# Running headscale on OpenBSD ## Goal This documentation has the goal of showing a user how-to install and run `headscale` on OpenBSD 7.1. In additional to the "get up and running section", there is an optional [rc.d section](#running-headscale-in-the-background-with-rcd) describing how to make `headscale` run properly in a server environment. ## Install `headscale` 1. Install from ports (Not Recommend) As of OpenBSD 7.1, there's a headscale in ports collection, however, it's severely outdated(v0.12.4). You can install it via `pkg_add headscale`. 2. Install from source on OpenBSD 7.1 ```shell # Install prerequistes # 1. go v1.18+: headscale newer than 0.15 needs go 1.18+ to compile # 2. gmake: Makefile in the headscale repo is written in GNU make syntax pkg_add -D snap go pkg_add gmake git clone https://github.com/juanfont/headscale.git cd headscale # optionally checkout a release # option a. you can find offical relase at https://github.com/juanfont/headscale/releases/latest # option b. get latest tag, this may be a beta relase latestTag=$(git describe --tags `git rev-list --tags --max-count=1`) git checkout $latestTag gmake build # make it executable chmod a+x headscale # copy it to /usr/local/sbin cp headscale /usr/local/sbin ``` 3. Install from source via cross compile ```shell # Install prerequistes # 1. go v1.18+: headscale newer than 0.15 needs go 1.18+ to compile # 2. gmake: Makefile in the headscale repo is written in GNU make syntax git clone https://github.com/juanfont/headscale.git cd headscale # optionally checkout a release git checkout v0.16.0-beta1 make build GOOS=openbsd # copy headscale to openbsd machine and put it in /usr/local/sbin ``` ## Configure and run `headscale` 1. Prepare a directory to hold `headscale` configuration and the [SQLite](https://www.sqlite.org/) database: ```shell # Directory for configuration mkdir -p /etc/headscale # Directory for Database, and other variable data (like certificates) mkdir -p /var/lib/headscale ``` 2. Create an empty SQLite database: ```shell touch /var/lib/headscale/db.sqlite ``` 3. Create a `headscale` configuration: ```shell touch /etc/headscale/config.yaml ``` It is **strongly recommended** to copy and modify the [example configuration](../config-example.yaml) from the [headscale repository](../) 4. Start the headscale server: ```shell headscale serve ``` This command will start `headscale` in the current terminal session. --- To continue the tutorial, open a new terminal and let it run in the background. Alternatively use terminal emulators like [tmux](https://github.com/tmux/tmux). To run `headscale` in the background, please follow the steps in the [rc.d section](#running-headscale-in-the-background-with-rcd) before continuing. 5. Verify `headscale` is running: Verify `headscale` is available: ```shell curl http://127.0.0.1:9090/metrics ``` 6. Create a namespace ([tailnet](https://tailscale.com/kb/1136/tailnet/)): ```shell headscale namespaces create myfirstnamespace ``` ### Register a machine (normal login) On a client machine, execute the `tailscale` login command: ```shell tailscale up --login-server YOUR_HEADSCALE_URL ``` Register the machine: ```shell headscale --namespace myfirstnamespace nodes register --key ``` ### Register machine using a pre authenticated key Generate a key using the command line: ```shell headscale --namespace myfirstnamespace preauthkeys create --reusable --expiration 24h ``` This will return a pre-authenticated key that can be used to connect a node to `headscale` during the `tailscale` command: ```shell tailscale up --login-server --authkey ``` ## Running `headscale` in the background with rc.d This section demonstrates how to run `headscale` as a service in the background with [rc.d](https://man.openbsd.org/rc.d). 1. Create a rc.d service at `/etc/rc.d/headscale` containing: ```shell #!/bin/ksh daemon="/usr/local/sbin/headscale" daemon_logger="daemon.info" daemon_user="root" daemon_flags="serve" daemon_timeout=60 . /etc/rc.d/rc.subr rc_bg=YES rc_reload=NO rc_cmd $1 ``` 2. `/etc/rc.d/headscale` needs execute permission: ```shell chmod a+x /etc/rc.d/headscale ``` 3. Start `headscale` service: ```shell rcctl start headscale ``` 4. Make `headscale` service start at boot: ```shell rcctl enable headscale ``` 5. Verify the headscale service: ```shell rcctl check headscale ``` Verify `headscale` is available: ```shell curl http://127.0.0.1:9090/metrics ``` `headscale` will now run in the background and start at boot.