How do you guys set internal domains?

Say i dont want to type 192.168.1.100:8096 and want a url instead, say jellyfin.servername - how would I go about that? I don’t want it exposed online via reverse proxy. I don’t need certs. No port forwarding on the router.

How do I type ‘jellyfin.servername’ into a browser and being up the jellyfin dashboard?

      • novarime@sopuli.xyzOP
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, how and where? In the docker compose? I have a dozem containers and is love if they were all a.server. b.server, c.server. How can I do this? Pihole DNS records don’t do anything at the port level.

        • jjakc@lemthony.com
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          1 year ago

          Sorry I meant in your browser. Yes dns does not point to ports.

          You would have to use some sort of reverse proxy that is only accessible from internal networks

        • Captain Janeway@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Just to clarify a bit further. You browser doesn’t specify ports in the URL because HTTP and HTTPS have basically coopted the 80/443 ports. You could have a website running an HTTP server on another port like 3000. But then you’d need to specify the port in the URL since the browser - by default - is looking at 80/443 and not 3000.

          You should be able to configure the port for your Jellyfin server. I’m not a Jellyfin user, but most applications allow you to pick a port to run it on. So you’ll have to change the port to port 80 and then expose that port on your docker container in the docker-compose file.

          Edit: actually now that I think about it… You could just point your local port 80 to the docker container port. I forget the port mapping schema but it’s something like

          ports:
            - 80:1234
          

          You might have to flip the order of the ports. But basically that example above is trying to map port 80 to port 1234. If that fails, you might have port 80 being used by another application on your computer and you’d either have to shut that app down, pick a different port for that app or you’re back to picking a different port for Jellyfin

    • novarime@sopuli.xyzOP
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      1 year ago

      It’s the port that’s tripping me. How do I point jellyfin to that domain? It’s on docker on port 8096 - the hostname isn’t the problem, it’s the container.

      • plo@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Ah okay. You need some sort of reverse proxy.
        I really like caddy. Using it with caddy-docker-proxy in docker-compose makes it quite nifty:

        version: '3.7'
        services:
          whoami:
            image: containous/whoami
            networks:
              - caddy
            labels:
              caddy: http://whoami.mylab.home
              caddy.reverse_proxy: "{{upstreams 80}}"
        
        networks:
          caddy:
            external: true
        
        

        Just make sure to explicitly use ‘http’ instead of ‘https’. That way it won’t try to create certificates.

  • ilovetamako@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I use a pi hole instance for this. I just point all the subdomains at my ngnix server and reverse proxy everything through that

  • TheButtonJustSpins@infosec.pub
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    1 year ago

    You don’t need to expose it to the web to use a reverse proxy. You can use traefik, caddy, nginx, or any other reverse proxy to serve IP:PORT on domain.tld. You can use 80 or 443 as you’d like.

    If you’re using docker, it’s even easier. How are you hosting your jellyfin?

  • finn@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I use pihole running on an esxi server for dns. In pihole you can create local dns records which is exactly what you’re trying to do. It’s very lightweight, you can run it on about anything.

    You can also do something like this

    • novarime@sopuli.xyzOP
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      1 year ago

      Thanks. It was the ports that were more of an issue. It’s one server with several containers and id like a local “url” for all of them, but looks like reverse proxies aster my only out, which is a shame because i’m dumb.

  • dan@upvote.au
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    1 year ago

    You should be able to use mDNS pretty easily. Some services (like Home Assistant) support it out-of-the-box. mDNS is what powers the .local domains (eg homeassistant.local).

  • kamin@lemmy.kghorvath.com
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    1 year ago

    You need to set up a local DNS server with a .servername zone and point your machines to it. You’d add an external DNS server like 1.1.1.1 as forwarder to allow internet traffic to still resolve.

  • asjmcguire@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    PiHole as your DNS resolver. LocalDNS mapping whatever hostname you want to whatever IP you want.
    Because I use Nginx Proxy Manager internally - then most of my hostname point to the Nginx IP address

  • StrayPizza@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I currently use a custom filter/rewrite in AdGuard Home (similar to pihole).

    An alternative to running a central dns server is to use mDNS. You can install a daemon on each server that you want to access via hostname, and then clients know that ServerName.local domains should be resolved using mdns. They send out a dns query to a local multicast IP, the daemon on the servers receives the query and the appropriate one responds. By design it’s local only.

  • priapus@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    Reverse proxy and local DNS. Just add the domains you want to your DNS and point them at the reverse proxy.

  • zikk_transport2@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    If externally available - i use domain. If local - by ip:port. I find it easier to rely on firefox bookmarks and their folders lol.