FreeBSD tun devices don't work with the way we implement IPv6
https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/1307
At least for now, remove any IPv6 addresses from the netmap.
Signed-off-by: Denton Gentry <dgentry@tailscale.com>
Commit 68ddf1 removed code that reads
`SOFTWARE\Tailscale IPN\SearchList` registry value. But the commit
left code that writes that value.
So now this package writes and never reads the value.
Remove the code to stop pointless work.
Updates #853
Signed-off-by: Alex Brainman <alex.brainman@gmail.com>
The windows key timeout is longer than the wgengine watchdog timeout,
which means we never reach the timeout, instead the process exits.
Reduce the timeout so if we do hit it, at least the process continues.
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
On Win10, there's a hardcoded GUID and this works.
On Win7, this GUID changes and we need to ask the tun for its
LUID and convert that from the GUID.
This commit uses the computed GUID that is placed in InterfaceName.
Diagnosed by Jason Donnenfeld. (Thanks!)
os.IsNotExist doesn't unwrap errors. errors.Is does.
The ioutil.ReadFile ones happened to be fine but I changed them so
we're consistent with the rule: if the error comes from os, you can
use os.IsNotExist, but from any other package, use errors.Is.
(errors.Is always would also work, but not worth updating all the code)
The motivation here was that we were logging about failure to migrate
legacy relay node prefs file on startup, even though the code tried
to avoid that.
See golang/go#41122
Amazingly, there doesn't seem to be a documented way of updating network
configuration programmatically in a way that Windows takes notice of.
The naturopathic remedy for this is to invoke ipconfig /registerdns, which
does a variety of harmless things and also invokes the private API that
tells windows to notice new adapter settings. This makes our DNS config
changes stick within a few seconds of us setting them.
If we're invoking a shell command anyway, why futz with the registry at
all? Because netsh has no command for changing the DNS suffix list, and
its commands for setting resolvers requires parsing its output and
keeping track of which server is in what index. Amazingly, twiddling
the registry directly is the less painful option.
Fixes#853.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>