The upstream crypto package now supports sending banners at any time during
authentication, so the Tailscale fork of crypto/ssh is no longer necessary.
github.com/tailscale/golang-x-crypto is still needed for some custom ACME
autocert functionality.
tempfork/gliderlabs is still necessary because of a few other customizations,
mostly related to TTY handling.
Updates #8593
Signed-off-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
We've been maintaining temporary dev forks of golang.org/x/crypto/{acme,ssh}
in https://github.com/tailscale/golang-x-crypto instead of using
this repo's tempfork directory as we do with other packages. The reason we were
doing that was because x/crypto/ssh depended on x/crypto/ssh/internal/poly1305
and I hadn't noticed there are forwarding wrappers already available
in x/crypto/poly1305. It also depended internal/bcrypt_pbkdf but we don't use that
so it's easy to just delete that calling code in our tempfork/ssh.
Now that our SSH changes have been upstreamed, we can soon unfork from SSH.
That leaves ACME remaining.
This change copies our tailscale/golang-x-crypto/acme code to
tempfork/acme but adds a test that our vendored copied still matches
our tailscale/golang-x-crypto repo, where we can continue to do
development work and rebases with upstream. A comment on the new test
describes the expected workflow.
While we could continue to just import & use
tailscale/golang-x-crypto/acme, it seems a bit nicer to not have that
entire-fork-of-x-crypto visible at all in our transitive deps and the
questions that invites. Showing just a fork of an ACME client is much
less scary. It does add a step to the process of hacking on the ACME
client code, but we do that approximately never anyway, and the extra
step is very incremental compared to the existing tedious steps.
Updates #8593
Updates #10238
Change-Id: I8af4378c04c1f82e63d31bf4d16dba9f510f9199
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
The c2n handling code was using the Go httptest package's
ResponseRecorder code but that's in a test package which brings in
Go's test certs, etc.
This forks the httptest recorder type into its own package that only
has the recorder and adds a test that we don't re-introduce a
dependency on httptest.
Updates #12614
Change-Id: I3546f49972981e21813ece9064cc2be0b74f4b16
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
The hiding of internal packages has hidden things I wanted to see a
few times now. Stop hiding them. This makes depaware.txt output a bit
longer, but not too much. Plus we only really look at it with diffs &
greps anyway; it's not like anybody reads the whole thing.
Updates #12614
Change-Id: I868c89eeeddcaaab63e82371651003629bc9bda8
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
We had the debug packet capture code + Lua dissector in the CLI + the
iOS app. Now we don't, with tests to lock it in.
As a bonus, tailscale.com/net/packet and tailscale.com/net/flowtrack
no longer appear in the CLI's binary either.
A new build tag ts_omit_capture disables the packet capture code and
was added to build_dist.sh's --extra-small mode.
Updates #12614
Change-Id: I79b0628c0d59911bd4d510c732284d97b0160f10
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Still behind the same ts_omit_tap build tag.
See #14738 for background on the pattern.
Updates #12614
Change-Id: I03fb3d2bf137111e727415bd8e713d8568156ecc
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This pulls out the Wake-on-LAN (WoL) code out into its own package
(feature/wakeonlan) that registers itself with various new hooks
around tailscaled.
Then a new build tag (ts_omit_wakeonlan) causes the package to not
even be linked in the binary.
Ohter new packages include:
* feature: to just record which features are loaded. Future:
dependencies between features.
* feature/condregister: the package with all the build tags
that tailscaled, tsnet, and the Tailscale Xcode project
extension can empty (underscore) import to load features
as a function of the defined build tags.
Future commits will move of our "ts_omit_foo" build tags into this
style.
Updates #12614
Change-Id: I9c5378dafb1113b62b816aabef02714db3fc9c4a
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
We previously baked in the LetsEncrypt x509 root CA for our tlsdial
package.
This moves that out into a new "bakedroots" package and is now also
shared by ipn/ipnlocal's cert validation code (validCertPEM) that
decides whether it's time to fetch a new cert.
Otherwise, a machine without LetsEncrypt roots locally in its system
roots is unable to use tailscale cert/serve and fetch certs.
Fixes#14690
Change-Id: Ic88b3bdaabe25d56b9ff07ada56a27e3f11d7159
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
I moved the actual rename into separate, GOOS-specific files. On
non-Windows, we do a simple os.Rename. On Windows, we first try
ReplaceFile with a fallback to os.Rename if the target file does
not exist.
ReplaceFile is the recommended way to rename the file in this use case,
as it preserves attributes and ACLs set on the target file.
Updates #14428
Signed-off-by: Aaron Klotz <aaron@tailscale.com>
This finishes the work started in #14616.
Updates #8632
Change-Id: I4dc07d45b1e00c3db32217c03b21b8b1ec19e782
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
sync.OnceValue and slices.Compact were both added in Go 1.21.
cmp.Or was added in Go 1.22.
Updates #8632
Updates #11058
Change-Id: I89ba4c404f40188e1f8a9566c8aaa049be377754
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Importing the ~deprecated golang.org/x/exp/maps as "xmaps" to not
shadow the std "maps" was getting ugly.
And using slices.Collect on an iterator is verbose & allocates more.
So copy (x)maps.Keys+Values into our slicesx package instead.
Updates #cleanup
Updates #12912
Updates #14514 (pulled out of that change)
Change-Id: I5e68d12729934de93cf4a9cd87c367645f86123a
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
The go-httpstat package has a data race when used with connections that
are performing happy-eyeballs connection setups as we are in the DERP
client. There is a long-stale PR upstream to address this, however
revisiting the purpose of this code suggests we don't really need
httpstat here.
The code populates a latency table that may be used to compare to STUN
latency, which is a lightweight RTT check. Switching out the reported
timing here to simply the request HTTP request RTT avoids the
problematic package.
Fixestailscale/corp#25095
Signed-off-by: James Tucker <james@tailscale.com>
Or unless the new "ts_debug_websockets" build tag is set.
Updates #1278
Change-Id: Ic4c4f81c1924250efd025b055585faec37a5491d
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Otherwise all the clients only using control/controlhttp for the
ts2021 HTTP client were also pulling in WebSocket libraries, as the
server side always needs to speak websockets, but only GOOS=js clients
speak it.
This doesn't yet totally remove the websocket dependency on Linux because
Linux has a envknob opt-in to act like GOOS=js for manual testing and force
the use of WebSockets for DERP only (not control). We can put that behind
a build tag in a future change to eliminate the dep on all GOOSes.
Updates #1278
Change-Id: I4f60508f4cad52bf8c8943c8851ecee506b7ebc9
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This adds a new generic result type (motivated by golang/go#70084) to
try it out, and uses it in the new lineutil package (replacing the old
lineread package), changing that package to return iterators:
sometimes over []byte (when the input is all in memory), but sometimes
iterators over results of []byte, if errors might happen at runtime.
Updates #12912
Updates golang/go#70084
Change-Id: Iacdc1070e661b5fb163907b1e8b07ac7d51d3f83
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
In this PR, we add the tailscale syspolicy command with two subcommands: list, which displays
policy settings, and reload, which forces a reload of those settings. We also update the LocalAPI
and LocalClient to facilitate these additions.
Updates #12687
Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
CI / race-root-integration (3/4) (push) Waiting to run
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In this PR, we update the syspolicy package to utilize syspolicy/rsop under the hood,
and remove syspolicy.CachingHandler, syspolicy.windowsHandler and related code
which is no longer used.
We mark the syspolicy.Handler interface and RegisterHandler/SetHandlerForTest functions
as deprecated, but keep them temporarily until they are no longer used in other repos.
We also update the package to register setting definitions for all existing policy settings
and to register the Registry-based, Windows-specific policy stores when running on Windows.
Finally, we update existing internal and external tests to use the new API and add a few more
tests and benchmarks.
Updates #12687
Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
It had bit-rotted likely during the transition to vector io in
76389d8baf942b10a8f0f4201b7c4b0737a0172c. Tested on Ubuntu 24.04
by creating a netns and doing the DHCP dance to get an IP.
Updates #2589
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
Updates tailscale/tailscale#13839
Adds a new blockblame package which can detect common MITM SSL certificates used by network appliances. We use this in `tlsdial` to display a dedicated health warning when we cannot connect to control, and a network appliance MITM attack is detected.
Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
Adds logic to `checkExitNodePrefsLocked` to return an error when
attempting to use exit nodes on a platform where this is not supported.
This mirrors logic that was added to error out when trying to use `ssh`
on an unsupported platform, and has very similar semantics.
Fixes https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/13724
Signed-off-by: Mario Minardi <mario@tailscale.com>
We were using google/uuid in two places and that brought in database/sql/driver.
We didn't need it in either place.
Updates #13760
Updates tailscale/corp#20099
Change-Id: Ieed32f1bebe35d35f47ec5a2a429268f24f11f1f
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Rename kube/{types,client,api} -> kube/{kubetypes,kubeclient,kubeapi}
so that we don't need to rename the package on each import to
convey that it's kubernetes specific.
Updates#cleanup
Signed-off-by: Irbe Krumina <irbe@tailscale.com>
Further split kube package into kube/{client,api,types}. This is so that
consumers who only need constants/static types don't have to import
the client and api bits.
Updates#cleanup
Signed-off-by: Irbe Krumina <irbe@tailscale.com>
Previously, despite what the commit said, we were using a raw IP socket
that was *not* an AF_PACKET socket, and thus was subject to the host
firewall rules. Switch to using a real AF_PACKET socket to actually get
the functionality we want.
Updates #13140
Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca>
Change-Id: If657daeeda9ab8d967e75a4f049c66e2bca54b78
Currently, we use PermitRead/PermitWrite/PermitCert permission flags to determine which operations are allowed for a LocalAPI client.
These checks are performed when localapi.Handler handles a request. Additionally, certain operations (e.g., changing the serve config)
requires the connected user to be a local admin. This approach is inherently racey and is subject to TOCTOU issues.
We consider it to be more critical on Windows environments, which are inherently multi-user, and therefore we prevent more than one
OS user from connecting and utilizing the LocalBackend at the same time. However, the same type of issues is also applicable to other
platforms when switching between profiles that have different OperatorUser values in ipn.Prefs.
We'd like to allow more than one Windows user to connect, but limit what they can see and do based on their access rights on the device
(e.g., an local admin or not) and to the currently active LoginProfile (e.g., owner/operator or not), while preventing TOCTOU issues on Windows
and other platforms. Therefore, we'd like to pass an actor from the LocalAPI to the LocalBackend to represent the user performing the operation.
The LocalBackend, or the profileManager down the line, will then check the actor's access rights to perform a given operation on the device
and against the current (and/or the target) profile.
This PR does not change the current permission model in any way, but it introduces the concept of an actor and includes some preparatory
work to pass it around. Temporarily, the ipnauth.Actor interface has methods like IsLocalSystem and IsLocalAdmin, which are only relevant
to the current permission model. It also lacks methods that will actually be used in the new model. We'll be adding these gradually in the next
PRs and removing the deprecated methods and the Permit* flags at the end of the transition.
Updates tailscale/corp#18342
Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
This commit adds a new usermetric package and wires
up metrics across the tailscale client.
Updates tailscale/corp#22075
Co-authored-by: Anton Tolchanov <anton@tailscale.com>
Signed-off-by: Kristoffer Dalby <kristoffer@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 2f27319baf71681e221904d3a3ffe1badedc8e2e 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 25f0a3fc8f6f9cf681bb5afda8e1762816c67a8b 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>
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>
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>
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>
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>
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 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>
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>
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
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>
S4U logons do not automatically load the associated user profile. In this
PR we add UserProfile to handle that part. Windows docs indicate that
we should try to resolve a remote profile path when present, so we attempt
to do so when the local computer is joined to a domain.
Updates #12383
Signed-off-by: Aaron Klotz <aaron@tailscale.com>