This commit builds the exit node menu including the recommended exit
node, if available, as well as tailnet and mullvad exit nodes.
This does not yet update the menu based on changes in exit node outside
of the systray app, which will come later. This also does not include
the ability to run as an exit node.
Updates #1708
Change-Id: Ia101a4a3005adb9118051b3416f5a64a4a45987d
Signed-off-by: Will Norris <will@tailscale.com>
* tailcfg: rename and retype ServiceHost capability, add value type
Updates tailscale/corp#22743.
In #14046, this was accidentally made a PeerCapability when it
should have been NodeCapability. Also, renaming it to use the
nomenclature that we decided on after #14046 went up, and adding
the type of the value that will be passed down in the RawMessage
for this capability.
This shouldn't break anything, since no one was using this string or
variable yet.
Signed-off-by: Naman Sood <mail@nsood.in>
The new menu delay added to fix libdbusmenu systrays causes problems
with KDE. Given the state of wildly varying systray implementations, I
suspect we may need more desktop-specific hacks, so I'm setting this up
to accommodate that.
Updates #1708
Updates #14431
Change-Id: Ia101a4a3005adb9118051b3416f5a64a4a45987d
Signed-off-by: Will Norris <will@tailscale.com>
Bring UI closer to macOS and windows:
- split login and tailnet name over separate lines
- render profile picture (with very simple caching)
- use checkbox to indicate active profile. I've not found any desktops
that can't render checkboxes, so I'd like to explore other options
if needed.
Updates #1708
Change-Id: Ia101a4a3005adb9118051b3416f5a64a4a45987d
Signed-off-by: Will Norris <will@tailscale.com>
ShardedInt provides an int type expvar.Var that supports more efficient
writes at high frequencies (one order of magnigude on an M1 Max, much
more on NUMA systems).
There are two implementations of ShardValue, one that abuses sync.Pool
that will work on current public Go versions, and one that takes a
dependency on a runtime.TailscaleP function exposed in Tailscale's Go
fork. The sync.Pool variant has about 10x the throughput of a single
atomic integer on an M1 Max, and the runtime.TailscaleP variant is about
10x faster than the sync.Pool variant.
Neither variant have perfect distribution, or perfectly always avoid
cross-CPU sharing, as there is no locking or affinity to ensure that the
time of yield is on the same core as the time of core biasing, but in
the average case the distributions are enough to provide substantially
better performance.
See golang/go#18802 for a related upstream proposal.
Updates tailscale/go#109
Updates tailscale/corp#25450
Signed-off-by: James Tucker <james@tailscale.com>
Some notification managers crop the application icon to a circle, so
ensure we have enough padding to account for that.
Updates #1708
Change-Id: Ia101a4a3005adb9118051b3416f5a64a4a45987d
Signed-off-by: Will Norris <will@tailscale.com>
This new type of probe sends DERP packets sized similarly to CallMeMaybe packets
at a rate of 10 packets per second. It records the round-trip times in a Prometheus
histogram. It also keeps track of how many packets are dropped. Packets that fail to
arrive within 5 seconds are considered dropped.
Updates tailscale/corp#24522
Signed-off-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
MutexValue is simply a value guarded by a mutex.
For any type that is not pointer-sized,
MutexValue will perform much better than AtomicValue
since it will not incur an allocation boxing the value
into an interface value (which is how Go's atomic.Value
is implemented under-the-hood).
Updates #cleanup
Signed-off-by: Joe Tsai <joetsai@digital-static.net>
This is an experiment to see how useful we will find it to have some
text-based diagrams to document how various components of the operator
work. There are no plans to link to this from elsewhere yet, but
hopefully it will be a useful reference internally.
Updates #cleanup
Change-Id: If5911ed39b09378fec0492e87738ec0cc3d8731e
Signed-off-by: Tom Proctor <tomhjp@users.noreply.github.com>
1ed9bd76d682299376f404521cf1958a7f9bea7a meant to make tunAddress be optional.
Updates tailscale/corp#24635
Change-Id: Idc4a8540b294e480df5bd291967024c04df751c0
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
For https://github.com/tailscale/go/pull/108 so we can depend on it in
other repos. (This repo can't yet use it; we permit building
tailscale/tailscale with the latest stock Go release) But that will be
in Go 1.24. We're just impatient elsewhere and would like it in the
control plane code earlier.
Updates tailscale/corp#25406
Change-Id: I53ff367318365c465cbd02cea387c8ff1eb49fab
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
The omitzero tag option has been backported to v1 "encoding/json"
from the "encoding/json/v2" prototype and will land in Go1.24.
Until we fully upgrade to Go1.24, adjust the test to be agnostic
to which version of Go someone is using.
Updates tailscale/corp#25406
Signed-off-by: Joe Tsai <joetsai@digital-static.net>
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>
When we first made Tailscale SSH, we assumed people would want public
key support soon after. Turns out that hasn't been the case; people
love the Tailscale identity authentication and check mode.
In light of CVE-2024-45337, just remove all our public key code to not
distract people, and to make the code smaller. We can always get it
back from git if needed.
Updates tailscale/corp#25131
Updates golang/go#70779
Co-authored-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
Change-Id: I87a6e79c2215158766a81942227a18b247333c22
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
The errors emitted by util/dnsname are all written at least moderately
friendly and none of them emit sensitive information. They should be
safe to display to end users.
Updates tailscale/corp#9025
Change-Id: Ic58705075bacf42f56378127532c5f28ff6bfc89
Signed-off-by: Adrian Dewhurst <adrian@tailscale.com>
The IfElse function is equivalent to the ternary (c ? a : b) operator
in many other languages like C. Unfortunately, this function
cannot perform short-circuit evaluation like in many other languages,
but this is a restriction that's not much different
than the pre-existing cmp.Or function.
The argument against ternary operators in Go is that
nested ternary operators become unreadable
(e.g., (c1 ? (c2 ? a : b) : (c2 ? x : y))).
But a single layer of ternary expressions can sometimes
make code much more readable.
Having the bools.IfElse function gives code authors the
ability to decide whether use of this is more readable or not.
Obviously, code authors will need to be judicious about
their use of this helper function.
Readability is more of an art than a science.
Updates #cleanup
Signed-off-by: Joe Tsai <joetsai@digital-static.net>
Throughout our codebase we have types that only exist only
to implement an io.Reader or io.Writer, when it would have been
simpler, cleaner, and more readable to use an inlined function literal
that closes over the relevant types.
This is arguably more readable since it keeps the semantic logic
in place rather than have it be isolated elsewhere.
Note that a function literal that closes over some variables
is semantic equivalent to declaring a struct with fields and
having the Read or Write method mutate those fields.
Updates #cleanup
Signed-off-by: Joe Tsai <joetsai@digital-static.net>
This is the start of an integration/e2e test suite for the tailscale operator.
It currently only tests two major features, ingress proxy and API server proxy,
but we intend to expand it to cover more features over time. It also only
supports manual runs for now. We intend to integrate it into CI checks in a
separate update when we have planned how to securely provide CI with the secrets
required for connecting to a test tailnet.
Updates #12622
Change-Id: I31e464bb49719348b62a563790f2bc2ba165a11b
Co-authored-by: Irbe Krumina <irbe@tailscale.com>
Signed-off-by: Tom Proctor <tomhjp@users.noreply.github.com>
A method on kc was called unconditionally, even if was not initialized,
leading to a nil pointer dereference when TS_SERVE_CONFIG was set
outside Kubernetes.
Add a guard symmetric with other uses of the kubeClient.
Fixes#14354.
Signed-off-by: Bjorn Neergaard <bjorn@neersighted.com>
Make dev-mode DERP probes work without TLS. Properly dial port `3340`
when not using HTTPS when dialing nodes in `derphttp_client`. Skip
verifying TLS state in `newConn` if we are not running a prober.
Updates tailscale/corp#24635
Signed-off-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
Co-authored-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
Use envknob to configure the per client send
queue depth for the derp server.
Fixestailscale/corp#24978
Signed-off-by: Mike O'Driscoll <mikeo@tailscale.com>
Previously this unit test failed if it was run in a container. Update the assert
to focus on exactly the condition we are trying to assert: the package type
should only be 'container' if we use the build tag.
Updates #14317
Signed-off-by: Tom Proctor <tomhjp@users.noreply.github.com>
Make argparsing use flag for adding a new
parameter that requires parsing.
Enforce a read timeout deadline waiting for response
from the stun server provided in the args. Otherwise
the program will never exit.
Fixes#14267
Signed-off-by: Mike O'Driscoll <mikeo@tailscale.com>
OAuth clients that were used to generate an auth_key previously
specified the scope 'device'. 'device' is not an actual scope,
the real scope is 'devices'. The resulting OAuth token ended up
including all scopes from the specified OAuth client, so the code
was able to successfully create auth_keys.
It's better not to hardcode a scope here anyway, so that we have
the flexibility of changing which scope(s) are used in the future
without having to update old clients.
Since the qualifier never actually did anything, this commit simply
removes it.
Updates tailscale/corp#24934
Signed-off-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
This package grew organically over time and
is an awful mix of explicitly declared options and
globally set parameters via environment variables and
other subtle effects.
Add a new Options and TransportOptions type to
allow for the creation of a Policy or http.RoundTripper
with some set of options.
The options struct avoids the need to add yet more
NewXXX functions for every possible combination of
ordered arguments.
The goal of this refactor is to allow specifying the http.Client
to use with the Policy.
Updates tailscale/corp#18177
Signed-off-by: Joe Tsai <joetsai@digital-static.net>
If previousEtag is empty, then we assume control ACLs were not modified
manually and push the local ACLs. Instead, we defaulted to localEtag
which would be different if local ACLs were different from control.
AFAIK this was always buggy, but never reported?
Fixes#14295
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lytvynov <awly@tailscale.com>
Every so often, the ProxyGroup and other controllers lose an optimistic locking race
with other controllers that update the objects they create. Stop treating
this as an error event, and instead just log an info level log line for it.
Fixes#14072
Signed-off-by: Tom Proctor <tomhjp@users.noreply.github.com>
This provides an interface for a user to force a preferred DERP outcome
for all future netchecks that will take precedence unless the forced
region is unreachable.
The option does not persist and will be lost when the daemon restarts.
Updates tailscale/corp#18997
Updates tailscale/corp#24755
Signed-off-by: James Tucker <james@tailscale.com>
cmd/containerboot,kube/kubetypes,cmd/k8s-operator: detect if Ingress is created in a tailnet that has no HTTPS
This attempts to make Kubernetes Operator L7 Ingress setup failures more explicit:
- the Ingress resource now only advertises HTTPS endpoint via status.ingress.loadBalancer.hostname when/if the proxy has succesfully loaded serve config
- the proxy attempts to catch cases where HTTPS is disabled for the tailnet and logs a warning
Updates tailscale/tailscale#12079
Updates tailscale/tailscale#10407
Signed-off-by: Irbe Krumina <irbe@tailscale.com>
cmd/k8s-operator/deploy/chart: allow reading OAuth creds from a CSI driver's volume and annotating operator's Service account
Updates #14264
Signed-off-by: Oliver Rahner <o.rahner@dke-data.com>