tailscale/ipn/ipnlocal/profiles.go

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// Copyright (c) Tailscale Inc & AUTHORS
// SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
package ipnlocal
import (
"cmp"
"crypto/rand"
"encoding/json"
"errors"
"fmt"
"runtime"
"slices"
"strings"
"tailscale.com/clientupdate"
"tailscale.com/envknob"
"tailscale.com/health"
"tailscale.com/ipn"
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
"tailscale.com/tailcfg"
"tailscale.com/types/logger"
"tailscale.com/util/clientmetric"
)
var debug = envknob.RegisterBool("TS_DEBUG_PROFILES")
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// profileManager is a wrapper around an [ipn.StateStore] that manages
// multiple profiles and the current profile.
//
// It is not safe for concurrent use.
type profileManager struct {
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
goos string // used for TestProfileManagementWindows
store ipn.StateStore
logf logger.Logf
health *health.Tracker
currentUserID ipn.WindowsUserID
knownProfiles map[ipn.ProfileID]*ipn.LoginProfile // always non-nil
currentProfile *ipn.LoginProfile // always non-nil
prefs ipn.PrefsView // always Valid.
}
func (pm *profileManager) dlogf(format string, args ...any) {
if !debug() {
return
}
pm.logf(format, args...)
}
func (pm *profileManager) WriteState(id ipn.StateKey, val []byte) error {
return ipn.WriteState(pm.store, id, val)
}
// CurrentUserID returns the current user ID. It is only non-empty on
// Windows where we have a multi-user system.
func (pm *profileManager) CurrentUserID() ipn.WindowsUserID {
return pm.currentUserID
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// SetCurrentUserID sets the current user ID and switches to that user's default (last used) profile.
// If the specified user does not have a default profile, or the default profile could not be loaded,
// it creates a new one and switches to it. The uid is only non-empty on Windows where we have a multi-user system.
func (pm *profileManager) SetCurrentUserID(uid ipn.WindowsUserID) {
if pm.currentUserID == uid {
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
return
}
pm.currentUserID = uid
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
if err := pm.SwitchToDefaultProfile(); err != nil {
// SetCurrentUserID should never fail and must always switch to the
// user's default profile or create a new profile for the current user.
// Until we implement multi-user support and the new permission model,
// and remove the concept of the "current user" completely, we must ensure
// that when SetCurrentUserID exits, the profile in pm.currentProfile
// is either an existing profile owned by the user, or a new, empty profile.
pm.logf("%q's default profile cannot be used; creating a new one: %v", uid, err)
pm.NewProfileForUser(uid)
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// DefaultUserProfileID returns [ipn.ProfileID] of the default (last used) profile for the specified user,
// or an empty string if the specified user does not have a default profile.
func (pm *profileManager) DefaultUserProfileID(uid ipn.WindowsUserID) ipn.ProfileID {
// Read the CurrentProfileKey from the store which stores
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// the selected profile for the specified user.
b, err := pm.store.ReadState(ipn.CurrentProfileKey(string(uid)))
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
pm.dlogf("DefaultUserProfileID: ReadState(%q) = %v, %v", string(uid), len(b), err)
if err == ipn.ErrStateNotExist || len(b) == 0 {
if runtime.GOOS == "windows" {
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
pm.dlogf("DefaultUserProfileID: windows: migrating from legacy preferences")
profile, err := pm.migrateFromLegacyPrefs(uid, false)
if err == nil {
return profile.ID
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
pm.logf("failed to migrate from legacy preferences: %v", err)
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
return ""
}
pk := ipn.StateKey(string(b))
prof := pm.findProfileByKey(pk)
if prof == nil {
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
pm.dlogf("DefaultUserProfileID: no profile found for key: %q", pk)
return ""
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
return prof.ID
}
// checkProfileAccess returns an [errProfileAccessDenied] if the current user
// does not have access to the specified profile.
func (pm *profileManager) checkProfileAccess(profile *ipn.LoginProfile) error {
if pm.currentUserID != "" && profile.LocalUserID != pm.currentUserID {
return errProfileAccessDenied
}
return nil
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// allProfiles returns all profiles accessible to the current user.
// The returned profiles are sorted by Name.
func (pm *profileManager) allProfiles() (out []*ipn.LoginProfile) {
for _, p := range pm.knownProfiles {
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
if pm.checkProfileAccess(p) == nil {
out = append(out, p)
}
}
slices.SortFunc(out, func(a, b *ipn.LoginProfile) int {
return cmp.Compare(a.Name, b.Name)
})
return out
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// matchingProfiles is like [profileManager.allProfiles], but returns only profiles
// matching the given predicate.
func (pm *profileManager) matchingProfiles(f func(*ipn.LoginProfile) bool) (out []*ipn.LoginProfile) {
all := pm.allProfiles()
out = all[:0]
for _, p := range all {
if f(p) {
out = append(out, p)
}
}
return out
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// findMatchingProfiles returns all profiles accessible to the current user
// that represent the same node/user as prefs.
// The returned profiles are sorted by Name.
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
func (pm *profileManager) findMatchingProfiles(prefs ipn.PrefsView) []*ipn.LoginProfile {
return pm.matchingProfiles(func(p *ipn.LoginProfile) bool {
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
return p.ControlURL == prefs.ControlURL() &&
(p.UserProfile.ID == prefs.Persist().UserProfile().ID ||
p.NodeID == prefs.Persist().NodeID())
})
}
// ProfileIDForName returns the profile ID for the profile with the
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// given name. It returns "" if no such profile exists among profiles
// accessible to the current user.
func (pm *profileManager) ProfileIDForName(name string) ipn.ProfileID {
p := pm.findProfileByName(name)
if p == nil {
return ""
}
return p.ID
}
func (pm *profileManager) findProfileByName(name string) *ipn.LoginProfile {
out := pm.matchingProfiles(func(p *ipn.LoginProfile) bool {
return p.Name == name
})
if len(out) == 0 {
return nil
}
if len(out) > 1 {
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
pm.logf("[unexpected] multiple profiles with the same name")
}
return out[0]
}
func (pm *profileManager) findProfileByKey(key ipn.StateKey) *ipn.LoginProfile {
out := pm.matchingProfiles(func(p *ipn.LoginProfile) bool {
return p.Key == key
})
if len(out) == 0 {
return nil
}
if len(out) > 1 {
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
pm.logf("[unexpected] multiple profiles with the same key")
}
return out[0]
}
func (pm *profileManager) setUnattendedModeAsConfigured() error {
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
if pm.goos != "windows" {
return nil
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
if pm.currentProfile.Key != "" && pm.prefs.ForceDaemon() {
return pm.WriteState(ipn.ServerModeStartKey, []byte(pm.currentProfile.Key))
} else {
return pm.WriteState(ipn.ServerModeStartKey, nil)
}
}
// Reset unloads the current profile, if any.
func (pm *profileManager) Reset() {
pm.currentUserID = ""
pm.NewProfile()
}
// SetPrefs sets the current profile's prefs to the provided value.
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// It also saves the prefs to the [ipn.StateStore]. It stores a copy of the
// provided prefs, which may be accessed via [profileManager.CurrentPrefs].
//
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// The [ipn.NetworkProfile] stores additional information about the tailnet the user
// is logged into so that we can keep track of things like their domain name
// across user switches to disambiguate the same account but a different tailnet.
func (pm *profileManager) SetPrefs(prefsIn ipn.PrefsView, np ipn.NetworkProfile) error {
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
cp := pm.currentProfile
if persist := prefsIn.Persist(); !persist.Valid() || persist.NodeID() == "" || persist.UserProfile().LoginName == "" {
// We don't know anything about this profile, so ignore it for now.
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
return pm.setProfilePrefsNoPermCheck(pm.currentProfile, prefsIn.AsStruct().View())
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// Check if we already have an existing profile that matches the user/node.
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
if existing := pm.findMatchingProfiles(prefsIn); len(existing) > 0 {
// We already have a profile for this user/node we should reuse it. Also
// cleanup any other duplicate profiles.
cp = existing[0]
existing = existing[1:]
for _, p := range existing {
// Clear the state.
if err := pm.store.WriteState(p.Key, nil); err != nil {
// We couldn't delete the state, so keep the profile around.
continue
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// Remove the profile, knownProfiles will be persisted
// in [profileManager.setProfilePrefs] below.
delete(pm.knownProfiles, p.ID)
}
}
pm.currentProfile = cp
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
if err := pm.SetProfilePrefs(cp, prefsIn, np); err != nil {
return err
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
return pm.setProfileAsUserDefault(cp)
}
// SetProfilePrefs is like [profileManager.SetPrefs], but sets prefs for the specified [ipn.LoginProfile]
// which is not necessarily the [profileManager.CurrentProfile]. It returns an [errProfileAccessDenied]
// if the specified profile is not accessible by the current user.
func (pm *profileManager) SetProfilePrefs(lp *ipn.LoginProfile, prefsIn ipn.PrefsView, np ipn.NetworkProfile) error {
if err := pm.checkProfileAccess(lp); err != nil {
return err
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// An empty profile.ID indicates that the profile is new, the node info wasn't available,
// and it hasn't been persisted yet. We'll generate both an ID and [ipn.StateKey]
// once the information is available and needs to be persisted.
if lp.ID == "" {
if persist := prefsIn.Persist(); persist.Valid() && persist.NodeID() != "" && persist.UserProfile().LoginName != "" {
// Generate an ID and [ipn.StateKey] now that we have the node info.
lp.ID, lp.Key = newUnusedID(pm.knownProfiles)
}
// Set the current user as the profile owner, unless the current user ID does
// not represent a specific user, or the profile is already owned by a different user.
// It is only relevant on Windows where we have a multi-user system.
if lp.LocalUserID == "" && pm.currentUserID != "" {
lp.LocalUserID = pm.currentUserID
}
}
var up tailcfg.UserProfile
if persist := prefsIn.Persist(); persist.Valid() {
up = persist.UserProfile()
if up.DisplayName == "" {
up.DisplayName = up.LoginName
}
lp.NodeID = persist.NodeID()
} else {
lp.NodeID = ""
}
if prefsIn.ProfileName() != "" {
lp.Name = prefsIn.ProfileName()
} else {
lp.Name = up.LoginName
}
lp.ControlURL = prefsIn.ControlURL()
lp.UserProfile = up
lp.NetworkProfile = np
// An empty profile.ID indicates that the node info is not available yet,
// and the profile doesn't need to be saved on disk.
if lp.ID != "" {
pm.knownProfiles[lp.ID] = lp
if err := pm.writeKnownProfiles(); err != nil {
return err
}
// Clone prefsIn and create a read-only view as a safety measure to
// prevent accidental preference mutations, both externally and internally.
if err := pm.setProfilePrefsNoPermCheck(lp, prefsIn.AsStruct().View()); err != nil {
return err
}
}
return nil
}
func newUnusedID(knownProfiles map[ipn.ProfileID]*ipn.LoginProfile) (ipn.ProfileID, ipn.StateKey) {
var idb [2]byte
for {
rand.Read(idb[:])
id := ipn.ProfileID(fmt.Sprintf("%x", idb))
if _, ok := knownProfiles[id]; ok {
continue
}
return id, ipn.StateKey("profile-" + id)
}
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// setProfilePrefsNoPermCheck sets the profile's prefs to the provided value.
// If the profile has the [ipn.LoginProfile.Key] set, it saves the prefs to the
// [ipn.StateStore] under that key. It returns an error if the profile is non-current
// and does not have its Key set, or if the prefs could not be saved.
// The method does not perform any additional checks on the specified
// profile, such as verifying the caller's access rights or checking
// if another profile for the same node already exists.
func (pm *profileManager) setProfilePrefsNoPermCheck(profile *ipn.LoginProfile, clonedPrefs ipn.PrefsView) error {
isCurrentProfile := pm.currentProfile == profile
if isCurrentProfile {
pm.prefs = clonedPrefs
pm.updateHealth()
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
if profile.Key != "" {
if err := pm.writePrefsToStore(profile.Key, clonedPrefs); err != nil {
return err
}
} else if !isCurrentProfile {
return errors.New("cannot set prefs for a non-current in-memory profile")
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
if isCurrentProfile {
return pm.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured()
}
return nil
}
// setPrefsNoPermCheck is like [profileManager.setProfilePrefsNoPermCheck], but sets the current profile's prefs.
func (pm *profileManager) setPrefsNoPermCheck(clonedPrefs ipn.PrefsView) error {
return pm.setProfilePrefsNoPermCheck(pm.currentProfile, clonedPrefs)
}
func (pm *profileManager) writePrefsToStore(key ipn.StateKey, prefs ipn.PrefsView) error {
if key == "" {
return nil
}
if err := pm.WriteState(key, prefs.ToBytes()); err != nil {
pm.logf("WriteState(%q): %v", key, err)
return err
}
return nil
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// Profiles returns the list of known profiles accessible to the current user.
func (pm *profileManager) Profiles() []ipn.LoginProfile {
allProfiles := pm.allProfiles()
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
out := make([]ipn.LoginProfile, len(allProfiles))
for i, p := range allProfiles {
out[i] = *p
}
return out
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// ProfileByID returns a profile with the given id, if it is accessible to the current user.
// If the profile exists but is not accessible to the current user, it returns an [errProfileAccessDenied].
// If the profile does not exist, it returns an [errProfileNotFound].
func (pm *profileManager) ProfileByID(id ipn.ProfileID) (ipn.LoginProfile, error) {
kp, err := pm.profileByIDNoPermCheck(id)
if err != nil {
return ipn.LoginProfile{}, err
}
if err := pm.checkProfileAccess(kp); err != nil {
return ipn.LoginProfile{}, err
}
return *kp, nil
}
// profileByIDNoPermCheck is like [profileManager.ProfileByID], but it doesn't
// check user's access rights to the profile.
func (pm *profileManager) profileByIDNoPermCheck(id ipn.ProfileID) (*ipn.LoginProfile, error) {
if id == pm.currentProfile.ID {
return pm.currentProfile, nil
}
kp, ok := pm.knownProfiles[id]
if !ok {
return nil, errProfileNotFound
}
return kp, nil
}
// ProfilePrefs returns preferences for a profile with the given id.
// If the profile exists but is not accessible to the current user, it returns an [errProfileAccessDenied].
// If the profile does not exist, it returns an [errProfileNotFound].
func (pm *profileManager) ProfilePrefs(id ipn.ProfileID) (ipn.PrefsView, error) {
kp, err := pm.profileByIDNoPermCheck(id)
if err != nil {
return ipn.PrefsView{}, errProfileNotFound
}
if err := pm.checkProfileAccess(kp); err != nil {
return ipn.PrefsView{}, err
}
return pm.profilePrefs(kp)
}
func (pm *profileManager) profilePrefs(p *ipn.LoginProfile) (ipn.PrefsView, error) {
if p.ID == pm.currentProfile.ID {
return pm.prefs, nil
}
return pm.loadSavedPrefs(p.Key)
}
// SwitchProfile switches to the profile with the given id.
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// If the profile exists but is not accessible to the current user, it returns an [errProfileAccessDenied].
// If the profile does not exist, it returns an [errProfileNotFound].
func (pm *profileManager) SwitchProfile(id ipn.ProfileID) error {
metricSwitchProfile.Add(1)
kp, ok := pm.knownProfiles[id]
if !ok {
return errProfileNotFound
}
if pm.currentProfile != nil && kp.ID == pm.currentProfile.ID && pm.prefs.Valid() {
return nil
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
if err := pm.checkProfileAccess(kp); err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("%w: profile %q is not accessible to the current user", err, id)
}
prefs, err := pm.loadSavedPrefs(kp.Key)
if err != nil {
return err
}
pm.prefs = prefs
pm.updateHealth()
pm.currentProfile = kp
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
return pm.setProfileAsUserDefault(kp)
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// SwitchToDefaultProfile switches to the default (last used) profile for the current user.
// It creates a new one and switches to it if the current user does not have a default profile,
// or returns an error if the default profile is inaccessible or could not be loaded.
func (pm *profileManager) SwitchToDefaultProfile() error {
if id := pm.DefaultUserProfileID(pm.currentUserID); id != "" {
return pm.SwitchProfile(id)
}
pm.NewProfileForUser(pm.currentUserID)
return nil
}
// setProfileAsUserDefault sets the specified profile as the default for the current user.
// It returns an [errProfileAccessDenied] if the specified profile is not accessible to the current user.
func (pm *profileManager) setProfileAsUserDefault(profile *ipn.LoginProfile) error {
if profile.Key == "" {
// The profile has not been persisted yet; ignore it for now.
return nil
}
if err := pm.checkProfileAccess(profile); err != nil {
return errProfileAccessDenied
}
k := ipn.CurrentProfileKey(string(pm.currentUserID))
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
return pm.WriteState(k, []byte(profile.Key))
}
func (pm *profileManager) loadSavedPrefs(key ipn.StateKey) (ipn.PrefsView, error) {
bs, err := pm.store.ReadState(key)
if err == ipn.ErrStateNotExist || len(bs) == 0 {
return defaultPrefs, nil
}
if err != nil {
return ipn.PrefsView{}, err
}
savedPrefs := ipn.NewPrefs()
if err := ipn.PrefsFromBytes(bs, savedPrefs); err != nil {
return ipn.PrefsView{}, fmt.Errorf("parsing saved prefs: %v", err)
}
pm.logf("using backend prefs for %q: %v", key, savedPrefs.Pretty())
// Ignore any old stored preferences for https://login.tailscale.com
// as the control server that would override the new default of
// controlplane.tailscale.com.
if savedPrefs.ControlURL != "" &&
savedPrefs.ControlURL != ipn.DefaultControlURL &&
ipn.IsLoginServerSynonym(savedPrefs.ControlURL) {
savedPrefs.ControlURL = ""
}
// Before
// https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/11814/commits/1613b18f8280c2bce786980532d012c9f0454fa2#diff-314ba0d799f70c8998940903efb541e511f352b39a9eeeae8d475c921d66c2ac
// prefs could set AutoUpdate.Apply=true via EditPrefs or tailnet
// auto-update defaults. After that change, such value is "invalid" and
// cause any EditPrefs calls to fail (other than disabling auto-updates).
//
// Reset AutoUpdate.Apply if we detect such invalid prefs.
if savedPrefs.AutoUpdate.Apply.EqualBool(true) && !clientupdate.CanAutoUpdate() {
savedPrefs.AutoUpdate.Apply.Clear()
}
return savedPrefs.View(), nil
}
// CurrentProfile returns the current LoginProfile.
// The value may be zero if the profile is not persisted.
func (pm *profileManager) CurrentProfile() ipn.LoginProfile {
return *pm.currentProfile
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// errProfileNotFound is returned by methods that accept a ProfileID
// when the specified profile does not exist.
var errProfileNotFound = errors.New("profile not found")
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// errProfileAccessDenied is returned by methods that accept a ProfileID
// when the current user does not have access to the specified profile.
// It is used temporarily until we implement access checks based on the
// caller's identity in tailscale/corp#18342.
var errProfileAccessDenied = errors.New("profile access denied")
// DeleteProfile removes the profile with the given id. It returns
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// [errProfileNotFound] if the profile does not exist, or an
// [errProfileAccessDenied] if the specified profile is not accessible
// to the current user.
// If the profile is the current profile, it is the equivalent of
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// calling [profileManager.NewProfile] followed by [profileManager.DeleteProfile](id).
// This is useful for deleting the last profile. In other cases, it is
// recommended to call [profileManager.SwitchProfile] first.
func (pm *profileManager) DeleteProfile(id ipn.ProfileID) error {
metricDeleteProfile.Add(1)
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
if id == pm.currentProfile.ID {
return pm.deleteCurrentProfile()
}
kp, ok := pm.knownProfiles[id]
if !ok {
return errProfileNotFound
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
if err := pm.checkProfileAccess(kp); err != nil {
return err
}
return pm.deleteProfileNoPermCheck(kp)
}
func (pm *profileManager) deleteCurrentProfile() error {
if err := pm.checkProfileAccess(pm.currentProfile); err != nil {
return err
}
if pm.currentProfile.ID == "" {
// Deleting the in-memory only new profile, just create a new one.
pm.NewProfile()
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
return nil
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
return pm.deleteProfileNoPermCheck(pm.currentProfile)
}
// deleteProfileNoPermCheck is like [profileManager.DeleteProfile],
// but it doesn't check user's access rights to the profile.
func (pm *profileManager) deleteProfileNoPermCheck(profile *ipn.LoginProfile) error {
if profile.ID == pm.currentProfile.ID {
pm.NewProfile()
}
if err := pm.WriteState(profile.Key, nil); err != nil {
return err
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
delete(pm.knownProfiles, profile.ID)
return pm.writeKnownProfiles()
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// DeleteAllProfilesForUser removes all known profiles accessible to the current user
// and switches to a new, empty profile.
func (pm *profileManager) DeleteAllProfilesForUser() error {
metricDeleteAllProfile.Add(1)
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
currentProfileDeleted := false
writeKnownProfiles := func() error {
if currentProfileDeleted || pm.currentProfile.ID == "" {
pm.NewProfile()
}
return pm.writeKnownProfiles()
}
for _, kp := range pm.knownProfiles {
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
if pm.checkProfileAccess(kp) != nil {
// Skip profiles we don't have access to.
continue
}
if err := pm.WriteState(kp.Key, nil); err != nil {
// Write to remove references to profiles we've already deleted, but
// return the original error.
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
writeKnownProfiles()
return err
}
delete(pm.knownProfiles, kp.ID)
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
if kp.ID == pm.currentProfile.ID {
currentProfileDeleted = true
}
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
return writeKnownProfiles()
}
func (pm *profileManager) writeKnownProfiles() error {
b, err := json.Marshal(pm.knownProfiles)
if err != nil {
return err
}
return pm.WriteState(ipn.KnownProfilesStateKey, b)
}
func (pm *profileManager) updateHealth() {
if !pm.prefs.Valid() {
return
}
pm.health.SetAutoUpdatePrefs(pm.prefs.AutoUpdate().Check, pm.prefs.AutoUpdate().Apply)
}
// NewProfile creates and switches to a new unnamed profile. The new profile is
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// not persisted until [profileManager.SetPrefs] is called with a logged-in user.
func (pm *profileManager) NewProfile() {
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
pm.NewProfileForUser(pm.currentUserID)
}
// NewProfileForUser is like [profileManager.NewProfile], but it switches to the
// specified user and sets that user as the profile owner for the new profile.
func (pm *profileManager) NewProfileForUser(uid ipn.WindowsUserID) {
pm.currentUserID = uid
metricNewProfile.Add(1)
pm.prefs = defaultPrefs
pm.updateHealth()
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
pm.currentProfile = &ipn.LoginProfile{LocalUserID: uid}
}
// newProfileWithPrefs creates a new profile with the specified prefs and assigns
// the specified uid as the profile owner. If switchNow is true, it switches to the
// newly created profile immediately. It returns the newly created profile on success,
// or an error on failure.
func (pm *profileManager) newProfileWithPrefs(uid ipn.WindowsUserID, prefs ipn.PrefsView, switchNow bool) (*ipn.LoginProfile, error) {
metricNewProfile.Add(1)
profile := &ipn.LoginProfile{LocalUserID: uid}
if err := pm.SetProfilePrefs(profile, prefs, ipn.NetworkProfile{}); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
if switchNow {
pm.currentProfile = profile
pm.prefs = prefs.AsStruct().View()
pm.updateHealth()
if err := pm.setProfileAsUserDefault(profile); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
}
return profile, nil
}
// defaultPrefs is the default prefs for a new profile. This initializes before
// even this package's init() so do not rely on other parts of the system being
// fully initialized here (for example, syspolicy will not be available on
// Apple platforms).
var defaultPrefs = func() ipn.PrefsView {
prefs := ipn.NewPrefs()
prefs.LoggedOut = true
prefs.WantRunning = false
return prefs.View()
}()
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// Store returns the [ipn.StateStore] used by the [profileManager].
func (pm *profileManager) Store() ipn.StateStore {
return pm.store
}
// CurrentPrefs returns a read-only view of the current prefs.
// The returned view is always valid.
func (pm *profileManager) CurrentPrefs() ipn.PrefsView {
return pm.prefs
}
// ReadStartupPrefsForTest reads the startup prefs from disk. It is only used for testing.
func ReadStartupPrefsForTest(logf logger.Logf, store ipn.StateStore) (ipn.PrefsView, error) {
ht := new(health.Tracker) // in tests, don't care about the health status
pm, err := newProfileManager(store, logf, ht)
if err != nil {
return ipn.PrefsView{}, err
}
return pm.CurrentPrefs(), nil
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
// newProfileManager creates a new [profileManager] using the provided [ipn.StateStore].
// It also loads the list of known profiles from the store.
func newProfileManager(store ipn.StateStore, logf logger.Logf, health *health.Tracker) (*profileManager, error) {
return newProfileManagerWithGOOS(store, logf, health, envknob.GOOS())
}
func readAutoStartKey(store ipn.StateStore, goos string) (ipn.StateKey, error) {
startKey := ipn.CurrentProfileStateKey
if goos == "windows" {
// When tailscaled runs on Windows it is not typically run unattended.
// So we can't use the profile mechanism to load the profile at startup.
startKey = ipn.ServerModeStartKey
}
autoStartKey, err := store.ReadState(startKey)
if err != nil && err != ipn.ErrStateNotExist {
return "", fmt.Errorf("calling ReadState on state store: %w", err)
}
return ipn.StateKey(autoStartKey), nil
}
func readKnownProfiles(store ipn.StateStore) (map[ipn.ProfileID]*ipn.LoginProfile, error) {
var knownProfiles map[ipn.ProfileID]*ipn.LoginProfile
prfB, err := store.ReadState(ipn.KnownProfilesStateKey)
switch err {
case nil:
if err := json.Unmarshal(prfB, &knownProfiles); err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("unmarshaling known profiles: %w", err)
}
case ipn.ErrStateNotExist:
knownProfiles = make(map[ipn.ProfileID]*ipn.LoginProfile)
default:
return nil, fmt.Errorf("calling ReadState on state store: %w", err)
}
return knownProfiles, nil
}
func newProfileManagerWithGOOS(store ipn.StateStore, logf logger.Logf, ht *health.Tracker, goos string) (*profileManager, error) {
logf = logger.WithPrefix(logf, "pm: ")
stateKey, err := readAutoStartKey(store, goos)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
knownProfiles, err := readKnownProfiles(store)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
pm := &profileManager{
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
goos: goos,
store: store,
knownProfiles: knownProfiles,
logf: logf,
health: ht,
}
if stateKey != "" {
for _, v := range knownProfiles {
if v.Key == stateKey {
pm.currentProfile = v
}
}
if pm.currentProfile == nil {
if suf, ok := strings.CutPrefix(string(stateKey), "user-"); ok {
pm.currentUserID = ipn.WindowsUserID(suf)
}
pm.NewProfile()
} else {
pm.currentUserID = pm.currentProfile.LocalUserID
}
prefs, err := pm.loadSavedPrefs(stateKey)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
if err := pm.setProfilePrefsNoPermCheck(pm.currentProfile, prefs); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
// Most platform behavior is controlled by the goos parameter, however
// some behavior is implied by build tag and fails when run on Windows,
// so we explicitly avoid that behavior when running on Windows.
// Specifically this reaches down into legacy preference loading that is
// specialized by profiles_windows.go and fails in tests on an invalid
// uid passed in from the unix tests. The uid's used for Windows tests
// and runtime must be valid Windows security identifier structures.
} else if len(knownProfiles) == 0 && goos != "windows" && runtime.GOOS != "windows" {
// No known profiles, try a migration.
pm.dlogf("no known profiles; trying to migrate from legacy prefs")
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
if _, err := pm.migrateFromLegacyPrefs(pm.currentUserID, true); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
} else {
pm.NewProfile()
}
return pm, nil
}
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
func (pm *profileManager) migrateFromLegacyPrefs(uid ipn.WindowsUserID, switchNow bool) (*ipn.LoginProfile, error) {
metricMigration.Add(1)
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
sentinel, prefs, err := pm.loadLegacyPrefs(uid)
if err != nil {
metricMigrationError.Add(1)
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
return nil, fmt.Errorf("load legacy prefs: %w", err)
}
pm.dlogf("loaded legacy preferences; sentinel=%q", sentinel)
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
profile, err := pm.newProfileWithPrefs(uid, prefs, switchNow)
if err != nil {
metricMigrationError.Add(1)
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
return nil, fmt.Errorf("migrating _daemon profile: %w", err)
}
pm.completeMigration(sentinel)
pm.dlogf("completed legacy preferences migration with sentinel=%q", sentinel)
metricMigrationSuccess.Add(1)
ipn/ipnlocal: refactor and cleanup profileManager In preparation for multi-user and unattended mode improvements, we are refactoring and cleaning up `ipn/ipnlocal.profileManager`. The concept of the "current user", which is only relevant on Windows, is being deprecated and will soon be removed to allow more than one Windows user to connect and utilize `LocalBackend` according to that user's access rights to the device and specific Tailscale profiles. We plan to pass the user's identity down to the `profileManager`, where it can be used to determine the user's access rights to a given `LoginProfile`. While the new permission model in `ipnauth` requires more work and is currently blocked pending PR reviews, we are updating the `profileManager` to reduce its reliance on the concept of a single OS user being connected to the backend at the same time. We extract the switching to the default Tailscale profile, which may also trigger legacy profile migration, from `profileManager.SetCurrentUserID`. This introduces `profileManager.DefaultUserProfileID`, which returns the default profile ID for the current user, and `profileManager.SwitchToDefaultProfile`, which is essentially a shorthand for `pm.SwitchProfile(pm.DefaultUserProfileID())`. Both methods will eventually be updated to accept the user's identity and utilize that user's default profile. We make access checks more explicit by introducing the `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` method. The current implementation continues to use `profileManager.currentUserID` and `LoginProfile.LocalUserID` to determine whether access to a given profile should be granted. This will be updated to utilize the `ipnauth` package and the new permissions model once it's ready. We also expand access checks to be used more widely in the `profileManager`, not just when switching or listing profiles. This includes access checks in methods like `SetPrefs` and, most notably, `DeleteProfile` and `DeleteAllProfiles`, preventing unprivileged Windows users from deleting Tailscale profiles owned by other users on the same device, including profiles owned by local admins. We extract `profileManager.ProfilePrefs` and `profileManager.SetProfilePrefs` methods that can be used to get and set preferences of a given `LoginProfile` if `profileManager.checkProfileAccess` permits access to it. We also update `profileManager.setUnattendedModeAsConfigured` to always enable unattended mode on Windows if `Prefs.ForceDaemon` is true in the current `LoginProfile`, even if `profileManager.currentUserID` is `""`. This facilitates enabling unattended mode via `tailscale up --unattended` even if `tailscale-ipn.exe` is not running, such as when a Group Policy or MDM-deployed script runs at boot time, or when Tailscale is used on a Server Code or otherwise headless Windows environments. See #12239, #2137, #3186 and https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/6255#issuecomment-2016623838 for details. Fixes #12239 Updates tailscale/corp#18342 Updates #3186 Updates #2137 Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
2024-08-28 19:23:35 +00:00
return profile, nil
}
func (pm *profileManager) requiresBackfill() bool {
return pm != nil &&
pm.currentProfile != nil &&
pm.currentProfile.NetworkProfile.RequiresBackfill()
}
var (
metricNewProfile = clientmetric.NewCounter("profiles_new")
metricSwitchProfile = clientmetric.NewCounter("profiles_switch")
metricDeleteProfile = clientmetric.NewCounter("profiles_delete")
metricDeleteAllProfile = clientmetric.NewCounter("profiles_delete_all")
metricMigration = clientmetric.NewCounter("profiles_migration")
metricMigrationError = clientmetric.NewCounter("profiles_migration_error")
metricMigrationSuccess = clientmetric.NewCounter("profiles_migration_success")
)