Not quite
Not quite
We all know you fart in your server room. That’s perfectly normal as that’s one of the main uses.
Why wouldn’t you reinvent the wheel? That’s the fun part
How do I learn this power? Don’t you still need at least one server exposed?
Tailscale is actually a lot more open than you think. The agents are all foss and there is a self hostable version.
Can you share your use case?
Waydroid is likely what you want although it is not web based
First off great find. I didn’t think to check the AUR. I personally wouldn’t use it as that version is 3 years out of date but its existence means that it might be entirely possible to get a non Nix version. I’m not sure I fully understand why it needs Nix OS but what do I know.
It is all libp2p magic
There have been lots if talks on libp2p and Nat traversal. I suggest you check them out. How it actually works is pretty complex and requires someone more knowledgeable than me to explain. One way it works is that both devices start a TCP connection at the same time which gets the proper ports to open up.
Then why did you go SAS? Sata would’ve been a lot cheaper
When you start seeing a lot of failed login attempts or other suspicious activity you know you are in trouble
It relies on libp2p not ipfs. ipfs uses libp2p as its transport
Threat detection
Please post a full dmesg and a full list of specs
You could move to a high availability model but that is a pain and has lots of tradeoffs.
The device will go offline at some point. It is good to have some sort of plan of how to efficiently power it down without causing major problems. Maybe some automation to push stuff to a second NAS or something.
Voice of reason
You will get compromised if you haven’t already. (Your device becomes part of a botnet)
If you don’t want new hardware use something actively supported like TrueNAS or regular Linux. You are asking for trouble. No hardening will protect you from out of date software with serious security holes.
The solution is to not use EOL software
Ideally you should run ddr4 so you aren’t leaving performance on the table
Best bang for your buck is business workstations. $1000 is a fairly big budget and is likely a but overkill. Get 3 decently speced workstations and put storage and fast networking in them. Cluster them and then setup high availability. Depending on your setup you could also modify one to also be a NAS. Get a sata or SAS card and put some drives in the chassis. You may need to get dirty but that’s the fun part.
I hope you aren’t expecting people to just randomly click a Google docs link.
This is highly sus