this post was submitted on 22 Nov 2023
2 points (100.0% liked)

Self-Hosted Main

502 readers
1 users here now

A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.

For Example

We welcome posts that include suggestions for good self-hosted alternatives to popular online services, how they are better, or how they give back control of your data. Also include hints and tips for less technical readers.

Useful Lists

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

With my zoo of docker containers and multiple servers hosted locally or on some cloud providers, I feel the need more and more to understand what kind of network traffic is happening. Seeing my outbound traffic on some cloud providers I'm sometimes wondering "huh-where did that traffic come from?".

And honestly I have to say: I don't know. Monitoring traffic is a real hurdle since I'm doing a lot via tunnels / wireguard in between servers or to my clients. When I spin up a network analysis tool such as ntopng, I do see a lot of traffic happening that is "Wireguard". Cool. That doesn't help me one bit.

I would have to do some deep package inspection I suppose and SSL interception to actually understand WHAT is doing stuff / where network traffic comes from. Honestly I wouldn't be sure what stuff would be happening if there were some malicious thing running on the server and I really don't like that. I want to see all traffic and be able to assign it to "known traffic" or in other words - "this traffic belongs to Jellyfin", "That traffic is my gitea instance", "the other traffic is syncthing" or something along those lines.

Is there a solution you beautiful people in this subreddit recommend or use? Don't you care?

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago

I've been a network engineer, security analyst, security engineer, and SOAR engineer over the course of the last 20 years; I don't want to think about any of that shit when I'm not being paid for it. I have backups of the things I can't replace, no port forwarding/ingress rules from WAN on the firewall, and the network is heavily segmented and uses least privilege. The random security stuff I leverage is set to drop/block and my family does a good job being vocal when something isn't working. If I needed to start over tomorrow, I'd just build a new server with Ansible playbooks on my GitHub.