Hi guys I was wondering if there is a streamlined way to disable remote acess to a selfhosted service (say at a reverse proxy level) if a published security vunerability is present.
I know, ideally you want to keep all your selfhosted services up to date. However on certain selfhosted service auto updates may not be viable (due to major changes between updates) and you being unavailable 24/7 to respond to vunerabilities.
Curious on your thoughts and suggestions. So far the only middle ground I can find is realying on a vpn wireguard, tailscale, etc.
Page regarding homeassistant remote ui autodisable: https://www.nabucasa.com/config/remote/
If you figure it out, I know several companies that would be more than willing to drop 7 figures a year to license the tech from you
If you know of a data source for these vulnerabilities, I’m all ears. Because currently, that aggregation work is done by companies selling the feeds for quite a lot of money.
Personally, I’d just put everything behind a VPN. The attack surface is much smaller.
I tried this for 2 months with tailscale and love it, however having it run 24/7 on both my wife’s and my phone was too much. It literally wiped out the battery on my wife’s iPhone 12 unless she charged it in the middle of the day. I lost about 40% more battery throughout the day on my android. I had to switch back to cloudflare and nginx proxy manager for now.
Hmm. It shouldn’t do that. If you try it again, I’d check the configuration, and if you verify it with the Android battery metrics, open an issue.
I assume it also supports split tunneling, which might help.
Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I’ve seen in this thread:
Fewer Letters More Letters HTTP Hypertext Transfer Protocol, the Web VPN Virtual Private Network nginx Popular HTTP server
[Thread #762 for this sub, first seen 27th May 2024, 00:15] [FAQ] [Full list] [Contact] [Source code]
I can’t help here, but:
The title would be less confusing if you didn’t cram everything in one sentence. Potential help might be driven off by this, i was almost too.
Sorry about that (didn’t think that far when making the post 🫠 ).
I updated the title
Thats a really neat idea but I’m not sure its practical. Definitely putting everything you can behind a VPN is the best bet. Only things I dont have behind VPN/local only are things my extended family use and are on a different vlan.