There are dynamic dns services that can solve this problem for you.
Some of them are even supported directly by some routers, so you might
want to check your router configuration, and see if it has built-in
support for any of the dynamic dns services, and use that one, so you
don't have to do anything at all, just set your dns to point to the
dynamic dns servers, and the ips will change automatically when your ip
does. I've used a couple such services in the past, and they've all
worked fairly well. I can't use one now, because somehow, my isp blocks
incoming traffic to server ports, regardless of what I set them to.
<shrug> Might save you a whole lot of work and likely to be cheaper than
a vpn as well.
On 3/10/2017 8:18 AM, Graeme Geldenhuys wrote:
Last night I was investigating the idea of moving some of my personal
and company VMs and services to a remote cloud based VPS (Virtual
Private Server).
eg:
https://www.vultr.com/
https://www.vultr.com/pricing/
https://www.vultr.com/locations/
This seems amazing value. And the problem I currently have with hosting
many of my company services myself (like I've been doing for over 4
years), is that I lost my static IPv4 address and my ISP can't give me a
new one. This year alone my IP address has changed about 5 times, and
that means until I notice or my clients complain, my services can't be
accessed, and I need to keep updating many DNS entries and wait until
they propagate across the globe. I already stopped self-hosting my email
due to this issue. With a VPS I'll get an assigned IPv4 and IPv6 address
and it will stay mine as long as I don't delete the VPS I set up.
I'm not really a big fan of cloud based services, but with Vultr, I can
pick the country I host in (a choice of 15 I think), so that is a big
plus, and the price is really good - starting at $2.50 per month. I also
have a huge choice of various OSes and versions I can use to configure a
VPS (luckily FreeBSD is in that list too), and it takes 60 seconds to
get a new VPS up and running - amazing!
https://www.vultr.com/faq/#accordion-tech
Are any of you familiar or use with such services? What's your thoughts
on the subject? Privacy, reliability, speed, preferred country of
hosting etc.
They do per hour billing too, so if one wanted to test a new program or
installation on a different OS, this seems a quick and easy way of doing
it too (without having to create tons of different VM's, though I
already have plenty such VM images lying around). So this might not be
such a big "added advantage" for me.
Regards,
Graeme
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