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Offchain Gasless DNSSEC Names in ENS
Offchain Gasless DNSSEC Names in ENS

Allows DNS name owners to use their existing domains in the web3 ecosystem for free.

Updated over a week ago

ENS enables millions of traditional domain owners to crypto-enable their domains for free. Making it possible to use, for example, your .com .net or .org DNS name with ENS.

There are two ways to supercharge your DNS name with ENS functionality: Onchain and Offchain. Both methods support DNS names and integrate with DNSSEC (security layer for DNS).

In order to facilitate making the most widely usable naming system, ENS aims to integrate with the legacy DNS naming system to the greatest extent possible without sacrificing decentralization of ENS. ENS governance will not enact changes that compromise ENS’s ability to do this.


Onchain DNS Names in ENS

The onchain method requires that the user set a text record and prove ownership of that name by submitting proofs of those text records to Ethereum. Proving ownership and claiming names can cost of lot in gas/network fees.


Offchain Gasless DNSSEC in ENS

Offchain Gasless DNSSEC is as simple as updating a DNS text record and it works immediately at no cost.

To address high gas costs, Gasless DNSSEC adopts innovations of ERC-3668 CCIP Read and applies them to accessing names that are not onchain. By using CCIP Read to fetch and verify DNS records at the time of resolution, there's no need to submit proof of ownership onchain.

What that means is a DNS owner just needs to set the text record and their DNS records will just automatically work.

No need to send any transactions.

No need to pay any gas.

Your ens name will just start working... instantly.


Instructions

You can only claim existing DNS domain names that you own

1. Enable DNSSEC on any eligible domain

Not all registrars or hosting providers support DNSSEC, and some only support it as an additional paid service.

Supported DNSSEC key types

In order for your registrars or hosting providers DNSSEC to work with ENS it must use either RSA/SHA-256 or ECDSA keys.

If they don’t, you’ll need to migrate to a DNS provider that does.

Hosting providers with DNSSEC support

Hosting provider

Key support

Links

easyDNS

RSA/SHA-256 & ECDSA

Google Cloud DNS

RSA/SHA-256 & ECDSA

Namecheap

RSA/SHA-256 & ECDSA

Hostinger

RSA/SHA-256 & ECDSA

Hostgator

RSA/SHA-256 & ECDSA

Bluehost

RSA/SHA-256 & ECDSA

WordPress does not offer DNSSEC support

If you're using them to host your DNS you will need to migrate to another service for your DNS hosting. This does not mean you will have to stop using Wordpress.


2. Set the following DNS record

Type

Name

Value (this format might change)

Format

TXT

@

ENS1 dnsname.ens.eth <eth-address>

Example

TXT

@

ENS1 dnsname.ens.eth 0xFe89cc7aBB2C4183683ab71653C4cdc9B02D44b7

Note for developers or advanced users: You can use the format ENS1 <resolver-address> with any ENS resolver for full flexibility.

dnsname.ens.eth is just one example we created that can read an ETH address from the same TXT record for simplicity. Learn more about onchain and offchain resolvers.

DNS Subnames

You can gaslessly resolve DNS subdomains too (of any level, 3LD, 4LD, etc) just by adding the same TXT record for that subdomain.


3. Done

Now anybody would be able to type yourname.com into web3 applications that support ENS, and it would resolve to the provided Ethereum address. Try it here.

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