2025-02-20, 01:25 AM
(This post was last modified: 2025-02-20, 05:18 AM by gmachine24. Edited 7 times in total.)
Hi. Thanks for the reply. The result of route is located here: https://pastebin.com/BCKcEJXi
and I do not run a reverse proxy such as Nginx.
However, I read reviews of software similar to Tailscale and I came upon netbird, another zero trust network like Tailscale.
So far, my results with netbird are much better than with Tailscale. No trouble connecting remotely to my Jellyfin server on the Fedora install. But, as they say, it's still early. I need to give it a few more days to make sure it's stable.
I read online some moaning about the Fedora Jellyfin (Flathub) version not being updated - until a December 2024 post said it has been updated to version 11.1.1. Currently I'm running 10.10.5 - but not Flathub. So updating to 11.1.1 is an option although I'm not a big Flathub fan.
Anyway - I'm curious about what the route command might tell you of the problems I was having with Tailscale. Most posts I read online - people love it.
I really appreciate your time.
Edit: I use Private Internet Access VPN. With it switched on, OpenVPN or Wireguard, I cannot connect to the Fedora desktop running Jellyfin - even when allowing local lan traffic while running PIA.
Edit2: Doh. I shut off netbird, turned on tailscale on my phones and Fedora computer and made sure PIA was not running - and my phones etc connected to Jellyfin on the Fedora computer. I connected the PIA vpn and connections failed. So, I'm thinking PIA is the problem. I know Tailscale has some deal with Mullvad - but I'm not familiar with that. This is from Tailscale: "However, in most cases, you can’t Tailscale alongside other VPNs without a workaround. Usually, this is due to aggressive firewall rules, device limitations, or IP address conflicts." A split-tunnel is one possibility - but it doesn't seem promising. I need to do more research.
Any information will be most welcome.
I'm curious. I use a VPN 90+ % of the time. Assuming I cannot run a VPN while using Tailscale or netbird, and assuming I connect from my phone's network or via wifi in some cafe or other, what will my ISP see? I know Tailscale and netbird use Wireguard - and that encrypts data to and from. But I imagine my ISP will see where I'm connecting from - do you have any insight into this? Will the ISP know what device I connect to? I realize these may be questions for the VPN folks. Thanks.
and I do not run a reverse proxy such as Nginx.
However, I read reviews of software similar to Tailscale and I came upon netbird, another zero trust network like Tailscale.
So far, my results with netbird are much better than with Tailscale. No trouble connecting remotely to my Jellyfin server on the Fedora install. But, as they say, it's still early. I need to give it a few more days to make sure it's stable.
I read online some moaning about the Fedora Jellyfin (Flathub) version not being updated - until a December 2024 post said it has been updated to version 11.1.1. Currently I'm running 10.10.5 - but not Flathub. So updating to 11.1.1 is an option although I'm not a big Flathub fan.
Anyway - I'm curious about what the route command might tell you of the problems I was having with Tailscale. Most posts I read online - people love it.
I really appreciate your time.
Edit: I use Private Internet Access VPN. With it switched on, OpenVPN or Wireguard, I cannot connect to the Fedora desktop running Jellyfin - even when allowing local lan traffic while running PIA.
Edit2: Doh. I shut off netbird, turned on tailscale on my phones and Fedora computer and made sure PIA was not running - and my phones etc connected to Jellyfin on the Fedora computer. I connected the PIA vpn and connections failed. So, I'm thinking PIA is the problem. I know Tailscale has some deal with Mullvad - but I'm not familiar with that. This is from Tailscale: "However, in most cases, you can’t Tailscale alongside other VPNs without a workaround. Usually, this is due to aggressive firewall rules, device limitations, or IP address conflicts." A split-tunnel is one possibility - but it doesn't seem promising. I need to do more research.
Any information will be most welcome.
I'm curious. I use a VPN 90+ % of the time. Assuming I cannot run a VPN while using Tailscale or netbird, and assuming I connect from my phone's network or via wifi in some cafe or other, what will my ISP see? I know Tailscale and netbird use Wireguard - and that encrypts data to and from. But I imagine my ISP will see where I'm connecting from - do you have any insight into this? Will the ISP know what device I connect to? I realize these may be questions for the VPN folks. Thanks.