In some cases, maybe through ignorance, or stubborness, the owner will simply ignore instruction, and do his own thing. Sometimes, the setup will work, but it will still be wrong. Maybe it's a setup recommended by the DNS host technical support staff.
Let's look at one case, again a fictional example "mydomain.com", setup using the "Advanced Settings" wizard.
There are 4 URLs to study here.
- The primary domain "mydomain.com".
- The "www" alias for the domain "www.mydomain.com".
- The primary BlogSpot URL "myblog.blogspot.com".
- The "www" alias for the BlogSpot URL "www.myblog.blogspot.com".
First, let's dig the DNS records for the primary domain "mydomain.com".
;; QUESTION SECTION:
;mydomain.com. IN A
;; ANSWER SECTION:
mydomain.com. 3600 IN A 64.202.189.170
Next, the "www" alias "www.mydomain.com".
;; QUESTION SECTION:
;www.mydomain.com. IN A
;; ANSWER SECTION:
www.mydomain.com. 3600 IN CNAME ghs.google.com.
ghs.google.com. 364681 IN CNAME ghs.l.google.com.
ghs.l.google.com. 300 IN A 72.14.207.121
And examine "64.202.189.170".
pwfwd-v01.prod.mesa1.secureserver.net (64.202.189.170)
64.202.160.0 - 64.202.191.255
GoDaddy.com, Inc.
The latter is using URL forwarding, to redirect "mydomain.com" to "myblog.blogspot.com". URL forwarding is preferred by some DNS hosts, who prefer to not to provide "CNAME" referral for the primary domain, but it's wrong when used in a custom domain setup. For Google Custom Domains, it will partially work, for a while, but unreliably at best. Even if it works for a while, it will potentially cause problems, for everybody.
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