You don’t need to do any configuration.
Just connect to your vpn, start every proxy and confgure your clients.
You don’t need to do any configuration.
Just connect to your vpn, start every proxy and confgure your clients.
There is an app called Every Proxy. It doesn’t need root. You just need to adjust proxy settings on your client devices.
It’s a Thinkpad 11e with AMD A series A4-6210 (1.8 GHz), 8GB RAM, 120GB SSD, AMD Radeon R3.
Thanks. I installed Cockpit and disabled a couple of unnecessary services.
Thanks. Yeah I’ll do that. Is it also possible to enable auto power on after power outage and restore? My celeron mini pc has this feature.
Didn’t know it was still being actively developed. Thanks!
Noob here can you please explain what the 2nd line does? Thanks!
Great odea. Any guides/howtos you can share?
Thanks yeah I have a lot of services and Docker containers running on the device. I’ll try disabling logging.
FRP is fine but the https certificate part is not easy/automated.
It’s an http service running on my home server (running openwrt and docker).
SSH and VPN are either blocked or heavily throttled where i live.
Which scripts?
No i just imported an m3u into jellyfin.
Wireguard is blocked at protocol level no matter which port you use. Tailsclale uses wireguard. Haven’t tried headscale yet.
Thanks but I don’t seem to get the point of these proxies. What do they do exactly? Can you give me an example please?
Sorry i should have said i wanted a server not a client.
Caddy was exactly what i needed. It magically solved the problem…
Thanks I understand the theory behind this but I can’t get it to work.
I have a jellyfin.mydomain.com subdomain pointing at my VPS ip. On my home server I have Nginx Proxy Manager listening to 192.168.8.1:8998 (http) and 8999 (https) From my home server I forward port 80 from the VPS to local port 8999 like this:
ssh -R 80:127.0.0.1:8998 root@vps-ip
Then on npm I define a proxy to localhost:8096 (jellyfin) for any traffic sent to jellyfinn.mydomain.com.
But I can’t access jellyfin remotely.
I thought the devs were Indian.