Get a cheap VPS on digital ocean, and make a wireguard tunnel from there to your server. Then you don’t need any open ports on your home network
Get a cheap VPS on digital ocean, and make a wireguard tunnel from there to your server. Then you don’t need any open ports on your home network
Radical Experience, Always Continue Twerking
I use TempleOS btw
It’s pretty easy to do, I set it up using this guide: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qlcVx-k-02E
They reduced the free option from 5 nodes to 3 a while back. Looks like only the people who had the 5 node license received that email.
Why are you manually running backups? Script it and run as a cron job
Yes, I use subdomains.
I pay for one domain name in Cloudflare (e.g. awesomedomain.com
), and have a single “A” record pointing to the public IP of my server, and a single “CNAME” record with a value of *
that points to awesomedomain.com
.
That way, any subdomain gets directed to the server, and then you setup Nginx Proxy Manager to listen for certain subdomains and where to proxy them. No need to manage any further DNS records in Cloudflare, and any changes made on the proxy don’t need any wait time for DNS records to propagate.
Nginx Proxy Manager also handles automatic SSL certs through Let’s Encrypt - I really can’t recommend it enough.
Sounds like you don’t have port forwarding setup.
I highly recommend setting up Nginx Proxy Manager and using it as a reverse proxy.
I have lots of services, but using a reverse proxy means I only have to expose 2 ports (80 & 443) and then I can serve whatever I want, like Plex, over https without a relay.
Get any old enterprise workstation (they practically give Dells away for free) and get to know Docker.
Using multiple Pis for single applications is a fool’s errand - my Optiplex was free and it is running ~30 containers with plenty of room to breathe.
ionos.com is $1/month and you can use external domain names. That plan includes the cost of a domain name as well, so you can transfer the external domain over if you really like it.
Bloat
By default it’s only for the the same account, but you can change it in the download settings to allow transfers to “Steam Friends” or “Anyone”.
I used archinstall
to setup my laptop with Gnome and only use pamac-nosnap
for package management (flatpak is fine, but fuck snaps).
I made the most noob Arch install ever and I love it.
I always go with the binary version if it’s available in the AUR, ain’t nobody got time for that.
That’s beautiful, bro 🥲
TIL it’s actually for changing timestamps.
A CMS is way overkill for what you need.
I suggest something like Hugo, with plenty of templates available and even the ability to host it out of Github, it’s a pretty good option.
I use the Waynergy client on my laptop (gnome & wayland) and Barrier on my PC as the host, and everything’s working.
FOR THE COMMONWEALTH