When auto-udpates are enabled, we don't need to nag users to update
after a new release, before we release auto-updates.
Updates https://github.com/tailscale/corp/issues/20081
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lytvynov <awly@tailscale.com>
This is not valid in many situations, specifically when running a local astro site that listens on localhost, but ignores 127.0.0.1
Fixes: https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/12201
Signed-off-by: Josh McKinney <joshka@users.noreply.github.com>
This turns the checklocks workflow into a real check, and adds
annotations to a few basic packages as a starting point.
Updates #12625
Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca>
Change-Id: I2b0185bae05a843b5257980fc6bde732b1bdd93f
The context can get canceled during backoff, and binding after that
makes the listener impossible to close afterwards.
Fixes#12620.
Signed-off-by: Naman Sood <mail@nsood.in>
We can observe a data race in tests when logging after a test is
finished. `b.onHealthChange` is called in a goroutine after being
registered with `health.Tracker.RegisterWatcher`, which calls callbacks
in `setUnhealthyLocked` in a new goroutine.
See: https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/actions/runs/9672919302/job/26686038740
Updates #12054
Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca>
Change-Id: Ibf22cc994965d88a9e7236544878d5373f91229e
So non-local users (e.g. Kerberos on FreeIPA) on Linux can be looked
up. Our default binaries are built with pure Go os/user which only
supports the classic /etc/passwd and not any libc-hooked lookups.
Updates #12601
Change-Id: I9592db89e6ca58bf972f2dcee7a35fbf44608a4f
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Fixestailscale/corp#20971
We added some Warnables for DERP failure situations, but their Text currently spits out the DERP region ID ("10") in the UI, which is super ugly. It would be better to provide the RegionName of the DERP region that is failing. We can do so by storing a reference to the last-known DERP map in the health package whenever we fetch one, and using it when generating the notification text.
This way, the following message...
> Tailscale could not connect to the relay server '10'. The server might be temporarily unavailable, or your Internet connection might be down.
becomes:
> Tailscale could not connect to the 'Seattle' relay server. The server might be temporarily unavailable, or your Internet connection might be down.
which is a lot more user-friendly.
Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
Previously, we were registering TCP and UDP connections in the same map,
which could result in erroneously removing a mapping if one of the two
connections completes while the other one is still active.
Add a "proto string" argument to these functions to avoid this.
Additionally, take the "proto" argument in LocalAPI, and plumb that
through from the CLI and add a new LocalClient method.
Updates tailscale/corp#20600
Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca>
Change-Id: I35d5efaefdfbf4721e315b8ca123f0c8af9125fb
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>
This abstraction provides a nicer way to work with
maps of slices without having to write out three long type
params.
This also allows it to provide an AsMap implementation which
copies the map and the slices at least.
Updates tailscale/corp#20910
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
Updates tailscale/tailscale#4136
This PR is the first round of work to move from encoding health warnings as strings and use structured data instead. The current health package revolves around the idea of Subsystems. Each subsystem can have (or not have) a Go error associated with it. The overall health of the backend is given by the concatenation of all these errors.
This PR polishes the concept of Warnable introduced by @bradfitz a few weeks ago. Each Warnable is a component of the backend (for instance, things like 'dns' or 'magicsock' are Warnables). Each Warnable has a unique identifying code. A Warnable is an entity we can warn the user about, by setting (or unsetting) a WarningState for it. Warnables have:
- an identifying Code, so that the GUI can track them as their WarningStates come and go
- a Title, which the GUIs can use to tell the user what component of the backend is broken
- a Text, which is a function that is called with a set of Args to generate a more detailed error message to explain the unhappy state
Additionally, this PR also begins to send Warnables and their WarningStates through LocalAPI to the clients, using ipn.Notify messages. An ipn.Notify is only issued when a warning is added or removed from the Tracker.
In a next PR, we'll get rid of subsystems entirely, and we'll start using structured warnings for all errors affecting the backend functionality.
Signed-off-by: Andrea Gottardo <andrea@gottardo.me>
Add a new TS_EXPERIMENTAL_ENABLE_FORWARDING_OPTIMIZATIONS env var
that can be set for tailscale/tailscale container running as
a subnet router or exit node to enable UDP GRO forwarding
for improved performance.
See https://tailscale.com/kb/1320/performance-best-practices#linux-optimizations-for-subnet-routers-and-exit-nodes
This is currently considered an experimental approach;
the configuration support is partially to allow further experimentation
with containerized environments to evaluate the performance
improvements.
Updates tailscale/tailscale#12295
Signed-off-by: Irbe Krumina <irbe@tailscale.com>
The last suggested exit node needs to be incorporated in the decision
making process when a new suggestion is requested, but currently it is
not quite right: it'll be used if the suggestion code has an error or a
netmap is unavailable, but it won't be used otherwise.
Instead, this makes the last suggestion into a tiebreaker when making a
random selection between equally-good options. If the last suggestion
does not make it to the final selection pool, then a different
suggestion will be made.
Since LocalBackend.SuggestExitNode is back to being a thin shim that
sets up the parameters to suggestExitNode, it no longer needs a test.
Its test was unable to be comprehensive anyway as the code being tested
contains an uncontrolled random number generator.
Updates tailscale/corp#19681
Change-Id: I94ecc9a0d1b622de3df4ef90523f1d3e67b4bfba
Signed-off-by: Adrian Dewhurst <adrian@tailscale.com>
We assume most containers are immutable and don't expect tailscale
running in them to auto-update. But there's no reason to prohibit it
outright.
Ignore the tailnet-wide default auto-update setting in containers, but
allow local users to turn on auto-updates via the CLI.
RELNOTE=Auto-updates are allowed in containers, but ignore the tailnet-wide default.
Fixes#12292
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lytvynov <awly@tailscale.com>
Rather than building a new suggested exit node set every time, compute
it once on first use. Currently, syspolicy ensures that values do not
change without a restart anyway.
Since the set is being constructed in a separate func now, the test code
that manipulates syspolicy can live there, and the TestSuggestExitNode
can now run in parallel with other tests because it does not have global
dependencies.
Updates tailscale/corp#19681
Change-Id: Ic4bb40ccc91b671f9e542bd5ba9c96f942081515
Signed-off-by: Adrian Dewhurst <adrian@tailscale.com>
Clean up the updater goroutine on shutdown, in addition to doing that on
backend state change. This fixes a goroutine leak on shutdown in tests.
Updates #cleanup
When the client is disconnected from control for any reason (typically
just turned off), we should still attempt to update if auto-updates are
enabled. This may help users who turn tailscale on infrequently for
accessing resources.
RELNOTE: Apply auto-updates even if the node is down or disconnected
from the coordination server.
Updates #12117
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lytvynov <awly@tailscale.com>
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>
This mostly removes a lot of repetition by predefining some nodes and
other data structures, plus adds some helpers for creating Peer entries
in the netmap. Several existing test cases were reworked to ensure
better coverage of edge cases, and several new test cases were added to
handle some additional responsibility that is in (or will be shortly
moving in) suggestExitNode().
Updates tailscale/corp#19681
Change-Id: Ie14c2988d7fd482f7d6a877f78525f7788669b85
Signed-off-by: Adrian Dewhurst <adrian@tailscale.com>
A non-signing node can be allowed to re-sign its new node keys following
key renewal/rotation (e.g. via `tailscale up --force-reauth`). To be
able to do this, node's TLK is written into WrappingPubkey field of the
initial SigDirect signature, signed by a signing node.
The intended use of this field implies that, for each WrappingPubkey, we
typically expect to have at most one active node with a signature
tracing back to that key. Multiple valid signatures referring to the
same WrappingPubkey can occur if a client's state has been cloned, but
it's something we explicitly discourage and don't support:
https://tailscale.com/s/clone
This change propagates rotation details (wrapping public key, a list
of previous node keys that have been rotated out) to netmap processing,
and adds tracking of obsolete node keys that, when found, will get
filtered out.
Updates tailscale/corp#19764
Signed-off-by: Anton Tolchanov <anton@tailscale.com>
This adds a new ListenPacket function on tsnet.Server
which acts mostly like `net.ListenPacket`.
Unlike `Server.Listen`, this requires listening on a
specific IP and does not automatically listen on both
V4 and V6 addresses of the Server when the IP is unspecified.
To test this, it also adds UDP support to tsdial.Dialer.UserDial
and plumbs it through the localapi. Then an associated test
to make sure the UDP functionality works from both sides.
Updates #12182
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
- Add current node signature to `ipnstate.NetworkLockStatus`;
- Print current node signature in a human-friendly format as part
of `tailscale lock status`.
Examples:
```
$ tailscale lock status
Tailnet lock is ENABLED.
This node is accessible under tailnet lock. Node signature:
SigKind: direct
Pubkey: [OTB3a]
KeyID: tlpub:44a0e23cd53a4b8acc02f6732813d8f5ba8b35d02d48bf94c9f1724ebe31c943
WrappingPubkey: tlpub:44a0e23cd53a4b8acc02f6732813d8f5ba8b35d02d48bf94c9f1724ebe31c943
This node's tailnet-lock key: tlpub:44a0e23cd53a4b8acc02f6732813d8f5ba8b35d02d48bf94c9f1724ebe31c943
Trusted signing keys:
tlpub:44a0e23cd53a4b8acc02f6732813d8f5ba8b35d02d48bf94c9f1724ebe31c943 1 (self)
tlpub:6fa21d242a202b290de85926ba3893a6861888679a73bc3a43f49539d67c9764 1 (pre-auth key kq3NzejWoS11KTM59)
```
For a node created via a signed auth key:
```
This node is accessible under tailnet lock. Node signature:
SigKind: rotation
Pubkey: [e3nAO]
Nested:
SigKind: credential
KeyID: tlpub:6fa21d242a202b290de85926ba3893a6861888679a73bc3a43f49539d67c9764
WrappingPubkey: tlpub:3623b0412cab0029cb1918806435709b5947ae03554050f20caf66629f21220a
```
For a node that rotated its key a few times:
```
This node is accessible under tailnet lock. Node signature:
SigKind: rotation
Pubkey: [DOzL4]
Nested:
SigKind: rotation
Pubkey: [S/9yU]
Nested:
SigKind: rotation
Pubkey: [9E9v4]
Nested:
SigKind: direct
Pubkey: [3QHTJ]
KeyID: tlpub:44a0e23cd53a4b8acc02f6732813d8f5ba8b35d02d48bf94c9f1724ebe31c943
WrappingPubkey: tlpub:2faa280025d3aba0884615f710d8c50590b052c01a004c2b4c2c9434702ae9d0
```
Updates tailscale/corp#19764
Signed-off-by: Anton Tolchanov <anton@tailscale.com>
The `--wait` flag for `systemd-run` was added in systemd 232. While it
is quite old, it doesn't hurt to special-case them and skip the `--wait`
flag. The consequence is that we lose the update command output in logs,
but at least auto-updates will work.
Fixes#12136
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lytvynov <awly@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>
Turn off stateful filtering for egress proxies to allow cluster
traffic to be forwarded to tailnet.
Allow configuring stateful filter via tailscaled config file.
Deprecate EXPERIMENTAL_TS_CONFIGFILE_PATH env var and introduce a new
TS_EXPERIMENTAL_VERSIONED_CONFIG env var that can be used to provide
containerboot a directory that should contain one or more
tailscaled config files named cap-<tailscaled-cap-version>.hujson.
Containerboot will pick the one with the newest capability version
that is not newer than its current capability version.
Proxies with this change will not work with older Tailscale
Kubernetes operator versions - users must ensure that
the deployed operator is at the same version or newer (up to
4 version skew) than the proxies.
Updates tailscale/tailscale#12061
Signed-off-by: Irbe Krumina <irbe@tailscale.com>
Co-authored-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@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>
There was a small window in ipnserver after we assigned a LocalBackend
to the ipnserver's atomic but before we Start'ed it where our
initalization Start could conflict with API calls from the LocalAPI.
Simplify that a bit and lay out the rules in the docs.
Updates #12028
Change-Id: Ic5f5e4861e26340599184e20e308e709edec68b1
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 way the default gets populated on first start, when no existing
state exists to migrate. Also fix `ipn.PrefsFromBytes` to preserve empty
fields, rather than layering `NewPrefs` values on top.
Updates https://github.com/tailscale/corp/issues/19623
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lytvynov <awly@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