Selfhosted
A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.
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Register a domain if you haven't already. I did two, one for internal and one for external. If you want something easy to setup, use nginx. I'm sure there are guides out there to add Let's Encrypt SSL certs to nginx. I personally use Let's Encrypt with Traefik as my reverse proxy. Traefik has a little bit of a learning curve, but once you have it setup and working, it's pretty easy to update and move around.
Once you have your reverse proxy working with a SSL cert, you can start looking at different options to expose your containers. Probably the easiest method is to point your domain to your home IP address and on your router setup port forwarding. I'm not a fan of that because it's probably the most risky exposing ports to the wide internet.
Another option is tunneling, which I think is the best. Cloudflare tunnels is pretty popular and I believe are still free. I have a cheap VPS that I have a Wireguard tunnel setup. With either tunnel option you don't have to make any changes to your home network or firewall.
Why did you register two separate domains instead of using a wildcard cert from LE and just using subdomains?
To separate my internal and external. Both my domains have wild card certs. I have a VPS that connects to my home lab. External requests hit the VPS first. Internal requests bypass the VPS and go straight to my home lab.
I could use a single domain but then my internal requests would reach out to the VPS just to go back to my home lab. I wanted to avoid that extra hop.
Forgive my stupidity, but couldn't you just use split-horizon DNS and have your internal DNS resolve to your homelab instead of the VPS? Personally, that's what I've done. So external lookups for sub.domain.tld go one way and internal lookups go to 10.10.10.x.
Yes, I could do a split DNS and achieve the same thing. I didn't really want to change my DNS settings in my router. I also just like the separation by domain name.