cross-posted from: https://discuss.online/post/34942012
I find everyone using different services, so unsure how to best manage (and balance) concurrent access in Ubuntu/Debian to:
- Local network services
- Tailscale services from userA
- Tailscale services from userB
- Wireguard (OpenVPN also option) from userC
- Twingate from userD
Each user is wanting to share different services via VPN, and pressuring any to change their production setups to a different style of VPN is not going to happen.
- Management via software
- Possibly up a routing device along the lines of OpenWrt or OpnSense.
- Could even distribute such devices between these friends.
Thanks for all thoughts!
Are you running your services directly on the host or via docker? All the VPN services listed provide docker images which I think should allow you to run multiple instances without them interfering with each other, although I’ve only played around with Tailscale myself. The setup would be slightly different depending on if your services are containers or not
What do you mean? Is it working now? To my understanding this stuff either works or it doesn’t, what is going wrong for you? What are some things you’d like to make more seamless?
Example setup:
- Jellyfin user access from TailscaleA
- Nextcloud user access from TailscaleB
- Jellyfin user access from Wireguard
- Jellyfin user access from Twingate
- Jellyfin user access from local services
How would you manage this in a somewhat seamless manner?
This is just basic network routing and subnetting.
Okay, although it certainly doesn’t seem basic.
I’m not sure what you’d like here. You didn’t give much info.
Did you want someone to literally work out a full config for you in here? We don’t know what you’re even running.
You didn’t really include any details about your current VPN setups, your subnets, your routing rules, etc for anyone to give you a useful answer.


