If ConfigFromFile cannot find the configuration file,
we must not initialize it with NewConfig.
Instead, we need it to fail validation so that it eventually writes
a newly constructed configuration file.
Otherwise, new tailscale instances will never be able store a persistent
log config and start with a new config file upon every bootup.
Signed-off-by: Joe Tsai <joetsai@digital-static.net>
refactor logpolicy config loading to make it easier to reuse from
outside the package. Within tsnet, setup a basic logtail config.
Signed-off-by: Will Norris <will@tailscale.com>
Allows instances that are running with the same machine ID (due to
cloning) to be distinguished.
Also adds sequence numbers to detect duplicates.
For tailscale/corp#5244
Signed-off-by: Mihai Parparita <mihai@tailscale.com>
A new package can also later record/report which knobs are checked and
set. It also makes the code cleaner & easier to grep for env knobs.
Change-Id: Id8a123ab7539f1fadbd27e0cbeac79c2e4f09751
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This is for use by the Windows GUI client to log via when an
exit node is in use, so the logs don't go out via the exit node and
instead go directly, like tailscaled's. The dialer tried to do that
in the unprivileged GUI by binding to a specific interface, but the
"Internet Kill Switch" installed by tailscaled for exit nodes
precludes that from working and instead the GUI fails to dial out.
So, go through tailscaled (with a CONNECT request) instead.
Fixestailscale/corp#3169
Change-Id: I17a8efdc1d4b8fed53a29d1c19995592b651b215
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This moves the Windows-only initialization of the filelogger into
logpolicy. Previously we only did it when babysitting the tailscaled
subprocess, but this meant that log messages from the service itself
never made it to disk. Examples that weren't logged to disk:
* logtail unable to dial out,
* DNS flush messages from the service
* svc.ChangeRequest messages (#3581)
This is basically the same fix as #3571 but staying in the Logf type,
and avoiding build-tagged file (which wasn't quite a goal, but
happened and seemed nice)
Fixes#3570
Co-authored-by: Aaron Klotz <aaron@tailscale.com>
Change-Id: Iacd80c4720b7218365ec80ae143339d030842702
Android doesn't use logpolicy and currently has enough
unique stuff about its logging that makes it difficult to
do so. For example, its logsDir comes from Gio.
Export NewLogtailTransport to let Android use it.
Updates https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/3046
Signed-off-by: Denton Gentry <dgentry@tailscale.com>
tailscale-ipn.exe (the GUI) shouldn't use C:\ProgramData.
Also, migrate the earlier misnamed wg32/wg64 conf files if they're present.
(That was stopped in 2db877caa3, but the
files exist from fresh 1.14 installs)
Updates #2856
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
C:\WINDOWS\system32\config\systemprofile\AppData\Local\
is frequently cleared for almost any reason: Windows updates,
System Restore, even various System Cleaner utilities.
The server-state.conf file in AppData\Local could be deleted
at any time, which would break login until the node is removed
from the Admin Panel allowing it to create a new key.
Carefully copy any AppData state to ProgramData at startup.
If copying the state fails, continue to use AppData so at
least there will be connectivity. If there is no state,
use ProgramData.
We also migrate the log.conf file. Very old versions of
Tailscale named the EXE tailscale-ipn, so the log conf was
tailscale-ipn.log.conf and more recent versions preserved
this filename and cmdName in logs. In this migration we
always update the filename to
c:\ProgramData\Tailscale\tailscaled.log.conf
Updates https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/2856
Signed-off-by: Denton Gentry <dgentry@tailscale.com>
Given that https://github.com/golang/go/issues/42888 is coming, this
catches most practical panics without interfering in our development
environments.
Signed-off-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@tailscale.com>
Filch doesn't like having multiple processes competing
for the same log files (#937).
Parallel integration tests were all using the same log files.
Add a TS_LOGS_DIR env var that the integration test can use
to use separate log files per test.
Fixes#2269
Signed-off-by: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josh@tailscale.com>
Log levels can now be specified with "[v1] " or "[v2] " substrings
that are then stripped and filtered at the final logger. This follows
our existing "[unexpected]" etc convention and doesn't require a
wholesale reworking of our logging at the moment.
cmd/tailscaled then gets a new --verbose=N flag to take a log level
that controls what gets logged to stderr (and thus systemd, syslog,
etc). Logtail is unaffected by --verbose.
This commit doesn't add annotations to any existing log prints. That
is in the next commit.
Updates #924
Updates #282
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
When building with redo, also include the git commit hash
from the proprietary repo, so that we have a precise commit
that identifies all build info (including Go toolchain version).
Add a top-level build script demonstrating to downstream distros
how to burn the right information into builds.
Adjust `tailscale version` to print commit hashes when available.
Fixes#841.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
What I was probably actually hitting was exe caching issues where the
binary was updated on a SMB shared drive and I tried to run it with
the GUI exe still open, so Windows blends the two pages together and
causes all sorts of random corruption. I didn't know about that at the time.
Now, just call tryFixLogStateLocation unconditionally. The func itself will
bail out early on non-applicable OSes. (And rearrange it to return even a bit
earlier.)
It's just a config wrapper that passes "use less memory at the
expense of compression" parameters by default, so that we don't
accidentally construct resource-hungry (de)compressors.
Also includes a benchmark that measures the memory cost of the
small variants vs. the stock variants. The savings are significant
on both compressors (~8x less memory) and decompressors (~1.4x less,
not including the savings from the significantly smaller
window on the compression side - with those savings included it's
more like ~140x smaller).
BenchmarkSmallEncoder-8 56174 19354 ns/op 31 B/op 0 allocs/op
BenchmarkSmallEncoderWithBuild-8 2900 382940 ns/op 1746547 B/op 36 allocs/op
BenchmarkStockEncoder-8 48921 25761 ns/op 286 B/op 0 allocs/op
BenchmarkStockEncoderWithBuild-8 426 2630241 ns/op 13843842 B/op 124 allocs/op
BenchmarkSmallDecoder-8 123814 9344 ns/op 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
BenchmarkSmallDecoderWithBuild-8 41547 27455 ns/op 27694 B/op 31 allocs/op
BenchmarkStockDecoder-8 129832 9417 ns/op 1 B/op 0 allocs/op
BenchmarkStockDecoderWithBuild-8 25561 51751 ns/op 39607 B/op 92 allocs/op
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>
... it was crashing for some reason, running out of stack while
loading a DLL in goversion. I don't understand Windows (or the Go
runtime for Windows) enough to know why that'd be problematic in that
context.
In any case, don't call it, as tryFixLogStateLocation does nothing on
Windows anyway.
tryFixLogStateLocation should probably just call version.CmdName
itself if/when it needs to, after the GOOS check.
The compressed blobs we send back and forth are small and infrequent,
which doesn't justify the 8MB * GOMAXPROCS memory that was being
allocated. This was the overwhelming majority of memory use in
tailscaled. On my system it goes from ~100M RSS to ~15M RSS (which is
still suspiciously high, but we can worry about that more later).
Signed-off-by: Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@tailscale.com>
If a test calls log.Printf, 'go test' horrifyingly rearranges the
output to no longer be in chronological order, which makes debugging
virtually impossible. Let's stop that from happening by making
log.Printf panic if called from any module, no matter how deep, during
tests.
This required us to change the default error handler in at least one
http.Server, as well as plumbing a bunch of logf functions around,
especially in magicsock and wgengine, but also in logtail and backoff.
To add insult to injury, 'go test' also rearranges the output when a
parent test has multiple sub-tests (all the sub-test's t.Logf is always
printed after all the parent tests t.Logf), so we need to screw around
with a special Logf that can point at the "current" t (current_t.Logf)
in some places. Probably our entire way of using subtests is wrong,
since 'go test' would probably like to run them all in parallel if you
called t.Parallel(), but it definitely can't because the're all
manipulating the shared state created by the parent test. They should
probably all be separate toplevel tests instead, with common
setup/teardown logic. But that's a job for another time.
Signed-off-by: Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@tailscale.com>
This was the last of the three places that do TLS from clients (logs,
control, derp). With this, iOS should be able to use the
memory-efficient x509 root CertPool.