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351 lines
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12 KiB
YAML
351 lines
No EOL
12 KiB
YAML
---
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# headscale will look for a configuration file named `config.yaml` (or `config.json`) in the following order:
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#
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# - `/etc/headscale`
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# - `~/.headscale`
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# - current working directory
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# The url clients will connect to.
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# Typically this will be a domain like:
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#
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# https://myheadscale.example.com:443
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#
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server_url: https://tailscale.yourdomain.co.uk
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# Address to listen to / bind to on the server
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#
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# For production:
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# listen_addr: 0.0.0.0:8080
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listen_addr: 0.0.0.0:8080
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# Address to listen to /metrics, you may want
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# to keep this endpoint private to your internal
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# network
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#
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metrics_listen_addr: 0.0.0.0:9090
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# Address to listen for gRPC.
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# gRPC is used for controlling a headscale server
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# remotely with the CLI
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# Note: Remote access _only_ works if you have
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# valid certificates.
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#
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# For production:
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# grpc_listen_addr: 0.0.0.0:50443
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grpc_listen_addr: 0.0.0.0:50443
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# Allow the gRPC admin interface to run in INSECURE
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# mode. This is not recommended as the traffic will
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# be unencrypted. Only enable if you know what you
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# are doing.
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grpc_allow_insecure: false
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# The Noise section includes specific configuration for the
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# TS2021 Noise protocol
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noise:
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# The Noise private key is used to encrypt the
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# traffic between headscale and Tailscale clients when
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# using the new Noise-based protocol.
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private_key_path: /var/lib/headscale/noise_private.key
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# List of IP prefixes to allocate tailaddresses from.
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# Each prefix consists of either an IPv4 or IPv6 address,
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# and the associated prefix length, delimited by a slash.
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# It must be within IP ranges supported by the Tailscale
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# client - i.e., subnets of 100.64.0.0/10 and fd7a:115c:a1e0::/48.
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# See below:
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# IPv6: https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/blob/22ebb25e833264f58d7c3f534a8b166894a89536/net/tsaddr/tsaddr.go#LL81C52-L81C71
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# IPv4: https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/blob/22ebb25e833264f58d7c3f534a8b166894a89536/net/tsaddr/tsaddr.go#L33
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# Any other range is NOT supported, and it will cause unexpected issues.
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prefixes:
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v6: fd7a:115c:a1e0::/48
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v4: 100.64.0.0/10
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# Strategy used for allocation of IPs to nodes, available options:
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# - sequential (default): assigns the next free IP from the previous given IP.
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# - random: assigns the next free IP from a pseudo-random IP generator (crypto/rand).
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allocation: sequential
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# DERP is a relay system that Tailscale uses when a direct
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# connection cannot be established.
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# https://tailscale.com/blog/how-tailscale-works/#encrypted-tcp-relays-derp
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#
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# headscale needs a list of DERP servers that can be presented
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# to the clients.
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derp:
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server:
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# If enabled, runs the embedded DERP server and merges it into the rest of the DERP config
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# The Headscale server_url defined above MUST be using https, DERP requires TLS to be in place
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enabled: false
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# Region ID to use for the embedded DERP server.
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# The local DERP prevails if the region ID collides with other region ID coming from
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# the regular DERP config.
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region_id: 999
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# Region code and name are displayed in the Tailscale UI to identify a DERP region
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region_code: "headscale"
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region_name: "Headscale Embedded DERP"
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# Listens over UDP at the configured address for STUN connections - to help with NAT traversal.
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# When the embedded DERP server is enabled stun_listen_addr MUST be defined.
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#
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# For more details on how this works, check this great article: https://tailscale.com/blog/how-tailscale-works/
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stun_listen_addr: "0.0.0.0:3478"
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# Private key used to encrypt the traffic between headscale DERP
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# and Tailscale clients.
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# The private key file will be autogenerated if it's missing.
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#
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private_key_path: /var/lib/headscale/derp_server_private.key
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# This flag can be used, so the DERP map entry for the embedded DERP server is not written automatically,
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# it enables the creation of your very own DERP map entry using a locally available file with the parameter DERP.paths
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# If you enable the DERP server and set this to false, it is required to add the DERP server to the DERP map using DERP.paths
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automatically_add_embedded_derp_region: true
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# For better connection stability (especially when using an Exit-Node and DNS is not working),
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# it is possible to optionally add the public IPv4 and IPv6 address to the Derp-Map using:
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ipv4: 1.2.3.4
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ipv6: 2001:db8::1
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# List of externally available DERP maps encoded in JSON
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urls:
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- https://controlplane.tailscale.com/derpmap/default
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# Locally available DERP map files encoded in YAML
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#
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# This option is mostly interesting for people hosting
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# their own DERP servers:
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# https://tailscale.com/kb/1118/custom-derp-servers/
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#
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# paths:
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# - /etc/headscale/derp-example.yaml
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paths: []
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# If enabled, a worker will be set up to periodically
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# refresh the given sources and update the derpmap
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# will be set up.
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auto_update_enabled: true
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# How often should we check for DERP updates?
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update_frequency: 24h
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# Disables the automatic check for headscale updates on startup
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disable_check_updates: false
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# Time before an inactive ephemeral node is deleted?
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ephemeral_node_inactivity_timeout: 30m
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database:
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type: sqlite
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# SQLite config
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sqlite:
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path: /var/lib/headscale/db.sqlite
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# Enable WAL mode for SQLite. This is recommended for production environments.
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# https://www.sqlite.org/wal.html
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write_ahead_log: true
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# # Postgres config
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# postgres:
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# # If using a Unix socket to connect to Postgres, set the socket path in the 'host' field and leave 'port' blank.
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# host: localhost
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# port: 5432
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# name: headscale
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# user: foo
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# pass: bar
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# max_open_conns: 10
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# max_idle_conns: 10
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# conn_max_idle_time_secs: 3600
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# # If other 'sslmode' is required instead of 'require(true)' and 'disabled(false)', set the 'sslmode' you need
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# # in the 'ssl' field. Refers to https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/libpq-ssl.html Table 34.1.
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# ssl: false
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### TLS configuration
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#
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## Let's encrypt / ACME
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#
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# headscale supports automatically requesting and setting up
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# TLS for a domain with Let's Encrypt.
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#
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# URL to ACME directory
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acme_url: https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory
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# Email to register with ACME provider
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acme_email: ""
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# Domain name to request a TLS certificate for:
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tls_letsencrypt_hostname: ""
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# Path to store certificates and metadata needed by
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# letsencrypt
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# For production:
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tls_letsencrypt_cache_dir: /var/lib/headscale/cache
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# Type of ACME challenge to use, currently supported types:
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# HTTP-01 or TLS-ALPN-01
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# See [docs/tls.md](docs/tls.md) for more information
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tls_letsencrypt_challenge_type: HTTP-01
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# When HTTP-01 challenge is chosen, letsencrypt must set up a
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# verification endpoint, and it will be listening on:
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# :http = port 80
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tls_letsencrypt_listen: ":http"
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## Use already defined certificates:
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tls_cert_path: ""
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tls_key_path: ""
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log:
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# Output formatting for logs: text or json
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format: text
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level: info
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# Path to a file containing ACL policies.
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# ACLs can be defined as YAML or HUJSON.
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# https://tailscale.com/kb/1018/acls/
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acl_policy_path: ""
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## DNS
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#
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# headscale supports Tailscale's DNS configuration and MagicDNS.
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# Please have a look to their KB to better understand the concepts:
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#
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# - https://tailscale.com/kb/1054/dns/
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# - https://tailscale.com/kb/1081/magicdns/
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# - https://tailscale.com/blog/2021-09-private-dns-with-magicdns/
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#
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dns_config:
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# Whether to prefer using Headscale provided DNS or use local.
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override_local_dns: true
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# List of DNS servers to expose to clients.
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nameservers:
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- 1.1.1.1
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# NextDNS (see https://tailscale.com/kb/1218/nextdns/).
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# "abc123" is example NextDNS ID, replace with yours.
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#
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# With metadata sharing:
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# nameservers:
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# - https://dns.nextdns.io/abc123
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#
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# Without metadata sharing:
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# nameservers:
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# - 2a07:a8c0::ab:c123
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# - 2a07:a8c1::ab:c123
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# Split DNS (see https://tailscale.com/kb/1054/dns/),
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# list of search domains and the DNS to query for each one.
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#
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# restricted_nameservers:
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# foo.bar.com:
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# - 1.1.1.1
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# darp.headscale.net:
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# - 1.1.1.1
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# - 8.8.8.8
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# Search domains to inject.
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domains: []
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# Extra DNS records
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# so far only A-records are supported (on the tailscale side)
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# See https://github.com/juanfont/headscale/blob/main/docs/dns-records.md#Limitations
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# extra_records:
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# - name: "grafana.myvpn.example.com"
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# type: "A"
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# value: "100.64.0.3"
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#
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# # you can also put it in one line
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# - { name: "prometheus.myvpn.example.com", type: "A", value: "100.64.0.3" }
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# Whether to use [MagicDNS](https://tailscale.com/kb/1081/magicdns/).
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# Only works if there is at least a nameserver defined.
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magic_dns: true
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# DEPRECATED
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# Use the username as part of the DNS name for nodes, with this option enabled:
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# node1.username.example.com
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# while when this is disabled:
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# node1.example.com
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# This is a legacy option as Headscale has have this wrongly implemented
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# while in upstream Tailscale, the username is not included.
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use_username_in_magic_dns: false
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# Defines the base domain to create the hostnames for MagicDNS.
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# `base_domain` must be a FQDNs, without the trailing dot.
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# The FQDN of the hosts will be
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# `hostname.user.base_domain` (e.g., _myhost.myuser.example.com_).
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base_domain: example.com
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# Unix socket used for the CLI to connect without authentication
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# Note: for production you will want to set this to something like:
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unix_socket: /var/run/headscale/headscale.sock
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unix_socket_permission: "0770"
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#
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# headscale supports experimental OpenID connect support,
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# it is still being tested and might have some bugs, please
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# help us test it.
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# OpenID Connect
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# oidc:
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# only_start_if_oidc_is_available: true
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# issuer: "https://your-oidc.issuer.com/path"
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# client_id: "your-oidc-client-id"
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# client_secret: "your-oidc-client-secret"
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# # Alternatively, set `client_secret_path` to read the secret from the file.
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# # It resolves environment variables, making integration to systemd's
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# # `LoadCredential` straightforward:
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# client_secret_path: "${CREDENTIALS_DIRECTORY}/oidc_client_secret"
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# # client_secret and client_secret_path are mutually exclusive.
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#
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# # The amount of time from a node is authenticated with OpenID until it
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# # expires and needs to reauthenticate.
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# # Setting the value to "0" will mean no expiry.
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# expiry: 180d
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#
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# # Use the expiry from the token received from OpenID when the user logged
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# # in, this will typically lead to frequent need to reauthenticate and should
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# # only been enabled if you know what you are doing.
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# # Note: enabling this will cause `oidc.expiry` to be ignored.
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# use_expiry_from_token: false
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#
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# # Customize the scopes used in the OIDC flow, defaults to "openid", "profile" and "email" and add custom query
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# # parameters to the Authorize Endpoint request. Scopes default to "openid", "profile" and "email".
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#
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# scope: ["openid", "profile", "email", "custom"]
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# extra_params:
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# domain_hint: example.com
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#
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# # List allowed principal domains and/or users. If an authenticated user's domain is not in this list, the
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# # authentication request will be rejected.
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#
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# allowed_domains:
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# - example.com
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# # Note: Groups from keycloak have a leading '/'
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# allowed_groups:
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# - /headscale
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# allowed_users:
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# - alice@example.com
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#
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# # If `strip_email_domain` is set to `true`, the domain part of the username email address will be removed.
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# # This will transform `first-name.last-name@example.com` to the user `first-name.last-name`
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# # If `strip_email_domain` is set to `false` the domain part will NOT be removed resulting to the following
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# user: `first-name.last-name.example.com`
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#
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# strip_email_domain: true
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# Logtail configuration
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# Logtail is Tailscales logging and auditing infrastructure, it allows the control panel
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# to instruct tailscale nodes to log their activity to a remote server.
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logtail:
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# Enable logtail for this headscales clients.
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# As there is currently no support for overriding the log server in headscale, this is
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# disabled by default. Enabling this will make your clients send logs to Tailscale Inc.
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enabled: false
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# Enabling this option makes devices prefer a random port for WireGuard traffic over the
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# default static port 41641. This option is intended as a workaround for some buggy
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# firewall devices. See https://tailscale.com/kb/1181/firewalls/ for more information.
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randomize_client_port: false |