| name | namecheap |
| description | Manage DNS records for domains registered with Namecheap via their API. List domains, view/add/update/remove DNS host entries (A, AAAA, CNAME, MX, TXT, etc.), and guide users through API setup including public IP detection and credential configuration. Use when the user mentions Namecheap, DNS records, domain management, or wants to add/change/remove A records, CNAME records, MX records, or TXT records for their domains. |
Namecheap DNS Management
UTILITY SKILL — manages DNS records via the Namecheap API.
USE FOR: "add DNS record", "update A record", "manage Namecheap domains", "set CNAME", "add MX record", "add TXT record", "list my domains", "show DNS records", "namecheap setup", "configure namecheap API", "what is my public IP"
DO NOT USE FOR: domain registration/purchase, SSL certificate management, hosting configuration, non-Namecheap DNS providers
Workflow
First-time Setup
Before executing any API commands, verify credentials are configured:
- Check for existing config — look for
~/.namecheap-api
- If not configured, guide the user through setup:
a. Show public IP — run
python3 namecheap.py public-ip to display the user's public IP
b. Instruct IP whitelisting — tell the user to go to https://ap.www.namecheap.com/settings/tools/apiaccess/, enable API (select ON), and whitelist the displayed IP
c. Have the user run setup themselves — ask the user to run python3 namecheap.py setup directly in their own terminal. The script prompts for the username and reads the API key with a hidden prompt (getpass), writes ~/.namecheap-api with chmod 600, and validates the connection. Never ask the user to paste their API key into the chat, and never log, echo, or display the API key value. If you cannot run an interactive terminal for the user, instruct them to run setup themselves, or to export NAMECHEAP_API_USER and NAMECHEAP_API_KEY as environment variables in their own shell — rather than collecting the secret via ask_user.
d. Confirm — once the user reports setup succeeded, proceed with DNS operations.
DNS Operations
Use the namecheap.py script (bundled in this skill's directory) for all API interactions. It requires only Python 3 (standard library only — no pip install needed) and works the same on macOS, Linux, and Windows:
python3 namecheap.py public-ip
python3 namecheap.py setup
python3 namecheap.py domains.getList
python3 namecheap.py domains.dns.getList --domain example.com
python3 namecheap.py domains.dns.getHosts --domain example.com
python3 namecheap.py dns.addHost --domain example.com --type A --name www --address 1.2.3.4 --ttl 1800
python3 namecheap.py dns.removeHost --domain example.com --type A --name www --address 1.2.3.4
python3 namecheap.py domains.dns.setHosts --domain example.com --hosts records.json
python3 namecheap.py domains.dns.setDefault --domain example.com
python3 namecheap.py domains.dns.setCustom --domain example.com --nameservers ns1.cloudflare.com,ns2.cloudflare.com
python3 namecheap.py domains.dns.getEmailForwarding --domain example.com
python3 namecheap.py domains.dns.setEmailForwarding --domain example.com --mailbox info --forward-to user@gmail.com
python3 namecheap.py domains.dns.setEmailForwarding --domain example.com --forwards forwards.json
python3 namecheap.py domains.ns.create --domain example.com --nameserver ns1.example.com --ip 1.2.3.4
python3 namecheap.py domains.ns.delete --domain example.com --nameserver ns1.example.com
python3 namecheap.py domains.ns.getInfo --domain example.com --nameserver ns1.example.com
python3 namecheap.py domains.ns.update --domain example.com --nameserver ns1.example.com --old-ip 1.2.3.4 --ip 5.6.7.8
JSON file formats
domains.dns.setHosts --hosts records.json expects an array of objects with Namecheap API field names:
[
{ "HostName": "@", "RecordType": "A", "Address": "1.2.3.4", "TTL": 1800 },
{ "HostName": "www", "RecordType": "CNAME", "Address": "@", "TTL": 1800 },
{ "HostName": "@", "RecordType": "MX", "Address": "mail.example.com.", "TTL": 1800, "MXPref": 10 }
]
domains.dns.setEmailForwarding --forwards forwards.json expects an array of mailbox rules:
[
{ "MailBox": "info", "ForwardTo": "team@example.net" },
{ "MailBox": "sales", "ForwardTo": "owner@example.net" }
]
Behavior
- Always check credentials first. Before any API operation, verify
~/.namecheap-api exists and is readable. If not, run the setup flow.
- Show current records before modifying. Before adding or removing records, always fetch and display the current DNS records so the user can confirm the change.
- Use
ask_user to confirm destructive changes. Before removing records or replacing all records with setHosts, confirm with the user.
- The Namecheap
setHosts API replaces ALL records. Never call domains.dns.setHosts directly unless you have fetched all existing records first. Use dns.addHost and dns.removeHost for safe single-record operations — they handle the fetch-modify-write cycle internally.
- Explain TTL in human terms. When the user asks about TTL, explain that 1800 = 30 minutes, 3600 = 1 hour, etc.
- Handle multi-part TLDs. Domains like
example.co.uk have SLD=example and TLD=co.uk. The script recognizes a built-in list of common second-level suffixes (e.g. co.uk, com.au, co.jp, com.br). This list is best-effort and not a full public-suffix database — if a domain with an unlisted multi-part suffix returns a 2019166 ("Domain not found") error, the SLD/TLD split was likely wrong. In that case, confirm the registered domain with the user and report the limitation.
Credential Storage
Credentials are stored in ~/.namecheap-api:
NAMECHEAP_API_USER="username"
NAMECHEAP_API_KEY="api-key-here"
This file must have 600 permissions (owner read/write only). Alternatively, the script reads credentials from the NAMECHEAP_API_USER and NAMECHEAP_API_KEY environment variables, which take precedence over the file when both are set.
Supported Record Types
A, AAAA, CNAME, MX, MXE, TXT, URL, URL301, FRAME
References
See references/namecheap-api.md for full API documentation including request/response formats.