CGNAT, or Carrier-grade NAT is a different kettle of fish. I usually just get a static IP with my existing ISP to lessen the traps but with current ISP they buy their IP blocks from a third party, and they are quite expensive per month so i chose to stay with CGNAT instead.
The way that technology is improving there are ways around CGNAT for things you need to run as a local service - i basically haven't hit a hurdle / gotcha as per yet.
I use a CloudFlare Tunnel on Opnsense to link and integrate my Home Assistant server with Alexa/ Tuya et al.
I use a dynip ipv4 checker for my PBX and do that via DNS records on a specific hostname to get around it.
And tailscale to link my servers so they can talk on a network layer that isnt restricted though private and secure.
When out and about, I can use my mobile phone to tailscale into my home network and make use of the local NAT too including manually turning smart devices on / off - that is, lights, aircon, washer, dryer, vertical blinds, TVs etc.
Edited by
Unknow
on Sun 06/30/24 10:00 PM