takkkkkkk Posted December 27, 2015 Share Posted December 27, 2015 When I want to log into my unraid remotely, I usually manage unraid by accessing VM via TeamViewer and opening browser. Today, I was at my in-law's house, and I decided to add a hard drive that was unmapped to unraid (cuz, you know, there's nothing better to do when you're at in-law's:)). So, I do the usual, logging into my TeamViewer, accessing VM, opening browser, accessing unraid, "oh I have to stop array... ok!", check the check-box, click "stop", then right after I realize what this may do, my VM starts shutting down... then there it goes... no more plex, no more VM, no more.... thankfully, my in-law's house was a quick drive away from my house, so I drove back to the house and restarted the array. I also started my gaming rig so that I dont' have to rely on my VM. then I thought "there's gotta be a better way!". I'm assuming there's a plenty users here that manage their servers remotely. How do you guys do it? How do companies which own tons of servers manage them, I bet they often have to manage them remotely, or do they have people on-site to manage cases like this?? Quote Link to comment
Raah1911 Posted December 27, 2015 Share Posted December 27, 2015 I would suggest a secure way to access your connection remotely via ssh? ie open your ports on your router and forward? Quote Link to comment
Helmonder Posted December 27, 2015 Share Posted December 27, 2015 I have: VPN running on my Mikrotik router, that way I can access my entire network remotely with the same tools I use indoors (eg: my phone), but I can also set up a tunnel from another device if I need to do something more drastic. IPMI running on my two server boxes, so I can physically restart them should something really go wrong with the hosts Quote Link to comment
beire Posted December 27, 2015 Share Posted December 27, 2015 Also vpn here. Total access to the internal network ...couldn't be more easy. Log in from your phone or any device at your disposal, temporarily log in and just access your unraid with the local IP. I'm also running it from my mikrotik router. But there's plenty of ways you can run a vpn tunnel. Quote Link to comment
takkkkkkk Posted December 27, 2015 Author Share Posted December 27, 2015 Thanks for the great suggestions!! I wasn't sure how to do VPN considering the server has openVPN client. but if I put VPN to the router it should solve the issue!! Quote Link to comment
kgregg Posted December 27, 2015 Share Posted December 27, 2015 i use Remote Desktop extension to Chrome browser (running on Win 10 PC on same home network as unRAID) to remotely connect to PC at home. It works great and is free. Quote Link to comment
Helmonder Posted December 27, 2015 Share Posted December 27, 2015 Also vpn here. Total access to the internal network ...couldn't be more easy. Log in from your phone or any device at your disposal, temporarily log in and just access your unraid with the local IP. I'm also running it from my mikrotik router. But there's plenty of ways you can run a vpn tunnel. Mikrotik kicks ass... Doesn"t it ?! Quote Link to comment
beire Posted December 27, 2015 Share Posted December 27, 2015 Also vpn here. Total access to the internal network ...couldn't be more easy. Log in from your phone or any device at your disposal, temporarily log in and just access your unraid with the local IP. I'm also running it from my mikrotik router. But there's plenty of ways you can run a vpn tunnel. Mikrotik kicks ass... Doesn"t it ?! Jazeker Quote Link to comment
Helmonder Posted December 27, 2015 Share Posted December 27, 2015 Enormous wifi... Extremely flexible... Ridiculously cheap ! Quote Link to comment
takkkkkkk Posted December 27, 2015 Author Share Posted December 27, 2015 Ice never heard of Mikrotik until now. Are they goo compared to router like linksys A.C. Router?? Do they have a router with A.C.wifi? Quote Link to comment
Helmonder Posted December 27, 2015 Share Posted December 27, 2015 Hardware wise better, way cheaper but considerably harder to manage.. Quote Link to comment
Alexandro Posted December 27, 2015 Share Posted December 27, 2015 Mikrotik are great devices. Although they are really hard to be setup, especially for a person who is just a user. I own rb450g with uptime of several years but I gave up on setting it up as soon as I saw its "web interface". It was tuned by a friend who is a network admin in a large corporation. This devices are just on a next level compared to the soho routers. To answer the main question- I am using Vpn as well (PPtp). Quote Link to comment
Trunkz Posted December 27, 2015 Share Posted December 27, 2015 Run OpenVPN server on your unraid box. Peter has a plugin out and its increadibly easy to set-up. Takes 10 seconds to configure on unRAID, then simply forward UDP port 1194 to the unRAID server and you're done I VPN into my home network from my iPad when i'm out and about; very easy and its also secure. Quote Link to comment
takkkkkkk Posted December 28, 2015 Author Share Posted December 28, 2015 Mikrotik are great devices. Although they are really hard to be setup, especially for a person who is just a user. I own rb450g with uptime of several years but I gave up on setting it up as soon as I saw its "web interface". It was tuned by a friend who is a network admin in a large corporation. This devices are just on a next level compared to the soho routers. To answer the main question- I am using Vpn as well (PPtp). gothca, so, it's probably something I shouldn't have... I'll look for more of consumer grade router... Quote Link to comment
bedpan Posted December 29, 2015 Share Posted December 29, 2015 I use TeamViewer on most of my machines..... Teamview in and access via local connection.. Quote Link to comment
peter_sm Posted December 29, 2015 Share Posted December 29, 2015 OpenVPN on unRaid Quote Link to comment
WeeboTech Posted December 29, 2015 Share Posted December 29, 2015 My setup is a bit more complicated, as it's based on ssh. I use ssh forwarding/tunneling to a host that houses a squid proxy. This can be a Rasperry Pi or unRAID itself. I use secureCRT (which is commercial) to foward a local host port tunneled over ssh to the squid proxy. When I need to, I login with ssh, I enable the proxy in the browser and connect to the server's ip address. It helps to have multiple browsers, one you usually use and one that you use with forwarding. chrome/firefox for example. It's a bit complex, but it's worked for me over the years when I can only gain a single ssh connection to my network. Over a guest's network that is unencumbered by complex firewall rules, I would use the openvpn. Quote Link to comment
gundamguy Posted December 29, 2015 Share Posted December 29, 2015 My setup is a bit different as I use OpenVPN but I am running it off of a Raspberry Pi that's also on the network and not unRAID. It's really not very different then running it off of my router. Quote Link to comment
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