The internet can feel like it's built for speed.
You join a new service and you're presented with a feed. The name tells you all you need to know. The feed is the actor. You are the thing that is acted upon. You don't control the feed. Your role is
The internal port will also be the same as the external port 80 and 443.
If the router is running in bridge mode, that would mean that your dhcp, dns and nat is happening on the upstream router.
That means you will have to go to the upstream router to setup the port forwarding.
Also depending on how it works internally with the VPN.
It might try to port forward the ports on the VPN’s ip address
Which none of the VPN I tried allowed to port forward port 80 and 443
With a linux or openwrt router this could be as easy as the following
But the problem with store bought router is that every one of them has a different way of doing the things so it gets confusing really fast.
All of this confusion about port forwarding was engineered to discourage ordinary people from using their internet to host their own files and instead because cloud-dependant techno-serfs.
Another way, would be to go on the forum low end talk and obtain a VPS, and host your apache server there.
That would work, but you would be back to renting someone else’s computer (aka cloud bull) but it’s still better than paying squarespace about it.
Keep at it, you’ll figure it out, it’s actually very easy once you know all the complicated bits, I do it all the time.
Hi,
The internal port will also be the same as the external port 80 and 443. If the router is running in bridge mode, that would mean that your dhcp, dns and nat is happening on the upstream router. That means you will have to go to the upstream router to setup the port forwarding.
Also depending on how it works internally with the VPN. It might try to port forward the ports on the VPN’s ip address Which none of the VPN I tried allowed to port forward port 80 and 443
With a linux or openwrt router this could be as easy as the following
iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -i eth0 -p tcp --dport 80 -j DNAT --to-destination 192.168.1.199:80 iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -i eth0 -p tcp --dport 443 -j DNAT --to-destination 192.168.1.199:443
But the problem with store bought router is that every one of them has a different way of doing the things so it gets confusing really fast.
All of this confusion about port forwarding was engineered to discourage ordinary people from using their internet to host their own files and instead because cloud-dependant techno-serfs.
Another way, would be to go on the forum low end talk and obtain a VPS, and host your apache server there. That would work, but you would be back to renting someone else’s computer (aka cloud bull) but it’s still better than paying squarespace about it.
Keep at it, you’ll figure it out, it’s actually very easy once you know all the complicated bits, I do it all the time.