OK I'm going to apologise for this post as I have spent days looking for the solution and have read that much, I'm forgetting what I'm doing.
I have only recently installed Proxmox to a bare metal Dell R710. The installation was painless and Proxmox looks like a superior setup. I've created a container with Nextcloud as a turnkey install and I followed some tutorials on hardening the Proxmox through firewall policies. I've also installed nginx to handle port 443 but not 80 as that needs to be used for lets encrypt.
As far as I know the server is hardened and Proxmox can be reached through my FQD.
I have configured one public ip address and that is bridged to the server.
What I can't do is access Nextcloud through say port 8282 because I don't understand how to configure it.
I thought, like most firewalls, that Proxmox uses port forwarding to handle http requests, but I can see that this is achieved somehow through bridges.
So is there a document that anyone knows of that can help me with this. Or can anyone tell me what I'm doing wrong please.
I really do appreciate any help, and am willing to read up where I need to.
I have only recently installed Proxmox to a bare metal Dell R710. The installation was painless and Proxmox looks like a superior setup. I've created a container with Nextcloud as a turnkey install and I followed some tutorials on hardening the Proxmox through firewall policies. I've also installed nginx to handle port 443 but not 80 as that needs to be used for lets encrypt.
As far as I know the server is hardened and Proxmox can be reached through my FQD.
I have configured one public ip address and that is bridged to the server.
What I can't do is access Nextcloud through say port 8282 because I don't understand how to configure it.
I thought, like most firewalls, that Proxmox uses port forwarding to handle http requests, but I can see that this is achieved somehow through bridges.
So is there a document that anyone knows of that can help me with this. Or can anyone tell me what I'm doing wrong please.
I really do appreciate any help, and am willing to read up where I need to.