A question re. #wireguard

When I’m away from home I usually connect to my home (US) and my server (Europe). However sometimes (not always) the connection to my home is blocked, I don’t know if it is caused by my phone company or my ISP. I blame the latter, because the connection to my european server never fails.

I wonder if there is something I can do in those cases?
I guess I could try to redirect the traffic to use the european server as a proxy, but that would make things slower the 90% of the time this isn’t a problem. Also, this would require me to switch wireguard connections manually, which is not ideal, especially if I’m driving.

Another alternative would be tailscale (maybe with headscale), but I’d rather keep my infrstructure as wireguard only.

Any ideas? cc @selfhosted@lemmy.world @selfhost@lemmy.ml

  • just_another_person@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    If Wireguard loses its connection, it doesn’t automatically requery the host and reconnect AFAIK. So if name resolution fails, or you’re on dynamic DNS and the IP changes, it’s not going to fix itself.

    • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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      3 months ago

      And by default, WireGuard doesn’t keep the connection alive when there’s no traffic. You can tune this in settings, which I’ve done because I’m behind CGNAT and need a persistent connection.

      • vividspecter@lemm.ee
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        3 months ago

        Or just use tailscale/headscale/netbird and keep the underlying wireguard performance.

        • MangoPenguin@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          3 months ago

          Tailscale in my experience does not run as kernel mode wireguard so performance is not great, but maybe that’s changed.

          Not sure about Netbird, but the Android app reviews are poor and it does not sound reliable.

      • lorentz@feddit.it
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        3 months ago

        Could it be that the domain name has both IPv4 and IPv6 and depending on the network you try to reach one or another? Wireguard can work on both protocols, but from my experience it doesn’t try both to see which one works (like browsers do). So if at the first try the dns resolves the “wrong” IP version, wireguard cannot connect and doesn’t fallback trying the alternative.