Selfhosted
A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.
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You don't have to worry about DDoS:
If the stuff you'll be hosting is static files you can use a CDN service. CDN's are designed to be distributed and redundant so they're somewhat resilient to DoS attacks by default. They'll still kick you off if it gets to be too much but maybe you can weather shorter/moderate attacks.
If you're hosting a dynamic/interactive service forget about it.
Use your common sense. They're not going to expend any significant resources to keep up a free website.
They have a small capacity available for mitigating DoS for free accounts together, while resources last. If you happen to fit in that capacity at any given time that's nice, if you don't, you go down.
Then why do they offer a separate, distinct DDoS mitigation feature on the enterprise plans? And did you notice they call them "mitigation" and not "protection"? 🙂
Look at the description of each one, the free one "stops illegitimate traffic at the edge". Meaning they'll serve from cache, it's not getting through to your actual site. You can get caching from any CDN service, it doesn't have to be CF. All CDN services are distributed and will try to serve for as long as possible because their whole purpose is to deal with traffic spikes.
And if you want to know for how long CF (or any service) will serve from cache and how far they'll go for an account (especially a free account), you want to check the terms of service not the plans. The plans are made to sell to you, the fine print is in the terms.
Anyway, I really don't understand people's obsession with DDoS, particularly self-hosting people. The chances of their little website ever being the target of a DDoS are astronomical. Many of them don't take proper backups, and don't worry about theft or fire or electric spikes, which are far more likely, but go frantic when they hear about features they'll never use.