Does anyone have any advice on hosting a server to the outside world? I intend to host a Jellyfin media server and want to be able to access it remotely. I was leaning towards hosting a VPN on my network with a good password but I don’t know much about that. I am looking for a free option that ideally doesn’t require proprietary software and can be completely hosted locally. For reasons that I won’t go into, I am a little concerned about my isp seeing the traffic to the media server. I know I am being paranoid but I don’t really care. I imagine if I host it through port forwarding on the router but set up HTTPS that would encrypt the traffic and stop my ISP from seeing it, but I don’t know if hosting a VPN would be easier / more secure. Thoughts?

  • PatrickYaa@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    To Hijack this: If I wanted to host a public instance of jellyfin at jellyfin.mydomain.xyz, I would then need a dDNS hosted on my server, and then…? If I want to allow non-technical people to access my instances, how do I manage that? Could you point me to a guide that explains the overarching requirements that one would need for that, with a mention of examples for each service I need to host that I need to achoeve this? Because I am a bit lost atm :p

    • fitgse
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      1 year ago

      If you are running Jellyfin on a computer at home you’ll need to configure your dns with your dns provider to point to your home public ip then configure your router to forward port 443 to your Jellyfin server.

      • PatrickYaa@lemmy.one
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        1 year ago

        And this works even with a dynamic/non-static IP? I thought there was more hassle involved :D

        • fitgse
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          1 year ago

          No, if you don’t have a static IP, you will need to use a dynamic DNS solution.

          You might also investigate ipv6 if your ISP provides it. Often, if they don’t give you a static ipv4 address, they might assign you a static block of ipv6 addresses you can use. That makes a big assumption that you can always use ipv6 though!