I’ve migrated from cloudflare pages to cloudflare tunnels as I wanted to do a little bit more.
I can’t segregate my network as my ISPs router is rather limited, which means no vLANs. Connecting another router would introduce a double nat as they don’t allow bridging. So I’m running my website basically “raw” in a hyperV virtual machine. the website is semi-static and made out of flatfiles, therefore it’s is quite impossible to login into it. as stated before i’m using cloudflare tunnels to expose a nginx server to the interner. what are the chances someone or something (bot) inflataring my network? 100% safety is not possible but how safe am i?
Well it does slightly more than just obfuscating your home IP, in that it will also do automatic bot, DDOS prevention, etc…
Nothing will stop a general scan from happening. Especially if it’s a slow scan.
Scans won’t trigger dos/ddos alerts.
Well yeah, that would get your host IP…if they’re doing a general scan of whole ISP IP ranges (Which nothing could really stop, except for a good firewall). But there is much more low-hanging fruit for hackers than to scan tens of thousands of unoccupied subnets.
Ilulz. Automated scans cost nothing in resources. That would not find a host IP, it’d find the public Ip and open port.
I would consider time a pretty major resource…and yes, you are correct I misspoke/typed. I meant public IP, not host IP…
Anyway, the point is not to prevent all attack vectors (which is impossible, unless you’re totally offline/air-gapped/etc), OP wants to minimize the probability of infiltration. So to get back to the question, yes CF tunnels help with that when implemented correctly.
tunnels are reverse-portforwarding. ports aren’t open on my network but on theirs.
anyways i moved back on VPS because im not 100% sure what is my ISPs stance lmao. and since i cant have much control with my internal network for now, id rather stay away but i def wanna host at home eventually