If the username includes a suffix of +password, then we accept
password auth and just let them in like it were no auth.
This exists purely for SSH clients that get confused by seeing success
to their initial auth type "none".
Co-authored-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
Change-Id: I616d4c64d042449fb164f615012f3bae246e91ec
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This was preventing tailscaled from shutting down properly if there were
active sessions in certain states (e.g. waiting in check mode).
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
This was assumed to be the fix for mosh not working, however turns out
all we really needed was the duplicate fd also introduced in the same
commit (af412e8874).
Fixes#5103
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
The io/ioutil package has been deprecated as of Go 1.16 [1]. This commit
replaces the existing io/ioutil functions with their new definitions in
io and os packages.
Reference: https://golang.org/doc/go1.16#ioutil
Signed-off-by: Eng Zer Jun <engzerjun@gmail.com>
Also rename it to expandDelegateURLLocked, previously it was trying
to acquire the mutex while holding the mutex.
Fixes#5235
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
We were not handling errors occurred while copying data between the subprocess and the connection.
This makes it so that we pass the appropriate signals when to the process and the connection.
This also fixes mosh.
Updates #4919
Co-authored-by: James Tucker <raggi@tailscale.com>
Co-authored-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
Whenever the SSH policy changes we revaluate all open connections to
make sure they still have access. This check was using the wrong
timestamp and would match against expired policies, however this really
isn't a problem today as we don't have policy that would be impacted by
this check. Fixing it for future use.
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
Also lazify SSHServer initialization to allow restarting the server on a
subsequent `tailscale up`
Updates #3802
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
Currently, killing a SCP copy with a Ctrl+C leaves the session hanging
even though the stdout copy goroutine fails with an io.EOF. Taking a
step back, when we are unable to send any more data back to the client
we should just terminate the session as the client will stop getting any
response from the server anyways.
Updates #3802
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
Ideally we would re-establish these sessions when tailscaled comes back
up, however we do not do that yet so this is better than leaking the
sessions.
Updates #3802
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
Currently the ssh session isn't terminated cleanly, instead the packets
are just are no longer routed to the in-proc SSH server. This makes it
so that clients get a disconnection when the `RunSSH` pref changes to
`false`.
Updates #3802
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
Currently if the policy changes and the session is logged in with local
user "u1" and the new policy says they can only login with "u2" now, the
user doesn't get kicked out because they had requested
`rando@<ssh-host>` and the defaulting had made that go to `u1`.
Signed-off-by: Maisem Ali <maisem@tailscale.com>
Remove the weird netstack -> tailssh dependency and instead have tailssh
register itself with ipnlocal when linked.
This makes tailssh.server a singleton, so we can have a global map of
all sessions.
Updates #3802
Change-Id: Iad5caec3a26a33011796878ab66b8e7b49339f29
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
While we rearrange/upstream things.
gliderlabs/ssh is forked into tempfork from our prior fork
at be8b7add40
x/crypto/ssh OTOH is forked at
https://github.com/tailscale/golang-x-crypto because it was gnarlier
to vendor with various internal packages, etc.
Its git history shows where it starts (2c7772ba30643b7a2026cbea938420dce7c6384d).
Updates #3802
Change-Id: I546e5cdf831cfc030a6c42557c0ad2c58766c65f
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>