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submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by 7Sea_Sailor@lemmy.dbzer0.com to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world

@selfhosted@lemmy.world

Mid 2022, a friend of mine helped me set up a selfhosted Vaultwarden instance. Since then, my "infrastructure" has not stopped growing, and I've been learning each and every day about how services work, how they communicate and how I can move data from one place to another. It's truly incredible, and my favorite hobby by a long shot.

Here's a map of what I've built so far. Right now, I'm mostly done, but surely time will bring more ideas. I've also left out a bunch of "technically revelant" connections like DNS resolution through the AdGuard instance, firewalls and CrowdSec on the main VPS.

Looking at the setups that others have posted, I don't think this is super incredible - but if you have input or questions about the setup, I'll do my best to explain it all. None of my peers really understand what it takes to construct something like this, so I am in need of people who understand my excitement and proudness :)

Edit: the image was compressed a bit too much, so here's the full res image for the curious: https://files.catbox.moe/iyq5vx.png And a dark version for the night owls: https://files.catbox.moe/hy713z.png

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[-] empireOfLove2@lemmy.dbzer0.com 51 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

me after 15 years of intermittent learning self hosting:

i have the one random office PC that runs minecraft

....yeah that's it

[-] RiderExMachina@lemmy.ml 11 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

With the enshittification of streaming platforms, a Kodi or Jellyfin server would be a great starting point. In my case, I have both, and the Kodi machine gets the files from the Jellyfin machine through NFS.

Or Home Assistant to help keep IOT devices that tend to be more IoS. Or a Nextcloud server to try to degoogle at least a little bit.

Maybe a personal Friendica instance for your LAN so your family can get their Facebook addiction without giving their data to Meta?

[-] Specal@lemmy.world 4 points 11 months ago

Additionally, using jottacloud with 2 VPS's (one of them being built on epyc like from OVH cloud) can get you a really good download server and streaming server for about £30 a month, which is the same as having netflix and Disney plus, except now you can have anything you want.

I have a contabo 4core 8gb ram VPS that handles downloading content.

A OVH 4core 8gb VPS that handles emby (I keep trying to go back to jellyfin but it's just slightly slower than emby at transcoding and I need to squeeze as much performance out of my VPS as possible so... Maybe one day jelly)

And I have a really good streaming experience with subtitles that don't put big black boxes on the screen making 1/8th of the screen non viewable.

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[-] Turun@feddit.de 4 points 11 months ago

Nice

Only host what you need.

[-] IlIllIIIllIlIlIIlI@lemmy.world 35 points 11 months ago

This seems like work but from/for home.

[-] jelloeater85@lemmy.world 24 points 11 months ago

You should see some of the literal data centers folks have in their houses. It's nuts.

I've saved this. I set up unraid and docker, have the home media server going, but I'm absolutely overwhelmed trying to understand reverse proxy, Caddy, NGINX and the security framework. I guess that's my next goal.

[-] 7Sea_Sailor@lemmy.dbzer0.com 27 points 11 months ago

Hey! I'm also running my homelab on unraid! :D

The reverse proxy basically allows you to open only one port on your machine for generic web traffic, instead of opening (and exposing) a port for each app individually. You then address each app by a certain hostname / Domain path, so either something like movies.myhomelab.com or myhomelab.com/movies.

The issue is that you'll have to point your domain directly at your home IP. Which then means that whenever you share a link to an app on your homelab, you also indirectly leak your home location (to the degree that IP location allows). Which I simply do not feel comfortable with. The easy solution is running the traffic through Cloudflare (this can be set up in 15 minutes), but they impose traffic restrictions on free plans, so it's out of the question for media or cloud apps.

That's what my proxy VPS is for. Basically cloudflare tunnels rebuilt. An encrypted, direct tunnel between my homelab and a remote server in a datacenter, meaning I expose no port at home, and visitors connect to that datacenter IP instead of my home one. There is also no one in between my two servers, so I don't give up any privacy. Comes with near zero bandwith loss in both directions too! And it requires near zero computational power, so it's all running on a machine costing me 3,50 a month.

I appreciate this thoughtful reply. I read it a few times, I think I understand the goal. Basically you're systematically closing off points that leak private information or constitute a security weakness. The IP address and the ports.

For the VPS, in order for that to have no bandwidth loss, does that mean it's only used for domain resolution but clients actually connect directly to your own server? If not and if all data has to pass through a data center, I'd assume that makes service more unreliable?

[-] 7Sea_Sailor@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 11 months ago

Your first paragraph hits the nail on the head. From what I've read, bots all over the net will find any openly exposed ports in no time and start attacking it blindly, putting strain on your router and a general risk into your home network.

Regarding bandwith: 100% of the traffic via the domain name (not local network) runs through the proxy server. But these datacenters have 1 to 10 gigabit uplinks, so the slowest link in the chain is usually your home internet connection. Which, in my case, is 500mbit down and 50mbit up. And that's easily saturated on both directions by the tunnel and VPS. plus, streaming a 4K BluRay remux usually only requires between 35 and 40 mbit of upload speed, so speed is rarely a worry.

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[-] dan@upvote.au 21 points 11 months ago

I'd recommend using Borgbackup over SSH, instead of just using rclone for backups. As far as I know, rclone is like rsync in that you only have one copy of the data. If it gets corrupted at the source, and that gets synced across, your backup will be corrupted too. Borgbackup and Borgmatic are a great way to do backups, and since it's deduplicated you can usually store months of daily backups without issue. I do daily backups and retain 7 daily backups, 4 weekly backups, and 'infinite' monthly backups (until my backup server runs out of space, then I'll start pruning old monthly backups).

Borgbackup also has an append-only mode, which prevents deleting backups. This protects the backup in case the client system is hacked. Right now, someone that has unauthorized access to your main VPS could in theory delete both the system and the backup (by connecting via rclone and deleting it). Borg's append-only mode can be enabled per SSH key, so for example you could have one SSH key on the main VPS that is in append-only mode, and a separate key on your home PC that has full access to delete and prune backups. It's a really nice system overall.

[-] 7Sea_Sailor@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 points 11 months ago

You're right, that's one of the remaining pain points of the setup. The rclone connections are all established from the homelab, so potential attackers wouldn't have any traces of the other servers. But I'm not 100% sure if I've protected the local backup copy from a full deletion.

The homelab is currently using Kopia to push some of the most important data to OneDrive. From what I've read it works very similarly to Borg (deduplicate, chunk based, compression and encryption) so it would probably also be able to do this task? Or maybe I'll just move all backups to Borg.

Do you happen to have a helpful opinion on Kopia vs Borg?

[-] dan@upvote.au 4 points 11 months ago

I haven't tried Kopia, so unfortunately I can't compare the two. A lot of the other backup solutions don't have an equivalent to Borg's append-only mode though.

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[-] thantik@lemmy.world 16 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

Very nice setup imho. Quite a bit more complicated than mine - mine is basically just the left box without being behind a VPS or anything. I don't expose anything through Caddy except Jellyfin. I'm also running fail2ban in front of my services, so that if it gets hit with too many 404s because someone is poking around, they get IP banned for 30d

[-] 7Sea_Sailor@lemmy.dbzer0.com 6 points 11 months ago

I'm still on the fence if I want to expose Jellyfin publicly or not. On the one hand, I never really want to stream movies or shows from abroad, so there's no real need. And in desperate times I can always connect to Tailscale and watch that way. But on the other, it's really cool to simply have a web accessible Netflix. Idk.

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[-] ginko@lemmy.world 14 points 11 months ago

Architecture looks dope

Hope you've safeguarded your setup by writing a provisoning script in case anything goes south.

I had to reinstall my server from scratch twice and can't fathom having to reconfigure everything manually anymore

[-] 7Sea_Sailor@lemmy.dbzer0.com 12 points 11 months ago

Nope, don't have that yet. But since all my compose and config files are neatly organized on the file system, by domain and then by service, I tar up that entire docker dir once a week and pull it to the homelab, just in case.

How have you setup your provisioning script? Any special services or just some clever batch scripting?

[-] ginko@lemmy.world 4 points 11 months ago

Old school ansible at first, then I ditched it for Cloudbox (an OSS provisioning script for media server)

Works wonders for me but I believe it's currently stuck on a deprecated Ubuntu release

[-] N0x0n@lemmy.ml 13 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

Possible for a dark mode version XD? excalidraw can do that.

[-] 7Sea_Sailor@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 points 11 months ago

Of course! here you go: https://files.catbox.moe/hy713z.png. The image has the raw excalidraw data embedded, so you can import it to the website like a save file and play around with the sorting if need be.

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[-] Decronym@lemmy.decronym.xyz 10 points 11 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I've seen in this thread:

Fewer Letters More Letters
DNS Domain Name Service/System
HTTP Hypertext Transfer Protocol, the Web
HTTPS HTTP over SSL
IP Internet Protocol
Plex Brand of media server package
SSH Secure Shell for remote terminal access
SSL Secure Sockets Layer, for transparent encryption
TCP Transmission Control Protocol, most often over IP
VPN Virtual Private Network
VPS Virtual Private Server (opposed to shared hosting)
k8s Kubernetes container management package
nginx Popular HTTP server

11 acronyms in this thread; the most compressed thread commented on today has 15 acronyms.

[Thread #473 for this sub, first seen 2nd Feb 2024, 05:25] [FAQ] [Full list] [Contact] [Source code]

[-] krash@lemmy.ml 10 points 11 months ago

How do you like crowdsec? I've used it on a tiny VPS (2 vcpu / 1 GB RAM) and it hogs my poor machine. I also found it to have a bit of learning curve, compared to fail2ban (which is much simpler, but dosen't play well with Caddy by default).

Would be happy to see your Caddy / Crowdsec configuration.

[-] 7Sea_Sailor@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

The crowdsec agent running on my homelab (8 Cores, 16GB RAM) is currently sitting idle at 96.86MiB RAM and between 0.4 and 1.5% CPU usage. I have a separate crowdsec agent running on the Main VPS, which is a 2 vCPU 4GB RAM machine. There, it's using 1.3% CPU and around 2.5% RAM. All in all, very manageable.

There is definitely a learning curve to it. When I first dove into the docs, I was overwhelmed by all the new terminology, and wrapping my head around it was not super straightforward. Now that I've had some time with it though, it's become more and more clear. I've even written my own simple parsers for apps that aren't on the hub!

What I find especially helpful are features like explain, which allow me to pass in logs and simulate which step of the process picks that up and how the logs are processed, which is great when trying to diagnose why something is or isn't happening.

The crowdsec agent running on my homelab is running from the docker container, and uses pretty much exactly the stock configuration. This is how the docker container is launched:

  crowdsec:
    image: crowdsecurity/crowdsec
    container_name: crowdsec
    restart: always
    networks:
      socket-proxy:
    ports:
      - "8080:8080"
    environment:
      DOCKER_HOST: tcp://socketproxy:2375
      COLLECTIONS: "schiz0phr3ne/radarr schiz0phr3ne/sonarr"
      BOUNCER_KEY_caddy: as8d0h109das9d0
      USE_WAL: true
    volumes:
      - /mnt/user/appdata/crowdsec/db:/var/lib/crowdsec/data
      - /mnt/user/appdata/crowdsec/acquis:/etc/crowdsec/acquis.d
      - /mnt/user/appdata/crowdsec/config:/etc/crowdsec

Then there's the Caddyfile on the LabProxy, which is where I handle banned IPs so that their traffic doesn't even hit my homelab. This is the file:

{
	crowdsec {
		api_url http://homelab:8080
		api_key as8d0h109das9d0
		ticker_interval 10s
	}
}

*.mydomain.com {
	tls {
		dns cloudflare skPTIe-qA_9H2_QnpFYaashud0as8d012qdißRwCq
	}
	encode gzip
	route {
		crowdsec
		reverse_proxy homelab:8443
	}
}

Keep in mind that the two machines are connected via tailscale, which is why I can pass in the crowdsec agent with its local hostname. If the two machines were physically separated, you'd need to expose the REST API of the agent over the web.

I hope this helps clear up some of your confusion! Let me know if you need any further help with understanding it. It only gets easier the more you interact with it!

don't worry, all credentials in the two files are randomized, never the actual tokens

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[-] callcc@lemmy.world 8 points 11 months ago

Remeber, the more boxes you have, the more advanced you are as an admin! Once you do his job for money, the challenge is the exact opposite. The less parts you have, the better. The more vanilla they are, the better.

[-] 7Sea_Sailor@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 points 11 months ago

Absolutely! To be honest, I don't even want to have countless machines under my umbrella, and constantly have consodilation in mind - but right now, each machine fulfills a separate purpose and feels justified in itself (homelab for large data, main VPS for anything thats operation critical and cant afford power/network outages and so on). So unless I find another purpose that none of the current machines can serve, I'll probably scale vertically instead of horizontally (is that even how you use that expression?)

[-] kadotux@lemmings.world 8 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

I saved this! Yeah, it seems like a lot of work, but I got inspired again (I had a slight self-hosting burnout and nuked my raspberry setup ~year ago) so I appreciate it. :) Can I ask what hardware you run this on? edit: I just wanted to ramble some more: I just fired up my rPI4 again just last week, setup it with just as barebone VPS with wireguard, samba, jellyfin and pi-hole+unbound (as to not burn myself again :D )

[-] 7Sea_Sailor@lemmy.dbzer0.com 7 points 11 months ago

Glad to have gotten you back into the grind!

My homelab runs on an N100 board I ordered on Aliexpress for ~150€, plus some 16GB Corsair DDR5 SODIMM RAM. The Main VPS is a 2 vCPU 4GB RAM machine, and the LabProxy is a 4 vCPU 4GB RAM ARM machine.

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[-] rutrum@lm.paradisus.day 8 points 11 months ago

What software did you use to make this image? Its very well done

[-] 7Sea_Sailor@lemmy.dbzer0.com 11 points 11 months ago

Thank you! It's done in excalidraw.com. Not the most straightforward for flowcharts, took me some time to figure out the best way to sort it all. But very powerful once you get into the flow.

If you're feeling funny, you can download the original image from the catbox link and plug it right back into the site like a save file!

[-] brbposting@sh.itjust.works 6 points 11 months ago

Now just gotta understand everything beyond… Jellyfin haha

[-] filister@lemmy.world 4 points 11 months ago

Draw.io is also pretty good or lucidcharts

[-] BoiLudens@lemmy.world 6 points 11 months ago

I have taken a picture and shall study it

[-] jkrtn@lemmy.ml 5 points 11 months ago

I've seen Caddy mentioned a few times recently, what do you like about it over other tools?

[-] 7Sea_Sailor@lemmy.dbzer0.com 7 points 11 months ago

In addition to the other commenter and their great points, here's some more things I like:

  • ressource efficient: im running all my stuff on low end servers, and cant afford my reverse proxy to waste gigabytes of RAM (kooking at you, NPM)
  • very easy syntax: the Caddyfile uses a very simple, easy to remember syntax. And the documentation is very precise and quickly tells me what to do to achieve something. I tried traefik and couldn't handle the long, complicated tag names required to set anything up.
  • plugin ecosystem: caddy is written in go, and very easy to extend. There's tons of plugins for different functionalities, that are (mostly) well documented and easy to use. Building a custom caddy executable takes one command.
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[-] xantoxis@lemmy.world 6 points 11 months ago

I can answer this one, but mainly only in reference to the other popular solutions:

  • nginx. Solid, reliable, uncomplicated, but. Reverse proxy semantics have a weird dependency on manually setting up a dns resolver (why??) and you have to restart the instance if your upstream gets replaced.
  • traefik. I am literally a cloud software engineer, I've been doing Linux networking since 1994 and I've made 3 separate attempts to configure traefik to work according to its promises. It has never worked correctly. Traefik's main selling point to me is its automatic docker proxying via labels, but this doesn't even help you if you also have multiple VMs. Basically a non-starter due to poor docs and complexity.
  • caddy. Solid, reliable, uncomplicated. It will do acme cert provisioning out of the box for you if you want (I don't use that feature because I have a wildcard cert, but it seems nice). Also doesn't suffer from the problems I've listed above.
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[-] Fedegenerate@lemmynsfw.com 5 points 11 months ago

I am sorry, I am but a worm just starting Docker and I have two questions.

Say I set up pihole in a container. Then say I use Pihole's web UI to change a setting, like setting the web UI to the midnight theme.

Do changes persist when the container updates?

I am under the impression that a container updating is the old one being deleted and a fresh install taking its place. So all the changes in settings vanish.

I understand that I am supposed to write files to define parameters of the install. How am I supposed to know what to write to define the changes I want?

Sorry to hijack, the question doesn't seem big enough for its own post.

[-] Limit@lemm.ee 6 points 11 months ago

With containers, most will have a persistent volume that is mapped to the host filesystem. This is where your config data is. When you update a container, just the image is updated(pihole binaries) but it leaves the config files there. Things like your block lists and custom dns settings, theme settings, all of that will remain.

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[-] notfromhere@lemmy.ml 4 points 11 months ago

What is seedbox? Is it part of the homelab or a service like the VPSs?

[-] 7Sea_Sailor@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 points 11 months ago

its basically a VPS that comes with torrenting software preinstalled. Depending on hoster and package, you'll be able to install all kinds of webapps on the server. Some even enable Plex/Jellyfin on the more expensive plans.

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this post was submitted on 01 Feb 2024
636 points (98.2% liked)

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