this post was submitted on 24 Jul 2023
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Hey y'all! First time trying to self-host something, I started with a local Nextcloud instance for me and my family to use. I just wanted to make sure that no outsiders can enter the instance (access it or its files) through a browser on another connection.

I don't have a DNS server so we access it through its IP address. The connection is unencrypted (I don't know if this is a problem on a local instance, but from what I've read, I need a local DNS server to encrypt it, as well as to be able to set a domain (?) name (I don't really know if it's a domain name, but I'm referring to the website name, for instance google.com). I don't think leaving it as it is (unencrypted, no domain name, only accessible through IP) will be problematic. Could other people access the server remotely with this setting? By remotely, I mean from far away. I tried out Nextcloud's own Security Scan and it returns:

Scan failed! The scan for the specified domain failed. Either no Nextcloud or ownCloud can be found there or you tried to scan too many servers.

I'm guessing this is a good thing for what I'm trying to achieve?

for reference, the tutorial I've used is this one under Linux Mint

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[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

Since your other question is already answered:

think leaving it as it is (unencrypted, no domain name, only accessible through IP) will be problematic.

Yes, that's no biggy since it is on your local network only. But be aware that everyone that has access to your network could potentionally capture all the files you're transfering and your nextcloud credentials as well. Other than that, your communication with nc will be encrypted on the wifi layer.