As the title says, I want to know the most paranoid security measures you’ve implemented in your homelab. I can think of SDN solutions with firewalls covering every interface, ACLs, locked-down/hardened OSes etc but not much beyond that. I’m wondering how deep this paranoia can go (and maybe even go down my own route too!).
Thanks!
- full disk encryption on everything except the router (no point in encrypting the router)
- the server doesn’t have a display connected for obvious reasons, so I’m manually unlocking it via ssh on each boot
- obviously, the SSH keys are different, so the server has a different IP in initrd. That said, I still don’t have any protection against malicious modification of initrd or UEFI
- the server doesn’t have a display connected for obvious reasons, so I’m manually unlocking it via ssh on each boot
- the server scans all new SSL certificates in realtime using certspotter and notifies me of any new certificates issued for my domains that it doesn’t know about (I use Cloudflare so it triggers relatively often, but I still do checks on who the issuer is)
- firewall blocks outgoing 25 so nobody can impersonate my mailserver
You might be interested in setting up network bound encryption via Clevis and Tang. I use a hidden pi zero in my house acting as a Tang server. It’s great being able to reboot any of my encrypted servers without having to manually unlock disks.
I know about it, but it kinda defeats the purpose (the purpose being police raid protection)
Do you recommend any resources about this? I’d be interested in learning how to implement this.
I’m using the recently merged Clevis module for NixOS. There was a recent talk at FOSDEM about it.
Thanks, I’d like to know more about your public-facing setup using cloudflare
there’s not much to know about it, I use Cloudflare simply because its routing is better than direct IP connections for many places on Earth. I can’t fully use Cloudflare anyway because I host many non-web services.
- full disk encryption on everything except the router (no point in encrypting the router)