In NetworkManager you can setup network sharing using Ethernet port on the laptop, then connect cable to your server.
Downside of that is you need to setup port forwarding in your laptop if you want to open port.
In NetworkManager you can setup network sharing using Ethernet port on the laptop, then connect cable to your server.
Downside of that is you need to setup port forwarding in your laptop if you want to open port.
Thanks I'll try this, don't need to open ports, as I use Tailscale 🙌
Found a listener of Jupiter Broadcasting
Member* of JupiterBroadcasting 🤗 But I was using Tailscale before I found their show haha
It was the combination of Nixos btw and tail scale that gave it away
Hahaha yeah fair point, I'm also quite new to Linux so Nix is a lot at once, but really love it so far!
Of course you can.
However, my networking knowledge is not super fresh. I believe you need a special ethernet cable for this. A crossover ethernet cable. Then you have to manually set the IP address on both ends for that interface to something kind 192.168.0.1 and 192.168.0.2 Here's a quick how-to that shows an example.
Or... You don't have an individual router? Couldn't you just plug it in the router by ethernet cable?
I believe a crossover cable is no longer needed these days as most ethernet adapters implements Auto-MDIX .
Ah ok.
I was born in the 1900's so... You know, things have changed in the 21st century.
If both Ethernet NIC is over 1gbps, you are fine with using normal cable.
Thanks I'll try this!
One way is to use iptables to forward the connection from the wireless interface through the ethernet interface. But I am not sure whether this is better than using the NetworkManager or a more specialized solution. I have used iptables for configuring WireGuard VPNs, but not for this specific use case.
An option is to buy a router that supports openwrt and install the travelmate package:
Quick Start Guide:
https://openwrt.org/docs/guide-quick-start/start
Travelmate Readme:
https://github.com/openwrt/packages/blob/master/net/travelmate/files/README.md
Supported hardware:
https://openwrt.org/toh/start?toh.filter.supportedcurrentrel=22.03%7C23.05
Then you could setup Wireless WAN (Connect to existing WiFi) + Wireless LAN (for laptop/phone) + Ethernet LAN (for server) in that router.
I have a raspi 3b dedicated to being my wifi to ethernet bridge, the config is old and it runs rpi os but if your interested i can dig up how it works 🙃
You can do the same with $25 mikrotik device.
Infact, a lot of cheap wireless APs can connect to a wifi and bridge to ethernet, especially if they are running an openWRT fork (most cheapo wifi APs do)
I actually do have a spear rpi actually! However I was planning on running HomeassistantOS on it. But could do what you do as a temporary solution. If you wouldn't mind and have the time to look up your solution I would highly appreciate it 🙌
How does your laptop have internet?
Depending on what's on the server it might be simpler to run a VM and a temporary solution.
Via WiFi, sry if that wasn't clear. I simply don't have access to the router as that belongs to the landlord. He has a separate network for me, but it's on his side of the house 😅
I think moving what you can to your laptop is the simplest approach depending on what you need. You will likely be without some stuff but it will be simpler to setup than a direct connection.
Of course if you have a ton of data that may not work.
Your description isn't very clear on what exactly you have, or what you need.
It sounds like you have wired NICs in both server and laptop, which will be physically close to each other, but your only connection to the Internet will be WiFi that you don't control. How accurate is that?
Next question is how do you want them to connect to each other? You can do a P2P wired connection, which is more complicated but fully isolates your traffic. It also means that, unless each device has a separate connection and an appropriate routing config, it won't be online to the Internet (unless you set up some form of connection sharing). You can also connect them to a router that has no Internet. Simpler than the above, but the same limitations.
You could easily and cheaply get a USB Wi-Fi NIC. The major downside is that all traffic will be going across the wireless connection, both ways. This makes it slow and unreliable.
You can also connect them to a modified router configured as a wireless bridge. DD-WRT and others can be configured in a different way than usual. The wireless router will provide wired LAN ports to your local network, but then use the wireless connection to connect to an upstream WiFi.
None of this has anything to do with Linux, BTW. Once you choose a path, you should be able to implement it in whatever OS (or multiple OSes) you would like. None of it is new or special. You might get more options if you post in the Homelab, Data Hoarder, or Self Hosted communities.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Linux is a family of open source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991 by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution (or distro for short).
Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word "Linux" in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.
Community icon by Alpár-Etele Méder, licensed under CC BY 3.0