That’s a bit sub-optimal regarding how they handle domain setup, I agree. You
can get partial functionality by adding a NS record in your existing DNS
servers for pointing specific records to their DNS servers even without going
through the full domain delegation process. After some testing, we were
sufficiently happy with their service to move forward with the full delegation,
but this technique worked well for kicking the tires without making the full
commitment to their DNS service.
The down side to using the NS trick is that their SSL handling will not be
fully active unless you do the whole domain. Depending on what you hope to
accomplish, that may be the make-or-break decision for using their service or
not. You can still do SSL on the host under some circumstances, but I believe
all entries in the top level domain must use their certificates when
acceleration is active. Subdomains can still use the SSL certificate on the
host even without full delegation.
Another reason to consider letting them handle your DNS (if you can) is that
they have some pretty interesting plans for adding DNSSEC support for later
this year.
At any rate, what I would suggest you consider is something like this:
testIN NS ns1.ns.cloudflare.com
IN NS ns2.ns.cloudflare.com
and replace ns1 and ns2 with the name servers assigned to your account.
Of course, you need a “test” record created on the CloudFlare end to serve the
appropriate DNS entries. This configuration will send all DNS queries for the
test host to CloudFlare’s servers and through their acceleration infrastructure.
Hope this helps,
Andrew
--
Andrew Anderson, Director of Development, Library and Information Resources
Network, Inc.
http://www.lirn.net/ | http://www.twitter.com/LIRNnotes |
http://www.facebook.com/LIRNnotes
On Jun 19, 2015, at 18:29, Kun Lin l...@whitman.edu wrote:
In most case, Cloudflare will want you to delete the whole domain to their
DNS server. This is impossible for us to do. Therefore, I am trying to
figure out CNAME option.
Thanks
Kun
-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of
Andrew Anderson
Sent: Friday, June 19, 2015 3:24 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] quick question: CloudFlare
We have had good experience with it so far, yes. Do you have a specific
use case that you're concerned about?
--
Andrew Anderson, Director of Development, Library and Information
Resources Network, Inc.
http://www.lirn.net/ | http://www.twitter.com/LIRNnotes |
http://www.facebook.com/LIRNnotes
On Jun 19, 2015, at 12:58, Kun Lin l...@whitman.edu wrote:
Quick question:
Who is using CloudFlare for their library website? Are they very
accommodating in using CNAME?
Thanks
Kun Lin