• interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
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      5 hours ago

      Buy the cheapest laptop you can find, with a broken screen it’s fine. Install debian 12 on it give it a memorable name, like “server” go to a DNS registrar of your choice, maybe “porkbun” and buy your internet DNS name for example “MyInternetWebsite.tv”, this will cost you 20$/30$ for the rest of your life, or until we finally abolish the DNS system to something less extortionnate Install webmin and then apache on it go to your router, give the laptop a static address in the DNS section Some router do no have the ability to apply a static dhcp lease to computers on your network, in that case it will be more complicated or you will have to buy a new one, one that preferably supports openwrt. then go to port forwarding and forward the ports 80 and 443 to the address of the static dhcp lease now use puttygen to create a private key, copy that public key to your linux laptop’s file called /root/.ssh/authorized_keys go to the webmin interface, which can be accessed with http://server.lan:10000/ from any computer on your PC and setup dynamic dns, this will make the DNS record for MyInternetWebsite.tv change when the IP of your internet connection changes, which can happen at any time, but usually rarely does. But you have to, or else when it changes again, your website and email will stop working. Now go to your desktop computer, and download winsshfs, put in your private key and mount the folder /var/www/html/ to a drive letter like “T:” Now, whatever you put in T: , will be the content of your very own internet web server enjoy

      • ohshit604@sh.itjust.works
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        2 hours ago

        While i appreciate the detailed response here i did make another comment letting OP know i’m in a similiar situation as them, i use Docker Engine & Docker Compose for my self-hosting needs on a 13th Gen Asus Nuc (i7 model) running Proxmox with a Debian 12 VM. My reverse proxy is traefik and i am able to receive SSL certificates on port :80/:443 (also have Fail2Ban setup) however, i can’t for the life of me figure out how to expose my containers to the internet.

        On my iPhone over LTE/5G trying my domain leads to an “NSURLErrorDomain” and my research of this error doesn’t give me much clarity.

        This is a snippet of my docker-compose.yml
        services:
          homepage:
            image: ghcr.io/gethomepage/homepage
            hostname: homepage
            container_name: homepage
            networks:
              - main
            environment:
              PUID: 0 # optional, your user id
              PGID: 0 # optional, your group id
              HOMEPAGE_ALLOWED_HOSTS: my.domain,*
            ports:
              - '127.0.0.1:3000:3000'
            volumes:
              - ./config/homepage:/app/config # Make sure your local config directory exists
              - /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock #:ro # optional, for docker integrations
              - /home/user/Pictures:/app/public/icons
            restart: unless-stopped
            labels:
              - "traefik.enable=true"
              - "traefik.http.routers.homepage.rule=Host(`my.domain`)"
              - "traefik.http.routers.homepage.entrypoints=https"
              - "traefik.http.routers.homepage.tls=true"
              - "traefik.http.services.homepage.loadbalancer.server.port=3000"
              - "traefik.http.routers.homepage.middlewares=fail2ban@file"
              # - "traefik.http.routers.homepage.tls.certresolver=cloudflare"
              #- "traefik.http.services.homepage.loadbalancer.server.port=3000"
              #- "traefik.http.middlewares.homepage.ipwhitelist.sourcerange=127.0.0.1/32, 192.168.1.0/24, 172.18.0.0/16, 208.118.140.130"
              #- "traefik.http.middlewares.homepage.ipwhitelist.ipstrategy.depth=2"
          traefik:
            image: traefik:v3.2
            container_name: traefik
            hostname: traefik
            restart: unless-stopped
            security_opt:
              - no-new-privileges:true
            networks:
              - main
            ports:
              # Listen on port 80, default for HTTP, necessary to redirect to HTTPS
              - target: 80
                published: 55262
                mode: host
              # Listen on port 443, default for HTTPS
              - target: 443
                published: 57442
                mode: host
            environment:
              CF_DNS_API_TOKEN_FILE: /run/secrets/cf_api_token # note using _FILE for docker secrets
              # CF_DNS_API_TOKEN: ${CF_DNS_API_TOKEN} # if using .env
              TRAEFIK_DASHBOARD_CREDENTIALS: ${TRAEFIK_DASHBOARD_CREDENTIALS}
            secrets:
              - cf_api_token
            env_file: .env # use .env
            volumes:
              - /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime:ro
              - /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro
              - ./config/traefik/traefik.yml:/traefik.yml:ro
              - ./config/traefik/acme.json:/acme.json
              #- ./config/traefik/config.yml:/config.yml:ro
              - ./config/traefik/custom-yml:/custom
              # - ./config/traefik/homebridge.yml:/homebridge.yml:ro
            labels:
              - "traefik.enable=true"
              - "traefik.http.routers.traefik.entrypoints=http"
              - "traefik.http.routers.traefik.rule=Host(`traefik.my.domain`)"
              #- "traefik.http.middlewares.traefik-ipallowlist.ipallowlist.sourcerange=127.0.0.1/32, 192.168.1.0/24, 208.118.140.130, 172.18.0.0/16"
              #- "traefik.http.middlewares.traefik-auth.basicauth.users=${TRAEFIK_DASHBOARD_CREDENTIALS}"
              - "traefik.http.middlewares.traefik-https-redirect.redirectscheme.scheme=https"
              - "traefik.http.middlewares.sslheader.headers.customrequestheaders.X-Forwarded-Proto=https"
              - "traefik.http.routers.traefik.middlewares=traefik-https-redirect"
              - "traefik.http.routers.traefik-secure.entrypoints=https"
              - "traefik.http.routers.traefik-secure.rule=Host(`my.domain`)"
              #- "traefik.http.routers.traefik-secure.middlewares=traefik-auth"
              - "traefik.http.routers.traefik-secure.tls=true"
              - "traefik.http.routers.traefik-secure.tls.certresolver=cloudflare"
              - "traefik.http.routers.traefik-secure.tls.domains[0].main=my.domain"
              - "traefik.http.routers.traefik-secure.tls.domains[0].sans=*.my.domain"
              - "traefik.http.routers.traefik-secure.service=api@internal"
              - "traefik.http.routers.traefik.middlewares=fail2ban@file"
        

        Image of my port-forwarding rules (note; the 3000 internal/external port was me “testing”)


        Edit: I should note the Asus Documentation for Port-forwarding mentions this:

        1. Port Forwarding only works within the internal network/intranet(LAN) but cannot be accessed from Internet(WAN).

        (1) First, make sure that Port Forwarding function is set up properly. You can try not to fill in the [ Internal Port ] and [ Source IP ], please refer to the Step 3.

        (2) Please check that the device you need to port forward on the LAN has opened the port. For example, if you want to set up a HTTP server for a device (PC) on your LAN, make sure you have opened HTTP port 80 on that device.

        (3) Please note that if the router is using a private WAN IP address (such as connected behind another router/switch/modem with built-in router/Wi-Fi feature), could potentially place the router under a multi-layer NAT network. Port Forwarding will not function properly under such environment.

        Private IPv4 network ranges:

        Class A: 10.0.0.0 – 10.255.255.255

        Class B: 172.16.0.0 – 172.31.255.255

        Class C: 192.168.0.0 – 192.168.255.255

        CGNAT IP network ranges:

        The allocated address block is 100.64.0.0/10, i.e. IP addresses from 100.64.0.0 to 100.127.255.255.

        I want to highlight the fact that i may be under a multi-layered NAT, the folks in my household demand the ISP router given that i have PiHole running DNS blocking and my Asus Router routes all outbound connections through a VPN tunnel, besides DDNS obviously which my router also handles, i have to run these routers in bridged-mode so that they share the same WAN IP but, if I am able to receive SSL/TLS certificates from LetsEncrypt on port :80/:443 that means port-forwarding is working as intended right?

      • ohshit604@sh.itjust.works
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        6 hours ago

        I’m in the same boat (sorta)!

        Follow up question, did you have trouble exposing port :80 & :443 to the internet? Also are you also using Swarm or Kubernetes?

        I have the docker engine setup on a machine along side Traefik (have tried Nginx in the past) primarily using Docker Compose and it works beautifully on LAN however I can’t seem to figure out why I can’t connect over the internet, I’m forced to WireGuard/VPN into my home network to access my site.

        No need to provide troubleshooting advice, just curious on your experience.