SRV Records in Hosting
You're going to be able to create a new SRV record for any one of the domain addresses you host inside a shared web hosting account on our cutting-edge cloud platform. As long as the DNS records for the domain name are handled on our end, you will be able to manage them with ease in the respective section of your Hepsia CP and minutes later any new record which you set up is going to be active. Hepsia comes with a very user-friendly interface and all it will take to create an SRV record is to fill in just a few text boxes - the service the record is going to be used for, the Internet protocol plus the port number. The priority (1-100), weight (1-100) and TTL boxes have standard values, which you can leave unless the other provider needs different ones. TTL is short for Time To Live and this number illustrates the time in seconds for the record to remain active in case you edit it or erase it at some point, the default one being 3600.
SRV Records in Semi-dedicated Servers
Creating a completely new SRV record for every single domain address hosted within a semi-dedicated server account on our end will be very easy and is going to take no more than a couple of clicks using a user-friendly interface. Using the DNS management tool in your Hepsia web hosting CP, you are able to create any record you need and when you pick SRV as the type, several more textboxes will appear on your screen. There, you will have to input the record value, the service, the protocol along with the port number and you will be set. Additionally, in case the other service provider requires it, you will also be able to set the weight and priority values when they have to be different from the default value, which is 10. The range for those 2 options is from 1 to 100, so you have quite a lot of possibilities if you use many servers for a specific service. You can also outline how long the new SRV record will remain active if you remove it in the future by setting a TTL (Time To Live) value for it. By default, the TTL is 3600 seconds.