4f1d6c53cb
This conforms to the NGINX subrequest result authentication protocol[1] using the NGINX module `ngx_http_auth_request_module`. This is based on the example that @peterkeen provided on Twitter[2], but with several changes to make things more tightly locked down: * This listens over a UNIX socket instead of a TCP socket to prevent leakage to the network * This uses systemd socket activation so that systemd owns the socket and can then lock down the service to the bare minimum required to do its job without having to worry about dropping permissions * This provides additional information in HTTP response headers that can be useful for integrating with various services * This has a script to automagically create debian and redhat packages for easier distribution This will be written about on the Tailscale blog. There is more information in README.md. [1]: https://docs.nginx.com/nginx/admin-guide/security-controls/configuring-subrequest-authentication/ [2]: https://github.com/peterkeen/tailscale/blob/main/cmd/nginx-auth-proxy/nginx-auth-proxy.go Signed-off-by: Xe Iaso <xe@tailscale.com> |
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.. | ||
.gitignore | ||
mkdeb.sh | ||
nginx-auth.go | ||
README.md | ||
tailscale.nginx-auth.service | ||
tailscale.nginx-auth.socket |
nginx-auth
This is a tool that allows users to use Tailscale Whois authentication with NGINX as a reverse proxy. This allows users that already have a bunch of services hosted on an internal NGINX server to point those domains to the Tailscale IP of the NGINX server and then seamlessly use Tailscale for authentication.
Many thanks to @zrail on Twitter for introducing the basic idea and offering some sample code. This program is based on that sample code with security enhancements. Namely:
- This listens over a UNIX socket instead of a TCP socket, to prevent leakage to the network
- This uses systemd socket activation so that systemd owns the socket and can then lock down the service to the bare minimum required to do its job without having to worry about dropping permissions
- This provides additional information in HTTP response headers that can be useful for integrating with various services
Configuration
In order to protect a service with this tool, do the following in the respective
server
block:
Create an authentication location with the internal
flag set:
location /auth {
internal;
proxy_pass http://unix:/run/tailscale.nginx-auth.sock;
proxy_pass_request_body off;
proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
proxy_set_header Remote-Addr $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header Remote-Port $remote_port;
proxy_set_header Original-URI $request_uri;
}
Then add the following to the location /
block:
auth_request /auth;
auth_request_set $auth_user $upstream_http_tailscale_user;
auth_request_set $auth_name $upstream_http_tailscale_name;
auth_request_set $auth_login $upstream_http_tailscale_login;
auth_request_set $auth_tailnet $upstream_http_tailscale_tailnet;
auth_request_set $auth_profile_picture $upstream_http_tailscale_profile_picture;
proxy_set_header X-Webauth-User "$auth_user";
proxy_set_header X-Webauth-Name "$auth_name";
proxy_set_header X-Webauth-Login "$auth_login";
proxy_set_header X-Webauth-Tailnet "$auth_tailnet";
proxy_set_header X-Webauth-Profile-Picture "$auth_profile_picture";
When this configuration is used with a Go HTTP handler such as this:
http.HandlerFunc(func (w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
e := json.NewEncoder(w)
e.SetIndent("", " ")
e.Encode(r.Header)
})
You will get output like this:
{
"Accept": [
"*/*"
],
"Connection": [
"upgrade"
],
"User-Agent": [
"curl/7.82.0"
],
"X-Webauth-Login": [
"Xe"
],
"X-Webauth-Name": [
"Xe Iaso"
],
"X-Webauth-Profile-Picture": [
"https://avatars.githubusercontent.com/u/529003?v=4"
],
"X-Webauth-Tailnet": [
"cetacean.org.github"
]
"X-Webauth-User": [
"Xe@github"
]
}
Headers
The authentication service provides the following headers to decorate your proxied requests:
Header | Example Value | Description |
---|---|---|
Tailscale-User |
azurediamond@hunter2.net |
The Tailscale username the remote machine is logged in as in user@host form |
Tailscale-Login |
azurediamond |
The user portion of the Tailscale username the remote machine is logged in as |
Tailscale-Name |
Azure Diamond |
The "real name" of the Tailscale user the machine is logged in as |
Tailscale-Profile-Picture |
https://i.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/newsfeed/001/065/963/ae0.png |
The profile picture provided by the Identity Provider your tailnet uses |
Tailscale-Tailnet |
hunter2.net |
The tailnet name |
Most of the time you can set X-Webauth-User
to the contents of the
Tailscale-User
header, but some services may not accept a username with an @
symbol in it. If this is the case, set X-Webauth-User
to the Tailscale-Login
header.
The Tailscale-Tailnet
header can help you identify which tailnet the session
is coming from. If you are using node sharing, this can help you make sure that
you aren't giving administrative access to people outside your tailnet. You will
need to be sure to check this in your application code. If you use OpenResty,
you may be able to do more complicated access controls than you can with NGINX
alone.
Building
Install cmd/mkpkg
:
cd .. && go install ./mkpkg
Then run ./mkdeb.sh
. It will emit a .deb
and .rpm
package for amd64
machines (Linux uname flag: x86_64
). You can add these to your deployment
methods as you see fit.