I recently bought an x86 passive cooled box from Topton, an aliexpress merchant, that was recommended by ServeTheHome, a great youtube channel/blog that reviews all kinds of networking equipment for homelabs. Since it’s x86, you can pretty much install anything on it, in my case OPNSense. I recommend you watch some of their videos/read their blogs and see what fits!
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Cake day: June 4th, 2023
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I read you mentioned firefox. I had a similar experience a while ago, related to this bug: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1704774#c13
qjammer@lemmy.mlto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•NGINX config for TLS passthrough with multiple services?English2·2 years agoThe nginx documentation for the ssl preread module has an almost identical example.
qjammer@lemmy.mlto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•NGINX config for TLS passthrough with multiple services?English3·2 years agoI am running a similar setup to yours. The issue is that only one server block can listen to an address+port pair. You ought to do something like this:
map $ssl_preread_server_name $proxy_backend_router { serviceA.example.com upstreamA:12346; serviceB.example.com upstreamB:12346; default $ssl_preread_server_name.invalid_proxy:443; } server { listen 443; ssl_preread on; proxy_pass $proxy_backend_router; }
You can install ufw and a frontend for it that lets you block specific processes. https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Uncomplicated_Firewall#GUI_frontends It seems KDE already comes with a frontend in the system settings, and there’s gufw for gnome/gtk.