awesome-wireguard
Nebula
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awesome-wireguard | Nebula | |
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5 | 140 | |
799 | 13,717 | |
- | 2.0% | |
1.2 | 8.6 | |
15 days ago | 5 days ago | |
Go | ||
MIT License | 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.
awesome-wireguard
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JIT WireGuard
Roughly, yes. Netmaker has a self-hostable server though. With tailscsle of course the 3rd-party headscale is available. Netbird also seems promising. See https://github.com/cedrickchee/awesome-wireguard for more alternatives.
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ZeroTier Alternatives With the Speed of Netmaker But Without Custom Domain?
Check this list. Lots of good WG overlay options there.
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Finding a replacement for a lockdown jury-rigged Remote Login system.
There are other options out there.
- Reviving homelab behind CG-NAT
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tailscale is magic. That is all.
Is anyone using Netmaker to manage multiple networks? We have been using ztncui to manage multiple Zerotier networks, occasionally we have trouble with locked down routers, so we are looking at alernatives. For the uninitiated, here are a few comparison charts: https://github.com/HarvsG/WireGuardMeshes https://github.com/gravitl/netmaker https://github.com/cedrickchee/awesome-wireguard
Nebula
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JIT WireGuard
(I am a Nebula maintainer.) We recently merged support for gVisor-based services, although it's very new, and I don't know of much experimentation that's been done with it yet: https://github.com/slackhq/nebula/pull/965
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Ask HN: What Underrated Open Source Project Deserves More Recognition?
Nebula, originally from Slack[0].
Wireguard rightly gets a lot of attention, but Nebula is a really simple and easy to deploy mesh network that is often overlooked.
It does lack a management GUI and that stuff is very much DIY.
[0] https://github.com/slackhq/nebula
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Nebula is Not the Fastest Mesh VPN (But neither are any of the others)
Fair enough about the android mobile client... My use case only involves meshing linux appliances across various networks so we only need the nebula core binaries which are under MIT license
https://github.com/slackhq/nebula/blob/master/LICENSE
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Nebula is an open-source and free-to-use modern C++ game engine
That's not at all confusing with Slack's Nebula. https://github.com/slackhq/nebula
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A word of caution about Tailscale
Sounds like a bunch of your pain points are just related to needing an online CA or ICA. But, looking through the Nebula docs I don't know that it supports things like CRL addresses where you could host the CRL, or OCSP responders. Someone got support for an OCSP responder but never submitted a PR with completed code: https://github.com/slackhq/nebula/issues/72
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Free Tech Tools and Resources - Multi-clock Display, Networking Tools, Digital Forensics & More
Nebula is a scalable, cross-platform overlay networking tool focused on performance, simplicity, and security. This portable tool is equally adapted for linking a small number of computers or scaling to connect tens of thousands. It integrates encryption, security groups, certificates, and tunneling into a powerful, cohesive connectivity solution. Thanks for the recommendation go to jmeador42.
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Would we still create Nebula today?
Replying to my own comment as I can no longer edit it:
The folks over at Slack had an interesting discussion regarding the the "battle of the VPNs" article published by Netmaker I sourced in my parent comment:
https://github.com/slackhq/nebula/discussions/911
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Tailscale vs. Narrowlink
Interesting. I thought recognized the logo, apparently seems to be a commercial support offering of https://github.com/slackhq/nebula and they support the "nebula" iOS app. I had been using for nebula/defined in the past.
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Which overlay network?
Nebula: Is super easy to get running. It uses an interesting angle, working on the service and not just the device level. Unfortunately their NAT support seems to be still quite problematic and I am not going to maintain all those forwarded ports manually. There is a PR to support PCP but even if that ever gets applied I am not sure how well that will play with older routers. While it should be battle proven at slack, the community seems to be not that active. It still has the in-house tool that just got released.
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Most efficient way to reliably get a message to every server in a network?
The catch is that I want this to be reliable and fault tolerant, so if some of the game servers in the network go down, the remaining online servers should still always be able to receive broadcasts from any other online server. The servers can also be in multiple geographic locations and I am planning on using a mesh overlay network like Nebula to connect them. Essentially each pair of online servers will likely have a secure link between them that goes directly through the underlying network.
What are some alternatives?
shadowsocks-rust - A Rust port of shadowsocks
ZeroTier - A Smart Ethernet Switch for Earth
wg-easy - The easiest way to run WireGuard VPN + Web-based Admin UI. [Moved to: https://github.com/wg-easy/wg-easy]
Netmaker - Netmaker makes networks with WireGuard. Netmaker automates fast, secure, and distributed virtual networks.
WireGuardMeshes - A text repo to feature-track WireGuard mesh software
tailscale - The easiest, most secure way to use WireGuard and 2FA.
aws-ssm-ec2-proxy-command - AWS SSM EC2 SSH Proxy Command
tinc - a VPN daemon
Dual-LND-Wireguard-VPS - Connect your lightning network nodes via wireguard VPN Tunnel through your VPS to allow fast and anonymous payments
headscale - An open source, self-hosted implementation of the Tailscale control server
yggdrasil-go - An experiment in scalable routing as an encrypted IPv6 overlay network