We have several checked type assertions to *types.Named in both cmd/cloner and cmd/viewer.
As Go 1.23 updates the go/types package to produce Alias type nodes for type aliases,
these type assertions no longer work as expected unless the new behavior is disabled
with gotypesalias=0.
In this PR, we add codegen.NamedTypeOf(t types.Type), which functions like t.(*types.Named)
but also unrolls type aliases. We then use it in place of type assertions in the cmd/cloner and
cmd/viewer packages where appropriate.
We also update type switches to include *types.Alias alongside *types.Named in relevant cases,
remove *types.Struct cases when switching on types.Type.Underlying and update the tests
with more cases where type aliases can be used.
Updates #13224
Updates #12912
Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
Go 1.23 updates the go/types package to produce Alias type nodes for type aliases, unless disabled with gotypesalias=0.
This new default behavior breaks codegen.LookupMethod, which uses checked type assertions to types.Named and
types.Interface, as only named types and interfaces have methods.
In this PR, we update codegen.LookupMethod to perform method lookup on the right-hand side of the alias declaration
and clearly switch on the supported type nodes types. We also improve support for various edge cases, such as when an alias
is used as a type parameter constraint, and add tests for the LookupMethod function.
Additionally, we update cmd/viewer/tests to include types with aliases used in type fields and generic type constraints.
Updates #13224
Updates #12912
Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
The natlab Test Agent (tta) still had its old log streaming hack in
place where it dialed out to anything on TCP port 124 and those logs
were streamed to the host running the tests. But we'd since added gokrazy
syslog streaming support, which made that redundant.
So remove all the port 124 stuff. And then make sure we log to stderr
so gokrazy logs it to syslog.
Also, keep the first 1MB of logs in memory in tta too, exported via
localhost:8034/logs for interactive debugging. That was very useful
during debugging when I added IPv6 support. (which is coming in future
PRs)
Updates #13038
Change-Id: Ieed904a704410b9031d5fd5f014a73412348fa7f
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Otherwise you get "Access denied: watch IPN bus access denied, must
set ipn.NotifyNoPrivateKeys when not running as admin/root or
operator".
This lets a non-operator at least start the app and see the status, even
if they can't change everything. (the web UI is unaffected by operator)
A future change can add a LocalAPI call to check permissions and guide
people through adding a user as an operator (perhaps the web client
can do that?)
Updates #1708
Change-Id: I699e035a251b4ebe14385102d5e7a2993424c4b7
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This adds a systray app for linux, similar to the apps for macOS and
windows. There are already a number of community-developed systray apps,
but most of them are either long abandoned, are built for a specific
desktop environment, or simply wrap the tailscale CLI.
This uses fyne.io/systray (a fork of github.com/getlantern/systray)
which uses newer D-Bus specifications to render the tray icon and menu.
This results in a pretty broad support for modern desktop environments.
This initial commit lacks a number of features like profile switching,
device listing, and exit node selection. This is really focused on the
application structure, the interaction with LocalAPI, and some system
integration pieces like the app icon, notifications, and the clipboard.
Updates #1708
Signed-off-by: Will Norris <will@tailscale.com>
After the upstream PR is merged, we can point directly at github.com/vishvananda/netlink
and retire github.com/tailscale/netlink.
See https://github.com/vishvananda/netlink/pull/1006
Updates #12298
Signed-off-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
In prep for updating to new staticcheck required for Go 1.23.
Updates #12912
Change-Id: If77892a023b79c6fa798f936fc80428fd4ce0673
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
To avoid dig vs nslookup vs $X availability issues between
OSes/distros. And to be in Go, to match the resolver we use.
Updates #13038
Change-Id: Ib7e5c351ed36b5470a42cbc230b8f27eed9a1bf8
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
In Tailnet Lock, there is an implicit limit on the number of rotation
signatures that can be chained before the signature becomes too long.
This program helps tailnet admins to identify nodes that have signatures
with long chains and prints commands to re-sign those node keys with a
fresh direct signature. It's a temporary mitigation measure, and we will
remove this tool as we design and implement a long-term approach for
rotation signatures.
Example output:
```
2024/08/20 18:25:03 Self: does not need re-signing
2024/08/20 18:25:03 Visible peers with valid signatures:
2024/08/20 18:25:03 Peer xxx2.yy.ts.net. (100.77.192.34) nodeid=nyDmhiZiGA11KTM59, current signature kind=direct: does not need re-signing
2024/08/20 18:25:03 Peer xxx3.yy.ts.net. (100.84.248.22) nodeid=ndQ64mDnaB11KTM59, current signature kind=direct: does not need re-signing
2024/08/20 18:25:03 Peer xxx4.yy.ts.net. (100.85.253.53) nodeid=nmZfVygzkB21KTM59, current signature kind=rotation: chain length 4, printing command to re-sign
tailscale lock sign nodekey:530bddbfbe69e91fe15758a1d6ead5337aa6307e55ac92dafad3794f8b3fc661 tlpub:4bf07597336703395f2149dce88e7c50dd8694ab5bbde3d7c2a1c7b3e231a3c2
```
To support this, the NetworkLockStatus localapi response now includes
information about signatures of all peers rather than just the invalid
ones. This is not displayed by default in `tailscale lock status`, but
will be surfaced in `tailscale lock status --json`.
Updates #13185
Signed-off-by: Anton Tolchanov <anton@tailscale.com>
In 2f27319baf we disabled GRO due to a
data race around concurrent calls to tstun.Wrapper.Write(). This commit
refactors GRO to be thread-safe, and re-enables it on Linux.
This refactor now carries a GRO type across tstun and netstack APIs
with a lifetime that is scoped to a single tstun.Wrapper.Write() call.
In 25f0a3fc8f we used build tags to
prevent importation of gVisor's GRO package on iOS as at the time we
believed it was contributing to additional memory usage on that
platform. It wasn't, so this commit simplifies and removes those
build tags.
Updates tailscale/corp#22353
Updates tailscale/corp#22125
Updates #6816
Signed-off-by: Jordan Whited <jordan@tailscale.com>
cmd/k8s-operator/deploy: replace wildcards in Kubernetes Operator RBAC role definitions with verbs
fixes: #13168
Signed-off-by: Pierig Le Saux <pierig@n3xt.io>
Coder has just adopted nhooyr/websocket which unfortunately changes the import path.
`github.com/coder/coder` imports `tailscale.com/net/wsconn` which was still pointing
to `nhooyr.io/websocket`, but this change updates it.
See https://coder.com/blog/websocket
Updates #13154
Change-Id: I3dec6512472b14eae337ae22c5bcc1e3758888d5
Signed-off-by: Kyle Carberry <kyle@carberry.com>
This PR modifies viewTypeForContainerType to use the last type parameter of a container type
as the value type, enabling the implementation of map-like container types where the second-to-last
(usually first) type parameter serves as the key type.
It also adds a MapContainer type to test the code generation.
Updates #12736
Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
cmd/k8s-operator,k8s-operator/sessionrecording: support recording WebSocket sessions
Kubernetes currently supports two streaming protocols, SPDY and WebSockets.
WebSockets are replacing SPDY, see
https://github.com/kubernetes/enhancements/issues/4006.
We were currently only supporting SPDY, erroring out if session
was not SPDY and relying on the kube's built-in SPDY fallback.
This PR:
- adds support for parsing contents of 'kubectl exec' sessions streamed
over WebSockets
- adds logic to distinguish 'kubectl exec' requests for a SPDY/WebSockets
sessions and call the relevant handler
Updates tailscale/corp#19821
Signed-off-by: Irbe Krumina <irbe@tailscale.com>
Co-authored-by: Tom Proctor <tomhjp@users.noreply.github.com>
Add functionality to optionally serve a health check endpoint
(off by default).
Users can enable health check endpoint by setting
TS_HEALTHCHECK_ADDR_PORT to [<addr>]:<port>.
Containerboot will then serve an unauthenticatd HTTP health check at
/healthz at that address. The health check returns 200 OK if the
node has at least one tailnet IP address, else returns 503.
Updates tailscale/tailscale#12898
Signed-off-by: Irbe Krumina <irbe@tailscale.com>
... rather than abusing the generic tsapp.
Per discussion in https://github.com/gokrazy/gokrazy/pull/275
It also means we can remove stuff we don't need, like ntp or randomd.
Updates #13038
Change-Id: Iccf579c354bd3b5025d05fa1128e32f1d5bde4e4
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
The change in b7e48058c8 was too loose; it also captured the CLI
being run as a child process under cmd/tta.
Updates #13038
Updates #1866
Change-Id: Id410b87132938dd38ed4dd3959473c5d0d242ff5
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
* cmd/k8s-operator: fix DNS reconciler for dual-stack clusters
This fixes a bug where DNS reconciler logic was always assuming
that no more than one EndpointSlice exists for a Service.
In fact, there can be multiple, for example, in dual-stack
clusters, but also in other cases this is valid (as per kube docs).
This PR:
- allows for multiple EndpointSlices
- picks out the ones for IPv4 family
- deduplicates addresses
Updates tailscale/tailscale#13056
Signed-off-by: Irbe Krumina <irbe@tailscale.com>
Co-authored-by: Tom Proctor <tomhjp@users.noreply.github.com>
Package setting contains types for defining and representing policy settings.
It facilitates the registration of setting definitions using Register and RegisterDefinition,
and the retrieval of registered setting definitions via Definitions and DefinitionOf.
This package is intended for use primarily within the syspolicy package hierarchy,
and added in a preparation for the next PRs.
Updates #12687
Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
In particular, tests showing that #3824 works. But that test doesn't
actually work yet; it only gets a DERP connection. (why?)
Updates #13038
Change-Id: Ie1fd1b6a38d4e90fae7e72a0b9a142a95f0b2e8f
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
getConns() is now responsible for returning both stable and unstable
conns. conn and measureFn are now passed together via connAndMeasureFn.
newConnAndMeasureFn() is responsible for constructing them.
TCP measurement timeouts are adjusted to more closely match netcheck.
Updates tailscale/corp#22114
Signed-off-by: Jordan Whited <jordan@tailscale.com>
This adds a new NodeAgentClient type that can be used to
invoke the LocalAPI using the LocalClient instead of
handcrafted URLs. However, there are certain cases where
it does make sense for the node agent to provide more
functionality than whats possible with just the LocalClient,
as such it also exposes a http.Client to make requests directly.
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
And don't make guests under vnet/natlab upload to logcatcher,
as there won't be a valid cert anyway.
Updates #13038
Change-Id: Ie1ce0139788036b8ecc1804549a9b5d326c5fef5
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
'stun' has been removed from metric names and replaced with a protocol
label. This refactor is preparation work for HTTPS & ICMP support.
Updates tailscale/corp#22114
Signed-off-by: Jordan Whited <jordan@tailscale.com>
In a situation when manual edits are made on the admin panel, around the
GitOps process, the pusher will be stuck if `--fail-on-manual-edits` is
set, as expected.
To recover from this, there are 2 options:
1. revert the admin panel changes to get back in sync with the code
2. check in the manual edits to code
The former will work well, since previous and local ETags will match
control ETag again. The latter will still fail, since local and control
ETags match, but previous does not.
For this situation, check the local ETag against control first and
ignore previous when things are already in sync.
Updates https://github.com/tailscale/corp/issues/22177
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lytvynov <awly@tailscale.com>
For cases where users want to be extra careful about not overwriting
manual changes, add a flag to hard-fail. This is only useful if the etag
cache is persistent or otherwise reliable. This flag should not be used
in ephemeral CI workers that won't persist the cache.
Updates https://github.com/tailscale/corp/issues/22177
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lytvynov <awly@tailscale.com>
* cmd/tsidp: add funnel support
Updates #10263.
Signed-off-by: Naman Sood <mail@nsood.in>
* look past funnel-ingress-node to see who we're authenticating
Signed-off-by: Naman Sood <mail@nsood.in>
* fix comment typo
Signed-off-by: Naman Sood <mail@nsood.in>
* address review feedback, support Basic auth for /token
Turns out you need to support Basic auth if you do client ID/secret
according to OAuth.
Signed-off-by: Naman Sood <mail@nsood.in>
* fix typos
Signed-off-by: Naman Sood <mail@nsood.in>
* review fixes
Signed-off-by: Naman Sood <mail@nsood.in>
* remove debugging log
Signed-off-by: Naman Sood <mail@nsood.in>
* add comments, fix header
Signed-off-by: Naman Sood <mail@nsood.in>
---------
Signed-off-by: Naman Sood <mail@nsood.in>
During review of #8644 the `recover-compromised-key` command was renamed
to `revoke-key`, but the old name remained in some messages printed by
the command.
Fixestailscale/corp#19446
Signed-off-by: Anton Tolchanov <anton@tailscale.com>
This commit implements TCP GRO for packets being written to gVisor on
Linux. Windows support will follow later. The wireguard-go dependency is
updated in order to make use of newly exported IP checksum functions.
gVisor is updated in order to make use of newly exported
stack.PacketBuffer GRO logic.
TCP throughput towards gVisor, i.e. TUN write direction, is dramatically
improved as a result of this commit. Benchmarks show substantial
improvement, sometimes as high as 2x. High bandwidth-delay product
paths remain receive window limited, bottlenecked by gVisor's default
TCP receive socket buffer size. This will be addressed in a follow-on
commit.
The iperf3 results below demonstrate the effect of this commit between
two Linux computers with i5-12400 CPUs. There is roughly ~13us of round
trip latency between them.
The first result is from commit 57856fc without TCP GRO.
Starting Test: protocol: TCP, 1 streams, 131072 byte blocks
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Test Complete. Summary Results:
[ ID] Interval Transfer Bitrate Retr
[ 5] 0.00-10.00 sec 4.77 GBytes 4.10 Gbits/sec 20 sender
[ 5] 0.00-10.00 sec 4.77 GBytes 4.10 Gbits/sec receiver
The second result is from this commit with TCP GRO.
Starting Test: protocol: TCP, 1 streams, 131072 byte blocks
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Test Complete. Summary Results:
[ ID] Interval Transfer Bitrate Retr
[ 5] 0.00-10.00 sec 10.6 GBytes 9.14 Gbits/sec 20 sender
[ 5] 0.00-10.00 sec 10.6 GBytes 9.14 Gbits/sec receiver
Updates #6816
Signed-off-by: Jordan Whited <jordan@tailscale.com>
This commit implements TCP GSO for packets being read from gVisor on
Linux. Windows support will follow later. The wireguard-go dependency is
updated in order to make use of newly exported GSO logic from its tun
package.
A new gVisor stack.LinkEndpoint implementation has been established
(linkEndpoint) that is loosely modeled after its predecessor
(channel.Endpoint). This new implementation supports GSO of monster TCP
segments up to 64K in size, whereas channel.Endpoint only supports up to
32K. linkEndpoint will also be required for GRO, which will be
implemented in a follow-on commit.
TCP throughput from gVisor, i.e. TUN read direction, is dramatically
improved as a result of this commit. Benchmarks show substantial
improvement through a wide range of RTT and loss conditions, sometimes
as high as 5x.
The iperf3 results below demonstrate the effect of this commit between
two Linux computers with i5-12400 CPUs. There is roughly ~13us of round
trip latency between them.
The first result is from commit 57856fc without TCP GSO.
Starting Test: protocol: TCP, 1 streams, 131072 byte blocks
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Test Complete. Summary Results:
[ ID] Interval Transfer Bitrate Retr
[ 5] 0.00-10.00 sec 2.51 GBytes 2.15 Gbits/sec 154 sender
[ 5] 0.00-10.00 sec 2.49 GBytes 2.14 Gbits/sec receiver
The second result is from this commit with TCP GSO.
Starting Test: protocol: TCP, 1 streams, 131072 byte blocks
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Test Complete. Summary Results:
[ ID] Interval Transfer Bitrate Retr
[ 5] 0.00-10.00 sec 12.6 GBytes 10.8 Gbits/sec 6 sender
[ 5] 0.00-10.00 sec 12.6 GBytes 10.8 Gbits/sec receiver
Updates #6816
Signed-off-by: Jordan Whited <jordan@tailscale.com>
fixes tailscale#12968
The dns manager cleanup func was getting passed a nil
health tracker, which will panic. Fixed to pass it
the system health tracker.
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nobels <jonathan@tailscale.com>
cmd/k8s-operator,k8s-operator/sessionrecording,sessionrecording,ssh/tailssh: refactor session recording functionality
Refactor SSH session recording functionality (mostly the bits related to
Kubernetes API server proxy 'kubectl exec' session recording):
- move the session recording bits used by both Tailscale SSH
and the Kubernetes API server proxy into a shared sessionrecording package,
to avoid having the operator to import ssh/tailssh
- move the Kubernetes API server proxy session recording functionality
into a k8s-operator/sessionrecording package, add some abstractions
in preparation for adding support for a second streaming protocol (WebSockets)
Updates tailscale/corp#19821
Signed-off-by: Irbe Krumina <irbe@tailscale.com>
Re-instates the functionality that generates CRD API docs, but using
a different library as the one we were using earlier seemed to have
some issues with its Git history.
Also regenerates the docs (make kube-generate-all).
Updates tailscale/tailscale#12859
Signed-off-by: Irbe Krumina <irbe@tailscale.com>
Updates tailscale/tailscale#1634
This PR introduces a new `captive-portal-detected` Warnable which is set to an unhealthy state whenever a captive portal is detected on the local network, preventing Tailscale from connecting.
ipn/ipnlocal: fix captive portal loop shutdown
Change-Id: I7cafdbce68463a16260091bcec1741501a070c95
net/captivedetection: fix mutex misuse
ipn/ipnlocal: ensure that we don't fail to start the timer
Change-Id: I3e43fb19264d793e8707c5031c0898e48e3e7465
Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca>
Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
This adds support for container-like types such as Container[T] that
don't explicitly specify a view type for T. Instead, a package implementing
a container type should also implement and export a ContainerView[T, V] type
and a ContainerViewOf(*Container[T]) ContainerView[T, V] function, which
returns a view for the specified container, inferring the element view type V
from the element type T.
Updates #12736
Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
Some users run "tailscale cert" in a cron job to renew their
certificates on disk. The time until the next cron job run may be long
enough for the old cert to expire with our default heristics.
Add a `--min-validity` flag which ensures that the returned cert is
valid for at least the provided duration (unless it's longer than the
cert lifetime set by Let's Encrypt).
Updates #8725
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lytvynov <awly@tailscale.com>
Remove fybrik.io/crdoc dependency as it is causing issues for folks attempting
to vendor tailscale using GOPROXY=direct.
This means that the CRD API docs in ./k8s-operator/api.md will no longer
be generated- I am going to look at replacing it with another tool
in a follow-up.
Updates tailscale/tailscale#12859
Signed-off-by: Irbe Krumina <irbe@tailscale.com>
To match the format of exit node suggestions and ensure that the result
is not ambiguous, relax exit node CLI selection to permit using a FQDN
including the trailing dot.
Updates #12618
Change-Id: I04b9b36d2743154aa42f2789149b2733f8555d3f
Signed-off-by: Adrian Dewhurst <adrian@tailscale.com>
This adds support for generic types and interfaces to our cloner and viewer codegens.
It updates these packages to determine whether to make shallow or deep copies based
on the type parameter constraints. Additionally, if a template parameter or an interface
type has View() and Clone() methods, we'll use them for getters and the cloner of the
owning structure.
Updates #12736
Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
This adds a package with GP-related functions and types to be used in the future PRs.
It also updates nrptRuleDatabase to use the new package instead of its own gpNotificationWatcher implementation.
Updates #12687
Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
While `clientupdate.Updater` won't be able to apply updates on macsys,
we use `clientupdate.CanAutoUpdate` to gate the EditPrefs endpoint in
localAPI. We should allow the GUI client to set AutoUpdate.Apply on
macsys for it to properly get reported to the control plane. This also
allows the tailnet-wide default for auto-updates to propagate to macsys
clients.
Updates https://github.com/tailscale/corp/issues/21339
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lytvynov <awly@tailscale.com>
cmd/k8s-operator,ssh/tailssh,tsnet: optionally record kubectl exec sessions
The Kubernetes operator's API server proxy, when it receives a request
for 'kubectl exec' session now reads 'RecorderAddrs', 'EnforceRecorder'
fields from tailcfg.KubernetesCapRule.
If 'RecorderAddrs' is set to one or more addresses (of a tsrecorder instance(s)),
it attempts to connect to those and sends the session contents
to the recorder before forwarding the request to the kube API
server. If connection cannot be established or fails midway,
it is only allowed if 'EnforceRecorder' is not true (fail open).
Updates tailscale/corp#19821
Signed-off-by: Irbe Krumina <irbe@tailscale.com>
Co-authored-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
cmd/containerboot,cmd/k8s-operator: enable IPv6 for fqdn egress proxies
Don't skip installing egress forwarding rules for IPv6 (as long as the host
supports IPv6), and set headless services `ipFamilyPolicy` to
`PreferDualStack` to optionally enable both IP families when possible. Note
that even with `PreferDualStack` set, testing a dual-stack GKE cluster with
the default DNS setup of kube-dns did not correctly set both A and
AAAA records for the headless service, and instead only did so when
switching the cluster DNS to Cloud DNS. For both IPv4 and IPv6 to work
simultaneously in a dual-stack cluster, we require headless services to
return both A and AAAA records.
If the host doesn't support IPv6 but the FQDN specified only has IPv6
addresses available, containerboot will exit with error code 1 and an
error message because there is no viable egress route.
Fixes#12215
Signed-off-by: Tom Proctor <tomhjp@users.noreply.github.com>
This change expands the `exit-node list -filter` command to display all
location based exit nodes for the filtered country. This allows users
to switch to alternative servers when our recommended exit node is not
working as intended.
This change also makes the country filter matching case insensitive,
e.g. both USA and usa will work.
Updates #12698
Signed-off-by: Charlotte Brandhorst-Satzkorn <charlotte@tailscale.com>
In hopes it'll be found more.
Updates tailscale/corp#20844
Change-Id: Ic92ee9908f45b88f8770de285f838333f9467465
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
A few other minor language updates.
Updates tailscale/corp#20844
Change-Id: Idba85941baa0e2714688cc8a4ec3e242e7d1a362
Signed-off-by: James Tucker <james@tailscale.com>
The exit node suggestion CLI command was written with the assumption
that it's possible to provide a stableid on the command line, but this
is incorrect. Instead, it will now emit the name of the exit node.
Fixes#12618
Change-Id: Id7277f395b5fca090a99b0d13bfee7b215bc9802
Signed-off-by: Adrian Dewhurst <adrian@tailscale.com>
stunstamp now sends data to Prometheus via remote write, and Prometheus
can serve the same data. Retaining and cleaning up old data in sqlite
leads to long probing pauses, and it's not worth investing more effort
to optimize the schema and/or concurrency model.
Updates tailscale/corp#20344
Signed-off-by: Jordan Whited <jordan@tailscale.com>
PeerPresentFlags was added in 5ffb2668ef but wasn't plumbed through to
the RunConnectionLoop. Rather than add yet another parameter (as
IP:port was added earlier), pass in the raw PeerPresentMessage and
PeerGoneMessage struct values, which are the same things, plus two
fields: PeerGoneReasonType for gone and the PeerPresentFlags from
5ffb2668ef.
Updates tailscale/corp#17816
Change-Id: Ib19d9f95353651ada90656071fc3656cf58b7987
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This adds the ability to "peek" at the value of a SyncValue, so that
it's possible to observe a value without computing this.
Updates tailscale/corp#17122
Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca>
Co-authored-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Change-Id: I06f88c22a1f7ffcbc7ff82946335356bb0ef4622
This is implemented via GetBestInterfaceEx. Should we encounter errors
or fail to resolve a valid, non-Tailscale interface, we fall back to
returning the index for the default interface instead.
Fixes#12551
Signed-off-by: Aaron Klotz <aaron@tailscale.com>
Timeouts could already be identified as NaN values on
stunstamp_derp_stun_rtt_ns, but we can't use NaN effectively with
promql to visualize them. So, this commit adds a timeouts metric that
we can use with rate/delta/etc promql functions.
Updates tailscale/corp#20689
Signed-off-by: Jordan Whited <jordan@tailscale.com>
This actually performs a Noise request in the 'debug ts2021' command,
instead of just exiting once we've dialed a connection. This can help
debug certain forms of captive portals and deep packet inspection that
will allow a connection, but will RST the connection when trying to send
data on the post-upgraded TCP connection.
Updates #1634
Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca>
Change-Id: I1e46ca9c9a0751c55f16373a6a76cdc24fec1f18
So that it can be later used in the 'tailscale debug ts2021' function in
the CLI, to aid in debugging captive portals/WAFs/etc.
Updates #1634
Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca>
Change-Id: Iec9423f5e7570f2c2c8218d27fc0902137e73909
Updates tailscale/corp#20969
Right now, when netcheck starts, it asks tailscaled for a copy of the DERPMap. If it doesn't have one, it makes a HTTPS request to controlplane.tailscale.com to fetch one.
This will always fail if you're on a network with a captive portal actively blocking HTTPS traffic. The code appears to hang entirely because the http.Client doesn't have a Timeout set. It just sits there waiting until the request succeeds or fails.
This adds a timeout of 10 seconds, and logs more details about the status of the HTTPS request.
Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
This is useful during maintenance as a method for shedding home client
load.
Updates tailscale/corp#20689
Signed-off-by: Jordan Whited <jordan@tailscale.com>
Adds a new TailscaleProxyReady condition type for use in corev1.Service
conditions.
Also switch our CRDs to use metav1.Condition instead of
ConnectorCondition. The Go structs are seralized identically, but it
updates some descriptions and validation rules. Update k8s
controller-tools and controller-runtime deps to fix the documentation
generation for metav1.Condition so that it excludes comments and
TODOs.
Stop expecting the fake client to populate TypeMeta in tests. See
kubernetes-sigs/controller-runtime#2633 for details of the change.
Finally, make some minor improvements to validation for service hostnames.
Fixes#12216
Co-authored-by: Irbe Krumina <irbe@tailscale.com>
Signed-off-by: Tom Proctor <tomhjp@users.noreply.github.com>
Previously, we were registering TCP and UDP connections in the same map,
which could result in erroneously removing a mapping if one of the two
connections completes while the other one is still active.
Add a "proto string" argument to these functions to avoid this.
Additionally, take the "proto" argument in LocalAPI, and plumb that
through from the CLI and add a new LocalClient method.
Updates tailscale/corp#20600
Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca>
Change-Id: I35d5efaefdfbf4721e315b8ca123f0c8af9125fb
* cmd/containerboot: store device ID before setting up proxy routes.
For containerboot instances whose state needs to be stored
in a Kubernetes Secret, we additonally store the device's
ID, FQDN and IPs.
This is used, between other, by the Kubernetes operator,
who uses the ID to delete the device when resources need
cleaning up and writes the FQDN and IPs on various kube
resource statuses for visibility.
This change shifts storing device ID earlier in the proxy setup flow,
to ensure that if proxy routing setup fails,
the device can still be deleted.
Updates tailscale/tailscale#12146
Signed-off-by: Irbe Krumina <irbe@tailscale.com>
* code review feedback
Signed-off-by: Irbe Krumina <irbe@tailscale.com>
---------
Signed-off-by: Irbe Krumina <irbe@tailscale.com>
We do not support specific version updates or track switching on macOS.
Do not populate the flag to avoid confusion.
Updates #cleanup
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lytvynov <awly@tailscale.com>
This moves NewContainsIPFunc from tsaddr to new ipset package.
And wgengine/filter types gets split into wgengine/filter/filtertype,
so netmap (and thus the CLI, etc) doesn't need to bring in ipset,
bart, etc.
Then add a test making sure the CLI deps don't regress.
Updates #1278
Change-Id: Ia246d6d9502bbefbdeacc4aef1bed9c8b24f54d5
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
NewContainsIPFunc was previously documented as performing poorly if
there were many netip.Prefixes to search over. As such, we never it used it
in such cases.
This updates it to use bart at a certain threshold (over 6 prefixes,
currently), at which point the bart lookup overhead pays off.
This is currently kinda useless because we're not using it. But now we
can and get wins elsewhere. And we can remove the caveat in the docs.
goos: darwin
goarch: arm64
pkg: tailscale.com/net/tsaddr
│ before │ after │
│ sec/op │ sec/op vs base │
NewContainsIPFunc/empty-8 2.215n ± 11% 2.239n ± 1% +1.08% (p=0.022 n=10)
NewContainsIPFunc/cidr-list-1-8 17.44n ± 0% 17.59n ± 6% +0.89% (p=0.000 n=10)
NewContainsIPFunc/cidr-list-2-8 27.85n ± 0% 28.13n ± 1% +1.01% (p=0.000 n=10)
NewContainsIPFunc/cidr-list-3-8 36.05n ± 0% 36.56n ± 13% +1.41% (p=0.000 n=10)
NewContainsIPFunc/cidr-list-4-8 43.73n ± 0% 44.38n ± 1% +1.50% (p=0.000 n=10)
NewContainsIPFunc/cidr-list-5-8 51.61n ± 2% 51.75n ± 0% ~ (p=0.101 n=10)
NewContainsIPFunc/cidr-list-10-8 95.65n ± 0% 68.92n ± 0% -27.94% (p=0.000 n=10)
NewContainsIPFunc/one-ip-8 4.466n ± 0% 4.469n ± 1% ~ (p=0.491 n=10)
NewContainsIPFunc/two-ip-8 8.002n ± 1% 7.997n ± 4% ~ (p=0.697 n=10)
NewContainsIPFunc/three-ip-8 27.98n ± 1% 27.75n ± 0% -0.82% (p=0.012 n=10)
geomean 19.60n 19.07n -2.71%
Updates #12486
Change-Id: I2e2320cc4384f875f41721374da536bab995c1ce
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This abstraction provides a nicer way to work with
maps of slices without having to write out three long type
params.
This also allows it to provide an AsMap implementation which
copies the map and the slices at least.
Updates tailscale/corp#20910
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
Without this rule, Windows 8.1 and newer devices issue parallel DNS requests to DNS servers
associated with all network adapters, even when "Override local DNS" is enabled and/or
a Mullvad exit node is being used, resulting in DNS leaks.
This also adds "disable-local-dns-override-via-nrpt" nodeAttr that can be used to disable
the new behavior if needed.
Fixestailscale/corp#20718
Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>