ts_block
docker-swag
ts_block | docker-swag | |
---|---|---|
4 | 295 | |
175 | 2,539 | |
- | 2.0% | |
0.0 | 9.1 | |
over 2 years ago | 9 days ago | |
Visual Basic | Dockerfile | |
Artistic License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
ts_block
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Learning Lessons From The Cyber-Attack: British Library cyber incident review [pdf]
> Is there something inherently insecure about remote desktops, or is MS software here known to be particularly insecure...
Exposing RDP to the Internet directly has been frowned-upon because of the attack surface being presented, there's no two factor "story" out-of-the-box, and you're opened up to brute force attempts on cruddy user passwords.
Older versions of the Microsoft Remote Desktop Protocol had a much larger attack surface than current versions. The current versions with Network Level Authentication (starting in Windows Vista/Server 2008) present a smaller attacks surface. Older versions used "homegrown" Microsoft crypto, whereas current versions use TLS.
Disclosure: I made a FLOSS fail2ban-like tool for RDP many years ago[0]. I had a situation where I was forced to expose RDP to the Internet and I didn't like having it open w/o some protection against brute force attacks. This tool happens to still works in Server 2022 and will slow the velocity of brute force attacks. I still highly recommend not exposing RDP directly to the Internet anyway.
(The ts_block tool is missing some fairly essential functionality that I never got around to implementing. It works fine and is really easy to install but some things are sub-optimal.)
[0] https://github.com/EvanAnderson/ts_block
- Fail2Ban – Daemon to ban hosts that cause multiple authentication errors
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Analysis of a large brute force attack campaign against Windows Remote Desktop
My old ts_block[0] project does something similar to yours, albeit for RDP only and with much less sophisticated customization.
I opted to go with a WMI Event Sink rather than polling the Event Log. I've never done a benchmark to see which architecture would use less CPU, but I can say the WMI event sink causes nearly instantaneous reaction.
As an aside: I'd love to hear if somebody tries ts_block on Windows Server 2022. It works fine on 2012 R2 thru 2019 but I've never tried it on 2022.
[0] https://github.com/EvanAnderson/ts_block
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WinGet is terrible. I want AppGet back
The perspectives in the comments on this article re: WiX XML source and Windows Installer being difficult are interesting to me. Like I said elsewhere, I overcame that learning curve so long ago that I can't put myself in a position where it seems daunting now.
To be fair, though, an MSI to install a 10 files in "C:\Program Files\AppName", register a couple .NET assemblies, create a couple of shortcuts, and throw a few values into the registry would amount to <100 lines of XML.
Here's a years-old WiX 2.0 syntax source file to install 4 files in "C:\Program Files\appname" and run an EXE embedded in the MSI to install a service: https://github.com/EvanAnderson/ts_block/blob/master/MSI/ts_...
I've only seen "thousands of lines" of WiX source when dealing programs that install a ton of files, or put scads of entries in the registry.
Most of the MSIs with WiX are based on a simple skeleton generated from a template, and using "includes" generated by the "candle" tool.
Understanding the Windows Installer and the WiX source feels analogous to what I see in "modern" web development-- a bunch of tools that developers use, seemingly without understanding what they do, to create a massive pile of edifice into which original code is finally placed.
docker-swag
- Armar mi propio server
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Guide: Setting up Local DNS WITH PORTS
I have a NAS on .0.181 and a swag container (on a different port than nginx) on .0.180 that points to my public facing services. For obvious reasons, I don't want my public domain to point to any other ports/addresses on my home network. Additionally, as elegant as swag is, it requires authentication and so won't work for simple local DNS. I now have one local domain for each server and an nginx instance on each that resolves to my different services on each.
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SWAG + Nextcloud AIO + OnlyOffice + Openproject: Fullchain cert connections required. I have the data but I'm not sure how to plug this all together...
OP is even linking the Github... https://github.com/linuxserver/docker-swag
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Reverse Proxied services not accessible on LAN
I have an UnRAID server with a few services (Jellyfin, Nextcloud, etc.) running on it behind Linux Servers' SWAG reverse proxy container, which is built on Nginx and Let's Encrypt. This is pointed to a DuckDNS link, which is then pointed at my domain with a CNAME. So I can access Jellyfin, for example, at jellyfin.mydomain.com. A few weeks ago, due to seemingly unrelated issues, I got a new modem/router, an Arris SURFboard G34. For the first few weeks, everything was working as before. But now, when on my LAN, I can't get to my services at the proxied domain. It times out every time. There are no errors in SWAG's logs, nothing seems amiss in the router's web interface, and the services are available both at their IP:port address and, when not on my LAN, I can access them at the domain no problem.
- Fail2Ban – Daemon to ban hosts that cause multiple authentication errors
- Mealie and Swag sut issues
- Can't get Swag instance page
- Site marked dangerous
- Reverse proxy, where to start?
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What's the best way to connect my parent's Roku to my PC, which are on two separate networks?
Reverse proxy, probably? I use Docker SWAG, setup here, with DuckDNS and it works really well for me. There are of course many ways to reverse proxy, as I linked to earlier.
What are some alternatives?
Versions - 📦 A Scoop bucket for alternative versions of apps.
Nginx Proxy Manager - Docker container for managing Nginx proxy hosts with a simple, powerful interface
Shovel-Ash258 - Personal Shovel bucket with a wide variety of applications of all kinds.
authentik - The authentication glue you need.
oneget - PackageManagement (aka OneGet) is a package manager for Windows
traefik-examples - docker-compose configurations examples for traefik
ts_block - Blocks IP addresses generating invalid Terminal Services logons
oauth2-proxy - A reverse proxy that provides authentication with Google, Azure, OpenID Connect and many more identity providers.
wix3 - WiX Toolset v3.x
Caddy - Fast and extensible multi-platform HTTP/1-2-3 web server with automatic HTTPS
Chocolatey - Chocolatey - the package manager for Windows
authelia - The Single Sign-On Multi-Factor portal for web apps