In the immortal words of Jake the Dog:
Dude, suckin’ at something is the first step to being sorta good at something.
We are or were all noobs once. Going away from the keyboard is often an undervalued step in the solution-finding process. Kudos!
In the immortal words of Jake the Dog:
Dude, suckin’ at something is the first step to being sorta good at something.
We are or were all noobs once. Going away from the keyboard is often an undervalued step in the solution-finding process. Kudos!
This is such an important message, I keep this on my phone:
Indeed, I've sucked at guitar and rubiks cubes in the last 5 years and now I'm good at both of them!
Our man is hard flexing on us mortals right now.
Agreed! I had a math professor once say that epiphanies usually happen in one of the three B's: Bed, Bathroom, and Bus. There really is something magical about stepping away to let your brain chew on a problem.
I'm a fellow noob, maybe that's why I found the bath side of it more amusing. I can relate to the pervasive obsession and unexpected eureka moments.
Yeah I get a little obsessive about my new hobbies to the point where a whole day of tinkering goes by and I barely notice.
I had an 11hr messing about session a couple weeks ago then we had to go out for a family meal because of some important occasion (my 40th birthday) and I got to the meal with a massive headache from staring at a screen all day, only to find it was a surprise party.
My Wife could not understand how on earth I hadn't worked out it was a surprise party beforehand, but my head was in setting Proxmox up and getting things working.
There's a quote from 1908's Wind in the Willows: Believe me, my young friend, there is nothing–absolutely nothing–half so much worth doing as simply messing about in boats.
Fill in your own hobby, and it reads just as well.
Another newbie here.
It's worse when you go to bed and get your clarity as you're trying to sleep.
Now you gotta decide if you wanna wake up, stay up or get up... I try to settle for writing a note.
This is why I separate bedtime and tinkering time with something else
Strange electrical signal and high dopamine level flooding your brain 😍🤪
Woah I've just had my mind blown a little. I did not realise that using Tailscale I'd be able to smb into my server on my phone, but I can!
I'm in a similar boat, maybe a few steps further down the line than you but not that far.
Something that is really fun is getting a dynamic DNS set up with duckdns, and then put a certificate on it from certbot and then give all of your containers and self-hosted servers am SSL certificate and name using nginx reverse proxy.
If you do that and your Wi-Fi router has a VPN option then you can easily get rid of all of the certificate errors on your locally hosted stuff and navigate directly to them with a name rather than typing in IP addresses.
For me this was daunting but once I actually got it up and running it all made sense.
It's on my list. I've played with DuckDNS in my time with Home Assistant, I used to get external access through it and Nginx and honestly loathed it. I was SO HAPPY when I got Cloudflare working.
I am now working for a global company and I've noticed that the intranet here doesn't have valid SLL certificates at all, which I know is a security concern, so with a bit of research and tinkering I believe I can become more knowledgeable about this kind of thing than the IT manager of our factory. Might help me work up to a position that isn't on a line anymore.
So yeah, it's on my list.
I've been working on the same thing over the past month, with some minor differences. I skipped portainer and am just running LXCs on Proxmox, and built it from the beginning as a *arr/Plex box, so it has 4x4TB internal drives in ZFS RAID6, with the OS on an SSD. I still need to try out the TrueNAS thing, but I'm running a Minecraft server on it, and I just spent the better part of a day figuring out how to run Mullvad on it and force all my torrent traffic to use it.
Also, look at Open Media Vault instead of TrueNAS, honestly so much easier
Now then, you may be my new best friend:
I just spent the better part of a day figuring out how to run Mullvad on it and force all my torrent traffic to use it.
Mine all runs on a Windows machine because I could not work out how to get everything to talk to each other in containers. Then I tried to do the Mullvad thing too. I tried OpenWRT, OpenVPN (docker), Wireguard (Docker), Traffaek (Docker), and even Tailscale (Docker) and couldn't get anything running right.
ATM I just have Mullvad installed on the Windows machine and have it turn on when the VM starts up, but I'd like it all in containers instead.
Do you have any handy links as to how you get Mullvad working?
I think my next project is getting all my Arr working in containers, but I need to get them working through Mullvad to do that, or at least Prowlarr and my Real Debrid or qBittorrent through it
I think when mullavad disabled port forwarding it kinda borked it. I ended up getting my *arr docker stack nested in an LXC along with one of those qbittorrent+VPN containers.
Have a look at my reply to the other guy, I'm pretty sure I've got it working now
Ugh, I wish I could be more help on that, but I couldn't get Mullvad to work that way either. I think what needs to be done is to use pfsense or something to create a virtual LAN, set the container running Mullvad to be the gateway on that network, then give each container a virtual network bridge connected to that virtual network. What I ended up doing was just installing Mullvad (through WireGuard) on the same container as qBitTorrent and telling qBitTorrent to use the virtual network device that Mullvad creates.
Fortunately, that's the only thing that really needs to run through it for me (I think your Real Debrid will need to as well). AFAIK, the *arr stuff doesn't need to be hidden.
As to getting things to talk to each other in containers, where were you having trouble? You should just be able to give all the *arr stuff the addresses where you reach the other ones. That may just be their IP address, or I run PiHole so I can have a local DNS and give them all their own hostnames.
Edit: I'm doing all this in Debian LXCs
I probably can get the container way working now I've had some time with it. The problem is routing it through Mullvad. Prowlarr deffo needs to go through it, otherwise it can't see the indexers (I've been using Prowlarr without a VPN for a while and it's much better with it). Debrid doesn't need a VPN I just prefer it to be there
I watched a YouTube tutorial to get an OpenWRT container set up to route traffic through ,and managed to get it working. I struggled however to set the VPN up through it, I feel like I was in spitting distance!
The bonus of using that method was that I could have multiple containers use the OpenWRT container, meaning they would all share the same IP address and just have different ports, so all my Self Hosted containers would be in the same place on my network.
I'll keep plugging away and give pfsense a look. Now that I have OMV running I can kill my Windows server without losing the media
Well I've had another go this morning and believe I've managed it. My problem seemed to be that I already had 5 devices in Mullvad through my tinkering, so I deleted one and made a new one (just as an fyi in case you hit the same issue).
So I followed this guy on YouTube to set up an Openwrt router VM https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3mPbrunpjpk&t=897s
When you are able to route traffic through the VM stop following the tutorial and use this link instead to set up the VPN https://mullvad.net/en/help/running-wireguard-router
And apparently I'm now running the Openwrt router through Mullvad.
I did all the SSH parts in Console and I put my public key into the website through the Mullvad link above and copied the IP addresses from the same page.
So theoretically I just have to set vmbr1 as my bridge to containers and VMS that I want to run through my VPN and set up port forwarding for them in the OpenWRT interface and they'll route through Mullvad
Hope this helps.
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://www.piped.video/watch?v=3mPbrunpjpk&t=897s
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I'm open-source; check me out at GitHub.
Nice! Glad to hear that works. I'll have to give it another go. I had spent the whole day trying to get Mullvad (without WireGuard) working, but it kept failing to create the tun device, so by the time I got it working with WireGuard I didn't really feel like trying to figure out the VLAN thing too lol.
This is with Wireguard too, it's just inside OpenWRT.
I've put my Windows VM behind it and checked it's working and it is, but now I can't access Plex and SMB lol, more tinkering when I finish work I guess
Now I just need to work out why I'm only getting 6MBps transfer speeds. All my research has gained me a whole 2MBps which is a 50% increase, but all things online say they're getting over 100...
You've got a single, old HDD attached via USB. There's plenty of places that could be the bottleneck here, but that's among the first I'd check. Can you actually read from that HDD significantly faster than your network transfer speed? Check that locally first. No use in optimizing anything network-related when your underlying disk IO is slow.
I have transferred a file from another container on the same computer to it and get 40+MBps. So there's something going on on the network.
That said, "The Network" is an old powerline adapter running up a floor through a wired router, so it's probably something to do with that. Not a big deal, it still works and tbh I don't see myself moving too many big files between the server and my PC so I can live with 40MBps between my containers
If you want to rule out most everything software, you can use dd
and nc
to benchmark file transfers with minimal overhead. iperf
also your friend of course :)
I will have to have a research about what all of those things mean lol. Thanks.
This is why I love this community, really helpful but speak in a language I'm not fluent in yet.
It's like when I learned guitar, I had no clue what people were talking about half the time on /R/learnguitar, same in /R/homeassistant, but I lurked enough that I learned loads and ended up contributing to both communities after a spell of time.
Just to share my experience. I was part of r/HomeAssistant for a year or so and I had no effing clue what it was or what it does. One day I was scrolling through YouTube and there was a guy talking about HomeAssistant. Only then I realised this is not some "Alexa/Siri" kinda home assistant. This is a home automation kinda thing.
Haha, I still laugh at my self for being an idiot for the whole 1 1.5 years.
Yeah I get it, I started home automation using Google Assistant and Tasker on my phone to make everything work. I spent HOURS writing Tasker automations because the Wifey hated it all because it all worked based on my phone.
Whenever I couldn't get something working I'd see Home Assistant as the solution. Maybe for a year or more...
COVID happened and I bought a Pi to play with. Did some shit with it and eventually gave Home Assistant a go and never looked back.
My home automation has come along leaps and bounds since then. I had a friend on the weekend comment that I'll finally know I'm living in the future when I walk through the door and my house welcomes me home. It's been doing that for over a year already...
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 |
IP | Internet Protocol |
LXC | Linux Containers |
PiHole | Network-wide ad-blocker (DNS sinkhole) |
Plex | Brand of media server package |
SSD | Solid State Drive mass storage |
SSH | Secure Shell for remote terminal access |
SSL | Secure Sockets Layer, for transparent encryption |
VPN | Virtual Private Network |
ZFS | Solaris/Linux filesystem focusing on data integrity |
nginx | Popular HTTP server |
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