Someone who understands DNSes and all the ill-defined jargon... take pity.
Goal: DDNS updates for my rarely changing IPv4 address given me my my beloved ISP - synch that IP address to my domain name. Somehow with CNAME records and all that jibberish:
my registrar: Google domains, for "mydomain.com" (or some such)
my NAS has DDNS to NAS vendor's DDNS server, but mine is in their domain and tld.
my router, same story: DDNS to their own DDNS server, their tld.
Google, my registrar, has a lot of options and capabilities with my domain name, but I can't understand all the jargon.
How can I get mydomain.com at Google to follow the DDNS server which tracks my numeric IP du jour? Google Domains also has some proprietary tools in this area. All greek to me.
I do have my numeric IP address key into an "A" record at Google for mydomain.com. But that IP will change every 3-6 months based on history.
I found a way to forward all web server accesses made to mydomain.com to the symbolic name at the NAS vendor. That doesn't meet the goal. My NAS has an SSL certicate tied to mydomain.com.
So, anyone smart in all this A record, CNAME, aliasing domain names of mine to a single IP address?
Google has a DDNS service of their own. They take in dyndns2 protocol reporting. To do that, I'd have to get a client that does that and put it on a computer (or hack the NAS' Linux).
Confused.
Goal: DDNS updates for my rarely changing IPv4 address given me my my beloved ISP - synch that IP address to my domain name. Somehow with CNAME records and all that jibberish:
my registrar: Google domains, for "mydomain.com" (or some such)
my NAS has DDNS to NAS vendor's DDNS server, but mine is in their domain and tld.
my router, same story: DDNS to their own DDNS server, their tld.
Google, my registrar, has a lot of options and capabilities with my domain name, but I can't understand all the jargon.
How can I get mydomain.com at Google to follow the DDNS server which tracks my numeric IP du jour? Google Domains also has some proprietary tools in this area. All greek to me.
I do have my numeric IP address key into an "A" record at Google for mydomain.com. But that IP will change every 3-6 months based on history.
I found a way to forward all web server accesses made to mydomain.com to the symbolic name at the NAS vendor. That doesn't meet the goal. My NAS has an SSL certicate tied to mydomain.com.
So, anyone smart in all this A record, CNAME, aliasing domain names of mine to a single IP address?
Google has a DDNS service of their own. They take in dyndns2 protocol reporting. To do that, I'd have to get a client that does that and put it on a computer (or hack the NAS' Linux).
Confused.