if you like.
Using Linode’s DNS Manager as a Secondary Server
When using BIND installed on cPanel as primary nameserver and the Linode DNS Servers as a secondary, set all of the nameservers at your registrar. You should have a list like this:
ns1.example.com
ns2.example.com
ns1.linode.com
ns2.linode.com
ns3.linode.com
ns4.linode.com
ns5.linode.com
The DNS changes can take up to 48 hours to propagate.
To get your cPanel Linode ready as your primary DNS server, you need to make a few additions/edits to the /etc/named.conf
file.
The transfer of DNS records from Primary DNS server to the Linode DNS servers is done through AXFR queries. By default these are not allowed. Add these sections to options
:
- File: /etc/named.conf
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
allow-transfer { 104.237.137.10; 65.19.178.10; 74.207.225.10; 207.192.70.10; 109.74.194.10; 2600:3c00::a; 2600:3c01::a; 2600:3c02::a; 2600:3c03::a; 2a01:7e00::a; }; also-notify { 104.237.137.10; 65.19.178.10; 74.207.225.10; 207.192.70.10; 109.74.194.10; 2600:3c00::a; 2600:3c01::a; 2600:3c02::a; 2600:3c03::a; 2a01:7e00::a; };
After your updates are complete, save and close the named.conf
file.
Check that the configuration file is usable by issuing the command:
named-checkconf /etc/named.conf
If everything was done correctly, you should see no output. No output means everything is OK. If you get any errors, open the file and fix the reported issue. The errors are self-explanatory and point to the exact issue.
After the check is OK, the BIND service needs to be restarted in order for the changes to be picked up.
Complete the following steps while you are logged in a root
user in the WHM interface.
On the left side in WHM under Restart Services, click DNS Server.
Click Yes to restart the service. Allow a few minutes for the service to restart.
You then want to begin adding your domains to the Linode DNS Manager as secondary zones.
Complete the following steps using Linode Cloud Manager:
From the Domains section, click Add a Domain. The Create a Domain panel appears where you can fill out the form fields with your domain’s information.
To add a secondary zone, click the Secondary radio button.
Click the Create Domain button.
More Information
You may wish to consult the following resources for additional information on this topic. While these are provided in the hope that they will be useful, please note that we cannot vouch for the accuracy or timeliness of externally hosted materials.
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