wg-easy
oauth2-proxy
wg-easy | oauth2-proxy | |
---|---|---|
186 | 98 | |
7,136 | 8,712 | |
- | 2.1% | |
5.8 | 9.0 | |
12 months ago | 4 days ago | |
HTML | Go | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
wg-easy
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Admin-Friendly Mesh VPN with WireGuard?
After browsing through, I've noticed that three options seem to be gaining traction: Netmaker, wg-easy, and headscale. I'm curious to know if these solutions are interchangeable, and if there are specific reasons to choose one over the others. I'd also like to understand if they are complete stacks, meaning, once set up, could I easily replace one admin GUI with another, or would I need to tear down and rebuild the VPN?
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VPN to bypass Country blocms
WireGuard is the solution to everything! It has an app and they can easily login via a QR code that you send them. For the server I would recommend wg-easy, there you can manage all user accounts in a web interface.
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Wireguard without VPS?
I use this, https://github.com/WeeJeWel/wg-easy
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What are some security/VPN features you would like to see in UniFi Network?
Dashboard with access to the QR and config files for clients as well as bandwidth data. Even something as simple as wg-easy would be great.
- Self hosted public DNS Server
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Build your own private WireGuard VPN with PiVPN
I run wg-easy https://github.com/WeeJeWel/wg-easy for this sort of thing. I use the docker container, and it's great. "Just works".
Also, unrelated, I just decided I don't like the sentiment of "PiMyProjectName" branding. I know most projects don't just run on a Pi, and that the intent is to say "you can self-host thing", but at this point if you want to run a home server sort of thing, just buy some cheap 100-200 dollar minipc thing. That's how much you'd pay for a Pi now anyway, and it comes with such great features as:
* just establishing an ssh connection doesn't take multiple seconds
* the ethernet doesn't go over a usb hub
* it doesn't run on an sd card that is going to fail within a year
I'm pretty dismissive of ARM chips for homelab stuff at this point. There's super cheap minipcs with "real" processors that will just destroy even an expensive ARM board.
Pi's shine with their ability to run both a real/full Linux and also do gpio type stuff that otherwise is usually an arduino board. I don't have anything against low-level programming but damn is it just a lot more fun to do in python. I love the Rpi zero w 2 products for this, just enough juice to run wifi and a python loop, plus the gpio pins. Too bad they've been sold out for literally years.
- Seft-host VPNs recommendation regarding power efficiency
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[Wireguard] Le serveur ne peut pas faire un ping au client
J'ai installé Wireguard Server sur un VPS en utilisant [https://github.com/weejewel/wg-easy Peer to Peer Ping, mais je ne peux pas ping-ping à des pairs du serveur.
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Using AWS EC2 as a proxy server to bypass a Minecraft VPNGuard server block or run a Minecraft server from your home while hiding the public IP
To expand: I'd recommend wireguard it's super easy to run with docker, openvpn is way more annoying to setup The Github page for wg-easy docker image
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Today is a lovely day to setup my new media server. X220 i5, 512GB msata SSD (slow af), 1TB internal HDD, and another terabyte in the dock. Installing Ubuntu server 22.04 LTS. Any fun ideas for what to do with it, aside from a Jellyfin server and samba share?
for wireguard im using wg-easy
oauth2-proxy
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Keycloak SSO with Docker Compose and Nginx
Recently I looked into having a relatively simple SSO setup for my homelab. My main objective is that I could easily login with Google or GitHub auth. At my previous job I used both JetBrains Hub [1] and Keycloak but I found both of them a bit of a PITA to setup.
JetBrains Hub was really, really easy to get going. As was my previous experience with them. The only thing that annoyed me was the lack of a latest tag on their Docker registry. Don't get me wrong, pinned versions are great, but for my personal use I mostly just want to update all my Docker containers in one go.
On the other hand I found Keycloak very cumbersome to get going. It was pretty easy in dev mode, but I stumbled to get it going in production. AFAIK it had something to do with the wildcard Let's Encrypt cert that I tried to use. But after a couple of hours, I just gave up.
I finally went with Dex [2]. I had previously put it off because of the lack of documentation, but in the end it was extremely easy to setup. It just required some basic YAML, a SQLite database and a (sub)domain. I combined Dex with the excellent OAuth2 Proxy and a custom Nginx (Proxy Manager) template for an easy two line SSO configuration on all of my internal services.
In addition to this setup, I also added Cloudflare Access and WAF outside of my home to add some security. I only want to add some CrowdSec to get a little more insights.
1. https://www.jetbrains.com/hub/
2. https://dexidp.io/
3. https://github.com/oauth2-proxy/oauth2-proxy
3. https://github.com/alex3305/unraid-docker-templates
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Multi client authentication with auth0 and oauth2-proxy
Authentication providers like Auth0 and Okta have become commonplace in software development. These providers help take this work off of your plate, and this can be made even easier by using a reverse proxy that provides authentication capabilities, like oauth2-proxy.
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Why You Should Migrate to OAuth 2.0 From API Keys
There's also other problems you might run into when using JWT: - First using scopes for permissions like Slack does can generate a token so large that a server might refuse it (One of many examples: https://github.com/oauth2-proxy/oauth2-proxy/issues/644, any rational server won't allow unlimited sized header), in my company they did this with the convention of read:team:product:resource but if you're an admin and have every rights by default, then you can't use the generated token by default as it will be too large. I think Quarkus works that way and you might encounter some problems with you don't configure it correctly. - Second is that it will cost a lot of bandwidth to send this header each time you're doing something, and probably won't be the perfect answer for what you want to do (do you really have third parties calling your API ?) - Third is about security concerns, you might say that having your permissions in a token is not as bad as you might think but in case of a Man In The Middle attack, you could leak information about your company, process or business intelligence that could have been prevented. - Fourth and that'll be the last, is that you can't revoke a JWT. And if you say you can, then you don't need a JWT at the first time because it would defeat the principle of a self contained JWT.
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Moving from Google workspace to Microsoft 365 and implementing Zero Trust
That is not how you do Zero Trust. You want to use an Identity Aware Proxy. There are lots of ways you can implement this with Google as your core auth. For example Pomerium or oauth2-proxy.
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Microsoft launches Windows App for accessing PCs in the cloud from any device
I use self-hosted Apache Guacamole (RDP) through a reverse proxy with Google SSO (oauth2-proxy[0]). So easy to access my desktop from virtually any browser (mobile isn't the best though). This would be a good solution for gaming, but for other activities RDP is unbeatable imo.
[0] https://github.com/oauth2-proxy/oauth2-proxy
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Best Practice For Serving Static (Frontend) Files with NGINX in K8s?
Meet https://oauth2-proxy.github.io/oauth2-proxy/ It could be deployed in the cluster somewhere and reuse it where needed. We do this to authenticate prometheus,alertmanager ui for useres
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Any thoughts on implemented access control of self hosted front end apps?
At work, I've used oauth2-proxy as a sidecar container (on Kubernetes) for an app that has no authentication mechanism. Pretty straightforward, works well. I think this or Authelia is your best bet.
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Authentik reverse proxy vs swag
BTW also keycloak and other similar products offer the oauth-proxy capability, I even used the original oauth2-proxy https://github.com/oauth2-proxy/oauth2-proxy for a while, but it was getting too difficult to maintain for me. I used for a while https://github.com/thomseddon/traefik-forward-auth that was a smart hack configuring a single upstream provider, but it look abandoned. So I was considering authentik but apparently it's just oauth2-proxy embedded in it, at that point why not use oauth2-proxy directly.
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How to build Auth in 2023 with go?
Like auth basic? Mate, its 2023 get that RestAPI endpoint behind an OAuth proxy. github.com/oauth2-proxy/oauth2-proxy is a good one on a budget or use some cloud provider's ApiGateway and IAM services.
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Pomerium or Authentik?
I use it in combination with oauth2-proxy, which sits in front of my network and the various services I host. https://github.com/oauth2-proxy/oauth2-proxy
What are some alternatives?
wg-manager - A easy to use WireGuard dashboard and management tool
traefik-forward-auth - Minimal forward authentication service that provides Google/OpenID oauth based login and authentication for the traefik reverse proxy
wg-gen-web - Simple Web based configuration generator for WireGuard
vouch-proxy - an SSO and OAuth / OIDC login solution for Nginx using the auth_request module
wireguard-ui - Wireguard web interface
authelia - The Single Sign-On Multi-Factor portal for web apps
firezone - Open-source VPN server and egress firewall for Linux built on WireGuard. Firezone is easy to set up (all dependencies are bundled thanks to Chef Omnibus), secure, performant, and self hostable.
Keycloak - Open Source Identity and Access Management For Modern Applications and Services
WGDashboard - Simplest dashboard for WireGuard VPN written in Python w/ Flask
Docusaurus - Easy to maintain open source documentation websites.
pivpn - The Simplest VPN installer, designed for Raspberry Pi
caddy-auth-portal - Authentication Plugin for Caddy v2 implementing Form-Based, Basic, Local, LDAP, OpenID Connect, OAuth 2.0 (Github, Google, Facebook, Okta, etc.), SAML Authentication. MFA with App Authenticators and Yubico.