Seasoned Network operator & hobbyist Sysadmin. Dog dad. Beer lover. Aspiring Greybeard. Strong believer in community action.
Mastodon: @[email protected]
Blog: zealnetworks.ca
Looks cool. Adding to my linkding. Thanks!
Okay.
Yet another reason to love VyOS
Yep, mainly because it’s targetting DC/SP operators, rather than just the home
This is somehow worse than “five giant websites, each filled with screenshots of text from the other four”
You just hurt Huawei & Arista’s feelings. /s
Cool project. Saving it for future reference, once I get a better handle on Rust.
Another vote for LibreNMS. I’ve been using it for a long time and it’s just great for most small - relatively large orgs (you have to work a bit harder to deploy it properly / distributed, if you’re going for a larger build).
I’ve also had Zabbix data piped into grafana and that was rock solid… I just find that Zabbix requires quite a bit more finessing to get going, if you’re not a seasoned sysadmin.
Sorry, I commented then went to Europe for 3 weeks; Browsing detox.
Symmetric NAT wouldn’t be an issue for Nebula at all – or WireGuard, as you know, but neither ZeroTier.
If you’re worried about CGNAT, it has several ways to deal with it:
https://nebula.defined.net/docs/config/punchy/
The lighthouse can also act as a bastion/proxy and handle the connections for you, if your two nodes can’t speak directly.
That being said… if you’re supporting other users, I think wireguard is the way to go.
I’ve been using Nebula for a long time. It’s great and definitely worth your time to setup.
Pretty good suggestions here. Can’t remember the last time I saw such quality replies on r/networking .
Wow… I just uninstalled Boost after midnight. Looks like it will be back soon :)
Great job, everyone. Hoping this community becomes a lot more engaged & less superficial than the r/networking one.
Very dumb move by IBM Redhat
Jeff Geerling’s take was good:
https://www.jeffgeerling.com/blog/2023/dear-red-hat-are-you-dumb
Thanks for reporting back. Every time I looked at it’s features, I came to roughly the same conclusions. Glad you actually did the work to try it, though.