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/ // /__ __ _ ___ / |/ /__ / /__ _____ ____/ /__
/ _ / _ \/ ' \/ -_) / / -_) __/ |/|/ / _ \/ __/ '_/
/_//_/\___/_/_/_/\__/ /_/|_/\__/\__/|__,__/\___/_/ /_/\_\
This is a collection of text files describing my home network. Here
I'm covering the most interesting or technically challenging aspects
of my current set-up, so I can remember how I did it, while also
sharing useful info with fellow hackers.
We have broad-band, provided via optical fiber. I don't know how
standard this is, but the fiber ends up into a little bridge that
makes it available over Ethernet.
The ISP provides us with one public IPv4 addresses, dynamically
assigned via DHCP. In the past we could use two public IPv4
adddresses at the time, but this is no longer the case.
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A few years ago I bought a custom made router on which I'm running
OpenWRT. As boring as it sounds, the router is configured as NAT
configuration, and provides WiFi access to various home devices.
Ethernet access is also served to the rooms, wherever it is needed,
thanks to a simple DLink switch that I saved from the dumpster.
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I've got a Raspberry 3B+ in my home network. It runs FreeBSD, and It
covers a number of little tasks:
Newsgroup reader (usenet, gmane, lore.kernel.org)
Email
Persistent IRC connections (Libera.chat, OFTC, Tilde.chat, ...)
Proxy (bypass dumb restrictions of the company laptop)
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Gophered by Gophernicus/3.0.1 on FreeBSD/amd64 14.1 |