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submitted 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) by palitu@aussie.zone to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world

Hey y'all!

I am after the colelctive expertise of this fantastic community. My family and i are moving overseas for a year for a pacific adventure, which leaves my hosting setup in a bind. We will be renting out our house and i will need to move all of my 'servers' (read laptop and NAS) out.

All of my services are in docker.

My main services that i MUST keep are:

  • Immich
    • 600Gb or so
    • very important as we will be taking a HEAP of photos.
  • paperless
  • vaultwarden
  • custom location tracking service
  • radicale

I would also like to make it so that all of my media is still available, but i may need to get a set up at a friends house. I have jellyfin plus a bunch of *arr's

I was thinking a mix between at a mates house and a cloud server.

any thoughts?

edit: a lot of my services are exposed publicly, via Nginx proxy manager.

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[-] atzanteol@sh.itjust.works 1 points 7 months ago

What benefit do you think the vps provides though?

[-] lemmyvore@feddit.nl 1 points 7 months ago

The most common ones:

  • Hiding your IP when you open services to the internet. Some people live in suburbs or towns where their IP can pinpoint their house almost perfectly.
  • Breaking out of ISP NAT (aka carrier NAT / CGNAT), where clients can't open connections to your public IP.
[-] atzanteol@sh.itjust.works 0 points 7 months ago

Hiding your IP when you open services to the internet.

No it doesn't. It hides it from things accessing your server but your IP address is not a secret and bots will scan it even if you do absolutely nothing on-line. And unless you're using a VPN 24x7 while browsing you give your IP address out more often by "using the internet" than you would by "running a server".

Though I suppose if you're the sort of person who really cares about hiding their IP you're also using a VPN 24x7 anyway... The VPN companies' marketing has worked wonders on spooking people about "your IP is available" it seems. I mean - sure, it is. But who cares?

Breaking out of ISP NAT (aka carrier NAT / CGNAT), where clients can’t open connections to your public IP.

That's fair - if needed.

this post was submitted on 06 Feb 2024
19 points (85.2% liked)

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