this post was submitted on 28 Nov 2023
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There are VPNS that offer public IPs, some more enterprise grade VPNs can offer static IPs as well. But its not cheap.
Another way if traffic is mostly HTTP(S) based you can use cloudflare, seems to be the norm here.
Why are you moving to an ISP that does not support your needs? are you moving?
The current ISP's service have been terrible.... frequent down times, that usually take 5-24 hours to resolve. It's unbearable. We were thinking of getting starlink too.
Yes all traffic i need to forward are http based... so that cloudflare thing, did u mean the cloudflared tunnel thing they have? if so, i think I will need to create different tunnels for each port I want to open right?
the other issue that I have is i need a fixed IP in order to access remote databases we use in development. It's a security thing (our remote database server whitelists connecting IP)
I knew when you described being behind CGNAT that you were talking about Starlink. Starlink isn't necessarily a solution to your problems. I have it, and it's recently been pretty slow where I am, and their support is famously difficult to work with. If you have a terrestrial option, it's probably worth taking a good look at whether you really want Starlink. A few hours of reading in r/starlink may be able to help.
For your other issue, it seems like the best answer is for your employer to provide a VPN (a real VPN, hosted by the employer, not some janky BorgVPN thing whose only purpose is paying YouTubers to lie about what people use their service for.) That has the additional advantage of greatly simplifying the whitelist, which is good for security.
hi
thanks for the insights
unfortunately employer wont be setting up VPNs anytime soon :(