Dude uses Yahoo mail
Yup! This is what I do! Love it so much
Thank you. It really was that simple
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Oops you are right.
A quick search said mc uses tcp
Yes, and Minecraft is TCP not http
Anything.
Personally I use Debian. But Docker doesn’t care. I chose Debian because it is very stable and simple
Nope
Wikipedia is only 110GB… https://library.kiwix.org
Thanks for the help. This is enough to get me started
With Crafty you can bind a specific port.
I use tailscale for public access, and have set it up so tailscale users can access the domain.
I guess what I’m asking for is NPM but for tcp.
No I’m not.
I have tailscale setup for external access. (I have dns records already in my domain provider pointing to a tailscale ip, so a device on my tailnet can access my domain. ie an authorized tailscale device can access nginx.example.com)
I want to know what I have to do to get minecraft.example.com to resolve interenally.
Oh fascinating. I’ll have to look into that
Cool okay.
What about the CNAME one?
For 4 II, its CNAME Name: @ Target: ???
What is the target supposed to be?
Edit: putting “@” for name on the A record, once saved, it changes to my domain instead of @, in your screenshot
A good dashboard helps with not remembering port numbers also. And can look slick
Holy crap thank you so much. I was literally thinking of figuring out how to do exactly this EARLIER TODAY!
Thank you again for this write up. I have almost all of what you wrote already done (cloudflare, NPM and tailscale setup) but haven’t hooked Tailscale and NPM together yet.
I have gluetun+socks5 containea running, then in an app, I put in localip:port
into a proxy field. Then that app will use that connection for internet.
Browsers on desktop also support proxies. So if you want a specific browser to always use the VPN, this is a very simple way to do that.
https://source.android.com/docs/security/features/private-space
Its not bad using the official wireguard app. Its definitely noticable. On the android battery screen it’ll show around 5% after a full day of use and it on always
Hmm that’s a good point.
Aws also can cost a good chunk if you restore un-optimally