Namecheap advanced DNS settings has an A Record with "photos" as the host and my home IP as the value. Visiting whatsmydns.net and checking the subdomain photos.myserver.com is propagated gives me green ticks. Doing a "dig photos.myserver.com" shows it's pointing to my home IP. Source: 12 months ago
You should have virtually 0 in the way of downtime. You can check DNS propagation at whatsmydns.net. That will give you a general idea. Source: about 1 year ago
You can monitor DNS propagation with whatsmydns.net Doesn't make it go any faster, but gives you something to watch - haha. Source: about 1 year ago
I am quite new to the whole topic of email security and today I came across whatsmydns.net and searched for my domain. Since then I realized that some DNS records are open to the public (e.g. Verification and SPF) and others maybe are, too (at least not on this website, couldn't get information about my dmarc entry). Source: over 1 year ago
However, after over 4 days whatsmydns.net and other dns checking tools are still showing the websites as not fully propagated, in addition my Vercel websites are still showing as pending and "Invalid Configuration" and my Zoho Mail console is further showing as the domain name configured and "MX Verification failure". Source: over 1 year ago
Trying to move a client’s website from AWS to another DNS provider. Changed the nameservers. Whatsmydns.com shows that the nameserver changes have propagated successfully:. Source: about 2 years ago
I use whatsmydns.net as well, I like it, I also use dnschecker.org. Source: over 2 years ago
As u/radialmonster said, you can go to a website like whatsmydns.net and search the domain in question. In particular you want to search for the A record DNS setting. Once you have an IP address, you can then search for something like "iplookup" and put that IP address in. It will give you a place where it resolves. Sometimes its name is obvious like yourhostingcompany.com. Sometimes it's not quite as obvious, in... Source: over 2 years ago
In the future, you can use whatsmydns.net and then intodns to verify if the DNS has propagated. Source: almost 3 years ago
I checked with https://whatsmydns.net and it shows the new IP address has propagated around the world so it all should resolve to the same IP address. Source: almost 3 years ago
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