Tunneling and Self-hosted Seafile
This post details a couple of methods for hosting Seafile at home using tunnels to protect your home IP: Cloudflare Tunnels or a VPS with Tailscale.
This post details a couple of methods for hosting Seafile at home using tunnels to protect your home IP: Cloudflare Tunnels or a VPS with Tailscale.
I’ve recently started using the overlay network Tailscale to provide connectivity between my various machines, regardless of where I am. It’s extremely easy to configure and “just works”. Tailscale also includes a feature called MagicDNS that provides name resolution for machines on my tailnet (i.e. so that ping server123 magically just works). MagicDNS also allows you to override local DNS settings and force a custom DNS server for name resolution machines on your tailnet. This post documents the setup of Pi-hole (accessible only to machines on my tailnet) to provide some level of DNS privacy and Ad Blocking for machines on my tailnet.
Every six months or so, when the position of the moon is just right, I flip-flop on the privacy/self-hosted vs. just-let-Google-handle-it issue. Today, I’ve flopped toward privacy and self-hosting.