You just need to change the nameservers in the NameCheap dashboard to the ones that CloudFlare tells you to use. Once those records are updated, you will manage all the domain's DNS entries through CloudFlare and never touch NameCheap again.@Infernum
so namecheap is the way to go and can be setup with cloud flare? i just want to make the right decision right now every cent i spent counts. i have been looking around, but if you trust them and they good i guess i try them because i need to setup cloudflare.
You just need to change the nameservers in the NameCheap dashboard to the ones that CloudFlare tells you to use. Once those records are updated, you will manage all the domain's DNS entries through CloudFlare and never touch NameCheap again.@Infernum
so namecheap is the way to go and can be setup with cloud flare? i just want to make the right decision right now every cent i spent counts. i have been looking around, but if you trust them and they good i guess i try them because i need to setup cloudflare.
By default, Cloudflare proxies traffic destined for the HTTP/HTTPS ports listed below.
HTTP ports supported by Cloudflare:
HTTPS ports supported by Cloudflare:
- 80
- 8080
- 8880
- 2052
- 2082
- 2086
- 2095
- 443
- 2053
- 2083
- 2087
- 2096
- 8443