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I suspect that google does not update their DNS cache very often, and if they are not crawling the new site yet it just means that they have not updated their cache.
[webmasterworld.com...]
[webmasterworld.com...]
[webmasterworld.com...]
There's been some good luck with a 301 redirect from a prior URL to the new, and I don't know how well it's working now, but an inbound link to the new IP number can't hurt.
Maybe someone has an authoritative answer for the timeframe.
Any suggestions for moving from one shared IP address to another? Do I want my old host to clear out it's zone file? I'm worried if googlebot doesn't find my site there, it might not find my new site for at least a month which would be very bad for me.
For now, I'm just keeping both sites up, and if I make critical additions, I update the old site as well.
I moved my domain on the 6th of Oct. Googlebot found the new IP on the 8th and spidered deeply for the next two days. However, I also keep seeing googlebot in my old host log files and that googlebot appears to be the fresh bot. Don't know if this helps, but it has me concerned, too. I updated the old host with new pages, mainly in case a human was still going there, but am hoping two different googlebots won't talk to each other and assume there are mirror domains. Since it is the same domain I'm reasonalbly confident they will know this, but ....
I had/have unique IPs at both the old and new hosting service.
So, it is safe to leave the site at old and new IP .. Once we had an issue where the server or name servers have not been changed but the domain went from a shared IP to static IP. And the domain was only accessible on the new IP address and not the old IP. It took Googlebot over 3 months to get over this and it was a good lesson learned for it so as not to repeat this again;)
Yes, you've got it right. Google needs to address this issue to make changing hosts a more deterministic process. Imagine the havoc that would ensue if a large hosting company went out of business... Like a well-known european ISP did recently.
You also picked up correctly on the difference between "moving to a different host (IP address)" versus the "changing domain names". A redirect on your old site wouldn't help you, because you're still using the same domain name, so what could you do, redirect to yourself? Good way to lock up a server, but not much help in your case!
Good luck with this, I hope big G flushes their DNS cache soon!
Jim