Comment on How do I securely host Jellyfin? (Part 2)
Charger8232@lemmy.ml 2 weeks agoA brief internet search shows that surprisingly, hosting Jellyfin on OpenWRT should work…
I still find it hilarious that since dd-wrt and OpenWrt are just… Linux, you could install Super Mario Bros on there. I checked, nobody seems to have tried.
I’ve never used tailscale, I’m afraid. Normally I would say: just use whatever seems easier to set up on your device/network; however, note that tailscale needs a “coordinate server”. No actual traffic ever goes through it, it just facilitates key exchanges and the like (from what I understand), but regardless, it’s a server outside your control which is involved in some way. You can selfhost this server, but that is additional work, of course…
Ah, that make sense. Is Wireguard P2P?
Glad I could help, after being so unhelpful yesterday :)
Don’t beat yourself up, you were fine. Because I’m big on privacy, when I ask for help I have a bad habit of leaving out the “why” behind my choices, so it’s understandable that people weren’t happy with what I needed.
Eh… Marriage is not really common in either of our families. We agreed to go sign the papers if there ever is a tax reason, lol. Sorry if that’s a bit unromantic :D Nice rings though ^^
I need to go make a petition to raise taxes then! /s
You both are perfect for each other, so don’t screw it up!
smiletolerantly@awful.systems 2 weeks ago
Oh, definitely, but there are varying degrees of difficulty, esp. with what kinds of packages / package management you have available :D
Yes, in the sense that each node/device is a peer. But the way I’d suggest you configure it in your case is more akin to a client/server setup - your devices forward all traffic to the “server”, but it never takes initiative to talk “back” to them, and they do not attempt to communicate with each other. Unless you have a separate usecase for that, of course.
❤️
Closing in on 8 years