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DNS Propugation
or Why does it take up to three days for my site to be visible?
Once the account
is set up on a server the "nameservers" for the domain
hosted on the server must be changed. Nameservers are the internets
way to direct someone to your site. When someone types in the address:
www.yourdomain.com that name is translated (or resolved) into numbers
(called an IP address) and then the computer is directed to the
correct site using those numbers. The translation of a domain name
to an IP address is done through nameservers. Nameservers are handled
by a domain registrarthe place where the domain name was registered.
Once the nameservers
have been updated at the domain registrar it takes up to 72 hours
for this information to filter through the internet. What happens
is that your domain registrar submits this information to the master
record database and it is available there very soon. However, each
ISP (the way you access the internet) does not use the master record
every time they need to find a domain name.
What the ISPs
do is copy the master record and then have their own database of
nameserver information. When someone on their ISP looks for a domain
name they are given the information in their database not necessarily
the up to date master record. The problem comes due to the fact
that each ISP updates their database with the new information whenever
they want to. Some do it every night, some every other day and some
up to 3 days.
So even though
you made the nameserver changes it *depend* on when your ISP updates
the info in their database, which can take up to three days even
though your account is activated right away. This does not mean
you cannot access your account and transfer files--you can do that
right away as well as set up all of your mail accounts and more,
but until everyone updates to the new records some people might
not find your site. The process of this filtering of the master
record through the internet is called DNS propugation.
Provided by http://www.e3servers.com/
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