@thechildofroth @xandris @rds @beasts
If you're having trouble getting regular certbot certificates (because that requires certbot service to talk to the computer trying to get the certificates), you can try using the certbot DNS verification for certificates (because that only needs you to prove that you control the domain name, and doesn't really talk to your servers)
https://eff-certbot.readthedocs.io/en/stable/using.html#dns-plugins
@double_a_runi @xandris @rds @beasts I've continued to chase this around today and it does appear that there's no simple way around the CGNAT address issued by my ISP. I've reached out to them to find out what options they have to circumvent it.
@thechildofroth @double_a_runi @xandris @rds @beasts Worth checking if your ISP uses CGNAT for both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. If you have a real IPv6 address, that might be the way to go.
@mdonkin @double_a_runi @xandris @rds @beasts There's no IPV6 address in the router control panel, although there is this article (from 2023) saying the ISP are ready and rolling it out to customers: https://www.ispreview.co.uk/index.php/2023/08/uk-broadband-isp-octaplus-confirms-ipv6-readiness.html
I wonder if there's something that I can do from my end to get upgraded?