Also replaces the IPv6Overlay bool with use of DebugFlags, since
it's currently an experimental configuration.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
We were creating the controlclient and starting the portpoll concurrently,
which frequently resulted in the first controlclient connection being canceled
by the firsdt portpoll result ~milliseconds later, resulting in another
HTTP request.
Instead, wait a bit for the first portpoll result so it's much less likely to
interrupt our controlclient connection.
Updates tailscale/corp#557
This partially (but not yet fully) migrates Windows to tailscaled's
StateStore storage system.
This adds a new bool Pref, ForceDaemon, defined as:
// ForceDaemon specifies whether a platform that normally
// operates in "client mode" (that is, requires an active user
// logged in with the GUI app running) should keep running after the
// GUI ends and/or the user logs out.
//
// The only current applicable platform is Windows. This
// forced Windows to go into "server mode" where Tailscale is
// running even with no users logged in. This might also be
// used for macOS in the future. This setting has no effect
// for Linux/etc, which always operate in daemon mode.
Then, when ForceDaemon becomes true, we now write use the StateStore
to track which user started it in server mode, and store their prefs
under that key.
The ipnserver validates the connections/identities and informs that
LocalBackend which userid is currently in charge.
The GUI can then enable/disable server mode at runtime, without using
the CLI.
But the "tailscale up" CLI was also fixed, so Windows users can use
authkeys or ACL tags, etc.
Updates #275
If no interfaces are up, calm down and stop spamming so much. It was
noticed as especially bad on Windows, but probably was bad
everywhere. I just have the best network conditions testing on a
Windows VM.
Updates #604
So previous routes aren't shadowing resources that the operating
system might need (Windows Domain Controller, DNS server, corp HTTP
proxy, WinHTTP fetching the PAC file itself, etc).
This effectively detects when we're transitioning from, say, public
wifi to corp wifi and makes Tailscale remove all its routes and stops
its TCP connections and tries connecting to everything anew.
Updates tailscale/corp#653
We depend on DERP for NAT traversal now[0] so disabling it entirely can't
work.
What we'll do instead in the future is let people specify
alternate/additional DERP servers. And perhaps in the future we could
also add a pref for nodes to say when they expect to never need/want
to use DERP for data (but allow it for NAT traversal communication).
But this isn't the right pref and it doesn't work, so delete it.
Fixes#318
[0] https://tailscale.com/blog/how-nat-traversal-works/
It's properly handled later in tsdns.NewMap anyway, but there's work
done in the meantime that can be skipped when a peer lacks a DNS name.
It's also more clear that it's okay for it to be blank.
Also remove rebinding logic from the windows router. Magicsock will
instead rebind based on link change signals.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
Start of making the IPN state machine react to link changes and down
its DNS & routes if necessary to unblock proxy resolution (e.g. for
transitioning from public to corp networks where the corp network has
mandatory proxies and WPAD PAC files that can't be resolved while
using the DNS/routes configured previously)
This change should be a no-op. Just some callback plumbing.
For example:
$ tailscale ping -h
USAGE
ping <hostname-or-IP>
FLAGS
-c 10 max number of pings to send
-stop-once-direct true stop once a direct path is established
-verbose false verbose output
$ tailscale ping mon.ts.tailscale.com
pong from monitoring (100.88.178.64) via DERP(sfo) in 65ms
pong from monitoring (100.88.178.64) via DERP(sfo) in 252ms
pong from monitoring (100.88.178.64) via [2604:a880:2:d1::36:d001]:41641 in 33ms
Fixes#661
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
tailscaled receives a SIGPIPE when CLIs disconnect from it. We shouldn't
shut down in that case.
This reverts commit 43b271cb26.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
ORder of operations to trigger a problem:
- Start an already authed tailscaled, verify you can ping stuff.
- Run `tailscale up`. Notice you can no longer ping stuff.
The problem is that `tailscale up` stops the IPN state machine before
restarting it, which zeros out the packet filter but _not_ the packet
filter hash. Then, upon restarting IPN, the uncleared hash incorrectly
makes the code conclude that the filter doesn't need updating, and so
we stay with a zero filter (reject everything) for ever.
The fix is simply to update the filterHash correctly in all cases,
so that running -> stopped -> running correctly changes the filter
at every transition.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
We need to emit Prefs when it *has* changed, not when it hasn't.
Test is added in our e2e test, separately.
Fixes: #620
Signed-off-by: Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@tailscale.com>
This prevents hostname being forced to os.Hostname despite override
when control is contacted for the first time after starting tailscaled.
Signed-off-by: Dmytro Shynkevych <dmytro@tailscale.com>
The StartLoginInteractive command is for delegating the sign-in flow
to a browser. The Android Gooogle Sign-In SDK inverts the flow by
giving the client ID tokens.
Add a new backend command for accepting such tokens by exposing the existing
controlclient.Client.Login support for OAuth2 tokens. Introduce a custom
TokenType to distinguish ID tokens from other OAuth2 tokens.
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>
This change adds to tsdns the ability to delegate lookups to upstream nameservers.
This is crucial for setting Magic DNS as the system resolver.
Signed-off-by: Dmytro Shynkevych <dmytro@tailscale.com>
This adds a new magicsock endpoint type only used when both sides
support discovery (that is, are advertising a discovery
key). Otherwise the old code is used.
So far the new code only communicates over DERP as proof that the new
code paths are wired up. None of the actually discovery messaging is
implemented yet.
Support for discovery (generating and advertising a key) are still
behind an environment variable for now.
Updates #483
Later we'll want to use the presence of a discovery key as a signal
that the node knows how to participate in discovery. Currently the
code generates keys and sends them to the control server but doesn't
do anything with them, which is a bad state to stay in lest we release
this code and end up with nodes in the future that look like they're
functional with the new discovery protocol but aren't.
So for now, make this opt-in as a debug option for now, until the rest
of it is in.
Updates #483
Overriding the hostname is required for Android, where os.Hostname
is often just "localhost".
Updates #409
Signed-off-by: Elias Naur <mail@eliasnaur.com>