Recently I’ve been reading a lot about the topic of mesh VPNs (tinc, Nebula, Tailscale, ZeroTier, Netmaker, Netbird, etc) and find them pretty interesting. Is anyone here using these in some capacity at home or maybe at work?
My problem so far is that many of the options seem to be aimed at corporate use, understandably, so the developers can earn enough to keep doing it. This means the focus is on a centralized control plane, one server which knows everything about the entire network and manages firewall rules for all of it.
This is why I’m leaning towards Nebula, since I think the decentralized design just makes more sense. There is some centralization for issuing certs though. How do I go about setting up PKI? Is there some open source solution for managing certificates and automatically renewing them?
There’s also the option of using vanilla WireGuard. This is my current setup, but I really like the idea of meshing, since it means I don’t need to care if my devices are physically on the same network or not, the best connection will be used. Basically the layer of abstraction is a nice convenience that lets me think about hosts or services independently of the physical network topology.
I’m interested to hear your thoughts on this topic! What’s your setup like and what do you use it for?
I have the exact same use case and I use headscale on a VPS + tailscale on my devices.
I haven’t figured out how to give lay-friends access though. I can make them a user in headscale but it seems cumbersome to make them use tailscale to connect. Wireguard directly seems even more cumbersome.
During my research I came across ngrok, maybe this could be useful in your situation. I also came across zrok, which seems like an open source version of the same thing based on OpenZiti. Both of them seem like ways to give public portals to your private services. So you could give your friends access that way without them needing to use a VPN.
Update: I found a guide to use traefik to tunnel into the VPN. Idea is:
Step 1 however is a gigantic pain in the ass. Traefik is overkill for anything non-enterprise. It was just three lines of Caddyfile to make it work with Caddy.
Step 4 is almost exactly the same
You can also use
tailscale funnel
instead any reverse proxy but then your exposing ports not sub domains. And whatever service you’re funneling to is responsible for SSL.:now-this-is-pod-racing: