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I own foo.com and bar.com. I am managing both in Route53. foo.com hosts my site, and I'd like to direct traffic from bar.com to foo.com. I tried to set up a CNAME record for bar.com pointing to foo.com, but I got the error message:

RRSet of type CNAME with DNS name foo.com. is not permitted at apex in zone bar.com.

Why doesn't this work, and what can I do instead?

7 Answers 7

141

As per RFC1912 section 2.4:

 A CNAME record is not allowed to coexist with any other data.  In
 other words, if suzy.podunk.xx is an alias for sue.podunk.xx, you
 can't also have an MX record for suzy.podunk.edu, or an A record, or
 even a TXT record.  Especially do not try to combine CNAMEs and NS 
 records like this!:

           podunk.xx.      IN      NS      ns1
                           IN      NS      ns2
                           IN      CNAME   mary
           mary            IN      A

The RFC makes perfect sense as the nameserver wouldn't know whether it needs to follow the CNAME or answer with the actual record the CNAME overlaps with. bar.com is a zone therefore it implicitly has an SOA record for the bar.com name. You can't have both a SOA record and a CNAME with the same name.

However, given that SOA records are generally used only for zone maintenance, these situations where you want to provide a CNAME at the zone's apex are quite common. Even though the RFC prohibits it, many engineers would like a behaviour such as: "follow the CNAME unless the query explicitly asks for the SOA record". That's why Route 53 provides alias records. These are a Route 53 specific feature which offer the exact functionality you require. Have a look at http://docs.aws.amazon.com/Route53/latest/DeveloperGuide/CreatingAliasRRSets.html

6
  • 14
    When creating a record in Route 53 so that a domain apex is directed to a classic ELB you create an alias to an A record rather than to a CNAME. The detailed instructions can be found here: docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/…
    – ewalshe
    Feb 1, 2017 at 21:55
  • @ewalshe maybe make this an answer to give this more visibility?
    – Jonathan
    Sep 4, 2017 at 19:19
  • But aren't CNAMES supposed to mask other domains? i.e. foo.com to bar.com, but the user's browser would still show foo.com? What would I search for that functionality? Sep 12, 2018 at 5:14
  • 1
    my SSL certificate has expired and AWS emailed me to create CNAME for the hosts I have, but I already have A record, what to do now?
    – eugene
    Jun 26, 2020 at 13:07
  • @eugene I assume you're referring to AWS' DNS based domain ownership verification: docs.aws.amazon.com/acm/latest/userguide/… If that's the case, then Amazon asks you to add a CNAME for a SUBDOMAIN of the domain you claim to own. The first label in the CNAME they ask you to create is randomly generated, so there shouldn't be an issue with it overlapping with any other record. Jul 1, 2020 at 16:20
84
  1. Create an S3 Bucket called bar.com. (The name must be the same as the domain you want to redirect from in order for this to work!)
  2. In the bar.com S3 Bucket go to Properties > Static Website Hosting, select Redirect all requests to another host name and enter foo.com in the text box.
  3. Back in Route 53, in your Hosted Zone for bar.com, click Create Record Set. Select A - IPv4 address for type. Click Yes for Alias. Click the text box for Alias Target. bar.com should be listed under -- S3 Website Endpoints --. Save the record. Wait a few minutes and you should have a redirect setup to redirect requests from bar.com to foo.com.

You can use this same method to redirect a naked domain to a subdomain (like www). I use this in cases where www.foo.com has to be a CNAME so I redirect from foo.com to www.foo.com with this same method. If foo.com is an A record, you can use this technique to redirect from www.foo.com to foo.com.

NOTE: this method will forward with the full path. i.e. http://bar.com/test will forward to http://foo.com/test.

4
  • 2
    I've found my s3 bucket name is not loading when AWS Route 53 showing available ones to link. I read somewhere it may matter what AWS Console user you create this as and perhaps what region...
    – bjm88
    Sep 18, 2017 at 18:24
  • foo.com/test works for me but accessing bar.com/test gives me an AccessDenied error. Anyone have suggestions? I wasn't able to change bucket policy on the shell bar.com account.
    – Sean
    Dec 11, 2018 at 7:00
  • @bjm88 - Your problem is probably the same as mine. You have to create a new bucket with literally "example.com" as the name! My bucket was dev-portfolio and I had to recreate a new bucket and name it myName.com and then it worked. Mar 15, 2021 at 20:48
  • Thanks for the tips. I was missing the #1 step.
    – Vikram Ray
    Sep 20, 2022 at 18:35
26

On Route53, You need to create an A record NOT a CNAME record, and create an alias under that.

From @ewalshe's comment on Alexandru Cucu's answer, if you came here trying to setup API Gateway with a custom domain name and have a Cloudfront distribution url.

1
  • I have a A record, and certificate renew failed and aws emailed me suggesting to create CNAME ... what to do?
    – eugene
    Jun 26, 2020 at 13:01
4

Jonathan answer is correct. If you still confuse with his answer please take a look of this example.

enter image description here

1

tldr; You have to pass in an FQDN as the ResourceRecordSet name.

I had this same problem using this statement c# snip:

 private static void RegisterHostWithDns(IAmazonRoute53 ec2,SynoviaImage image)
        {
            var changeBatch = new ChangeBatch();
            var rRs = new ResourceRecordSet(image.Name, RRType.CNAME) {TTL=60,ResourceRecords = new List<ResourceRecord>() { new ResourceRecord(image.PublicDns)} };
            var change = new Change(ChangeAction.UPSERT, rRs);
            changeBatch.Changes.Add(change);
            var request = new ChangeResourceRecordSetsRequest(ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["DnsZoneId"], changeBatch);
            var response = ec2.ChangeResourceRecordSets(request);
            Console.WriteLine("Updated CNAME For {0} setting {1}",image.Name,image.PublicDns);
        }

In this case image.Name == "Listener"

Once I changed it to:

 private static void RegisterHostWithDns(IAmazonRoute53 ec2,SynoviaImage image)
        {
            var changeBatch = new ChangeBatch();
            var rRs = new ResourceRecordSet(string.Format("{0}.{1}",image.Name, "testing.foo.bar.com"), RRType.CNAME) {TTL=60,ResourceRecords = new List<ResourceRecord>() { new ResourceRecord(image.PublicDns)} };
            var change = new Change(ChangeAction.UPSERT, rRs);
            changeBatch.Changes.Add(change);
            var request = new ChangeResourceRecordSetsRequest(ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["DnsZoneId"], changeBatch);
            var response = ec2.ChangeResourceRecordSets(request);
            Console.WriteLine("Updated CNAME For {0} setting {1}",image.Name,image.PublicDns);
        }

now the value being passed in is: "Listener.fully.qualified.com"

It works now.

1

Please note that this error can happen if you forgot to enter something in the 'Record Name' field.

That is, it may expect www, and if you forgot that, you'll see the error, even if everything else is correct.

It's a small chance, but if you forgot to enter www in the 'Record Name' field, go and do that, and everything should work.

0
-4

You should use the DNAME instead of a CNAME. A CNAME record is only able to redirect the label to another label.

When you talk about redirecting domain names instead of labels, you should use DNAME

$ORIGIN bar.com
           IN      DNAME   foo.com

This also means that every A, NS and any more records should be deleted. This have to be configured in the foo.com domain.

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  • 2
    DNAME is defined in RFC 2672. Could you explain how this relates to OP? Route53 does not allow SOA or NS record deletion, at least from the standard interface and DNAME isn't an available option.
    – vhs
    Mar 11, 2019 at 10:32
  • 1
    There is no DNAME in route53
    – surga
    Jul 10, 2021 at 8:35

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