this post was submitted on 28 Jun 2023
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I've been doing small hosting off and on for a while. Mainly for accessing files at home and the occasional Minecraft server. Not smart, as I've never used a specialized router. I used to use ddwrt, but now it's impossible to flash most consumer grade routers.

id like to learn more stuff about cyber security, host other stuff, maybe host a website, but I'm just a guy who lives in an apartment. I'm stuck with 1 Internet service that claims it will terminate my service if they find me to be hosting anything. They must be semi-lax with that rule, because i haven't gotten terminated for using ssh and cockpit.

Do you guys own a house, or are just fortunate enough to have access to an ISP that will let you host your own stuff?

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[–] Gompje@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

For me it’s simple: my ISP has crippled the upload to 30mbps making it impossible to host something from my home publically (download is 300mbps or more) but I do selfhost on unraid .. it’s just for stuff in my house or for my privately with vpn outside. I run a TON of apps this way.. I just don’t need them to be .. public they are just for me to use at home mostly.

That for me is also selfhosting.

Now that said: I still ask the same question to my isp when they want to upsell me something: and what about the upload? The sales persons mostly don’t know what I mean or how it matters 🤦‍♀️.. anyway I’ve been doing this for 20+ years now…… kinda lost hope? But nah not yet 😏 .. “hoop doet leven” we tell or selves over here (translates to: hope is live)

[–] HiddenRetro@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Same here. I have multiple servers between unraid and proxmox. Everything I have set is for local use. I used to have a few things accessible externally but now revert to using WireGuard if I need to access things locally. Only exception is that I have Nextcloud publicly accessible.

[–] styx@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I have a yearly vps subscription with 16GB ram, 160 GB ssd and 8 cores, including 5TB network limit. It is some Lithuanian company (time4vps). I don't have a static ip at home, and if I want to get one I have to pay pretty much the same amount, so why bother?

It has Debian 11, and ufw as the only security measure, together with Caddy as reverse proxying everything so only a handful of ports are open (80,8080, 443, and one for syncthing and one for dot).

I have the following services running:

  • Nextcloud (for office tools, calendar, to do, boards)
  • firefly iii for self accounting
  • technitium dns server for doh and dot with blocking
  • grafana, prometheus and node exporter foe monitoring
  • libreddit for, well, you know
  • searcxng
  • trilium for private knowledge base
  • tailscale for tunneling and VPN
  • syncthing for file syncing and password sync together with keepassxc
  • my personal page, auto updating with github actions over sftp.

I have partially documented most of my work in my blog, so you can take a look if you wish https://mustafacanyucel.com/#blog .

[–] randomguy2323@lemmy.fmhy.ml 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Your blog looks nice , how did you made it?

[–] styx@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Thank you. It is only css and html, but since my creative skills are no better than a potato's, I am using a designer-made template for css 😅.

I live in an apartment and used to run everything off of an Optiplex, never had any issues with my ISP.

I ended up switching to Oracle's Free Tier. They offer 4 ARM cores with 24 GB of RAM and 200 GB SSD for free.

[–] Soullioness@atosoul.zapto.org 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I've been slowly adding things to the mini PC someone in my family gifted me. I keep thinking there's no way this little machine can take one more thing. But as I sit here it's idling between 10-20% and basically never peaks up to the top. I've had no issues with this little machine keeping up. I also have slow internet, the lowest package offered. But my little champion just keeps proving it's self time and time again. It's made me realize that most people on here are making this sound much more burdensome than it actually is for a personal use server. If it's just you and family, you probably don't need to worry about it.

The more I self host the more I realize everyone needs to be self hosting at least one thing. But really why not more? Things are getting easier and easier mostly because those amongst us with really in depth knowledge are making easy launch scripts and self deploying programs. It's taught me a lot and has been a lot of fun. It's also really practical. I especially like having the FTP which might be the first and easiest thing I setup. It's really cool to have my own cloud it's not super secure being that there's no data redundancy but it's more than adequate for things I already have redundancy for like my whole phone syncs up every night, but I also upload all my photos to a cloud service. I also have common space for me and my spouse to share files really really easily and keep these files all in a common space. This has been helpful when looking for medical records during an emergency. But also just to share larger files in general. We even keep a collection of ebooks on there, we read from my server every night. My kid watches most TV from my server too. This avoids my kid being exposed to most ads I find inappropriate.

[–] world_hopper@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

I have a salvaged desktop in a closet which I use for:

  • pihole (adblock and local dns)
  • unbound for upstream dns (no more 8.8.8.8 dns for me)
  • VPN to access my home network and for some security on public wifi
  • NAS (only via sshfs, want to try nextcloud) where data is stored on a software raid array
  • a couple SQL databases for a hobby project

Since I have ports exposed (I know), I have it configured for no root login, some default ports are set to non default ports, and I have fail2ban installed.

I'm pretty proud of my setup and it's made my life and work flow pretty awesome and simplified, especially with the WFH/hybrid stuff.

I want to try nextcloud so I can consolidate my calendar(s?), and get rid of trello as a service, in addition to serving my NAS files. But i want to test drive it first and I dont have a system to do that properly at the moment.

[–] SocialDoki@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 1 year ago

My ISP used to block ports and have pretty strict anti hosting rules, but I moved to a place with more lax rules on hosting and set up a few things. When I moved back, I kept things exactly as I had them. They must have eased their rules because everything has worked and I've been back for 3 years now and they haven't dinged me.

[–] carroarmato0@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

You can use things like Tailscale or Cloudflare Tunnel for hosting things inside your home network. I'd use Tailscale if only you or a couple of people need access to your internal network and services, or Cloudflare Tunnel if you want to expose your self-hosted services to the outside world.

I personally have the luxury to have 2 internet connections available to me. I live in an apartment where ISP connection A is shared among the residents (they all have their own router connected, so using double-nat, which is not great but it works), and I managed to negotiate with the landlord that I could use a dedicated fiber connection since it does not disrupt the rest of the residents, and my work pays that bill. It's small virtual ISP, so I was also able to request a static public IP.

For my network at home, I'm using a Unifi stack: UDM-Pro and USW-Pro. For running services on my network, I have a server running Unraid where I mostly host services in containers of which I expect a lot of data to be stored on. Rest of my services I run on 6 thinclient grade hardware ( 4 Lenovo ThinkCenter M73 Tiny, 1 HP ProDesk 600 G3 and 1 Shuttle XH61V) using Nomad for the container clustering, docker as the runtime engine, and Consul for service discovery.

My router port-forwards a select number of ports (80 and 443 among things) to my reverse proxy (Traefik) which then routes the connections to the correct services based on the URL and other rules.

But, if your ISP is being difficult... renting a VPS these days is a viable option.

[–] bezerker03@lemmy.bezzie.world 1 points 1 year ago

I have a house with a basement and a fiber connection I run my stuff in. I also have a pair of vps I use for things from racknerd that were black Friday deals (160 a year for 8 core 12 gb ram)