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See also Nebula:

https://nebula.defined.net/docs/

https://nebula.defined.net/docs/guides/quick-start/

...I believe 100% open source. You can basically hub between different devices (including iOS/Android) that are identified via certs. Recommended to have one or more public "lighthouses" so anything that can reach a lighthouse can reach any of your other servers (maybe kindof "syncthing for vpn/overlay-network?").

I've dorked around with it a little bit, but it's rare enough that I need access to my home network while out that I haven't doubled down on proper cert, key management, rotation, etc.



The Nebula Android app is not open source:( That's why I dropped it, personally.

https://github.com/DefinedNet/mobile_nebula/issues/19#issuec...

https://github.com/DefinedNet/mobile_nebula/issues/142


Source Available vs Open Source on a monetizable/enterprise component? There are worse tradeoffs one could make, but thanks for pointing it out!


Huh. Y'know, until you suggested it, it hadn't occurred to me that the mobile app could be monetizable. That could at least explain why they did that; I thought it was odd.




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