What I really wonder now..do I really need to actually rent a VPS or is there somewhere in the internet someone who overs IPv4 to IPv6 forwarding as a service. I looked at the Oracle ARM VPS but this seems to be a bit convoluted..and its Oracle Oo
thanks, at least for the first point, those "Fritz Box" Routers are somewhat usual in german, I got my own to have more control over my network..and it does indeed support NAT loopback, I think that is what I had to configure in my previous IPv4 Setup for everything to work. For the rest..I will have to do some research. Although, my IPv6 address starts with 2a02 and is indeed reacheable from the outside, so apparently that is a thing
Also thanks for this advice, this seems easier than I thought.
Thanks for the pointer, I will try that....as soon as I have repaired the network stuff that I somehow broke 15 minutes after I wrote the last text by trying to upgrade the host-debian system the webserver VM lives in.
But yes, its a problem with other devices, but actually not with the windows gaming pc that is connected via cable, only Wifi devices seem to have that problem. I actually checked if the swap to the guest wifi (because for some reason it has better connection?) and it doesnt, so its at least not that
Self hosted Nextcloud IPv6 local and external - I lack some understanding
Aloha,
Long term lurker. I probably rather need help with knowing the right works to chant into Google than actual step by step help.
The Problem in short: my self hostet Nextcloud is only available most of the time locally...and rarely externally.
The Problem in long:
Back in 2020 I build a somewhat low energy NAS based on an AsRock J5005-ITX. It contains a single SSD with the OS on it (Debian, running Open Media Vault) and 2x 10TB HardDisks in Raid 1.
I live in Germany, this might be of some import.
In my last two previous flats my Internet was provided by Vodafone where I had a legacy IPv4 address that was mostly static (it changed every time cable reconnected which happened only every 100 days or so), I combined that with an .xyz domain to make it reachable from the outside. For that I had simple port forwarding rules in my FritzBox and some custom DNS entries in my PiHole to locally redirect the nc.[domain].xyz to a virtual machine inside the bare metal Debian box. That work