Stuck behind nat, any way to get wireguard working?
Is there any possibility to get wireguard working to access my raspberry pi from outside my home? I've port forwarded the wireguard udp port and it doesn't work... Likely because I'm behind a NAT. My wan public ip is like 10.x.x.x which is most likely a private ip. Running tailscale for now
Not OP, but thanks for sharing about headscale. I wasn't aware this existed. Probably won't make a switch to it anytime soon, personally. I have way too much connected on tailscale right now.
I'm in the same boat so I setup a $2.50/mo VPS and that's my gateway. It took a little bit to get the nftables on vps to work right. I'd recomemned tailscale or similar if you want easy, though I've not ever used them myself.
What would be the added latency. I was thinking of doing something like this and I could get a 3$ month VPS about 30km from where I live. I was thinking of doing something like that for remote gaming on my powerful desktop. Annoyingly I have cgnat and a IPv6 from where I live and no IPv6 from where I want to access it.
At best it will add whatever the extra hop is and any network congestion.
My VPS host is 2200km away. I should find a closer one.... but it adds 160ms with some spikes in the 200-300 range. This is round trip 4400km roughly All things considered not too bad. My VPS is a 1vCPU, 1GB ram, 1Gbit unmetered, only as wireguard server. Hope that helps.
I sent you a message They are bit bare bones compared to other host but I haven't had any issues with them in over a year. On the wireguard side you're looking for a spoke and hub setup.
You need to expose the ports you want to access on an external, publicly accessible server like a cheap vps. Then you can use wireguard to forward the traffic to your Pi.
I haven't done it in a long while, so I can't explain it well enough, try searching for "vps wireguard gateway". That should bring up some blog posts that will explain the process better.
I used a VPS I got on the AWS free tier, you really don't need anything expensive.