DNS records overview
Read this document for a brief overview of DNS records in the scope of GitLab Pages, for beginners in web development.
A Domain Name System (DNS) web service routes visitors to websites
by translating domain names (such as www.example.com
) into the
numeric IP addresses (such as 192.0.2.1
) that computers use to
connect to each other.
A DNS record is created to point a (sub)domain to a certain location, which can be an IP address or another domain. In case you want to use GitLab Pages with your own (sub)domain, you need to access your domain’s registrar control panel to add a DNS record pointing it back to your GitLab Pages site.
How to add DNS records depends on which server your domain is hosted on. Every control panel has its own place to do it. If you are not an administrator of your domain, and don’t have access to your registrar, you must ask the technical support of your hosting service to do it for you.
To help you out, we’ve gathered some instructions on how to do that for the most popular hosting services:
- 123-reg
- Amazon
- Bluehost
- Cloudflare
- cPanel
- DigitalOcean
- DreamHost
- Gandi
- Go Daddy
- Hostgator
- Inmotion hosting
- Media Temple
- Microsoft
- Namecheap
If your hosting service is not listed above, you can just try to
search the web for how to add dns record on <my hosting service>
.
A
record
A DNS A
record maps a host to an IPv4 IP address.
It points a root domain as example.com
to the host’s IP address as
192.192.192.192
.
Example:
-
example.com
=>A
=>192.192.192.192
CNAME
record
CNAME
records define an alias for canonical name for your server (one defined
by an A
record). It points a subdomain to another domain.
Example:
-
www
=>CNAME
=>example.com
This way, visitors visiting www.example.com
are redirected to
example.com
.
MX record
MX records are used to define the mail exchanges that are used for the domain. This helps email messages arrive at your mail server correctly.
Example:
-
MX
=>mail.example.com
Then you can register emails for users@mail.example.com
.
TXT
record
A TXT
record can associate arbitrary text with a host or other name. A common
use is for site verification.
Example:
-
example.com
=>TXT
=>"google-site-verification=6P08Ow5E-8Q0m6vQ7FMAqAYIDprkVV8fUf_7hZ4Qvc8"
This way, you can verify the ownership for that domain name.
All combined
You can have one DNS record or more than one combined:
-
example.com
=>A
=>192.192.192.192
-
www
=>CNAME
=>example.com
-
MX
=>mail.example.com
-
example.com
=>TXT
=>"google-site-verification=6P08Ow5E-8Q0m6vQ7FMAqAYIDprkVV8fUf_7hZ4Qvc8"