Ooookay… Took me a second to wrap my head around the layout… Originally I only looked at the picture, which only shows a single switch.
This is an odd topography. Typically when working with switches, you want them connecting directly to the router and not connected to another switch.
You are going to have bandwidth issues out the ass, along with having a troubleshooting nightmare when something goes wrong and you need to trace packets.
Right now you have a hub and a spoke inside a hub and spoke.
Since it looks like your Asus is just an AP in this scenario, you’d be better off:
You can then play around with VLANing on the managed switch. You won’t be able to separate IoT and Personal WiFi signals with VLAN. Youd need to create a guest SSID for that functionality and change the channels to 6 and 11 so you get good bandwidth
Edit: this is assuming you have a layer 3 switch, if its a layer 2 I would use the Asus as a router/AP and hook it directly to the ISP router and hook the switch up to the Asus.
Depends on your definition of safe.
If you do a public port forward and set up basic security and proper SSL its safe from the majority of people.
Looks like it’ll work. You should look into flashing that router with openwrt or pfsense and VLANing off those smart devices… They can be a security issue.
Also adding a second AP that you place on a different channel for guest and untrusted devices would work and increase bandwidth, but adds some routing complexity.
You could host a wireshark instance, and maybe even host a SIEM like security onion.
Yea, I haven’t played with it too much. You’ll ever have to host your own SMTP server to send it or use gmail or protons SMTP service.
Doing it yourself might cause big companies to send your mail to spam or possibly just drop the packets cause you’re not using a trusted IP, have the wrong DNS settings, etc. and your ISP may even block port 25
This can be circumvented by using a SMTP relay service but can still have some issues like mail sending limits.
I would have a failsafe, like use a major email provider for emails that you need to go through for like work order government stuff.
Hosting your own email is a great learning experience and is fun to do; but your emails will get marked as spam, you’ll have to constantly perform maintenance, and have major reliability issues.
Most of the issues youll have are fine for personal use, but is dicey if you plan to migrate 100%
Edit: receiving email is less of an issue of sending. The forwarder should be reliable, however, its the sending from the forwarding address that would possibly be an issue.
No only the server, you can host an openssh server and have clients connect remotely.
Sorta like how you can host a webserver and a client doesn’t need 443 open. Except a reverse shell is possible with ssh, allowing a client to be controlled without their port 22 open.
You can tunnel RDP over SSH. Then you’d only open a port that requires authentication to access and is encrypted.
I’m a tinkering nerd, so I like to have a headless Linux box.
I did use self hosting operating systems in the beginning, and they’re nice. However, when I tried just a plain Ubuntu headless install, I felt way more accomplished after getting everything working.
The reverse is easy, maybe consider hosting the apps as containers?
Personally I’d just spin up a wireguard container with a GUI, user friendly and you can add anyone to your VPN in like 2 minutes wherever you are.
Most advanced part would be forwarding port 51820
A reverse proxy like nginx can automatically implement it for you. Probably the easiest way of generating and using your own SSL with let’s encrypt is a reverse proxy.
I like ads as long as they aren’t super personalized and advertising companies didn’t track my every move I made to deliver it to me.
Plus if admins directly hosted ads they’d get 100% of the revenue, massive advertising companies routinely scalp the revenue and only give pennies to admins that host them.
So you don’t have the root database password, or just the Lemmy user password?
Might be worth it to make a new database and create a new Lemmy user and migrate data from the backup.
I found this article which might help: https://www.postgresqltutorial.com/postgresql-administration/postgresql-reset-password/
I’ve only ever used Maria dB so YMMV.
Subnetting and VLANs can get hard to conceptualize when they are virtualized on a single machine.
I’d suggest going to draw.io and making a logical network diagram so that you can have a reference when setting up your network.
If you want EVERYTHING going through piHole which is on a different subnet, easiest way I’ve done it was make going through the pihole necessary to make it to the default gateway.
But if you have a different situation for pihole you can set up DNS relays.
Did a little research and seems to be a PIA issue; they don’t provide config files… But there is a workaround: https://github.com/pia-foss/manual-connections
Or a Python script to obtain a config file: https://github.com/hsand/pia-wg
But there are other VPNs that will let you download config files for use, I have no idea why PIA makes it hard.
You would need to create a docker image or some sort of container/VM (container preferred) to host wireguard. This is what I personally use: https://github.com/wg-easy/wg-easy
Check out wireguard, its way smaller and faster than OpenVPN and still FOSS.
https://www.privateinternetaccess.com/vpn-features/wireguard
Very user friendly if you install it with a GUI, almost to plug and play level.
I bought a pi0 when I first started hosting things. It ran a pihole and piVPN instance for about 3-4 years before it died.
I would love to have another one, they are great pieces of hardware… but are just scalped to hell. I’ll keep buying old desktops and laptops with higher specs for cheaper until the costs go down.
I use keepassXC and sync across my devices with nextcloud and VPN to my home network with wire guard and this setup has never failed me.
I’ve toyed around with passbolt, and I really want to try because it just looks cool to me, but I keep having trouble with it playing nice with my reverse proxy.
My personal preference is hosting it myself on my own server and using a VPN to get to it. It gives me peace of mind because I’m not a big enough target for someone to try that hard to get my passwords and I’m not exposed to bitwarden or dashlane getting breached.
Might be janky, but if you really wanted this for free you could get a speech to text program like futo, play the video and have it transcribe it and save it to a text file, then copy and paste in the subtitles