+1 for Techworld with Nana
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Where would you host the script? If it’s expected that the server that fires it off is always online and performing health checks, why not have it host a load-balancer? Or another local instance of the website? It’s something fun to play around with, but if this is for anything beyond a fun exercise there are much better ways to accomplish this.
If you don’t want to mess with another VPS you can use a global server load balancer (GSLB) provider like Akamai, Cloudflare, Azure, etc.
This being a self-host community though it’s unlikely you’d want to pursue something like this, but without knowing more about your specific use case it’s tough to make a recommendation.
If global high-availability is your primary goal then a hosted solution is probably best.
If this is just an exercise you and your friend are working on for giggles and it’s not for a mission-critical Production instance, then presumably self-hosting a load-balancer on each of your servers that includes both nodes in a target group would achieve this, though somewhat counterintuitive; if the website goes down at either location, I would imagine there’s a pretty high likelihood the LB itself would be down as well.
lando55@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Is there a Ben Eater's Bread Board Computer/6502 type of content creator for home networks?English
1·1 year agoNo joke, I thought for a second you were referring to Infinite Solutions and were trolling hardcore. I haven’t thought about that in a long time.
lando55@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•My stupidity saved me from being hacked today!English
1·2 years agoOne of my home servers was popped once, they stuck a new MOTD on there to let me know how foolish I was and I haven’t made that mistake since. So… yay greyhat?
lando55@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•My stupidity saved me from being hacked today!English
1·2 years agoFor Chiefly reasons of course. Now whether or not that server is active in the cluster is another matter entirely, but hey if it makes him/her feel important /shrug
lando55@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•My stupidity saved me from being hacked today!English
3·2 years agoFigure ~45 minutes to run to the liquor store for a decent single malt, another ~25 minutes for the pizza rolls, quick power nap, wake up and redeploy. That’s about 2 hours.
lando55@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•RIP my photos from 2017 and contacts from 2005English
7·2 years agoUnix is the kind of friend who won’t bat an eye about holding your beer while you go and do something incredibly stupid
lando55@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Changed ISP and server now unreachableEnglish
2·2 years agoShould have paid for upgrade to a 10/8
Some questions come to mind:
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Do you have a static IP address from your ISP?
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Dynamic DNS?
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Have you verified the listening service is a box you own?
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Is there a reverse proxy set up?
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Checked the edge router logs to see if it rebooted recently and reloaded firewall rules?
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What else sits between your router and the listening server?
This could be any number of things, maybe this will help point you in the right direction.
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Just make sure it is only accessible in trusted networks though!!
Aw you’re no fun. Next you’ll be telling me to block all emails over 500 miles.
lando55@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•I need a solution for backing up images and videos from iOSEnglish
21·2 years agoCommenting to follow any suggestions that pop up here. iCloud is such a mess for syncing and backing up photos and video.
lando55@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Another good reason not to open port 22English
19·2 years agoFor me it’s not about the traffic, more the log spam.
Generally I’ll have :22 enabled internally, and anything non-standard is defined in
~/.ssh/configand shared out so I don’t have to remember things.
Troubleshooting checklist:
- DNS
- Fuck if I know
Edit: Didn’t notice you said your router can’t issue out two DNS servers. I’ve never heard of that.
Ugh. When I moved into my new place I bought a NetGear Orbi system to hold me over until I got my Ubiquiti gear put in place. Never again.
It’s well worth it for this reason alone. Unless you’re running a honeypot, getting that noise out of your access logs can provide more actionable data to work with for more persistent threats.

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