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# Controlling headscale with remote CLI
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This documentation has the goal of showing a user how-to control a headscale instance
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from a remote machine with the `headscale` command line binary.
## Prerequisite
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- A workstation to run `headscale` (any supported platform, e.g. Linux).
- A headscale server with gRPC enabled.
- Connections to the gRPC port (default: `50443` ) are allowed.
- Remote access requires an encrypted connection via TLS.
- An API key to authenticate with the headscale server.
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## Create an API key
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We need to create an API key to authenticate with the remote headscale server when using it from our workstation.
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To create an API key, log into your headscale server and generate a key:
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```shell
headscale apikeys create --expiration 90d
```
Copy the output of the command and save it for later. Please note that you can not retrieve a key again,
if the key is lost, expire the old one, and create a new key.
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To list the keys currently associated with the server:
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```shell
headscale apikeys list
```
and to expire a key:
```shell
headscale apikeys expire --prefix "< PREFIX > "
```
## Download and configure headscale
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1. Download the [`headscale` binary from GitHub's release page ](https://github.com/juanfont/headscale/releases ). Make
sure to use the same version as on the server.
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1. Put the binary somewhere in your `PATH` , e.g. `/usr/local/bin/headscale`
1. Make `headscale` executable:
```shell
chmod +x /usr/local/bin/headscale
```
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1. Provide the connection parameters for the remote headscale server either via a minimal YAML configuration file or via
environment variables:
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=== "Minimal YAML configuration file"
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```yaml
cli:
address: < HEADSCALE_ADDRESS > :< PORT >
api_key: < API_KEY_FROM_PREVIOUS_STEP >
```
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=== "Environment variables"
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```shell
export HEADSCALE_CLI_ADDRESS="< HEADSCALE_ADDRESS > :< PORT > "
export HEADSCALE_CLI_API_KEY="< API_KEY_FROM_PREVIOUS_STEP > "
```
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!!! bug
Headscale 0.23.0 requires at least an empty configuration file when environment variables are used to
specify connection details. See [issue 2193 ](https://github.com/juanfont/headscale/issues/2193 ) for more
information.
This instructs the `headscale` binary to connect to a remote instance at `<HEADSCALE_ADDRESS>:<PORT>` , instead of
connecting to the local instance.
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1. Test the connection
Let us run the headscale command to verify that we can connect by listing our nodes:
```shell
headscale nodes list
```
You should now be able to see a list of your nodes from your workstation, and you can
now control the headscale server from your workstation.
## Behind a proxy
It is possible to run the gRPC remote endpoint behind a reverse proxy, like Nginx, and have it run on the _same_ port as headscale.
While this is _not a supported_ feature, an example on how this can be set up on
[NixOS is shown here ](https://github.com/kradalby/dotfiles/blob/4489cdbb19cddfbfae82cd70448a38fde5a76711/machines/headscale.oracldn/headscale.nix#L61-L91 ).
## Troubleshooting
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- Make sure you have the _same_ headscale version on your server and workstation.
- Ensure that connections to the gRPC port are allowed.
- Verify that your TLS certificate is valid and trusted.
- If you don't have access to a trusted certificate (e.g. from Let's Encrypt), either:
- Add your self-signed certificate to the trust store of your OS _or_
- Disable certificate verification by either setting `cli.insecure: true` in the configuration file or by setting
`HEADSCALE_CLI_INSECURE=1` via an environment variable. We do **not** recommend to disable certificate validation.