Old computer, or Raspberry pi with proxmox and pfsense on it. The positive thing is that you can run other servers as well (pi-hole for example for network wide blocking ads)
Old computer, or Raspberry pi with proxmox and pfsense on it. The positive thing is that you can run other servers as well (pi-hole for example for network wide blocking ads)
Sorry for the late reaction. I found a solution in cloudflare tunnels. Works, and easy enough to understand.
I discovered this one too. Don’t care about the downside as long as it works and is easy a ough to do…And it is, worked right out of the box. The only problem I have now is that my website (hosted on the servers of a domain provider) is not accessible anymore. Tried to redirect to the correct ip, but it’s not working. I have an nginx server too but for some reason that ip is also unavailable, while the one from my jellyfin (which is on the same proxmox) is 🤔
So if I want to go to www.mydomain.com/pihole to go to my pi-hole instance, I would create an A record containing the internal IP of pi-hole and an MX one to configure the subdomain (www.mydomain.com/pihole), is that correct?
Lots of servers running. Main System is proxmox. I have an Ubuntu server running on that with docker installed which runs about everything (pi-hole, nginx, jellyfin, radarr, sonarr, (even) Firefox, and more). So end goal would be to go to www.mydomain.com/pihole to access pihole, to www.mydomain.com/jellyfin to go to jellyfin and so on.
Instead of a ‘normal’ search engine, you could take a look at a Gpt like replacement, maybe there is one that also protects you your privacy, and it can certainly be used to find what normal search engines could find