You could use Amazon AWS' Route 53 DNS hosting and use the APIs to update
the domain name directly, that way you can update the root record to be an A
record pointing to the dynamic IP and instead of the dyndns script have a
route53 script which updates Amazon's nameservers.
http://aws.amazon.com/
** Adrian Bridgett [2011-01-05 21:44]:
> Well I think it is anyway!
>
> My brother uses dyndns.org and want to use it for his email and web.
> Let's say he has example.com and his dyndns entry is example.dyndns.org.
>
> for example.com:
> IN NS ns1.123reg.co.uk.
> IN NS ns2.123reg.co.u
> My brother uses dyndns.org and want to use it for his email and web.
> Let's say he has example.com and his dyndns entry is example.dyndns.org.
>
> for example.com:
I'm assuming you meant "example.dyndns.org" there; if not, the rest of my
post will be entirely bogus...
> IN NS ns1.123reg.
On Wed, January 5, 2011 21:42, Adrian Bridgett wrote:
> Well I think it is anyway!
>
> My brother uses dyndns.org and want to use it for his email and web.
> Let's say he has example.com and his dyndns entry is example.dyndns.org.
Can you re-post this without any of the obfuscation? It's _really
Well I think it is anyway!
My brother uses dyndns.org and want to use it for his email and web.
Let's say he has example.com and his dyndns entry is example.dyndns.org.
for example.com:
IN NS ns1.123reg.co.uk.
IN NS ns2.123reg.co.uk.
IN MX example.dyndns.org.
www IN CNAME example.