AAAA Records in Cloud Hosting
The cutting-edge Hepsia website hosting Control Panel, bundled with our cloud hosting, will enable you to create a new AAAA record without difficulty. When you're in the account and you navigate to the DNS Records section, you'll find all records you have for any hosted domain address or a subdomain under it. All it takes to create the AAAA record is to click on the New Record button, to pick the domain/subdomain in question, choose AAAA after which just type in or copy and paste the IPv6 address. We also have a step-by-step guide if you've never created records for your domains, but it's extremely unlikely that you'll need it as Hepsia is much simpler to use in comparison with other Control Panels on the market. Within an hour your new record is going to be working and your domain name shall start resolving to the servers of the other service provider. There's also an option to modify the TTL value, which outlines how long this record will be active if you modify it, from the default 3600 seconds to any value which the other company may require.
AAAA Records in Semi-dedicated Servers
Setting up a new AAAA record is very easy with our user-friendly Hepsia hosting CP, so if you host a domain inside a semi-dedicated server account from our company and you want such a record either for it or for a subdomain that you have set up under it, you're going to be able to create it within a few rather simple steps and without any hassle. Hepsia features a section dedicated to the DNS records of your domain names in which you can find all current records or set up new ones with several mouse clicks. All it takes to do this is to choose the domain/subdomain that you'd like to edit, pick AAAA for the type from a drop-down menu and enter the actual record i.e. the IPv6 address the other company has given you. Within an hour after you save the modification, the new record is going to propagate world-wide and your domain will start forwarding to the third-party web server. If they require it, you could also modify the TTL value, which indicates the time this record will be functioning with its existing value before a new one takes over if you make any modifications in the future.