So maybe I am missing something obvious, but here goes:
I’ve got a small server at home, and I have simply.com pointing various domains to it. Works fine, nginx routs the traffic where it needs to go.
But whenever I am at home and connected to wifi I have to use the internal address and port to reach my server, e.g. 192.168.0.192:8096 for my Jellyfin server. If I use the public URL at home, i hit the login page to my router.
This is annoying when I use apps, as I need to switch between the public URL and the internal address as I come and go from my home…
What are my options for doing something about this? I want to use the public URL at home too…
You may have to set up split zone DNS so names resolve to private IPs when at home but resolve to public addresses when not home.
I strongly recommend the NAT loopback route over attempting split-horizon dns.
I can’t remember exactly what its called, but something like
routerNAT loopback is what you want. I’ll have a look around. But if you set it right, things should work properly. It might be a router setting.Found it: https://community.tp-link.com/en/home/stories/detail/1726
Thanks - I have an icotera i4850 router which claims to support NAT loopback, but I can’t figure out where to do it and it seems like the manual is gone from the internet :) Might have to ask my internet provider if they have a PDF somewhere.
Edit: D’oh, it’s a checkbox in the port forwarding interface! Thanks a bunch, didn’t know what to look for before your reply :)
To bypass this problem you can add your domain (with all the third level ones) to your router, pointing to your internal IP