| ▲ | ffsm8 8 hours ago |
| Because mine didn't I instead used a generic ddns and set a cname on my own domain to that. Works like a charm too. Kinda breaks MX records so don't so it if you wanna receive emails on that domain, too |
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| ▲ | rovr138 7 hours ago | parent [-] |
| > Kinda breaks MX records so don't so it if you wanna receive emails on that domain, too Is the CNAME on the root of the domain, @? |
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| ▲ | ffsm8 4 hours ago | parent [-] | | In my case yes, because I did not care about breaking email delivery to that domain (it's a novelty domain pointing to my residential IP address, (surname-home.tld) which I use exclusively for my selfhosted
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| ▲ | rovr138 3 hours ago | parent [-] | | Oh perfect Just wanted to ask since I’ve been bitten by that. I do something similar, but I have them all under <service>.home.<example.com> But that’s because I do have resources outside. Just helps my mental model to name space them. | | |
| ▲ | ffsm8 2 hours ago | parent [-] | | I know the feeling. Ive already configured almost all services to be header auth or disabled auth entirely if possible, and just put them all behind a SSO forward proxy (nginx + authentik) I also played around with injecting a tiny script into the proxied response to just add a small drop down menu with all services I've got available. .. while that worked, finding a good place to inject that menu was a chore so it's currently disabled again :) |
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