This commit starts restructuring the documentation and updating it to be compliant with 0.12.x+ releases. The main change is that the documentation has been rewritten for the ground up, and hopefully simplified. The documentation has been split into an official documentation for running headscale as a binary under Linux with SystemD and a "community" provided documentation for Docker. This should make the two documents a lot easier to read and follow than the mishmash document we had.
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Running headscale in a container
Note: the container documentation is maintained by the *community and there is no guarentee it is up to date, or working.
Goal
This documentation has the goal of showing a user how-to set up and run headscale
in a container.
Docker is used as the reference container implementation, but there is no reason that it should
not work with alternatives like Podman.
Configure and run headscale
- Prepare a direction to hold
headscale
configuration and the SQlite database:
mkdir config
- Create an empty SQlite datebase:
touch config/db.sqlite
- Create a
headscale
configuration:
touch config/config.yaml
It is strongly recommended to copy the example configuration from the headscale repository
- Start the headscale server:
docker run \
--name headscale \
--detach \
--rm \
--volume $(pwd)/config:/etc/headscale/ \
--publish 127.0.0.1:8080:8080 \
headscale/headscale:<VERSION> \
headscale serve
This command will mount config/
under /etc/headscale
, forward port 8080 out of the container so the
headscale
instance becomes available and then detach so headscale runs in the background.
- Verify
headscale
is running:
Follow the container logs:
docker logs --follow headscale
Verify running containers:
docker ps
Verify headscale
is available:
curl http://127.0.0.1:8080/metrics
- Create a namespace (tailnet):
docker exec headscale -- headscale namespaces create myfirstnamespace
Register a machine (normal login)
On a client machine, execute the tailscale
login command:
tailscale up --login-server YOUR_HEADSCALE_URL
To register a machine when running headscale
in a container, take the headscale command and pass it to the container:
docker exec headscale -- \
headscale --namespace myfirstnamespace nodes register --key <YOU_+MACHINE_KEY>
Register machine using a pre authenticated key
Generate a key using the command line:
docker exec headscale -- \
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:
tailscale up --login-server <YOUR_HEADSCALE_URL> --authkey <YOUR_AUTH_KEY>
Debugging headscale running in Docker
The headscale/headscale
Docker container is based on a "distroless" image that does not contain a shell or any other debug tools. If you need to debug your application running in the Docker container, you can use the -debug
variant, for example headscale/headscale:x.x.x-debug
.
Running the debug Docker container
To run the debug Docker container, use the exact same commands as above, but replace headscale/headscale:x.x.x
with headscale/headscale:x.x.x-debug
(x.x.x
is the version of headscale). The two containers are compatible with each other, so you can alternate between them.
Executing commands in the debug container
The default command in the debug container is to run headscale
, which is located at /bin/headscale
inside the container.
Additionally, the debug container includes a minimalist Busybox shell.
To launch a shell in the container, use:
docker run -it headscale/headscale:x.x.x-debug sh
You can also execute commands directly, such as ls /bin
in this example:
docker run headscale/headscale:x.x.x-debug ls /bin
Using docker exec
allows you to run commands in an existing container.