Google Apps is not the only web services aggregator that we have identifed recently. Yahoo provides a similar setup.
Let's look at a Yahoo Web Services setup, using a hypothetical domain, "mydomain.net" (name changed here to protect the unfortunate).
First, let's dig the DNS records for the primary domain "mydomain.net".
;; QUESTION SECTION:
;mydomain.net. IN A
;; ANSWER SECTION:
mydomain.net. 1200 IN A 68.180.151.21
mydomain.net. 1200 IN A 68.180.151.22
mydomain.net. 1200 IN A 68.180.151.23
mydomain.net. 1200 IN A 68.180.151.24
mydomain.net. 1200 IN A 68.180.151.25
mydomain.net. 1200 IN A 68.180.151.26
p2w12.geo.sp1.yahoo.com (68.180.151.21)
68.180.128.0 - 68.180.255.255
Yahoo
Next, the "www" alias "www.mydomain.net".
;; QUESTION SECTION:
;www.mydomain.net. IN A
;; ANSWER SECTION:
www.mydomain.net. 600 IN CNAME ghs.google.com.
ghs.google.com. 40765 IN CNAME ghs.l.google.com.
ghs.l.google.com. 300 IN A 72.14.207.121
You'll have no problem with publishing to "www.mydomain.net", as the primary URL for "mydomain.net". I don't think that Yahoo Web Services provides an option to "Redirect mydomain.net to www.mydomain.net.", though.
Yahoo provides 6 servers, in contrast to 3 provided by Google. To date, nobody has succeeded in configuring the 6 Yahoo servers to address anything but Yahoo content. This makes Yahoo Web Services useless for using the primary domain in a Google Custom Domain.
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