Skip Navigation
Is it possible to run a reverse proxy only on a specific service or port?
  • How will a reverse proxy help?

    Things that a reverse proxy is often used for:

    • making multiple services hosted on the same IP and port
    • SSL termination so that the wider world speaks https and the proxy speaks http to the server. This means the server doesn't have to do its own key management
    • load balancing services so multiple servers can serve the same request (technically a load balancer but I believe some reverse proxies do basic load balancing)
    • adding authentication in front of services that don't have their own (note that some of the protections/utility is lost if you use http. Anyone who can see your traffic will also be able to authenticate. It's not zero protection though because random internet users probably can't see your traffic)
    • probably something I'm forgetting

    Do any of these match what you're trying to accomplish? What do you hope to gain by adding a reverse proxy (or maybe some other software better suited to your need)?

    Edit: you say you want to keep this service 'private from the web'. What does that mean? Are you trying to have it so only clients you control can access your service? You say that you already have some services hosted publicly using port forwarding. What do you want to be different about this service? Assuming that you do need it to be secured/limited to a few known clients, you also say that these clients are too weak to run SSL. If that's the case, then you have two conflicting requirements. You can't simultaneously have a service that is secure (which generally means cryptographically) and also available to clients which cannot handle cryptography.

    Apologies if I've misunderstood your situation

  • local DNS server does not work as expected
  • Could you post the specific output of the commands that don't work? It's almost impossible to help with just 'It doesn't work'. Like when ping fails, what's the error message. Is it a timeout or a resolution failure. What does the resolvectl command I shared show on the laptop. If you enable logging on the DNS server, do you see the requests coming in when you run the commands that don't work.

  • local DNS server does not work as expected
  • Does it resolve correctly from the laptop or the server. What about resolvectl query server.local on the laptop?

  • local DNS server does not work as expected
  • Isn't .local a mdns auto configured domain? Usually I think you are supposed to choose a different domain for your local DNS zone. But that's probably not the source of the problem?

  • Question: What is Linux misinformation?
  • I've setup okular signing and it worked, but I believe it was with a mime certificate tied to my email (and not pgp keys). If you want I can try to figure out exactly what I did to make it work.

    Briefly off the top of my head, I believe it was

    1. Getting a mime certificate for my email from an authority that provides them. There's one Italian company that will do this for any email for free.
    2. Converting the mime certificate to some other format
    3. Importing the certificate to Thunderbird's (or maybe it was Firefox's) certificate store (and as a sidequest setting up Thunderbird to sign email with that certificate
    4. Telling Okular to use the Thunderbird/Firefox certificate store as the place to find certificates

    I can't remember if there was a way to do this with pgp certificates easily

  • GitHub - timelinize/timelinize: Store your data from all your accounts and devices in a single cohesive timeline on your own computer
  • From looking at the github, I think you don't need to/want to host this publicly. It doesn't automatically get and store your information. It's more a tool for visualizing and cross referencing your takeout/exported data from a variety of tech platforms. It's just developed as a web app for ease of UI/cross platform/ locally hostable.

  • Immutable backup for important data
  • Borg append only seems like the way to do this easily

  • TIL That the entirety of Wikipedia is only ~100Gb and you can download it for offline use
  • I'd be surprised if it was significantly less. A comparable 70 billion parameter model from llama requires about 120GB to store. Supposedly the largest current chatgpt goes up to 170 billion parameters, which would take a couple hundred GB to store. There are ways to tradeoff some accuracy in order to save a bunch of space, but you're not going to get it under tens of GB.

    These models really are going through that many Gb of parameters once for every word in the output. GPUs and tensor processors are crazy fast. For comparison, think about how much data a GPU generates for 4k60 video display. Its like 1GB per second. And the recommended memory speed required to generate that image is like 400GB per second. Crazy fast.

  • TIL That the entirety of Wikipedia is only ~100Gb and you can download it for offline use
  • Chatgpt is also probably around 50-100GB at most

  • Cheap, OpenWrt compatible routers with WiFi 6?
  • Second this router! It had the fastest CPU and antenna vs price when I last looked. I run zerotier as a VPN on it an it works great. Plenty of ram and flash for packages too.

  • Guess how I spent my morning...
  • I think pacreport --unowned-files might be able to help with that too. Showing you files that aren't part of any installed package. Probably only does system files though, nothing in /home

  • Guess how I spent my morning...
  • I use qdirstat a lot to determine what files are eating all my space

  • Cloudflare is bad. Youre right.
  • Your ISP knows where you're going anyway. They don't need DNS for that. They see all the traffic.

  • Voyager 1 Once Again Returning Science Data From All Four Instruments
  • As far as I'm aware, what you cited only proves that there is no ether that acts on light in a way such that the round trip time in the direction of ether travel is different from the round trip time in the direction perpendicular to ether travel.

    It's not merely that:

    somehow the movement of this medium caused the speed of light in one direction to be faster than another due to the movement of this medium, measuring the speed in two directions perpendicular to each other would reveal that difference.

    Instead, it's that the speed of light must be different in the two directions in a way such that their round trip times don't average out to the same average as in the other direction.

    The theories of ether at the time predicted such a round trip difference because of the wind like interactions that you say.

    I believe that this in no way proves anything about the one way speed of light. The Michaelson Morley inteferometer only measures difference in round trip time.

    (Insert comment about the irony of your last statement). See https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/One-way_speed_of_light

  • Microsoft has blocked the bypass that allowed you to create a local account during Windows 11 setup by typing in a blocked email address
  • I rum Creo under wine, and while the performance is great, the stability is not. Creo loves crashing even on windows, and it's much worse on Wine. It's the one program that I kinda wish I had kept dual boot around for.

  • Get rid of landlords...
  • There are a great variety of co-ops. If you define renting narrowly enough, then they are of course different. But the point is that for some (and the co-ops I've seen personally) you don't have to make a down payment for a mortgage like you do with a condo or house. You instead pay a monthly fee that covers the co-op's mortgage/repairs/taxes. Or if the place is fully owned by the co-op, then just the repairs/taxes.

    But you retain the flexibility of renting in that you can leave reasonably easily since you're not personally responsible for the mortgage.

    I think there are also co-ops (possibly more commonly) where it's essentially just a condo where the building is collectively owned by the tenants instead of a for profit company. In that case, it's much less like renting.

  • Get rid of landlords...
  • The other option is a housing coop. Where you still rent, but it's owned by all the renters collectively.

  • Totality in upstate NY
  • We were in Altmar, so kinda close.

  • Totality in upstate NY

    We were in upstate NY, and got extremely lucky with a hole in the clouds right around the sun at totality.

    The red at the bottom was unexpected and very cool to see. It's a solar prominence

    11
    xkcd #2915: Eclipse Clouds
  • I think upstate is forecast to be one of the clearer places

  • maxwellfire Max @lemmy.world
    Posts 1
    Comments 40