I have been running crowdsec on my OpenWRT firewall for a bit now, I am just curious as to what others think about it?
Thank you @irmadlad the webui you suggested is showing the logs a lot better than my vibe coded HA plug ins (both my ssh honey pot and my plug in showed nothing) looking over the logs shows so much activity that is happening.
It’s great! I use it on both my home server and my Hetzner server. It blocks connections based on behaviors defined by scenarios. I configured it to block any connections it decides to block via the firewall.
So far, so good. I don’t even know it’s running. It just does its job of blocking bots.
When I ran Crowdsec, I thought it was a great piece of software, and a very decent free tier. I didn’t have any real complaints other that there was not a way, at the time that I knew of, to have the UI selfhosted. I think now someone has created a selfhostable user front end to it, but I haven’t dabbled in that.
Here we go: https://corelab.tech/crowdsec-web-ui-setup-guide/
I think this gent posted this a week or so ago.
I am using HA
Edit: after looking at what you posted I thought I would check it out, and it is a lot better than the HA thing I vibe coded into home assistant.
Ooops! Well at least the link was helpful to ZebraGoose
I did not mean to through shade onto you this webui is a lot better than my ha vibe code.
Wow thanks! Defently gonna check that out!!
i run it on opnsense. When my services were on individual subdomains each with their own certificate, they got hit a lot and crowdsec blocked lots of bots and scripts
I ultimately moved all my services to a wildcard sub-subdomain, and poof all the bots went away and now crowdsec doesn’t do much other than block port scanners which the firewall does anyway.
it’s not worth the hassle to uninstall though.
I also haven’t seen any bot activity after I started using wildcard sub domains. My ISP blocks all incoming on common ports so I also use uncommon ports. I assume the combination of the two makes it too time consuming to find me.
I hid my ssh port with a wireguard connection so I also don’t see any attempts on my ssh port anymore either. My logs, including fail2ban, are quiet and boring.
It’s nice to have a quiet corner of the internet for myself.
Ahh so bots are finding subdomains by scraping SSL certificates?
That was my experience also. Within minutes of spinning up any new subdomain with a dedicated A DNS record, I had bots that scraped it from https://crt.sh/ knocking on the door.
With wildcard subdomains and relatively obscure URLs, it’s pretty quiet.






