Ah I’ll have to look into this then…gotta find a VPS that will hopefully have a Los Angeles location and have decent traffic bandwidth.
IT nerd
- 0 Posts
- 23 Comments
Honestly never thought to use a VPS like that before. We’ve all seen using a VPS as a VPN exit node. Do you run into quota limits on the VPS or Tailscale side? Too many requests/data?
I’m gonna have to look into this for fun lol
Could you explain your setup a bit more? Because my understanding is:
Let’s say you have a blog website in your homelab. To access the blog you have to: you go to your VPS’s hostname/IP, from there the VPS forwards your request over tailscale to your homelab which then responds with your blog website?
If that’s the case, why even have the VPS and instead just use tailscale to access your homelab directly?
Unless you intend to have the VPS be a load balancer in some way? Or a filter/firewall? Or you can’t do a static IP for your homelab but you want it to be publicly accessible?
Just trying to understand why you’re doing it this way. I love seeing all the crazy ways people can set things up like this lol
eli@lemmy.worldto
politics @lemmy.world•DHS says REAL ID, which DHS certifies, is too unreliable to confirm U.S. citizenship
281·3 days agoOh for sure, no doubt about that. Just like the post office date marking on mail being changed. It’s all bullshit the Trump administration is trying to get away with.
eli@lemmy.worldto
politics @lemmy.world•DHS says REAL ID, which DHS certifies, is too unreliable to confirm U.S. citizenship
103·3 days agoStill don’t have my REAL ID, I have my passport. Zero reason to get one until I’m forced to in 2028 when I renew.
Personally at this point I think passports should be free for every US Citizen to get, or at least the card one.
In my experience, people will move with their interests.
I’ve been using reddit for probably 10-15 years. I used to send links to my wife(then girlfriend), but she never used reddit.
In the last year she made a reddit account after moving off of tiktok.
Now I’m on Lemmy pretty much full time because I prefer smaller communities and more specific topics, also less normies.
Trying to browse reddit is like talking with boomers and AI now. No thanks.
eli@lemmy.worldto
politics @lemmy.world•Gen Z men are moving away from MAGA in droves, polls show
191·4 days agoYou can’t help morons unfortunately.
My father is Gen 1 of immigrant parents. His parents HATED Trump. Yet he voted for Trump all three times.
I have a GenZ sister-in-law that uses ChatGPT for relationship advice. Like copies and pastes responses from men into ChatGPT and asks what they’re “really saying” or “what their intentions are”, instead of you know, JUST ASKING THE PERSON OUTRIGHT.
We’re fucked
eli@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•🏳️(TrueNAS) Is my drive dying and should be replaced?🏳️English
3·5 days agoKind of, TrueNAS has “CORE” which is FreeBSD and “SCALE” which is Linux.
If you’re on CORE 13.X you can actually side-grade over to SCALE.
CORE is in maintenance only and SCALE is the path forward. So you can still get some updates on CORE I think, but everyone should be switching over to SCALE or using SCALE from here on out.
Proxmox recommends to not install anything directly on the proxmox host/baremetal.
Personally I would set this up as:
Proxmox installed on whatever single disk or raid 1 array.
Create a TrueNAS(or whatever OS you want) VM inside Proxmox. Mount the rest of the drives directly to the TrueNAS VM via Proxmox’s interface.
In the TrueNAS VM take the drives that were mounted directly to it and setup your array and pool(s) to your preference.
Now, I’d say you have two paths from this point:
- Inside the TrueNAS VM use their tools to create a VM within TrueNAS and use that for your arr stack.
OR
- Go back to Proxmox and create another VM or container and setup your arr stack in that container and point it to your TrueNAS via network mounts using internal networking from within proxmox(virtual bridge with a virtual LAN).
Either option has pros and cons. Doing everything inside TrueNAS will be a bit more simple, but you do complicate your TrueNAS setup and you’re at the mercy of how TrueNAS manages VMs(backups, restores, etc.). On the reverse with Proxmox, setting up the vmbridge and doing the network mounts is more work initially, but keeping the arr stack in a Proxmox VM/container lets you do direct snapshots and backups of the arr stack, and if you ever need to rebuild it or change it to another arr style set of tools then you can blow away the Proxmox VM and start fresh and resetup the network mounts.
Or don’t do any of the above and just install TrueNAS on the box directly as the baremetal OS and do everything inside TrueNAS.
0 bytes free is a broken environment. So that requires a fix during moratorium IMO.
Mint 21 still has support until 2027, so not exactly needed…but I get it when you only see certain family members during specific times of the year.
I’m just saying doing a full migration from ESXI to Proxmox and having to backup all VMs and import them or recreate and doing this during the holidays…I’d rather just sit on the couch and enjoy family time than be stuck in my garage or glued to my laptop.
Upgrading a family member’s laptop while shooting the shit with everyone while drinking a beer or something is just fine. Don’t need 100% focus, you’re good there man.
At work we have a nearly 2 week moratorium that covers Christmas and New Years. We do zero changes unless something breaks on its own. So everyone can take time off without worrying too much.
So I do the same for my homelab. I’ll spin up new stuff for fun(new docker containers to try out new apps), but I don’t touch my stable stuff. No reboots, no updates, no image pulls, nothing.
I’m as much of a nerd as the next guy, but hanging out with my HOA president? Probably the second to last thing I would ever want to do on this planet, and the last being living in a HOA.
No one is going to be interested in…whatever you’re trying to setup. Sorry buddy
I do this as well. Though if I’m deploying a stack(grafana+prometheus+cadvisor) then it all goes under a single folder like
/opt/stackname/But if I’m running multiple services that are mostly separate or not in the same stack then they go in their own folders like
/opt/nginx/and/opt/grafana/
eli@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How do you manage your home server configuration?English
1·16 days agoYes, essentially I have:
Proxmox Baremetal ↪LXC1 ↪Docker Container1 ↪LXC2 ↪Docker Container2 ↪LXC3 ↪Docker Container 3Or using real services:
Proxmox Baremetal ↪Ubuntu LXC1 192.168.1.11 ↪Docker Stack ("Profana") ↪cadvisor grafana node_exporter prometheus ↪Ubuntu LXC2 192.168.1.12 ↪Docker Stack ("paperless-ngx") ↪paperless-ngx-webserver-1 apache/tika gotenberg postgresdb redis ↪Ubuntu LXC3 192.168.1.13 ↪Docker Stack ("teamspeak") ↪teamspeak mariadbI do have a AMP game server, which AMP is installed in the Ubuntu container directly, but AMP uses docker to create the game servers.
Doing it this way(individual Ubuntu containers with docker installed on each) allows me to stop and start individual services, take backups via proxmox, restore from backups, and also manage things a bit more directly with IP assignment.
I also have pfSense installed as a full VM on my Proxmox and pfSense handles all of my firewall rules and SSL cert management/renewals. So none of my ubuntu/docker containers need to configure SSL services, pfSense just does SSL offloading and injects my SSL certs as requests come in.
I have an old Windows laptop. I need to figure out how to do dual boot with Linux
For this I would recommend:
- Install Windows first
- In Windows, partition the disk drive to how much storage you want. So if you have a 1TB, then maybe do 500GB for Windows and 500GB for Linux? Leave the new partition as unformatted/unallocated
- Boot up your linux installer and select the unformatted/unallocated partition for Linux to install to. Don’t erase whole disk. But let Linux setup all of it’s own formatting and partitions on the empty space
Now why do it this way? Because Windows does NOT like the boot manager being replaced and does NOT like disk space go “missing” unless it allocates it itself. If you install Windows first it’ll setup the boot manager for Windows and then when you install Linux grub will get installed and that can manage Windows pretty well.
And if you let Windows partition off the blank space for Linux then Windows knows that that empty partition isn’t owned by Windows anymore and it won’t freak out seeing the space go missing when Linux takes it over.
This article covers most: https://linuxblog.io/dual-boot-linux-windows-install-guide/
If you have two individual disk drives then I would do the same thing, install Windows on one of the drives, boot into Windows, and make sure the second drive shows up in disk utility, but it isn’t formatted for use in Windows, just unallocated/blank. Then when you install Linux you just tell it to install onto the second drive.
and get my vpn sorted (again) so he can use VMs on my Proxmox box
I would 100% recommend Tailscale for this. You can install Tailscale on the Proxmox host and then have your nephew have his own Tailscale account where you can give him access to only the Proxmox box.
I do this with my Proxmox boxes so I can remotely manage them wherever I am. When you first install Tailscale on Proxmox it may require a reboot, so I would recommend being nearby the server so you can login physically if needed, but after it has been smooth sailing for me. Been using it like this for a year or two now.
Of course just a suggestion.
I don’t have any books in particular to recommend, but with homelab’ing we should be learning about the command line of our OS(Powershell, terminal(bash, zsh)).
Learning the ins and outs of something like bash, cron, environment variables, for loops, systemd services(managing, creating your own), command line networking…all things I’ve had to learn to either setup, manage, and/or troubleshoot my homelab.
So maybe basic Linux command line books? Probably O’Reilly has some along with bash.
eli@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How do you manage your home server configuration?English
2·19 days agoThis is pretty much my setup as well. Proxmox on bare metal, then everything I do are in Ubuntu LXC containers, which have docker installed inside each of them running whatever docker stack.
I just installed Portainer and got the standalone agents installed on each LXC container, so it’s helped massively with managing each docker setup.
Of course you can do whatever base image you want for the LXC container, I just prefer Ubuntu for my homelab.
I do need to setup a golden image though to make stand-ups easier…one thing at a time though!
While I love and run Grafana and Prometheus myself, it’s like taking a RPG to an ant.
There are simpler tools that do the job just fine of “is X broken?”.
Even just running Portainer and attaching it to a bunch of standalone Docker environments is pretty good too.
I run proxmox for my own homelab and another instance for very small services inside my LAN.
Anyway, I have gotten into docker recently and my method so far has been to spin up a LXC container of just a base OS(like Ubuntu or Alpine or whatever) and then install docker and whatever else inside that container and then run my service.
So I have one container per service. Now my problem is how to manage the docker side without having to go into each container individually. I have tried portainer but it’s not clicking with me.
I’ve actually been trying to find a solution to just have docker on a bare metal OS install and that be my hypervisor, but I can’t get a clear answer on anything, so Proxmox seems to be my only option.
Proxmox is a very solid option, but it is not “less intensive” than Debian since it is built on top of Debian. Proxmox does not install a desktop environment(it has a web GUI), so that may help with keeping resources low, but it isn’t some magical solution.
I would recommend trying it 100%, there is a little bit of a learning curve getting to know Proxmox, but it’s the best hypervisor I’ve used for homelab so far.


Just looked, I guess USA servers only include 1TB of bandwidth, EU gets 20TB included.
Absolutely wild lol.