DNS CAA record

The DNS CAA record was first defined in 2013, and from September 2017, Certificate Authorities are obliged to review it before issuing any certificate. So, let’s clarify things a little bit more about it.

DNS CAA record – Definition

The CAA (Certification Authority Authorization) record is a Resource Record in DNS (Domain Name System) that lets domain owners to specify which CAs are authorized to issue a certificate for the domain name. 

Certification Authorities (CAs) are organizations that are authorized and able to issue certificates for domain names, for instance, SSL, TLS, or other certificates.

How to create a CAA record?

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ALIAS record

We are going to explore one alternative to the CNAME record, which has many advantages – the ALIAS record. With it, you can have different DNS records in the same DNS zone and even put ALIAS records inside the root. Put ALIAS records where you can’t do it with CNAME records and manage your DNS easier. 

ALIAS record

The ALIAS record is one of the DNS record types which serves to connect one hostname to another. After that, it will resolve to A or AAAA record (an A to IPv4 address and an AAAA to IPv6 address) that already exists for the second hostname. ALIAS has the benefit of being allowed for the root domain, and you can put it in a DNS zone with other DNS records like MX records.

Benefits of using ALIAS DNS record

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