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dyndns

Posted: Tue Oct 25, 2011 10:34 am
by TOR_LordRaven
Anyone have experience with dyndns.org ?

Re: dyndns

Posted: Tue Oct 25, 2011 10:42 am
by fliptw
been using it for nearly a decade.

Re: dyndns

Posted: Tue Oct 25, 2011 10:57 am
by Krom
Use their auto-updater program. Some routers can update the IP address but most of them only do it when the IP changes so the domain expires after 30 days, the dyndns updater program keeps the domain alive even if the IP doesn't change, and it uses very little memory or resources.

Re: dyndns

Posted: Tue Oct 25, 2011 11:22 am
by fliptw
You can tell dyndns.org you have a static IP.

it actually bitched about the IP not changing during the twice weekly update that DD-WRT defaulted to.

Re: dyndns

Posted: Tue Oct 25, 2011 11:59 am
by Jeff250
I'd imagine you wouldn't need the auto-updating program for any of the popular open source router firmwares. I can personally vouch for the Tomato variants as well.

Re: dyndns

Posted: Wed Oct 26, 2011 3:58 pm
by TOR_LordRaven
yeah, its all on the router - gotta love DD-WRT...

My question pertains to more than one domain name.

I have several i host off my home PC (using WAMP), but was wondering if anyone has experience with multiple domain names through dyndns

What i am trying to do is get each site on its own...

Currently everything is under a sub-folder of my own domain (sitename.com/sites/blah )
And their .com address is setup as a auto-forwarder to that using frames (So joe end user cannot tell)

So far this has worked fine as most of my "Clients" are relatives or family friends and they don't care much. (I wouldn't expect them to complain as its all done for free anyhow - lol)
I have one client who is not family who may complain about it. Building him a site as Trade Services.

Any thoughts?

Re: dyndns

Posted: Wed Oct 26, 2011 4:07 pm
by Krom
You could for a relatively low price buy professional hosting and your own domain name with unlimited subdomains and just run the whole thing on that.

Doing so also helps since running servers is usually a ToS violation on most ISPs (unless you have a business account, then its usually fine).

Re: dyndns

Posted: Fri Oct 28, 2011 8:21 pm
by Thenior
x2 on what Krom said. I run the HostPro/plan at Site5. Been very impressed with the speed and support. I get 600k to 1m download speeds from the server.