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<h3>Tailscale, caddy, and nixos containers</h3>
<h2>Tailscale, caddy, and nixos containers</h2>
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<time>May 16, 2023</time>
<p>May 16, 2023</p>
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</header><p>For a little while now I&rsquo;ve been running some services (jellyfin etc.) on an old laptop in my house. I&rsquo;m not trying to sound like a podcast ad but as a networking novice, the simplicity <a href="https://tailscale.com/">tailscale</a> brings to accessing these services remotely is very nice. Until recently though, I had been accessing my services like a heathen with http and port numbers (eg http://tailscale-ip:service-port). This works and is perfectly secure thanks to tailscale though it lacks a certain finesse. In an ideal world you&rsquo;d have a reverse proxy and set up SSL certs so your browser doesn&rsquo;t get stressed and you dont have to rememeber ip addresses and port numbers.</p>
<p>When I initially looked at how to do this it seemed like it was above my paygrade and not worth the stress; that was until I came across <a href="https://caddy.community/t/https-in-your-vpn-caddy-now-uses-tls-certificates-from-tailscale/15380">this</a>. This works great and is as simple as advertised though there is one drawback: you can only reverse proxy one service per host. So for my usecase of the laptop with multiple services running on it I could only use the magic caddy tailscale auto-https thing for one of them.</p>
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<p>As well as solving the multiple services problem, separating services onto their own hosts is nice if you want to <a href="https://tailscale.com/kb/1084/sharing/">share</a> a particular service with someone else. I personaly feel happier just sharing one container running jellyfin rather than the whole host with multiple things on it. Anyway thanks for listening to my TED talk.</p>
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