CNAME Records in Shared Web Hosting
You can easily set up CNAME records if you have a Linux shared web hosting through our company. We will supply you with an easy-to-use CP that enables you to view all DNS records for the domains and subdomains that are hosted within the account. Creating a CNAME record requires a number of easy steps - choose the domain/subdomain, choose CNAME as the type, type in the hostname you are redirecting to, after that simply click on the Save button. The procedure is as elementary as that and the new record is going to be active almost immediately. That way, you'll have more control over your domain addresses and subdomains and over the content they open, you can set up a private URL for company e-mails, and a lot more. If you feel unclear about how to set up a new record or you have never done such a task, you will find a short video tutorial where you could see the whole process first-hand. If you choose to change or delete an existing CNAME record created for a domain/subdomain hosted on our end, it'll require literally just a mouse click to do it.
CNAME Records in Semi-dedicated Hosting
You'll be able to create, edit and delete CNAME records really easy with any one of our semi-dedicated server plans. The accounts are handled through the custom Hepsia hosting CP, and in one of its sections you'll see all records for every domain name or subdomain you have added in your account. To set up a new record, you just need to select the hostname which will be forwarded (domain/subdomain), enter where it is going to be forwarded to, choose the record type, that will be CNAME in this case, and you are going to be ready. Even if you haven't used a web hosting service before, our CP is very intuitive to use, so you will not have any troubles. We also have a short video and a detailed help article on how to set up a CNAME record, both of which can be found in the exact same section of Hepsia. With this function, you can easily use a domain hosted on our cutting edge cloud hosting platform for a website created elsewhere, set up a custom webmail login address with any of your domains, and more.