Nope. No VMs. Don’t know why would I if I have a dedicated XCP-NG pool for that.
bufandatl
I use rdiff-backup to backup the volumes directory of my VPS to a local machine via VPN. Containers are stored in some public registry anyways. Also use ansible with all the configurations and container settings.
So you know how to do it securely and analyze what may go one when it is attacked. Or what else do you want with cybersecurity? It’s about securing services on the global network and local. And webhosting is one of those service.
Depends on the support case you got. If it’s technical you have basically 24/7. I am in Germany but had once a hard drive failure in a server at 1am contacted technical support and it took about 30 minutes overall and the new drive was resilvering and the server back online. Takes a bit as the NOC needs to go to the data center and so on.
The problem is a lot of people here are beginners and have no real clue about network security. And opening a port is opening a door. If you have a bouncer that clears people beforehand then you can keep the door open. But you will still need to keep your bouncer trained so he can take care of people you don’t want. Same with software. Keep it updated and have security enhancements in place like 2FA and analysis tools like crowdsec or fail2ban. And the open port might not an issue at all.
But if you open a device like a NAS (cough QNAP cough) then you have a higher security risk.
TLDR; if you know what you are doing it might not have implications.
Moved on from compose ages ago. So should you.
I run three piholes with gravity sync and have none of the problems you describe.
But pihole isn’t big magic it’s basically a dnsmasq with some management stuff around it. you could host a dnsmasq yourself and just fill the filter rules in the config file your self with ansible. The adliges are publicly available just get them with Ansible and parse them into a dnsmasq config template.
Here is an blog about it. https://alblue.bandlem.com/2020/05/using-dnsmasq.html
Maybe ask r/piracy. Not sure what this has to do with self hosting.
Mailcow is pretty good. They install fail2ban to protect all endpoints against attacks. And it’s pretty easy to setup and the documentation is pretty good.
Have a look at cloudflare tunnel. You still have vaultwarden in your lan but accessible from the world. No open ports needed.
Hm. Lag spikes in Tarkov and you check your server? I mean Tarkov.
But yeah I can feel your misconception here. But I am also the other way around I uninstalled firewalld and do all on iptables level. I am just more used to iptables. And so the sole controlling instance is iptables. In the end it’s all netfilter in kernel space.