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How can I have my own nameserver with own domain?
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How can I have my own nameserver with own domain?

I wanna do like what google did:
"ns1.google.com, ns2.google.com, ns3.google.com, ns4.google.com"

If you know good nameserver hosting support own domain and affrodable, let me know.

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Comments

  • FatGrizzlyFatGrizzly Member, Host Rep

    google for glue records, you set these up with the registrar usually.

  • Bunny DNS does that.

    Thanked by 1nick_
  • DazzleDazzle Member
    edited February 28

    Sorry, already answerd above by FatGrizzly.

  • edited February 28

    BIND9
    https://bind9.net/

    Open-source Self-hosted DNS
    ns1.yourdomain.tld, ns2.yourdomain.tld

  • Well, google.com is already taken. I guess you'll have to think of something different.

  • Daniel15Daniel15 Veteran
    edited February 28

    @lowendtalkxdax said:
    BIND9
    https://bind9.net/

    Open-source Self-hosted DNS
    ns1.yourdomain.tld, ns2.yourdomain.tld

    You don't need to self-host if you don't want to; some DNS hosts let you white-label their service. ClouDNS allows this for example: https://www.cloudns.net/wiki/article/39/

  • I have same question as op, but I also want to use cloudflare with custom glue records. Cloudflare doesn't allow that... Unless I pay way more than what it's worth. What is an alternative CDN to cloudflare that allows this?

  • Bunny.net DNS is pretty easy to set up.

    Thanked by 1nick_
  • dhmodhmo Member

    Thanks! I'll find good vps for host nameserver!

  • dhmodhmo Member

    @NessaCat said:
    Bunny.net DNS is pretty easy to set up.

    Is Cheap?

  • dhmodhmo Member

    @totally_not_banned said:
    Well, google.com is already taken. I guess you'll have to think of something different.

    I know.
    I mean google is using ns1/2/3/4.google.com for their domain google.com.
    I wanna do similar like ns1/2/3/4.mydomain.tld with mydomain.tld.

  • kvz12kvz12 Member
    edited February 28

    @dhmo said:

    @NessaCat said:
    Bunny.net DNS is pretty easy to set up.

    Is Cheap?

    It's free, can't get any cheaper than that.

  • Does HE.net allow this on their free DNS?

  • dhmodhmo Member

    @JosephF said:
    Does HE.net allow this on their free DNS?

    I do not know.... I think it's not

  • raindog308raindog308 Administrator, Veteran

    Overkill for a lot of use cases.

    I prefer NSD.

    Thanked by 1rm_
  • few years ago, you can do that with Digitalocean for free with its free dns...dont know about now as not use its dns anymore..

  • I think ClouDNS can do that

  • jsgjsg Member, Resident Benchmarker

    @dhmo said:
    I wanna do like what google did:
    "ns1.google.com, ns2.google.com, ns3.google.com, ns4.google.com"

    If you know good nameserver hosting support own domain and affrodable, let me know.

    "NS services" like mentioned by others can be a solution - but: what do you really gain, other than having all your domains' NS centralized, which btw. also can turn out to be a problem (SPOF, political issues, etc).

    That's why I personally prefer to host my name servers myself and strongly suggest to, at the very minimum, have the authoritative NS master under your control, i.e. run it on a VPS.
    (and not use 'bind'! There are way better options like e.g. NSD).

    Thanked by 2raindog308 rm_
  • raindog308raindog308 Administrator, Veteran

    I did a tutorial on NSD a while back on LEB:

    https://lowendbox.com/blog/setup-a-dns-nameserver-using-nsd/

    For some reason I don't remember now, I didn't setup proper zone transfers with that tut but used rsync. I did in the later video:

    I should probably do an updated tut on LEB. NSD works very well as an authoritative name server.

    Thanked by 2jsg lanefu
  • @raindog308 said:
    I did a tutorial on NSD a while back on LEB:

    https://lowendbox.com/blog/setup-a-dns-nameserver-using-nsd/

    For some reason I don't remember now, I didn't setup proper zone transfers with that tut but used rsync. I did in the later video:

    I should probably do an updated tut on LEB. NSD works very well as an authoritative name server.

    What's the practical differences between BIND and BSD?

  • raindog308raindog308 Administrator, Veteran

    @JosephF said: What's the practical differences between BIND and BSD?

    BIND does both authoritative name serving and caching name serving.

    NSD only does authoritative.

    There's also djbdns, unbound on *BSD, and others.

    Compare

    I like NSD because it does what I want, and I've run it on very small systems (128MB in the past, though I no longer have VPSes that small).

  • kevindskevinds Member, LIR

    @JosephF said: What's the practical differences between BIND and BSD?

    Seriously?

    Practical differences? One is an application, one is an operating system.

    Thanked by 1JabJab
  • dhmodhmo Member
    edited February 29

    I'm finding managed solution with affrodable pricing
    I think I am not good to setup it myself , and VPS has bandwidth limit

  • kaitkait Member

    @raindog308 said:

    Overkill for a lot of use cases.

    I prefer NSD.

    CoreDNS is OP

  • NeoonNeoon Community Contributor, Veteran
    edited February 29

    Yes, but gluerecords are not available for domain extensions from google.
    I tried to use .app and .dev for my nameservers but apparently it wasn't technically possible.

    Had to use a .com
    I have no fucking idea why though, however this limitation is real.

    TLDR: You can't use a google TLD for glue records if it points to another google TLD.
    You have to use something else.

  • jsgjsg Member, Resident Benchmarker

    @raindog308 said:
    ... NSD works very well as an authoritative name server.

    Yep, my experience over many years (as well as occasionally looking (again) at alternatives) confirms that.

    I like NSD because it does what I want, and I've run it on very small systems (128MB in the past, though I no longer have VPSes that small).

    That as well. I still have very small (<=256 MB) VPS running NSD perfectly well.

    @JosephF said: What's the practical differences between BIND and BSD?

    BIND does both authoritative name serving and caching name serving.

    NSD only does authoritative.

    Yes_no. The guys behind NSD just split the two functionalities. The caching resolver is 'Unbound', also a fine daemon.

    Btw, one of the main reasons I like NSD so well is that zone transfers (and control thereof) are easy and work well and reliably.

    (And now I'll watch your video *g)

  • kaitkait Member

    You guys aren't listening, the answer is always CoreDNS.

  • jsgjsg Member, Resident Benchmarker

    @kevinds said:

    @JosephF said: What's the practical differences between BIND and BSD?

    Seriously?

    Practical differences? One is an application, one is a bug ridden snarky operating system.

    I took the freedom to complement that for you *g

    @dhmo said:
    ... and VPS has bandwidth limit

    Don't worry, unless you have very, very prominent domains and lots of them even 1 TB will be more than plenty enough.

    @Neoon said:
    Yes, but gluerecords are not available for domain extensions from google.
    I tried to use .app and .dev for my nameservers but apparently it wasn't technically possible.

    Had to use a .com
    I have no fucking idea why though, however this limitation is real.

    TLDR: You can't use a google TLD for glue records if it points to another google TLD.
    You have to use something else.

    Meh, oh well google ...

  • tentortentor Member, Patron Provider

    Strange that no one mentioned PowerDNS

    Thanked by 1abtdw
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