Example CNAME record
- Type: CNAME
- Name:
resolve.example.com - Target:
domain.s3.amazonaws.com - TTL:
Auto - Proxy status: Proxied (orange cloud icon)
The following sections describe the available settings in Origin Rules.
Allows you to rewrite the HTTP Host header of incoming requests.
A common use case for this functionality is when your content is hosted on a third-party server that only accepts Host headers with their own server names. In this situation, you must update the Host HTTP header in incoming requests from Host: example.com to Host: thirdpartyserver.example.net.
Allows you to override the Server Name Indication (SNI) 1 value of a request. For more information, refer to What is SNI (Server Name Indication)? ↗ in the Learning Center.
The new SNI value must be a valid hostname on the same Cloudflare account (possibly on a different zone).
Allows you to override the resolved hostname of incoming requests. This functionality is also known as resolve override.
A common use case is when you are serving an application from the URI (for example, mydomain.com/app). In this case, the app may be hosted on a different server or by a third party. A DNS record override allows you to redirect requests to this endpoint to the server for that third-party application.
You must specify a valid hostname in a DNS record override that is a hostname on the same Cloudflare account (possibly on a different zone).
You can configure a DNS record (a CNAME, A, or AAAA record) with a hostname pointing to a third-party hostname/IP address, either proxied by Cloudflare or not.
The following example DNS records configure a resolve.example.com hostname pointing to an external hostname and IP address using a CNAME record and an A record, respectively:
Example CNAME record
resolve.example.comdomain.s3.amazonaws.comAuto
Example A record
resolve.example.com203.0.113.1AutoAllows you to override the destination port of a request.
When you configure a destination port override, you can redirect incoming requests to a different port. For example, you could override the destination port for requests received for mydomain.com so that they are served by the application running on port 9000 (mydomain.com:9000).
The destination port must be between 1 and 65,535.
SNI allows a server to host multiple TLS Certificates for multiple websites using a single IP address. SNI adds the website hostname in the TLS handshake to inform the server which website to present when using shared IPs. ↩