In order to test the sticky last suggestion code, a test was written for
LocalBackend.SuggestExitNode but it contains a random number generator
which makes writing comprehensive tests very difficult. This doesn't
change how the last suggestion works, but it adds some infrastructure to
make that easier in a later PR.
This adds func parameters for the two randomized parts: breaking ties
between DERP regions and breaking ties between nodes. This way tests can
validate the entire list of tied options, rather than expecting a
particular outcome given a particular random seed.
As a result of this, the global random number generator can be used
rather than seeding a local one each time.
In order to see the tied nodes for the location based (i.e. Mullvad)
case, pickWeighted needed to return a slice instead of a single
arbitrary option, so there is a small change in how that works.
Updates tailscale/corp#19681
Change-Id: I83c48a752abdec0f59c58ccfd8bfb3f3f17d0ea8
Signed-off-by: Adrian Dewhurst <adrian@tailscale.com>
After some analysis, stateful filtering is only necessary in tailnets
that use `autogroup:danger-all` in `src` in ACLs. And in those cases
users explicitly specify that hosts outside of the tailnet should be
able to reach their nodes. To fix local DNS breakage in containers, we
disable stateful filtering by default.
Updates #12108
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lytvynov <awly@tailscale.com>
It was requested by the first customer 4-5 years ago and only used
for a brief moment of time. We later added netmap visibility trimming
which removes the need for this.
It's been hidden by the CLI for quite some time and never documented
anywhere else.
This keeps the CLI flag, though, out of caution. It just returns an
error if it's set to anything but true (its default).
Fixes#12058
Change-Id: I7514ba572e7b82519b04ed603ff9f3bdbaecfda7
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Updates #12172 (then need to update other repos)
Change-Id: I439f65e0119b09e00da2ef5c7a4f002f93558578
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
The previous LocalBackend & CLI 'up' changes improved some stuff, but
might've been too aggressive in some edge cases.
This simplifies the authURL vs authURLSticky distinction and removes
the interact field, which seemed to just just be about duplicate URL
suppression in IPN bus, back from when the IPN bus was a single client
at a time. This moves that suppression to a different spot.
Fixes#12119
Updates #12028
Updates #12042
Change-Id: I1f8800b1e82ccc1c8a0d7abba559e7404ddf41e4
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
The CLI's "up" is kinda chaotic and LocalBackend.Start is kinda
chaotic and they both need to be redone/deleted (respectively), but
this fixes some buggy behavior meanwhile. We were previously calling
StartLoginInteractive (to start the controlclient's RegisterRequest)
redundantly in some cases, causing test flakes depending on timing and
up's weird state machine.
We only need to call StartLoginInteractive in the client if Start itself
doesn't. But Start doesn't tell us that. So cheat a bit and a put the
information about whether there's a current NodeKey in the ipn.Status.
It used to be accessible over LocalAPI via GetPrefs as a private key but
we removed that for security. But a bool is fine.
So then only call StartLoginInteractive if that bool is false and don't
do it in the WatchIPNBus loop.
Fixes#12028
Updates #12042
Change-Id: I0923c3f704a9d6afd825a858eb9a63ca7c1df294
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
We used to Lock, Unlock, Lock, Unlock quite a few
times in Start resulting in all sorts of weird race
conditions. Simplify it all and only Lock/Unlock once.
Updates #11649
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
This removes one of the Lock,Unlock,Lock,Unlock at least in
the Start function. Still has 3 more of these.
Updates #11649
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
This plumbs a packet filter for jailed nodes through to the
tstun.Wrapper; the filter for a jailed node is equivalent to a "shields
up" filter. Currently a no-op as there is no way for control to
tell the client whether a peer is jailed.
Updates tailscale/corp#19623
Co-authored-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca>
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
Change-Id: I5ccc5f00e197fde15dd567485b2a99d8254391ad
I noticed this while working on the following fix to #11962.
Updates #11962
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Change-Id: I4c5894d8899d1ae8c42f54ecfd4d05a4a7ac598c
We'd like to use tsdial.Dialer.UserDial instead of SystemDial for DNS over TCP.
This is primarily necessary to properly dial internal DNS servers accessible
over Tailscale and subnet routes. However, to avoid issues when switching
between Wi-Fi and cellular, we need to ensure that we don't retain connections
to any external addresses on the old interface. Therefore, we need to determine
which dialer to use internally based on the configured routes.
This plumbs routes and localRoutes from router.Config to tsdial.Dialer,
and updates UserDial to use either the peer dialer or the system dialer,
depending on the network address and the configured routes.
Updates tailscale/corp#18725
Fixes#4529
Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
Setting the field after-the-fact wasn't working because we could migrate
prefs on creation, which would set health status for auto updates.
Updates #11986
Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca>
Change-Id: I41d79ebd61d64829a3a9e70586ce56f62d24ccfd
In prep for making health warnings rich objects with metadata rather
than a bunch of strings, start moving it all into the same place.
We'll still ultimately need the stringified form for the CLI and
LocalAPI for compatibility but we'll next convert all these warnings
into Warnables that have severity levels and such, and legacy
stringification will just be something each Warnable thing can do.
Updates #4136
Change-Id: I83e189435daae3664135ed53c98627c66e9e53da
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Also, reset it in a few more places (e.g. logout, new blank profiles,
etc.) to avoid a few more cases where a pre-existing dialPlan can cause
a new Headscale server take 10+ seconds to connect.
Updates #11938
Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca>
Change-Id: I3095173a5a3d9720507afe4452548491e9e45a3e
When switching profile, the server URL can change (e.g.
because of switching to a self-hosted headscale instance).
If it is not reset here, dial plans returned by old
server (e.g. tailscale control server) will be used to
connect to new server (e.g. self-hosted headscale server),
and the register request will be blocked by it until
timeout, leading to very slow profile switches.
Updates #11938 11938
Signed-off-by: Shaw Drastin <showier.drastic0a@icloud.com>
This fixes bugs where after using the cli to set AdvertiseRoutes users
were finding that they had to restart tailscaled before the app
connector would advertise previously learned routes again. And seems
more in line with user expectations.
Fixes#11006
Signed-off-by: Fran Bull <fran@tailscale.com>
When an app connector is reconfigured and domains to route are removed,
we would like to no longer advertise routes that were discovered for
those domains. In order to do this we plan to store which routes were
discovered for which domains.
Add a controlknob so that we can enable/disable the new behavior.
Updates #11008
Signed-off-by: Fran Bull <fran@tailscale.com>
Lays the groundwork for the ability to persist app connectors discovered
routes, which will allow us to stop advertising routes for a domain if
the app connector no longer monitors that domain.
Updates #11008
Signed-off-by: Fran Bull <fran@tailscale.com>
In prep for most of the package funcs in net/interfaces to become
methods in a long-lived netmon.Monitor that can cache things. (Many
of the funcs are very heavy to call regularly, whereas the long-lived
netmon.Monitor can subscribe to things from the OS and remember
answers to questions it's asked regularly later)
Updates tailscale/corp#10910
Updates tailscale/corp#18960
Updates #7967
Updates #3299
Change-Id: Ie4e8dedb70136af2d611b990b865a822cd1797e5
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
... in prep for merging the net/interfaces package into net/netmon.
This is a no-op change that updates a bunch of the API signatures ahead of
a future change to actually move things (and remove the type alias)
Updates tailscale/corp#10910
Updates tailscale/corp#18960
Updates #7967
Updates #3299
Change-Id: I477613388f09389214db0d77ccf24a65bff2199c
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
The goal is to move more network state accessors to netmon.Monitor
where they can be cheaper/cached. But first (this change and others)
we need to make sure the one netmon.Monitor is plumbed everywhere.
Some notable bits:
* tsdial.NewDialer is added, taking a now-required netmon
* because a tsdial.Dialer always has a netmon, anything taking both
a Dialer and a NetMon is now redundant; take only the Dialer and
get the NetMon from that if/when needed.
* netmon.NewStatic is added, primarily for tests
Updates tailscale/corp#10910
Updates tailscale/corp#18960
Updates #7967
Updates #3299
Change-Id: I877f9cb87618c4eb037cee098241d18da9c01691
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Fixestailscale/corp#19558
A request for the suggested exit nodes that occurs too early in the
VPN lifecycle would result in a null deref of the netmap and/or
the netcheck report. This checks both and errors out.
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nobels <jonathan@tailscale.com>
This adds a health.Tracker to tsd.System, accessible via
a new tsd.System.HealthTracker method.
In the future, that new method will return a tsd.System-specific
HealthTracker, so multiple tsnet.Servers in the same process are
isolated. For now, though, it just always returns the temporary
health.Global value. That permits incremental plumbing over a number
of changes. When the second to last health.Global reference is gone,
then the tsd.System.HealthTracker implementation can return a private
Tracker.
The primary plumbing this does is adding it to LocalBackend and its
dozen and change health calls. A few misc other callers are also
plumbed. Subsequent changes will flesh out other parts of the tree
(magicsock, controlclient, etc).
Updates #11874
Updates #4136
Change-Id: Id51e73cfc8a39110425b6dc19d18b3975eac75ce
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Previously it was both metadata about the class of warnable item as
well as the value.
Now it's only metadata and the value is per-Tracker.
Updates #11874
Updates #4136
Change-Id: Ia1ed1b6c95d34bc5aae36cffdb04279e6ba77015
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This moves most of the health package global variables to a new
`health.Tracker` type.
But then rather than plumbing the Tracker in tsd.System everywhere,
this only goes halfway and makes one new global Tracker
(`health.Global`) that all the existing callers now use.
A future change will eliminate that global.
Updates #11874
Updates #4136
Change-Id: I6ee27e0b2e35f68cb38fecdb3b2dc4c3f2e09d68
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
If seamless key renewal is enabled, we typically do not stop the engine
(deconfigure networking). However, if the node key has expired there is
no point in keeping the connection up, and it might actually prevent
key renewal if auth relies on endpoints routed via app connectors.
Fixestailscale/corp#5800
Signed-off-by: Anton Tolchanov <anton@tailscale.com>
Since we already track active SSH connections, it's not hard to
proactively reject updates until those finish. We attempt to do the same
on the control side, but the detection latency for new connections is in
the minutes, which is not fast enough for common short sessions.
Handle a `force=true` query parameter to override this behavior, so that
control can still trigger an update on a server where some long-running
abandoned SSH session is open.
Updates https://github.com/tailscale/corp/issues/18556
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lytvynov <awly@tailscale.com>
Containers are typically immutable and should be updated as a whole (and
not individual packages within). Deny enablement of auto-updates in
containers.
Also, add the missing check in EditPrefs in LocalAPI, to catch cases
like tailnet default auto-updates getting enabled for nodes that don't
support it.
Updates #11544
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lytvynov <awly@tailscale.com>
peerapi does not want these, but rclone includes them.
Removing them allows rclone to work with Taildrive configured
as a WebDAV remote.
Updates #cleanup
Signed-off-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
peerapi does not want these, but rclone includes them.
Stripping them out allows rclone to work with Taildrive configured
as a WebDAV remote.
Updates #cleanup
Signed-off-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
Turns out, profileManager is not safe for concurrent use and I missed
all the locking infrastructure in LocalBackend, oops.
I was not able to reproduce the race even with `go test -count 100`, but
this seems like an obvious fix.
Fixes#11773
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lytvynov <awly@tailscale.com>
Updates tailscale/corp#18724
When localAPI clients directly set ExitNodeID to "", the expected behaviour is that the prior exit node also gets zero'd - effectively setting the UI state back to 'no exit node was ever selected'
The IntenalExitNodePrior has been changed to be a non-opaque type, as it is read by the UI to render the users last selected exit node, and must be concrete. Future-us can either break this, or deprecate it and replace it with something more interesting.
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nobels <jonathan@tailscale.com>
We haven't needed this hack for quite some time Andrea says.
Updates #11649
Change-Id: Ie854b7edd0a01e92495669daa466c7c0d57e7438
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
I'm on a mission to simplify LocalBackend.Start and its locking
and deflake some tests.
I noticed this hasn't been used since March 2023 when it was removed
from the Windows client in corp 66be796d33c.
So, delete.
Updates #11649
Change-Id: I40f2cb75fb3f43baf23558007655f65a8ec5e1b2
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
cc vs ccAuto is a mess. It needs to go. But this is a baby step towards
getting there.
Updates #11649
Change-Id: I34f33934844e580bd823a7d8f2b945cf26c87b3b
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
The new Android app and its libtailscale don't use this anymore;
it uses LocalAPI like other clients now.
Updates #11649
Change-Id: Ic9f42b41e0e0280b82294329093dc6c275f41d50
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This is primarily for GUIs, so they don't need to remember the most
recently used exit node themselves.
This adds some CLI commands, but they're disabled and behind the WIP
envknob, as we need to consider naming (on/off is ambiguous with
running an exit node, etc) as well as automatic exit node selection in
the future. For now the CLI commands are effectively developer debug
things to test the LocalAPI.
Updates tailscale/corp#18724
Change-Id: I9a32b00e3ffbf5b29bfdcad996a4296b5e37be7e
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This names the func() that Once-unlocked LocalBackend.mu. It does so
both for docs and because it can then have a method: Unlock, for the
few points that need to explicitly unlock early (the cause of all this
mess). This makes those ugly points easy to find, and also can then
make them stricter, panicking if the mutex is already unlocked. So a
normal call to the func just once-releases the mutex, returning false
if it's already done, but the Unlock method is the strict one.
Then this uses it more, so most the b.mu.Unlock calls remaining are
simple cases and usually defers.
Updates #11649
Change-Id: Ia070db66c54a55e59d2f76fdc26316abf0dd4627
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
A number of methods in LocalBackend (with suffixed "LockedOnEntry")
require b.mu be held but unlock it on the way out. That's asymmetric
and atypical and error prone.
This adds a helper method to LocalBackend that locks the mutex and
returns a sync.OnceFunc that unlocks the mutex. Then we pass around
that unlocker func down the chain to make it explicit (and somewhat
type check the passing of ownership) but also let the caller defer
unlock it, in the case of errors/panics that happen before the callee
gets around to calling the unlock.
This revealed a latent bug in LocalBackend.DeleteProfile which double
unlocked the mutex.
Updates #11649
Change-Id: I002f77567973bd77b8906bfa4ec9a2049b89836a
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This change switches the api to /drive, rather than the previous /tailfs
as well as updates the log lines to reflect the new value. It also
cleans up some existing tailfs references.
Updates tailscale/corp#16827
Signed-off-by: Charlotte Brandhorst-Satzkorn <charlotte@tailscale.com>
This change updates all tailfs functions and the majority of the tailfs
variables to use the new drive naming.
Updates tailscale/corp#16827
Signed-off-by: Charlotte Brandhorst-Satzkorn <charlotte@tailscale.com>
This change updates the tailfs file and package names to their new
naming convention.
Updates #tailscale/corp#16827
Signed-off-by: Charlotte Brandhorst-Satzkorn <charlotte@tailscale.com>
We're tracking down a new instance of memory usage, and excessive memory usage
from sockstats is definitely not going to help with debugging, so disable it by
default on mobile.
Updates tailscale/corp#18514
Signed-off-by: James Tucker <james@tailscale.com>
This allows sending multiple files via Taildrop in one request.
Progress is tracked via ipn.Notify.
Updates tailscale/corp#18202
Signed-off-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
This allows sending multiple files via Taildrop in one request.
Progress is tracked via ipn.Notify.
Updates tailscale/corp#18202
Signed-off-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
For example, if we get a 404 when downloading a file, we'll report access.
Also, to reduce verbosty of logs, this elides 0 length files.
Updates tailscale/corp#17818
Signed-off-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
This change introduces some basic logging into the access and share
pathways for tailfs.
Updates tailscale/corp#17818
Signed-off-by: Charlotte Brandhorst-Satzkorn <charlotte@tailscale.com>
First we had Capabilities []string. Then
https://tailscale.com/blog/acl-grants (#4217) brought CapMap, a
superset of Capabilities. Except we never really finished the
transition inside the codebase to go all-in on CapMap. This does so.
Notably, this coverts Capabilities on the wire early to CapMap
internally so the code can only deal in CapMap, even against an old
control server.
In the process, this removes PeerChange.Capabilities support, which no
known control plane sent anyway. They can and should use
PeerChange.CapMap instead.
Updates #11508
Updates #4217
Change-Id: I872074e226b873f9a578d9603897b831d50b25d9
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
When node attributes were super rare, the O(n) slice scans looking for
node attributes was more acceptable. But now more code and more users
are using increasingly more node attributes. Time to make it a map.
Noticed while working on tailscale/corp#17879
Updates #cleanup
Change-Id: Ic17c80341f418421002fbceb47490729048756d2
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Enable the web client over 100.100.100.100 by default. Accepting traffic
from [tailnet IP]:5252 still requires setting the `webclient` user pref.
Updates https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/10261
Signed-off-by: Mario Minardi <mario@tailscale.com>
Add a disable-web-client node attribute and add handling for disabling
the web client when this node attribute is set.
Updates https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/10261
Signed-off-by: Mario Minardi <mario@tailscale.com>
If the client uses the default Tailscale control URL, validate that all
PopBrowserURLs are under tailscale.com or *.tailscale.com. This reduces
the risk of a compromised control plane opening phishing pages for
example.
The client trusts control for many other things, but this is one easy
way to reduce that trust a bit.
Fixes#11393
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lytvynov <awly@tailscale.com>
To force the problem in its worst case scenario before fixing it.
Updates tailscale/corp#17859
Change-Id: I2c8b8e5f15c7801e1ab093feeafac52ec175a763
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Previously, the configuration of which folders to share persisted across
profile changes. Now, it is tied to the user's profile.
Updates tailscale/corp#16827
Signed-off-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
This eliminates unnecessary map.Clone() calls and also eliminates
repetitive notifications about the same set of shares.
Updates tailscale/corp#16827
Signed-off-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
This allows the Mac application to regain access to restricted
folders after restarts.
Updates tailscale/corp#16827
Signed-off-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
We used a HandleSet before when we didn't have a unique handle. But a
sessionID is a unique handle, so use that instead. Then that replaces
the other map we had.
And now we'll have a way to look up an IPN session by sessionID for
later.
Updates tailscale/corp#17859
Change-Id: I5f647f367563ec8783c643e49f93817b341d9064
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This fixes a regression introduced with 993acf4 and released in
v1.60.0.
The regression caused us to intercept all userspace traffic to port
8080 which prevented users from exposing their own services to their
tailnet at port 8080.
Now, we only intercept traffic to port 8080 if it's bound for
100.100.100.100 or fd7a:115c:a1e0::53.
Fixes#11283
Signed-off-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
(cherry picked from commit 17cd0626f3)
When reverse path filtering is in strict mode on Linux, using an exit
node blocks all network connectivity. This change adds a warning about
this to `tailscale status` and the logs.
Example in `tailscale status`:
```
- not connected to home DERP region 22
- The following issues on your machine will likely make usage of exit nodes impossible: [interface "eth0" has strict reverse-path filtering enabled], please set rp_filter=2 instead of rp_filter=1; see https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/3310
```
Example in the logs:
```
2024/02/21 21:17:07 health("overall"): error: multiple errors:
not in map poll
The following issues on your machine will likely make usage of exit nodes impossible: [interface "eth0" has strict reverse-path filtering enabled], please set rp_filter=2 instead of rp_filter=1; see https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/3310
```
Updates #3310
Signed-off-by: Anton Tolchanov <anton@tailscale.com>
Tailscaled becomes inoperative if the Tailscale Tunnel wintun adapter is abruptly removed.
wireguard-go closes the device in case of a read error, but tailscaled keeps running.
This adds detection of a closed WireGuard device, triggering a graceful shutdown of tailscaled.
It is then restarted by the tailscaled watchdog service process.
Fixes#11222
Signed-off-by: Nick Khyl <nickk@tailscale.com>
FileSystemForLocal was listening on the node's Tailscale address,
which potentially exposes the user's view of TailFS shares to other
Tailnet users. Remote nodes should connect to exported shares via
the peerapi.
This removes that code so that FileSystemForLocal is only avaialable
on 100.100.100.100:8080.
Updates tailscale/corp#16827
Signed-off-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
Adds support for node attribute tailfs:access. If this attribute is
not present, Tailscale will not accept connections to the local TailFS
server at 100.100.100.100:8080.
Updates tailscale/corp#16827
Signed-off-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
Add a WebDAV-based folder sharing mechanism that is exposed to local clients at
100.100.100.100:8080 and to remote peers via a new peerapi endpoint at
/v0/tailfs.
Add the ability to manage folder sharing via the new 'share' CLI sub-command.
Updates tailscale/corp#16827
Signed-off-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
Fixestailscale/support-escalations#23.
authURLs returned by control expire after 1 hour from creation. Customer reported that the Tailscale client on macOS would sending users to a stale authentication page when clicking on the `Login...` menu item. This can happen when clicking on Login after leaving the device unattended for several days. The device key expires, leading to the creation of a new authURL, however the client doesn't keep track of when the authURL was created. Meaning that `login-interactive` would send the user to an authURL that had expired server-side a long time before.
This PR ensures that whenever `login-interactive` is called via LocalAPI, an authURL that is too old won't be used. We force control to give us a new authURL whenever it's been more than 30 minutes since the last authURL was sent down from control.
Apply suggestions from code review
Set interval to 6 days and 23 hours
Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@tailscale.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
If an app connector is also configured as an exit node, it should still
advertise discovered routes that are not covered by advertised routes,
excluding the exit node routes.
Updates tailscale/corp#16928
Signed-off-by: James Tucker <james@tailscale.com>
When reporting ssh host keys to control, log a warning
if we're unable to get the SSH host keys.
Updates tailscale/escalations#21
Signed-off-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
This commit implements probing of UDP path lifetime on the tail end of
an active direct connection. Probing configuration has two parts -
Cliffs, which are various timeout cliffs of interest, and
CycleCanStartEvery, which limits how often a probing cycle can start,
per-endpoint. Initially a statically defined default configuration will
be used. The default configuration has cliffs of 10s, 30s, and 60s,
with a CycleCanStartEvery of 24h. Probing results are communicated via
clientmetric counters. Probing is off by default, and can be enabled
via control knob. Probing is purely informational and does not yet
drive any magicsock behaviors.
Updates #540
Signed-off-by: Jordan Whited <jordan@tailscale.com>
This change allows us to perform batch modification for new route
advertisements and route removals. Additionally, we now handle the case
where newly added routes are covered by existing ranges.
This change also introduces a new appctest package that contains some
shared functions used for testing.
Updates tailscale/corp#16833
Signed-off-by: Charlotte Brandhorst-Satzkorn <charlotte@tailscale.com>
If there are routes changes as a side effect of an app connector
configuration update, the connector configuration may want to reenter a
lock, so must be started asynchronously.
Updates tailscale/corp#16833
Signed-off-by: James Tucker <james@tailscale.com>
Control can now send down a set of routes along with the domains, and
the routes will be advertised, with any newly overlapped routes being
removed to reduce the size of the routing table.
Fixestailscale/corp#16833
Signed-off-by: James Tucker <james@tailscale.com>
When establishing connections to the ipnserver, we validate that the
local user is allowed to connect. If Tailscale is currently being
managed by a different user (primarily for multi-user Windows installs),
we don't allow the connection.
With the new device web UI, the inbound connection is coming from
tailscaled itself, which is often running as "NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM".
In this case, we still want to allow the connection, even though it
doesn't match the user running the Tailscale GUI. The SYSTEM user has
full access to everything on the system anyway, so this doesn't escalate
privileges.
Eventually, we want the device web UI to run outside of the tailscaled
process, at which point this exception would probably not be needed.
Updates tailscale/corp#16393
Signed-off-by: Will Norris <will@tailscale.com>
Removes the avoidFinalRename logic and all associated code as it is no longer required by the Apple clients.
Enables resume logic to be usable for Apple clients.
Fixestailscale/corp#14772
Signed-off-by: Rhea Ghosh <rhea@tailscale.com>