I have a few selfhosted services, but I’m slowly adding more. Currently, they’re all in subdomains like linkding.sekoia.example etc. However, that adds DNS records to fetch and means more setup. Is there some reason I shouldn’t put all my services under a single subdomain with paths (using a reverse proxy), like selfhosted.sekoia.example/linkding?

  • drdaemanA
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    21 year ago

    Some apps have hardcoded assumptions about the paths, making those kind of setup harder to achieve (you’ll have to patch the apps or do on-the-fly rewrites).

    Then there’s also potential cookie sharing/collision issue. If apps don’t set cookies for specific paths, they may both use same-named cookie and this may cause weird behavior.

    And if one of the apps is compromised (e.g. has an XSS issue) it’s a bit less secure with paths than with subdomains.

    But don’t let me completely dissuade you - paths are totally valid approach, especially if you group multiple clisely related things together (e.g. Grafana and Prometheus) under the same domain name.

    However, if you feel that setting up a new domain name is a lot of effort, I would recommend you investing some time in automating this.

  • @shrugal@lemmy.world
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    22 years ago

    If you don’t have any restrictions (limited subdomains, service only works on the server root etc.) then it’s really just a personal preference. I usually try paths first, and switch to subdomains if that doesn’t work.

  • Jeena
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    2 years ago

    I started with paths because I didn’t want to pay for a expensive SSL certificate for each service I’m running (now with letsencrypt no problem anymore). But that turned out to be a terrible idea. Once I wanted to host a service on a different server the problems started. With subdomain you just point your DNS to the correct IP address and that’s it. With paths you have to proxy everything through your one vhost and it get’s really messy. And to be honest most services expect you to run them on the root directory and not a path.

  • @dan@lemm.ee
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    22 years ago

    The only problem with using paths is the service might not support it (ie it might generate absolute URLs without the path in, rather than using relative URLs).

    Subdomains is probably the cleanest way to go.

    • @scrchngwsl@feddit.uk
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      22 years ago

      Agreed, I’ve run into lots of problems trying to get reverse proxies set up on paths, which disappear if you use a subdomain. For that reason I stick with subdomains and a wildcard DNS entry.

  • surfrock66
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    12 years ago

    Subdomain; overall cheaper after a certain point to get a wildcard cert, and if you split your services up without a reverse proxy it’s easier to direct names to different servers.

  • Midas
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    2 years ago

    I’ve kinda been trimming the amount of services I’ve exposed through subdomains, it grew so wild because it was pretty easy. I’d just set a wildcard subdomains to my ip and the caddy reverse proxy created the subdomains.

    Just have a wildcard A record that points *. to your ip address.

    Even works with nested domains like “home.” and then “*.home”

  • @TemperateFox@beehaw.org
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    2 years ago

    Everyone is saying subdomains so I’ll try to give a reason for paths. Using subdomains makes local access a bit harder. With paths you can use httpS://192etc/example, but if you use subdomains, how do you connect internally with https? Https://example.192etc won’t work as you can’t mix an ip address with domain resolution. You’ll have to use http://192etc:port. So no httpS for internal access. I got around this by hosting adguard as a local DNS and added an override so that my domain resolved to the local IP. But this won’t work if you’re connected to a VPN as it’ll capture your DNS requests, if you use paths you could exclude the IP from the VPN.

    Edit: not sure what you mean by “more setup”, you should be using a reverse proxy either way.

    • @tkohhh@waveform.social
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      12 years ago

      If your router has NAT reflection, then the problem you describe is non existent. I use the same domain/protocol both inside and outside my network.