* Add support for service reload and sync service file * Copy the systemd.service file to the manual linux docs and adjust the path to the headscale binary to match with the previous documentation blocks. Unfortunately, there seems to be no easy way to include a file in mkdocs. * Remove a redundant "deprecation" block. The beginning of the documentation already states that. * Add `ExecReload` to the systemd.service file. Fixes: #2016 * Its called systemd * Fix link to systemd homepage
4.7 KiB
Running headscale on Linux
!!! warning "Outdated and advanced"
This documentation is considered the "legacy"/advanced/manual version of the documentation, you most likely do not
want to use this documentation and rather look at the [distro specific documentation](./running-headscale-linux.md).
Goal
This documentation has the goal of showing a user how-to set up and run headscale
on Linux.
In additional to the "get up and running section", there is an optional systemd section
describing how to make headscale
run properly in a server environment.
Configure and run headscale
-
Download the latest
headscale
binary from GitHub's release page:wget --output-document=/usr/local/bin/headscale \ https://github.com/juanfont/headscale/releases/download/v<HEADSCALE VERSION>/headscale_<HEADSCALE VERSION>_linux_<ARCH>
-
Make
headscale
executable:chmod +x /usr/local/bin/headscale
-
Prepare a directory to hold
headscale
configuration and the SQLite database:# Directory for configuration mkdir -p /etc/headscale # Directory for Database, and other variable data (like certificates) mkdir -p /var/lib/headscale # or if you create a headscale user: useradd \ --create-home \ --home-dir /var/lib/headscale/ \ --system \ --user-group \ --shell /usr/sbin/nologin \ headscale
-
Create a
headscale
configuration:touch /etc/headscale/config.yaml
(Strongly Recommended) Download a copy of the example configuration from the headscale repository.
-
Start the headscale server:
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 or screen.
To run
headscale
in the background, please follow the steps in the systemd section before continuing. -
Verify
headscale
is running: Verifyheadscale
is available:curl http://127.0.0.1:9090/metrics
-
Create a user (tailnet):
headscale users create myfirstuser
Register a machine (normal login)
On a client machine, execute the tailscale
login command:
tailscale up --login-server YOUR_HEADSCALE_URL
Register the machine:
headscale nodes register --user myfirstuser --key <YOUR_MACHINE_KEY>
Register machine using a pre authenticated key
Generate a key using the command line:
headscale preauthkeys create --user myfirstuser --reusable --expiration 24h
This will return a pre-authenticated key that can be used to connect a node to headscale
during the tailscale
command:
tailscale up --login-server <YOUR_HEADSCALE_URL> --authkey <YOUR_AUTH_KEY>
Running headscale
in the background with systemd
This section demonstrates how to run headscale
as a service in the background with systemd.
This should work on most modern Linux distributions.
-
Copy headscale's systemd service file to
/etc/systemd/system/headscale.service
and adjust it to suit your local setup. The following parameters likely need to be modified:ExecStart
,WorkingDirectory
,ReadWritePaths
.Note that when running as the headscale user ensure that, either you add your current user to the headscale group:
usermod -a -G headscale current_user
or run all headscale commands as the headscale user:
su - headscale
-
In
/etc/headscale/config.yaml
, override the defaultheadscale
unix socket with path that is writable by theheadscale
user or group:unix_socket: /var/run/headscale/headscale.sock
-
Reload systemd to load the new configuration file:
systemctl daemon-reload
-
Enable and start the new
headscale
service:systemctl enable --now headscale
-
Verify the headscale service:
systemctl status headscale
Verify
headscale
is available:curl http://127.0.0.1:9090/metrics
headscale
will now run in the background and start at boot.