In your homelab endeavors I highly recommend learning some fourm of VPN. If you run into problems Google is an amazing thing! The hard part is the config but there is usually a way to have those generated withing the server. I use the mobile app and desktop app, and they work like a charm. Test it internal to your network to get a understanding as to how it works then forward it and see if it still works. They even have docker containers to get you up and running quick! Port forward and Bob's your uncle! I highly recommend reading up on how to get it running. You could have 5, 10, 100 services open to the entire world oooor 1 VPN connection to rule them all. The saying goes, "protecting a pin hole is better than protecting an antire infrastructure" at least that's what I say □. I personally just use RDP for Windows and Mac implements VNC "already built in".Īny time you are wanting to access things in your homelab, from the internet that is, it is a homelab group consensus to do this over a self hosted VPN. Runs in docker which your Synology supports □ cool! Now I personally don't use it but have seen what it can do and there are A Lot of tutorials for setup. There is a great homelab program for this very thing, it's called guacamole. r/HomeNetworking - Simpler networking advice. r/pfsense - for all things pfsense ('nix firewall) Might be able to find things useful for a lab. r/hardwareswap - Used hardware, swap hardware. r/buildapcsales - For sales on building a PC r/linux - All flavors of Linux discussion & news - not for the faint of heart! Try to be specific with your questions if possible. r/linux4noobs - Newbie friendly place to learn Linux! All experience levels. r/datacenter - Talk of anything to do with the datacenter here We have an official, partnered Discord server which is great for all kinds of discussions and questions, invite link is clickable button at the top of the sidebar or right here.Keep piracy discussion off of this subreddit.Īll sales posts and online offers should be posted in /r/homelabsales.īefore posting please read the wiki, there is always content being added and it could save you a lot of time and hassle.įeel like helping out your fellow labber? Contribute to the wiki! It's a great help for everybody, just remember to keep the formatting please. Report any posts that you feel should be brought to our attention. We love detailed homelab builds, especially network diagrams! Post about your homelab, discussion of your homelab, questions you may have, or general discussion about transition your skill from the homelab to the workplace. Please see the full rules page for details on the rules, but the jist of it is: Labporn Diagrams Tutorials News Subreddit Rules TV should give an option to use the reduced SDR palette or change the bit color depth regardless of whether there is HDR available at both ends, just like it lets us specify a local resolution.New to Homelab? Start Here! Homelab Wiki HomelabSales Plus, it would just add to bandwidth to pump the HDR data over the line. However, given that many TV users are working at companies who have no need to pay the extra for HDR displays, and many hosts are at homes where users who game will have them, relying on local HDR displays seems a foolish solution. This problem is only going to get worse as more and more screens become HDR, unless TV users also switch to HDR displays on the local end. TV does a really, really poor job at mapping colors from an HDR display. This seems pretty clearly because on TeamViewer, unlike other solutions like RDP, uses the host's native monitor display, then just puts it on the local display. Colors from an HDR display washed out, makes text hard to read, especially on a white background. In my case, Windows 11 on host, Windows 10 still for the local PC. Same problem in TeamViewer in January 2023 (or at least not fully fixed yet).
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