AAAA Records in Website Hosting
If you'd like to use a domain name or a subdomain you have inside a website hosting account on our end for any third-party service and you have to set up an AAAA record for that, it is not going to take you more than a few clicks to do this via our powerful, albeit easy-to-use Hepsia CP. After you go to the DNS Records section and click on the Create a New Record button, a small pop-up will appear. This is the spot in which you can create any DNS record, so you just have to select the needed domain or subdomain and the type of record via drop-down menus and input the IPv6 address, that’s the actual record. Just in case you have no experience with such matters, you won't have any difficulties as Hepsia is quite intuitive and the new AAAA record will propagate within the hour, to enable you to start using your domain/subdomain with the other service provider. In case they demand it, you'll also be able to change the Time To Live (TTL) value for the record, defining how long it's going to stay active in the global DNS system after you change it or delete it.
AAAA Records in Semi-dedicated Hosting
Creating a new AAAA record is very easy using our user-friendly Hepsia hosting CP, so if you host a domain in a semi-dedicated server account from our company and you require such a record either for it or for a subdomain that you have set up under it, you are going to be able to create it in a few quite simple steps and without any hassle. Hepsia has a section devoted to the DNS records of your domain names in which you can find all current records or create new ones with a few mouse clicks. All it takes to accomplish this is to choose the domain/subdomain you need to modify, choose AAAA for the type from a drop-down menu and input the actual record i.e. the IPv6 address that the other company has given you. Within an hour after you save the modification, the newly created record is going to propagate world-wide and your domain address will start pointing to the third-party hosting server. If they require it, you can also modify the TTL value, which outlines the time this record will be functioning with its existing value before a new one kicks in if you make any changes in the future.