this post was submitted on 05 Jun 2023
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It's similar but with dyndns clients are connected directly to your own IP address (which may occasionally change). Cloudflare Tunnel is what the name implies, a tunnel: you run a process (
cloudflared) on your machine that connects to Cloudflare, and clients will connect to Cloudflare as well. Cloudflare does its thing with the connection, then sends it tocloudflaredwhich forwards it to your actual server process.Benefits compared to dyndns:
Downsides:
Cloudflare provides two options: quick tunnels and permanent ones.
Quick tunnels are temporary but quick to set up: you just run
cloudflared tunnel --url http://localhost, it tells you your URL is something likehttps://some-words-strung-together.trycloudflare.com, and when you stopcloudflared(or it loses the connection) that URL is gone and you can't get it back.Permanent tunnels require more configuration, and you need to already own or control a (sub)domain for Cloudflare to manage. Internally it uses a "crazy hash looking string" domain, but that's just for configuration and not really user-visible. The main differences compared to quick tunnels:
yourdomain.comorsub.yourdomain.netor whatever).