Hi!

I often read suggestions to use something like Tailscale to create a tunnel between a home server and a VPS because it is allegedly safer than opening a port for WireGuard (WG) or Nginx on my router and connecting to my home network that way.

However, if my VPS is compromised, wouldn’t the attacker still be able to access my local network? How does using an extra layer (the VPS) make it safer?

  • @[email protected]
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    121 month ago

    How can you ever learn the risks of exposing ports if all answers are “if you don’t know you shouldn’t do it”?

    The post explicitly recommends ONLY exposing the wireguard port, not 80/443/22 which one should usually not do anyways. Very different things!

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      Yes, and to be fair the OP doesn’t even need to expose a port on his home network. He can do the opposite and have the port exposed on the VPS and have the local router / server connect to the VPS endpoint instead. This will also remove the issues caused by having dynamic IPs at home as well.

      • @[email protected]
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        01 month ago

        And that’s a different animal (moving the goalposts, which is an excellent idea, but OP didn’t even think of doing this).

        OP asked about exposing a local port, which is a Bad Idea 99.9% of the time, especially for someone asking why it’s a risk.

        Using a VPS with reverse proxy is an excellent approach to adding a layer between the real resource and the public internet.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      By learning before you take on the risk.

      It’s not like this isn’t well documented.

      If OP is asking this question, he’s nowhere near knowledgeable enough to take on this risk.

      Hell, I’ve been Cisco certified as an instructor since 1998 and I wouldn’t expose a port. Fuck that.

      I could open a port today, and within minutes I’ll be getting hammered with port scans.

      I did this about 10 years ago as a demonstration, and was immediately getting thousands of scans per second, eventually causing performance issues on the consumer-grade router.