I have a PC I have installed Portainer on, with various docker services (home assistant, jellyfin, etc…) with an ISP supplied router fixing various device IP addresses and reaching out to dyndns.

I really want to move everything over to HTTPS connections by supplying certificates, tls termination, etc .
The issue I have is self signed certificates mean I have to manage certificate deployment to everything in the house.

I figure I need to link a domain to the DynDNS entry and arrange certs for the domain. However I can’t make the link function and everywhere wants >£100 to generate a certificate.

How are people solving this issue?

  • ripcord@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    My problem - and I’m not alone - is that I really don’t want to expose anything publicly. Is there a way to do this without exposing anything to the Internet?

    • julle@kbin.juhlin.network
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      1 year ago

      I have a public domain that I only use internally on my home network. I have a local DNS server that handles all my internal DNS records. So I just point my DNS records to my nginx proxy manager’s local IP address and let it create certs using DNS Challenge. So I don’t need to expose anything external to make it work.

    • datallboy@lemmy.techhaven.io
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      1 year ago

      You don’t have to expose Nginx publicly. It can exist privately on your network. I have my own domain and DNS server internally. For example nginx.home.datallboy.com and jellyfin.home.datallboy.com will resolve to NPM server at 192.168.1.10. Then nginx can listen for jellyfin.home.datallboy.com, and proxy those connections to my Jellyfin VM at 192.168.1.20.

      Since I own my domain (datallboy.com), I let Nginx Proxy Manager do DNS challenge which is only used to authenticate that I own the domain. This will insert a TXT record on public DNS records for verification, and it can be removed afterwards. LetsEncrypt will then issue a certificate for https://jellyfin.home.datallboy.com which I can only access locally on my network since it only resolves to private IP addresses. The only thing “exposed” is that LetsEncrypt issued a certificate to your domain, which isn’t accessible to the internet anyways.

      You do not have to create your own CA server.

    • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      I am new at this, but from my understanding, if you want to not expose anything to internet, you would need to create your own CA server to create your own certificates and have the necessary encryption certs for your own https on your home lab.

      • ripcord@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        That’s essentially what I ended up having to do, but keep hoping that I’ve missed something.

        I also find that people seem to ignore this route, assuming people are fine with public dns pointing at your home ip and http/https ports open.

        • wagesj45@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Gotta live on the edge, man. Open up your router. All ports. Firewalls are for pansies. Connect your laptop directly to the modem. Enable ssh and rdp. What could go wrong?

        • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          You can setup a VPS between the internet and your home network to limit the exposition of your home network. When a client pings yourdomain.com, it sees the ip of the VPS and not the IP of your home network.

          Otherwise, a VPN + home CA server will make your home network accessible and encrypted as well