With the upcoming syspolicy changes, it's imperative that all syspolicy keys are defined in the syspolicy package
for proper registration. Otherwise, the corresponding policy settings will not be read.
This updates a couple of places where we still use string literals rather than syspolicy consts.
Updates #12687
Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
Updates tailscale/tailscale#13326
This PR begins implementing a `tailscale dns` command group in the Tailscale CLI. It provides an initial implementation of `tailscale dns status` which dumps the state of the internal DNS forwarder.
Two new endpoints were added in LocalAPI to support the CLI functionality:
- `/netmap`: dumps a copy of the last received network map (because the CLI shouldn't have to listen to the ipn bus for a copy)
- `/dns-osconfig`: dumps the OS DNS configuration (this will be very handy for the UI clients as well, as they currently do not display this information)
My plan is to implement other subcommands mentioned in tailscale/tailscale#13326, such as `query`, in later PRs.
Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
This PR changes how LocalBackend handles interactive (initiated via StartLoginInteractive) and non-interactive (e.g., due to key expiration) logins,
and when it sends the authURL to the connected clients.
Specifically,
- When a user initiates an interactive login by clicking Log In in the GUI, the LocalAPI calls StartLoginInteractive.
If an authURL is available and hasn't expired, we immediately send it to all connected clients, suggesting them to open that URL in a browser.
Otherwise, we send a login request to the control plane and set a flag indicating that an interactive login is in progress.
- When LocalBackend receives an authURL from the control plane, we check if it differs from the previous one and whether an interactive login
is in progress. If either condition is true, we notify all connected clients with the new authURL and reset the interactive login flag.
We reset the auth URL and flags upon a successful authentication, when a different user logs in and when switching Tailscale login profiles.
Finally, we remove the redundant dedup logic added to WatchNotifications in #12096 and revert the tests to their original state to ensure that
calling StartLoginInteractive always produces BrowseToURL notifications, either immediately or when the authURL is received from the control plane.
Fixes#13296
Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
Updates tailscale/tailscale#177
It appears that the OSS distribution of `tailscaled` is currently unable to get the current system base DNS configuration, as GetBaseConfig() in manager_darwin.go is unimplemented. This PR adds a basic implementation that reads the current values in `/etc/resolv.conf`, to at least unblock DNS resolution via Quad100 if `--accept-dns` is enabled.
Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
We've added more probe targets recently which has resulted in more
timeouts behind restrictive NATs in localized testing that don't
like how many flows we are creating at once. Not so much an issue
for datacenter or cloud-hosted deployments.
Updates tailscale/corp#22114
Signed-off-by: Jordan Whited <jordan@tailscale.com>
This reproduces the bug report from
https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/13346
It does not yet fix it.
Updates #13346
Change-Id: Ia5af7b0481a64a37efe259c798facdda6d9da618
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
We add package defining interfaces for policy stores, enabling creation of policy sources
and reading settings from them. It includes a Windows-specific PlatformPolicyStore for GP and MDM
policies stored in the Registry, and an in-memory TestStore for testing purposes.
We also include an internal package that tracks and reports policy usage metrics when a policy setting
is read from a store. Initially, it will be used only on Windows and Android, as macOS, iOS, and tvOS
report their own metrics. However, we plan to use it across all platforms eventually.
Updates #12687
Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
* cmd/k8s-operator,k8s-operator/sessonrecording: ensure CastHeader contains terminal size
For tsrecorder to be able to play session recordings, the recording's
CastHeader must have '.Width' and '.Height' fields set to non-zero.
Kubectl (or whoever is the client that initiates the 'kubectl exec'
session recording) sends the terminal dimensions in a resize message that
the API server proxy can intercept, however that races with the first server
message that we need to record.
This PR ensures we wait for the terminal dimensions to be processed from
the first resize message before any other data is sent, so that for all
sessions with terminal attached, the header of the session recording
contains the terminal dimensions and the recording can be played by tsrecorder.
Updates tailscale/tailscale#19821
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
I should've bumped capver in 65fe0ba7b5 but forgot.
This lets us turn off the cryptokey routing change from control for
the affected panicky range of commits, based on capver.
Updates #13332
Updates tailscale/corp#20732
Change-Id: I32c17cfcb45b2369b2b560032330551d47a0ce0b
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Both for Raspberry Pis, and for running natlab tests faster on Apple
Silicon Macs without emulating x86.
Not fully wired up yet.
Updates #1866
Updates #13038
Change-Id: I1552bf107069308f325f640773cc881ed735b5ab
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
No need to make callers specify the redundant IP version or
TTL/HopLimit or EthernetType in the common case. The mkPacket helper
can set those when unset.
And use the mkIPLayer in another place, simplifying some code.
And rename mkPacketErr to just mkPacket, then move mkPacket to
test-only code, as mustPacket.
Updates #13038
Change-Id: Ic216e44dda760c69ab9bfc509370040874a47d30
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
And clean up some of the test helpers in the process.
Updates #13038
Change-Id: I3e2b5f7028a32d97af7f91941e59399a8e222b25
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
I'd added this helper for tests, but then moved it to non-test code
and forgot some places to use it. This uses it in more places to
remove some boilerplate.
Updates #13038
Change-Id: Ic4dc339be1c47a55b71d806bab421097ee3d75ed
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Logging serial numbers every time they are read might have been useful
early on, but seems unnecessary now.
Updates #5902
Signed-off-by: Anton Tolchanov <anton@tailscale.com>
The LocalBackend's state machine starts in NoState and soon transitions to NeedsLogin if there's no auto-start profile,
with the profileManager starting with a new empty profile. Notably, entering the NeedsLogin state blocks engine updates.
We expect the user to transition out of this state by logging in interactively, and we set WantRunning to true when
controlclient enters the StateAuthenticated state.
While our intention is correct, and completing an interactive login should set WantRunning to true, our assumption
that logging into the current Tailscale profile is the only way to transition out of the NeedsLogin state is not accurate.
Another common transition path includes an explicit profile switch (via LocalBackend.SwitchProfile) or an implicit switch
when a Windows user connects to the backend. This results in a bug where WantRunning is set to true even when it was
previously set to false, and the user expressed no intention of changing it.
A similar issue occurs when switching from (sic) a Tailnet that has seamlessRenewalEnabled, regardless of the current state
of the LocalBackend's state machine, and also results in unexpectedly set WantRunning. While this behavior is generally
undesired, it is also incorrect that it depends on the control knobs of the Tailnet we're switching from rather than
the Tailnet we're switching to. However, this issue needs to be addressed separately.
This PR updates LocalBackend.SetControlClientStatus to only set WantRunning to true in response to an interactive login
as indicated by a non-empty authURL.
Fixes#6668Fixes#11280
Updates #12756
Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
This adds tests for DNS requests, and ignoring IPv6 packets on v4-only
networks.
No behavior changes. But some things are pulled out into functions.
And the mkPacket helpers previously just for tests are moved into
non-test code to be used elsewhere to reduce duplication, doing the
checksum stuff automatically.
Updates #13038
Change-Id: I4dd0b73c75b2b9567b4be3f05a2792999d83f6a3
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
When the TS_DEBUG_NETSTACK_LOOPBACK_PORT environment variable is set,
netstack will loop back (dnat to addressFamilyLoopback:loopbackPort)
TCP & UDP flows originally destined to localServicesIP:loopbackPort.
localServicesIP is quad-100 or the IPv6 equivalent.
Updates tailscale/corp#22713
Signed-off-by: Jordan Whited <jordan@tailscale.com>
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>
This adds support for sending packets to 33:33:00:00:01 at IPv6
multicast address ff02::1 to send to all nodes.
Nothing in Tailscale depends on this (yet?), but it makes debugging in
VMs behind natlab easier (e.g. you can ping all nodes), and other
things might depend on this in the future.
Mostly I'm trying to flesh out the IPv6 support in natlab now that we
can write vnet tests.
Updates #13038
Change-Id: If590031fcf075690ca35c7b230a38c3e72e621eb
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
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>
To test how virtual machines connect to the natlab vnet code.
Updates #13038
Change-Id: Ia4fd4b0c1803580ee7d94cc9878d777ad4f24f82
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
And refactor some of vnet.go for testability.
The only behavioral change (with a new test) is that ethernet
broadcasts no longer get sent back to the sender.
Updates #13038
Change-Id: Ic2e7e7d6d8805b7b7f2b5c52c2c5ba97101cef14
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@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>
This was previously disabled in 8e42510 due to missing GSO-awareness in
tstun, which was resolved in d097096.
Updates tailscale/corp#22511
Signed-off-by: Jordan Whited <jordan@tailscale.com>
The bad naming (which had only been half updated with the IPv6
changes) tripped me up in the earlier change.
Updates #13038
Change-Id: I65ce07c167e8219d35b87e1f4bf61aab4cac31ff
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
The reason they weren't working was because the cmd/tta agent in the
guest was dialing out to the test and the vnet couldn't map its global
unicast IPv6 address to a node as it was just using a
map[netip.Addr]*node and blindly trusting the *node was
populated. Instead, it was nil, so the agent connection fetching
didn't work for its RoundTripper and the test could never drive the
node. That map worked for IPv4 but for IPv6 we need to use the method
that takes into account the node's IPv6 SLAAC address. Most call sites
had been converted but I'd missed that one.
Also clean up some debug, and prohibit nodes' link-local unicast
addresses from dialing 2000::/3 directly for now. We can allow that to
be configured opt-in later (some sort of IPv6 NAT mode. Whatever it's
called.) That mode was working on accident, but was confusing: Linux
would do source address selection from link local for the first few
seconds and then after SLAAC and DAD, switch to using the global
unicast source address. Be consistent for now and force it to use the
global unicast.
Updates #13038
Change-Id: I85e973aaa38b43c14611943ff45c7c825ee9200a
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Really we need to fix logpolicy + bootstrapDNS to not be so aggressive,
but this is a quick workaround meanwhile.
Without this, tailscaled starts immediately while IPv6 DAD is
happening for a couple seconds and logpolicy freaks out without the
network available and starts spamming stderr about bootstrap DNS
options. But we see that regularly anyway from people whose wifi is
down. So we need to fix the general case. This is not that fix.
Updates #13038
Change-Id: Iba7e536d08e59d34abded1d279f88fdc9c46d94d
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
There were a few places it could get wedged (notably the dial without
a timeout).
And add a knob for verbose debug logs.
And keep two idle connections always.
Updates #13038
Change-Id: I952ad182d7111481d97a83c12aa2ff4bfdc55fe8
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Move all the UDP handling to its own func to remove a bunch of "if
isUDP" checks in a bunch of blocks.
Updates #13038
Change-Id: If71d71b49e57651d15bd307a2233c43751cc8639
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>