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Documentation Index

Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.proxylink.dev/llms.txt

Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

No. ProxyLink works with dynamic IPs. The WireGuard tunnel initiates an outbound connection from the client’s router to ProxyLink — no inbound ports need to be open. Even if the ISP IP changes, the tunnel reconnects automatically.
No — for network devices, cameras, NVRs, PBX systems, switches, and anything else accessible on the LAN. One WireGuard tunnel on the router is all you need. The only exception is Windows PCs, which require a one-time silent deploy script for RDP/VNC access.
TeamViewer and AnyDesk require software on every device. ProxyLink requires nothing on network devices — cameras, NVRs, PBX systems are unreachable by those tools without an agent. ProxyLink also routes traffic directly through WireGuard — it never passes through third-party servers. Both TeamViewer and AnyDesk were breached in 2024.
Yes. ProxyLink handles overlapping subnets via NETMAP — each tunnel gets a unique assigned subnet in the 10.128.0.0/9 range for translation. Two clients both using 192.168.1.0/24 work without conflict.
PersistentKeepalive=25 keeps the tunnel alive. If it drops, WireGuard reconnects automatically within seconds. ProxyLink monitoring alerts you if a service becomes unreachable.
The WireGuard pool supports up to 65,534 peers. On the MSP plan, you get 300 tunnels and 1,000 proxy links. On the Custom plan, it’s unlimited.