The Name Servers of a domain reveal the DNS servers that handle its DNS records. The Internet protocol address of the website (A record), the mail server that deals with the emails for a domain address (MX records), any text record in free form (TXT record), directing (CNAME record) etc are obtained from the DNS servers of the hosting provider and for any domain name to be using them and to be pointed to their hosting platform, it needs to have their name servers, or NS records. If you would like to open an Internet site, for instance, and you type in the URL, the Internet browser connects to a DNS server, which keeps the NS records for the domain and the request is then sent to the DNS servers of the webhosting provider where the A record of the web site is retrieved, so you can see the content from the correct location. Commonly a domain address has 2 name servers that start with NS or DNS as a prefix and the difference between the two is only visual.

NS Records in Shared Hosting

If you use a shared hosting from our us and you include a new domain address inside the account or transfer an existing one from a different company, you are going to be able to control its NS records effortlessly through the Hepsia web hosting Control Panel, provided with all shared accounts. You'll be able to change the current name servers or enter additional ones for a single domain address or even for a group of domain names at once with several mouse clicks. This is done using the feature-rich Domain Manager tool which is a part of Hepsia and the user-friendly interface will make it easy to manage your domain name even if it's the first one you've ever registered. It takes just a mouse click to see what name servers a domain address uses at the moment or if they're the correct ones to forward a domain address to the hosting space on our end and with only a few clicks more you are going to even be able to register private name servers for any of the domain names that you own. For the latter option you can use the IP addresses of every company that you would like the new NS records to forward to.