this post was submitted on 11 Jul 2023
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You can just open a port in the firewall/port forward a local server if your home ISP isn't shit. If it is shit, you can run it in the cloud somewhere. I wouldn't go with Amazon, they're terribly expensive for hobby projects (who needs multi zone failover for a personal hobby project), any $5 VPS provider will do. Just make sure to install updates automatically so you don't need to keep a close eye on maintenance and you should be golden.
Alternatively, if you don't want to expose your server to the internet, you can set up a VPN server on your cloud server and only expose the password manager to your VPN. Wireguard is relatively simple to set up for this purpose, but tailscale (and whatever the self-hosted tailscale server is called) makes things even easier.
A cheap <$20/year VPS is sufficient to host Vaultwarden. No need to spend several times that. My Vaultwarden installation is only using 120MB RAM, so a 1GB RAM VPS would be more than sufficient. Take a look at RackNerd, HostHatch, GreenCloudVPS, and the other top providers on LowEndTalk. RackNerd's latest sale has a VPS plan with 1GB RAM and 14GB SSD storage for $11.38/year: https://lowendtalk.com/discussion/186994/boom-boom-4th-of-july-deals-come-come-deals-freebies-by-racknerd, but I'd personally go with the 4GB RAM and 75GB disk for $47.88/year, since self-hosting is addictive and you'll find plenty of other stuff you want to host.
(I'm not affiliated with any of these companies)
I would trust the absolute bottom of the barrel services with unimportant things like blogs, but I don't want my password manager to be hosted there. It just feels too sketchy to me.
Given the prices of these VPSes, you could get two or three with different providers and have a warm standby in case of any issues.
RackNerd is legit though - a real company with a physical office. I've had some VPSes with them in the past, and only got rid of them because I wanted to consolidate a few things.