Setting up Route 53
Route 53 is a DNS management service. You don't need to use it if you want to expose subdomains, such as www.example.com
, however, it is indeed obligatory if you want to serve your website data under a naked domain, such as example.com
, hosted on S3 or CloudFront. This is due to the RFC rule: you can't have a CNAME record for your domain root, it must be an A record.
What's the difference? CNAME and A records are both record types that help the DNS system to translate a domain name into an IP address. While CNAME references another domain, an A record references an IP address.
So, if you don't want to use Route 53, you can use your own domain management system, such as GoDaddy, to add a CNAME that will map your www.example.com
domain to an S3 endpoint, for example, www.example.com.s3-website-us-east-1.amazonaws.com
. This configuration works fine, but you can't do the same for example.com
because the IP address of the example.com.s3-website-us-east-1.amazonaws.com
domain...