Self-Hosted Password Manager | Vault Warden on Docker - #14

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 10

  • @mozime1
    @mozime1 Месяц назад

    Great video. Tried before but now it works as explained. Thanks

  • @carlosalbertoacevedogonzal706
    @carlosalbertoacevedogonzal706 Месяц назад

    Thanks, your videos are totally good !!

  • @user-tk7sc4gz2v
    @user-tk7sc4gz2v 27 дней назад

    How is your DNS routing working from duckdns subdomain to a private ip range? do you have a dns server locally running?

    • @Tech-TheLazyAutomator
      @Tech-TheLazyAutomator  26 дней назад

      To route a DuckDNS subdomain to a private IP, I use a reverse proxy with SSL certificates, which directs traffic locally without needing a separate DNS server. Check out my RUclips video here [ruclips.net/video/kJOkmxKGKEg/видео.html] for a full step-by-step guide on setting up this configuration with DuckDNS and Nginx Proxy Manager. It covers everything you need to get your subdomain pointing to local services. Hope this helps!

  • @GfxShoaib-x6s
    @GfxShoaib-x6s Месяц назад

    bitwarden and this whats the difference?

    • @Tech-TheLazyAutomator
      @Tech-TheLazyAutomator  Месяц назад

      Great question! Bitwarden is the official, fully hosted version of the password manager, while Vault Warden is an unofficial, lightweight alternative designed to be self-hosted. Vault Warden uses fewer resources, making it ideal for personal or small server setups. Both offer similar core features like password storage, but with Vault Warden, you have full control over your data since it's hosted on your own server. Let me know if you need more details on any specific differences!