SusanoStyle

joined 2 years ago
[–] SusanoStyle@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

A bit off topic but i used to had a fiber provider which on rainy days internet would intermittently go down. I think the outside terminal was exposed or something. Also between 2AM and 6AM internet would start dropping packets like crazy.

[–] SusanoStyle@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 weeks ago

I see, i will study it over the weekend a bit better and see what i end up doing. Thank you.

[–] SusanoStyle@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 weeks ago

I'm leaning towards it, i will probably bit the bullet. Thanks for your comment.

[–] SusanoStyle@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

I did, but i don't know if changing things there will cause conflicts.

Since i have no experience using luci i don't know what behaviour is normal or expected, and to what extent the custom software glinet uses changes it. Do you think that tweeking the preconfigured networks would cause conflicts in the long run?

After sleeping over it, im leaning towards going full vanilla. It should be easier to find tutorials to solve and isolate problems.

Anyways thanks for your comment.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/45249301

Hi there, i have a few questions about GL-Mt3000 and Openwrt.

Context Wall fell free to skip:

spoiler

I bought a year ago a Gl-Mt3000 and have been using it as a home router since then.

It was fantastic, since the interface is really easy, i put all my iot on a guest network, my family cellphones on another and activated Adguardhome with little knowledge needed.

Now, i wanted to start learning a bit more, so i decided to host the dns sinkhole (Adguard Home) by myself on my main network.

I more or less got it working, it shouted a few errors but it worked. My problem is that the iot devices on the guest network can't access it.

Tinkering with the gl-inet interface i was able to proxy all dns request to the Adguard server, but since they are redirected from the router i lose the statistics since every query appears as if it was done by the router itself.

~~From what i read, there are ways to make the udp 53 port reach the guest network but it flew a bit over my head, and i don't know how touching luci will mess with the gl-inet interface.~~ Edit: You can easily do this through the gl.inet interface, on the tab called port forwarding, you can forward between zones, not only to the internet, i don't know why it didn't occurred to me. In my defense i wasn't able to google either. Maybe it was too obvious.

Questions:

Is there any benefit to host AdguardHome outside the router? I did it to learn, but i don't know if it has any advantages.

I plan to learn openwrt and flash the router to vanilla openwrt. My reasons are that:

  • I feel restricted by the gl-inet interface.
  • Gl-inet doesn't seem to update too frequently their firmware.
  • I'm worried their custom software will cause problems if i tinker Luci too much.
  • I think it will easier to learn the vanilla version than a custom version.

Does all of this make sense? Do you think is worth to spend time on this?

 

Hi there, i have a few questions about GL-Mt3000 and Openwrt.

Context Wall fell free to skip:

spoilerI bought a year ago a Gl-Mt3000 and have been using it as a home router since then.

It was fantastic, since the interface is really easy, i put all my iot on a guest network, my family cellphones on another and activated Adguardhome with little knowledge needed.

Now, i wanted to start learning a bit more, so i decided to host the dns sinkhole (Adguard Home) by myself on my main network.

I more or less got it working, it shouted a few errors but it worked. My problem is that the iot devices on the guest network can't access it.

Tinkering with the gl-inet interface i was able to proxy all dns request to the Adguard server, but since they are redirected from the router i lose the statistics since every query appears as if it was done by the router itself.

From what i read, there are ways to make the udp 53 port reach the guest network but it flew a bit over my head, and i don't know how touching luci will mess with the gl-inet interface.

Questions:

Is there any benefit to host AdguardHome outside the router? I did it to learn, but i don't know if it has any advantages.

I plan to learn openwrt and flash the router to vanilla openwrt. My reasons are that:

  • I feel restricted by the gl-inet interface.
  • Gl-inet doesn't seem to update too frequently their firmware.
  • I'm worried their custom software will cause problems if i tinker Luci too much.
  • I think it will easier to learn the vanilla version than a custom version.

Does all of this make sense? Do you think is worth to spend time on this?

[–] SusanoStyle@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 months ago

Glad to hear it! My pleasure, always happy to learn.

[–] SusanoStyle@lemmy.ml 3 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Fair enough, now i feel a bit ashamed since you are way way more knowledgeable than me. I have only been a Debian user for a year and half.

I made the reply because i remember that when i was looking to enter into Linux, Debian testing was recommended as a great compromise between stable and unstable.

My surprise when i went to the Debian wiki and said, pretty ambiguously at that, that i shouldn't use it! Reason being that it wasn't as updated in security patches as stable. No one told me that bit when i was asking. Since i didn't know the risks involved, i took the safe option and went with stable, in the end loved it.

I have to admit that for your case it makes sense to use it. You know the risks, know where to patch it up, and it helps to contribute to it by testing it and submitting bugs. Thank you!

I do still think that testing shouldn't be recommended, but i see and agree that it has it's niche where it works and can be great for some people.

Anyways, i hope i didn't came too hostile in my first reply! Cheers

[–] SusanoStyle@lemmy.ml 3 points 2 months ago (4 children)

I disagree, the strong points of debian are the stability (long periods of testing, without new changes) and security (by applying security updates quickly).

Using testing or sid means to forego the strong points. At that point you are better served by other distros which focus on having newer packages.

Also i would be cautious about using Debian testing (forky).As far as i know its the worst in terms of security. Stable has security update priority over testing. And some people say even sid it's better on that front by having even newer packages.

Disclaimer: I daily drive debian stable and game on it without hiccups. Rock solid. BUT i have 7 year old amd rig and the games are not demanding.

[–] SusanoStyle@lemmy.ml 1 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Thanks for the clarification, i read you wrong, and you are completely right. Whats worse is that even if you are a bit savvy or informed is hard to fully get away from them. But anyways, even if i cant escape them i will try to give the minimum data possible.

[–] SusanoStyle@lemmy.ml 2 points 5 months ago

whatsapp requires phone numbers. surely they can be called

Sadly the phone number is only for messages, in most cases it's automated with a bot giving you options.

if you have tech skills, try running a matrix bridge

I didn't know about matrix bridges. To be honest i'm not familiar with matrix but i have been learning about networking and self host on the side. I could make it part of the project.

Thanks for the suggestions! I should interact more with the community, i have been receiving lots of good feedback recently, i was always a lurker on reddit.

[–] SusanoStyle@lemmy.ml 5 points 5 months ago (5 children)

In Latin America most public services, banks ans bussines uses whatspps as their main support line.

To give you an example, if you have no water in your house you need to report on wp. No other way. And this is the standard for a lot of services, wp is the ONLY way to ask for support.

Also, if you are a freelancer or have a bussiness, your clients expect you to have whatsapp, 90% of inquiries and sales goes through wp.

It's a nightmare, i really want to get rid of meta services but it is impossible for my case.

I have decided to decouple what i can, and use different phones for meta services, but i suspect that they still correlate and collect data. (Based on location, wifi, mac of iot, browsing etc)

Anyways, i ask people to be aware that for some of us, our situations makes impossible to remove some of the meta, microsoft or google services.

My aproach for now is to only use the minimum neccesary, i still search for ways to gradually switch out what i can.

Whatever i can't rid off, i have another phone for it, how effecrive this is idk but for now is the best solution i found.

[–] SusanoStyle@lemmy.ml 2 points 6 months ago

Nice suggestion i will look it up, thank you!

[–] SusanoStyle@lemmy.ml 1 points 6 months ago

Thanks for the reply, i will keep it mind.

 

Hi there, In my search to learn a bit more about Linux, i came across this website called "OverTheWire", which teaches basic and some advanced concepts over SSH. It seems like a fun and engaging way to learn.

However, as a bit of a paranoid beginner when it comes to Linux and networking, i find myself worrying about the potential dangers of connecting to an untrusted network.

So, my questions are:

  1. Does anyone have any experience with the website?

  2. In the hypothetical case that I open an SSH connection to a compromised network, could that expose me to attacks? (Aside from obvious risks like downloading malicious files myself.)

  3. Should I use a virtual machine (VM) for this?

I sincerely appreciate any responses. Thank you!

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