If your goal is to improve security you would have to look into e2e encryption. This means network traffic needs to be encrypted both between client and proxy as well as between proxy and service. Your volumes should be also encrypted. You didn’t elaborate on your proxmox/network setup. I will assume that you have multiple proxmox hosts and external router perhaps with switch between them. Traffic this way flows between multiple devices. With security mindset you’re assuming network can’t be trusted. You need to apply layered approach and use sparation of physical devices, VLANs, ACLs, separate network interfaces for management and services for respective networks. Firewall rules on router, proxmox and VM.
Some solutions
- separate network for VM/CT. Instead of using network routable IP going to your router you can create new bridge on separate CIDR without specifying gateway. Add bridge to every VM that needs connectivity. Use new bridge IPs to communicate between VMs. Further you can configure proxmox to communicate between nodes in ring network P2P instead using switch/router. This requires at least 2 dedicated NICs on Proxmox host. This separates network but doesn’t encrypt.
Encryption:
- You could run another proxy on same VM as service just to encrypt traffic if service doesn’t support that. Then have your proxy connect to that proxy instead of service directly. This way unencrypted traffic doesn’t leave VM. Step up would be to use certificate validation. Step up from there would be to use internal certificate authority and issue certificates from there as well as validate using CA cert.
- Another alternative is to use overlay network between proxy and VM. There are bunch of different options. Hashicorp consul network could be interesting project. There are more advanced projects combining zero trust concepts like nebula.
- if you start building advanced overlay networks you may as well look at kubernetes as it streamlines deployment of both services and underlying infrastructure. You could deploy calico with wire guard network. Setup gets more complicated for a simple home lab.
All boils down to the question why you do self hosting? If it’s to learn new tech then go for it all the way. Experiment and fail often so you learn what works and what doesn’t. If you want to focus on reliability and simplicity don’t overcomplicate things. You will spend too much time troubleshooting and have your services unavailable. Many people run everything on single node just running docker with networks between services to separate internal services from proxy traffic. Simplicity trumps everything if you can’t configure complex networks securely.