How to securely expose internal services, comparisons with traditional VPN, release notes and the technical bones of the product.
The release that closes 3 versions of gap between the desktop clients. Gateway, global and per-tunnel pause, weekly scheduling — now also via CLI on Linux and macOS.
How to keep tunnels offline overnight to save traffic, or online only during business hours. All via command line, no GUI needed.
How to expose server, camera, NAS and printer sitting on different IPs of your LAN using only a single installed SuperDMZ client.
OpenVPN, WireGuard, IPSec, Tailscale, Twingate, ZTNA, reverse tunnel (ngrok, SuperDMZ). They overlap, but the decision depends on who your end user is.
Every HTTP tunnel in SuperDMZ ships with a valid HTTPS certificate (not self-signed). This post explains how we deliver that without charging extra or making you touch certbot.
As a developer, you need to test real webhooks during development. ngrok works. SuperDMZ does too — and with a stable URL that doesn't change on every reconnect.