Did you expose your router login page to the open internet? How'd they get access? Why are you chmoding anything to be 777?
Selfhosted
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There was an option that I had enabled years before and forgotten so yes, I didnt know but it was, on some obscure port.
And yes, pihole in docker makes its files be 777 which is pretty disgusting, I know. Thats why I tried to make it 700 and broke my whole network.
Doubt. You probably need to set the file owners in your volume to the same user running in the container.
I think you are still learning... What you say doesn't make sense, so I think you may have misunderstood what happened.
777? Bruh just set the owner?
I'm referring you to my quick "self-hosting guide": https://lemmy.world/comment/7126969
Thast awesome! Thanks! Bookmarked!
Saved~~
One of my fears of starting up my homelab.
All you have to do to avoid this is just not open any ports except one for something like wireguard, and only access your network using it externally, and you will never have this problem.
Exactly. It wasnt on purpose either. I thought there was an additional layer of security, gullible as I was 5 yrs ago. They made it seem like there was.
Gotta have a firewall that closely resembles swiss cheese.
One of my home servers was popped once, they stuck a new MOTD on there to let me know how foolish I was and I haven't made that mistake since. So... yay greyhat?
I’ve adopted a policy of always ebetering my password wrong the first time.
It started by accident.
Trying to work out why this is a good idea. Please could you explain why?
They can’t swipe your password if it’s wrong
They could of course enter it on the target website and see it’s wrong though, so this only works against the crappiest phishing attempts
Except how are the swiping your password if it’s https? Unless your being phished but don’t see how that would help because they could just get your second password.
This is very smart 😃 never thought about that
That's why I love Tailscale, nothing is open to the internet, all my shit is local lan inside Tailscale. Even better I don't have to bother with certificates and reverse proxy.
Reverse proxy isnt that hard tbh. Btw I have a vpn and my lan isnt open to the web. The router vendor made it look like there was an additional layer of security.
Not sure how reverse proxy is avoided this way
do you enter port numbers for your services when you access them, or have one service per machine?
I have a few publicly accessible services, and a bunch of private services, but everything is reverse proxy'd
I find it very convenient, as for example I can go to https://wap.mydomain.net for my access point admin page, or photos.mydomain.net for my Immich instance. I have a reverse proxy on my VPS for public services, and another one on my lan for private services; WireGuard between VPS, LAN, and my personal devices. Possibly have huge security holes of course...
Yep correct http://hostname:port por each application, all running in the same host on docker. The only thing it would be that any device that would want to connect to an app needs the Tailscale client. And would take over the VPN slot. That's why they offer exit nodes with mullvad and also DNS privacy resolvers like NextDNS.
Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I've seen in this thread:
Fewer Letters | More Letters |
---|---|
DNS | Domain Name Service/System |
Git | Popular version control system, primarily for code |
VPN | Virtual Private Network |
VPS | Virtual Private Server (opposed to shared hosting) |
4 acronyms in this thread; the most compressed thread commented on today has 11 acronyms.
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