tailscale/lib.rs
1//! A work-in-progress [Tailscale](https://tailscale.com/blog/how-tailscale-works) library.
2//!
3//! `tailscale` allows Rust programs to connect to a tailnet and exchange traffic with peers over
4//! TCP and UDP. It can communicate with other `tailscale`-based peers, `tailscaled` (the Tailscale
5//! Go client), `tsnet`, and `libtailscale` via public DERP servers.
6//!
7//! <div class="warning">
8//! `tailscale` is unstable and insecure.
9//!
10//! We welcome enthusiasm and interest, but please **do not** build production software using these
11//! libraries or rely on it for data privacy until we have a chance to batten down some hatches and
12//! complete a third-party audit.
13//!
14//! See the [Caveats section](#caveats) for more details.
15//! </div>
16//!
17//! For language bindings, see the following crates:
18//!
19//! - C: [ts_ffi](https://docs.rs/ts_ffi)
20//! - Python: [ts_python](https://docs.rs/ts_python)
21//! - Elixir: [ts_elixir](https://docs.rs/ts_elixir)
22//!
23//! For instructions on how to run tests, lints, etc., see [CONTRIBUTING.md]. For the high-level
24//! architecture and repository layout, see [ARCHITECTURE.md].
25//!
26//! ## Code Sample
27//!
28//! A simple UDP client that periodically sends messages to a tailnet peer at `100.64.0.1:5678`:
29//!
30//! ```no_run
31//! # use std::{
32//! # time::Duration,
33//! # net::Ipv4Addr,
34//! # error::Error,
35//! # };
36//! #
37//! # #[tokio::main]
38//! # async fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn Error>> {
39//! // Open a new connection to the tailnet
40//! let dev = tailscale::Device::new(
41//! &tailscale::Config::default_with_key_file("tsrs_keys.json").await?,
42//! Some("YOUR_AUTH_KEY_HERE".to_owned()),
43//! ).await?;
44//!
45//! // Bind a UDP socket on our tailnet IP, port 1234
46//! let sock = dev.udp_bind((dev.ipv4_addr().await?, 1234).into()).await?;
47//!
48//! // Send a packet containing "hello, world!" to 100.64.0.1:5678 once per second
49//! loop {
50//! sock.send_to((Ipv4Addr::new(100, 64, 0, 1), 5678).into(), b"hello, world!").await?;
51//! tokio::time::sleep(Duration::from_secs(1)).await;
52//! }
53//! # }
54//! ```
55//!
56//! Additional examples of using the `tailscale` crate can be found in the [`examples/`] directory.
57//!
58//! ## Using `tailscale`
59//!
60//! To use this crate or the language bindings, you will need to set the `TS_RS_EXPERIMENT` env var
61//! to `this_is_unstable_software`. We'll remove this requirement after a third-party code/cryptography
62//! audit and any necessary fixes.
63//!
64//! Under the hood, we use Tokio for our async runtime. You must also use Tokio, any kind and most
65//! configurations of Tokio runtimes should work, but there must be one available when you call any
66//! async API functions. The easiest way to do this is to use `#[tokio::main]`, see the
67//! [Tokio docs](https://docs.rs/tokio) for more information. In the future, we would like to limit
68//! our reliance on Tokio so that there are alternatives for users of other async runtimes.
69//!
70//! ## Caveats
71//!
72//! This software is still a work-in-progress! We are providing it in the open at this stage out of
73//! a belief in open-source and to see where the community runs with it, but please be aware of a
74//! few important considerations:
75//!
76//! - This implementation contains unaudited cryptography and hasn't undergone a comprehensive
77//! security analysis. Conservatively, assume there could be a critical security hole meaning
78//! anything you send or receive could be in the clear on the public Internet.
79//! - There are no compatibility guarantees at the moment. This is early-days software - we may
80//! break dependent code in order to get things right.
81//! - Direct peer-to-peer connections via NAT traversal are implemented (STUN-discovered endpoints
82//! and Disco, with `CallMeMaybe` hole-punching over DERP), with DERP relays as the fallback when
83//! no direct path is available. Hard/symmetric NATs get the same single fixed-local-port candidate
84//! (`EndpointSTUN4LocalPort`) Go Tailscale uses; behind a NAT with no static port mapping a flow
85//! may still stay relayed through DERP, which caps its throughput. (Upstream Go does **not** do a
86//! "256-port birthday-paradox spray" — that is a common misconception; the single-candidate guess
87//! is the actual behavior, and this fork matches it.)
88//!
89//! ## Feature Flags
90//!
91//! - `axum`: enables the `axum` module, which enables you to run an `axum` HTTP server on top
92//! of a [`netstack::TcpListener`].
93//!
94//! ## Platform Support
95//!
96//! `tailscale` currently supports the following platforms:
97//!
98//! - Linux (x86_64 and ARM64)
99//! - macOS (ARM64)
100//!
101//! ## Component crates
102//!
103//! The following crates are part of the tailscale-rs project and are dependencies of this one. For
104//! many tasks, just this crate should be sufficient and these other crates are an implementation detail.
105//! There are other crates too, see [ARCHITECTURE.md]
106//! or the [GitHub repo](https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale-rs).
107//!
108//! - [ts_runtime](https://docs.rs/ts_runtime): for each API-level `Device`, the runtime uses an actor
109//! architecture to manage the lifecycle of the control client, data plane components, netstack, etc.
110//! A message bus passes updates and communications between these top-level actors.
111//! - [ts_netcheck](https://docs.rs/ts_netcheck): checks network availability and reports latency to
112//! DERP servers in different regions.
113//! - [ts_netstack_smoltcp](https://docs.rs/ts_netstack_smoltcp): a [smoltcp](https://docs.rs/smoltcp)-based
114//! network stack that processes Layer 3+ packets to/from the overlay network.
115//! - [ts_control](https://docs.rs/ts_control): control plane client that handles registration,
116//! authorization/authentication, configuration, and streaming updates.
117//! - [ts_dataplane](https://docs.rs/ts_dataplane): wires all the individual data plane functions together,
118//! flowing inbound and outbound packets through the components in the correct order.
119//! - [ts_tunnel](https://docs.rs/ts_tunnel): a partial implementation of the WireGuard specification
120//! that protects all data plane traffic, and is interoperable with other WireGuard clients, including Tailscale clients.
121//! - [ts_cli_util](https://docs.rs/ts_cli_util): helpers for writing command line tools and initializing
122//! logging, used in examples.
123//! - [ts_disco_protocol](https://docs.rs/ts_disco_protocol): incomplete implementation of Tailscale's
124//! discovery protocol (disco).
125//!
126//! [ARCHITECTURE.md]: https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale-rs/blob/main/ARCHITECTURE.md
127//! [CONTRIBUTING.md]: https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale-rs/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.md
128//! [`examples/`]: https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale-rs/blob/main/examples/README.md
129//! [open an issue]: https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale-rs/issues
130//! [`axum` HTTP server]: https://docs.rs/axum/latest/axum/
131
132use std::{
133 net::{IpAddr, Ipv4Addr, Ipv6Addr, SocketAddr},
134 time::Duration,
135};
136
137#[doc(inline)]
138pub use config::Config;
139#[doc(inline)]
140pub use error::{Error, InternalErrorKind};
141// Re-exported so a downstream crate depending only on `tailscale` can name the auth-key secret type
142// for [`Device::new_with_secret`] without taking a separate, version-pinned dependency on `secrecy`
143// (which would risk a `SecretString`-type mismatch if the two `secrecy` majors diverged). Callers
144// pass `tailscale::SecretString`; `secrecy` is a pure-Rust wrapper (no aws-lc/openssl/ring).
145pub use secrecy::SecretString;
146#[doc(inline)]
147pub use ts_control::ExitNodeSelector;
148#[doc(inline)]
149pub use ts_control::Node as NodeInfo;
150#[doc(inline)]
151pub use ts_control::tls::{CertifiedKey, TlsAcceptor, TlsStream};
152#[doc(inline)]
153pub use ts_control::{CertError, MISSING_CERT_RPC, ServeConfig, ServeState, ServeTarget};
154/// The netmap DNS configuration returned by [`Device::dns_config`] (Go `netmap.NetworkMap.DNS`).
155#[doc(inline)]
156pub use ts_control::{DnsConfig, DnsResolver, ExtraRecord};
157#[doc(inline)]
158pub use ts_control::{ExitProxyConfig, ExitProxyScheme};
159pub use ts_control::{
160 IdTokenError, LogoutError, ServiceError, ServiceMode, SetDnsError, SetDnsInternalErrorKind,
161 SshAccept, SshAction, SshConnIdentity, SshDecision, SshDenyReason, SshPolicy, SshPrincipal,
162 SshRule, StableNodeId,
163};
164// Re-exported so the application data-path transport can be selected through the `tailscale`
165// facade alone: `Config::transport_mode` is `TransportMode` (default `Netstack`; `Tun(TunConfig {
166// name, mtu })` for a real kernel TUN interface). Both are `pub` in `ts_control` but were not
167// reachable through this facade, forcing downstream crates to depend on `ts_control` directly just
168// to name them.
169pub use ts_control::{TransportMode, TunConfig};
170#[doc(inline)]
171pub use ts_netstack_smoltcp::PingError;
172use ts_netstack_smoltcp::{CreateSocket, netcore::Channel};
173#[doc(inline)]
174pub use ts_runtime::fallback_tcp::{
175 FallbackConnFuture, FallbackConnHandler, FallbackDecision, FallbackTcpHandle,
176};
177#[doc(inline)]
178pub use ts_runtime::taildrop::WaitingFile;
179#[doc(inline)]
180pub use ts_runtime::{
181 DeviceState, FileTarget, IpnBusWatcher, NetcheckReport, Notify, NotifyWatchOpt, RegionLatency,
182 RegistrationError, Status, StatusNode, WhoIs,
183};
184/// The interactive-login URL type returned by [`Device::pop_browser_url`].
185#[doc(inline)]
186pub use url::Url;
187
188#[cfg(feature = "axum")]
189pub mod axum;
190pub mod config;
191mod dial;
192mod error;
193mod loopback;
194#[cfg(feature = "ssh")]
195pub mod ssh;
196
197#[doc(inline)]
198pub use dial::{ConnectedUdpSocket, DialConn};
199#[doc(inline)]
200pub use loopback::LoopbackHandle;
201
202/// How a program connects to a tailnet and communicates with peers.
203///
204/// The `Device` connects to the control plane, registers itself with the tailnet, and communicates
205/// with tailnet peers. Its tailnet identity is determined by the key state provided at
206/// construction-time.
207pub struct Device {
208 runtime: ts_runtime::Runtime,
209 /// Command channel to the application netstack. `None` in TUN transport mode, where there is
210 /// no userspace application netstack; the channel-driven socket APIs ([`Device::udp_bind`],
211 /// [`Device::tcp_listen`], [`Device::tcp_connect`], [`Device::ping`]) are unsupported there.
212 channel: Option<Channel>,
213 /// Whether IPv6 is enabled on the tailnet overlay (the `Config::enable_ipv6` gate, default
214 /// `false`). Captured at construction; used by [`Device::listen_service`] to decide whether an
215 /// IPv6 VIP-service address is bindable (the netstack only accepts IPv6 overlay addresses when
216 /// this is set).
217 enable_ipv6: bool,
218 /// The stored Serve config + its live per-port accept loops (`tsnet`'s `Get/SetServeConfig` +
219 /// serving runtime). Built lazily on the first [`Device::set_serve_config`] (it needs this
220 /// node's overlay IPv4, only known after registration). Held here so its accept loops abort when
221 /// the `Device` drops; `None` (empty config) until the first `set`.
222 serve: std::sync::Mutex<Option<ts_runtime::serve::ServeManager>>,
223 /// The live Funnel ingress manager (`tsnet`'s `ListenFunnel` data path), built on
224 /// [`Device::listen_funnel`](crate::Device::listen_funnel). Held here so its TLS-termination pump and the installed peerAPI
225 /// ingress sink stay alive for the device's life (and tear down when a new `listen_funnel`
226 /// replaces it, or the `Device` drops). `None` until the first `listen_funnel`.
227 funnel: std::sync::Mutex<Option<ts_runtime::funnel::FunnelManager>>,
228}
229
230/// Map a [`ts_runtime::taildrop::TaildropError`] to the device-facing [`Error`]. `Error` is a
231/// `Copy` enum with no payload, so the I/O detail string is dropped, but the *kind* is preserved so
232/// a caller can still distinguish the actionable cases: an invalid name →
233/// [`InternalErrorKind::BadRequest`], an in-progress conflict → [`InternalErrorKind::AlreadyExists`],
234/// a missing file → [`InternalErrorKind::NotFound`], and any other filesystem failure →
235/// [`InternalErrorKind::Io`].
236fn taildrop_err(e: ts_runtime::taildrop::TaildropError) -> Error {
237 use ts_runtime::taildrop::TaildropError;
238 match e {
239 TaildropError::InvalidFileName => Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::BadRequest),
240 TaildropError::FileExists => Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::AlreadyExists),
241 TaildropError::Io(io) if io.kind() == std::io::ErrorKind::NotFound => {
242 Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::NotFound)
243 }
244 TaildropError::Io(_) => Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::Io),
245 }
246}
247
248/// Map a [`ts_runtime::taildrop_send::TaildropSendError`] (the Taildrop *sender*) to the
249/// device-facing [`Error`]. The send-side conflict/forbidden/unexpected-status cases all reduce to
250/// `BadRequest` (the peer refused the transfer for a request-level reason), a dial failure or
251/// timeout to `Timeout`, an invalid name to `BadRequest`, and any stream I/O failure to `Io`.
252fn taildrop_send_err(e: ts_runtime::taildrop_send::TaildropSendError) -> Error {
253 use ts_runtime::taildrop_send::TaildropSendError;
254 match e {
255 TaildropSendError::Connect | TaildropSendError::Timeout => Error::Timeout,
256 TaildropSendError::InvalidName
257 | TaildropSendError::Forbidden
258 | TaildropSendError::Conflict
259 | TaildropSendError::UnexpectedStatus(_) => Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::BadRequest),
260 TaildropSendError::Io => Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::Io),
261 }
262}
263
264/// Resolve the effective registration auth key from `auth_key` plus the config's
265/// workload-identity-federation (WIF) / OAuth-client fields.
266///
267/// With the `identity-federation` feature enabled, an OAuth client secret (`tskey-client-…`) or a
268/// `client_id` + (`id_token` | `audience`) is exchanged for a Tailscale auth key against the SaaS
269/// admin API before registration (Go `tsnet.Server`'s `resolveAuthKey`). Without the feature this is
270/// a pure pass-through: `auth_key` is returned unchanged and the WIF config fields are ignored, so
271/// the default build is byte-identical to before.
272#[cfg(feature = "identity-federation")]
273async fn resolve_auth_key(
274 config: &Config,
275 auth_key: Option<String>,
276) -> Result<Option<String>, Error> {
277 let wif = ts_control::WifConfig {
278 auth_key,
279 client_id: config.client_id.clone(),
280 client_secret: config.client_secret.clone(),
281 id_token: config.id_token.clone(),
282 audience: config.audience.clone(),
283 tags: config.requested_tags.clone(),
284 };
285 ts_control::resolve_auth_key(&wif, &config.control_server_url)
286 .await
287 .map_err(|e| {
288 tracing::error!(error = %e, "resolving auth key via workload-identity federation");
289 Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::BadRequest)
290 })
291}
292
293/// Pass-through when the `identity-federation` feature is disabled: the auth key is used as-is and
294/// the WIF config fields have no effect (matching Go, where the federation path is compiled out
295/// unless its optional feature is linked).
296#[cfg(not(feature = "identity-federation"))]
297async fn resolve_auth_key(
298 _config: &Config,
299 auth_key: Option<String>,
300) -> Result<Option<String>, Error> {
301 Ok(auth_key)
302}
303
304impl Device {
305 /// Create a device from the given [`Config`] and auth key.
306 ///
307 /// Internally, this will spawn multiple asynchronous actors onto a Tokio runtime.
308 ///
309 /// # Example
310 ///
311 /// ```rust,no_run
312 /// # #[tokio::main]
313 /// # async fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
314 /// # use tailscale::*;
315 /// let dev = Device::new(
316 /// &Config::default_with_key_file("tsrs_keys.json").await?,
317 /// Some("MY_AUTH_KEY".to_string()),
318 /// ).await?;
319 /// # Ok(()) }
320 /// ```
321 pub async fn new(config: &Config, auth_key: Option<String>) -> Result<Self, Error> {
322 check_magic_env()?;
323
324 // Resolve the effective registration auth key. The explicit `auth_key` argument wins; if it
325 // is `None`, fall back to `config.auth_key` (Go `tsnet.Server.AuthKey`). When the
326 // `identity-federation` feature is enabled, the resolved key is further passed through the
327 // WIF / OAuth-client bootstrap, which exchanges an OAuth client secret (`tskey-client-…`) or
328 // an IdP-issued OIDC token for a Tailscale auth key before registration (SaaS-only).
329 let auth_key = auth_key.or_else(|| config.auth_key.clone());
330 let auth_key = resolve_auth_key(config, auth_key).await?;
331
332 let rt =
333 ts_runtime::Runtime::spawn(config.into(), auth_key, (&config.key_state).into()).await?;
334 // In TUN transport mode there is no application netstack, so the runtime has no command
335 // channel: that surfaces as `UnsupportedInTunMode`, which we map to a `None` channel rather
336 // than an error (the device is still usable for control-plane and peer-lookup APIs).
337 let channel = match rt.channel().await {
338 Ok(c) => Some(c),
339 Err(e) if e.kind == ts_runtime::ErrorKind::UnsupportedInTunMode => None,
340 Err(e) => return Err(e.into()),
341 };
342
343 Ok(Self {
344 runtime: rt,
345 channel,
346 enable_ipv6: config.enable_ipv6,
347 serve: std::sync::Mutex::new(None),
348 funnel: std::sync::Mutex::new(None),
349 })
350 }
351
352 /// Create a device from the given [`Config`] and a [`SecretString`] auth key.
353 ///
354 /// This is a back-compat-preserving convenience over [`new`](Self::new) for callers that already
355 /// hold the registration auth key as a [`secrecy::SecretString`] (e.g. a daemon that keeps the
356 /// pre-auth key wrapped end-to-end). It lets the caller avoid materializing a plain `String` at
357 /// the engine boundary: the secret is exposed only on the last inch, immediately before being
358 /// handed to [`new`](Self::new).
359 ///
360 /// # Honesty about the plaintext window
361 ///
362 /// This closes the *caller's* boundary, **not** the engine's internal handling. The engine still
363 /// resolves the auth key to a plain `String` internally for registration (the plaintext `String`
364 /// window inside the engine is identical to calling [`new`](Self::new) directly) — this method
365 /// does not make the engine itself secret-clean. If you call [`new`](Self::new) you create that
366 /// `String` yourself; if you call this you do not, but the engine creates one either way.
367 ///
368 /// Passing `None` is equivalent to `new(config, None)` (falls back to `config.auth_key`).
369 ///
370 /// # Example
371 ///
372 /// ```rust,no_run
373 /// # #[tokio::main]
374 /// # async fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
375 /// # use tailscale::*;
376 /// let dev = Device::new_with_secret(
377 /// &Config::default_with_key_file("tsrs_keys.json").await?,
378 /// Some(SecretString::from("MY_AUTH_KEY")),
379 /// ).await?;
380 /// # Ok(()) }
381 /// ```
382 pub async fn new_with_secret(
383 config: &Config,
384 auth_key: Option<SecretString>,
385 ) -> Result<Self, Error> {
386 use secrecy::ExposeSecret as _;
387
388 // Expose the secret on the last inch and delegate to `new`, so the spawn/registration path
389 // is shared verbatim (no duplicated runtime-spawn logic) and the engine-internal plaintext
390 // window is byte-for-byte identical to a direct `new` call.
391 let plain = auth_key.map(|s| s.expose_secret().to_string());
392 Self::new(config, plain).await
393 }
394
395 /// The application netstack command channel, or an error in TUN transport mode (no application
396 /// netstack exists).
397 fn channel(&self) -> Result<&Channel, Error> {
398 self.channel
399 .as_ref()
400 .ok_or(Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::UnsupportedInTunMode))
401 }
402
403 /// Get this [`Device`]'s IPv4 tailnet address.
404 pub async fn ipv4_addr(&self) -> Result<Ipv4Addr, Error> {
405 self.runtime
406 .control
407 .ask(ts_runtime::control_runner::Ipv4)
408 .await
409 .map_err(ts_runtime::Error::from)?
410 .ok_or(Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::Actor))
411 }
412
413 /// Get this [`Device`]'s IPv6 tailnet address.
414 pub async fn ipv6_addr(&self) -> Result<Ipv6Addr, Error> {
415 self.runtime
416 .control
417 .ask(ts_runtime::control_runner::Ipv6)
418 .await
419 .map_err(ts_runtime::Error::from)?
420 .ok_or(Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::Actor))
421 }
422
423 /// This node's tailnet IPv4 and (when provisioned) IPv6 addresses as a pair — the Rust analog of
424 /// Go `tsnet.Server.TailscaleIPs() (ip4, ip6 netip.Addr)`.
425 ///
426 /// Reads the self node's assigned addresses (the same source Go splits by family). The tailnet
427 /// is IPv4-only unless [`Config::enable_ipv6`](crate::config::Config) is set, so the IPv6 half is
428 /// `None` when no v6 address is assigned — the Rust shape for Go returning the zero `netip.Addr`
429 /// in that case (Go's IPv6-absent sentinel). Errors until the first netmap is received (no self
430 /// node yet), matching Go returning invalid addresses before the node has joined.
431 pub async fn tailscale_ips(&self) -> Result<(Ipv4Addr, Option<Ipv6Addr>), Error> {
432 let me = self.self_node().await?;
433 let v4 = me.tailnet_address.ipv4.addr();
434 let v6 = me.tailnet_address.ipv6.addr();
435 // The decoder synthesizes the unspecified `::` placeholder on an IPv4-only tailnet; surface
436 // a real v6 only when IPv6 is enabled AND a non-placeholder address was assigned.
437 let v6 = (self.enable_ipv6 && !v6.is_unspecified()).then_some(v6);
438 Ok((v4, v6))
439 }
440
441 /// Bind a UDP socket to the specified [`SocketAddr`].
442 ///
443 /// Returns an error in TUN transport mode (there is no application netstack to bind on).
444 pub async fn udp_bind(&self, socket_addr: SocketAddr) -> Result<netstack::UdpSocket, Error> {
445 self.channel()?
446 .udp_bind(socket_addr)
447 .await
448 .map_err(Into::into)
449 }
450
451 /// Bind a TCP listener to the specified [`SocketAddr`].
452 ///
453 /// Returns an error in TUN transport mode (there is no application netstack to listen on).
454 pub async fn tcp_listen(
455 &self,
456 socket_addr: SocketAddr,
457 ) -> Result<netstack::TcpListener, Error> {
458 self.channel()?
459 .tcp_listen(socket_addr)
460 .await
461 .map_err(Into::into)
462 }
463
464 /// Register a fallback TCP handler (like `tsnet`'s `RegisterFallbackTCPHandler`).
465 ///
466 /// The callback is consulted for every inbound TCP flow that matches **no** explicit
467 /// [`Device::tcp_listen`] listener, with the flow's `(src, dst)` addresses. It returns
468 /// `(handler, intercept)`:
469 /// - `(_, false)` — decline; the next registered callback is tried.
470 /// - `(Some(h), true)` — claim the flow; `h` is handed the accepted [`netstack::TcpStream`].
471 /// - `(None, true)` — claim and reject the flow (the connection is closed).
472 ///
473 /// Multiple handlers may be registered; they are consulted in registration order and the first
474 /// to intercept wins. The returned [`FallbackTcpHandle`] deregisters the handler when dropped.
475 ///
476 /// Handlers serve flows over the overlay netstack only — never a host socket — and a flow no
477 /// handler claims is closed (fail-closed), never direct-dialed.
478 ///
479 /// Returns an error in TUN transport mode (there is no application netstack to attach to).
480 pub fn register_fallback_tcp_handler<F>(&self, cb: F) -> Result<FallbackTcpHandle, Error>
481 where
482 F: Fn(SocketAddr, SocketAddr) -> FallbackDecision + Send + Sync + 'static,
483 {
484 self.runtime
485 .register_fallback_tcp_handler(std::sync::Arc::new(cb))
486 .map_err(Into::into)
487 }
488
489 /// Resolve a tailnet peer (or this node) by MagicDNS name to its tailnet IPv4 address.
490 ///
491 /// This is an in-process lookup against the netmap we already hold — like `tsnet`'s in-memory
492 /// `dnsMap`, it does not query any DNS server (there is no `100.100.100.100` resolver). The
493 /// `name` may be a bare hostname or a fully-qualified MagicDNS name, with or without a trailing
494 /// dot, in any case (matching is case-insensitive). Returns `Ok(None)` if no tailnet node has
495 /// that name.
496 ///
497 /// Only MagicDNS names are resolved; names outside the tailnet are not looked up here, so the
498 /// caller's system resolver remains responsible for them. IPv6 is intentionally not resolved —
499 /// this fork operates IPv4-only on the tailnet.
500 pub async fn resolve(&self, name: &str) -> Result<Option<Ipv4Addr>, Error> {
501 if let Some(peer) = self.peer_by_name(name).await? {
502 return Ok(Some(peer.tailnet_address.ipv4.addr()));
503 }
504
505 // tsnet's dnsMap also resolves our own name; fall back to self when no peer matches.
506 let me = self.self_node().await?;
507 if me.matches_name(name) {
508 return Ok(Some(me.tailnet_address.ipv4.addr()));
509 }
510
511 Ok(None)
512 }
513
514 /// Connect to a tailnet peer by MagicDNS name and port over TCP.
515 ///
516 /// Resolves `name` via [`Device::resolve`] (an in-process netmap lookup, no DNS server), then
517 /// dials the resulting tailnet IPv4 address. Returns [`InternalErrorKind::BadRequest`] if the
518 /// name does not resolve to a tailnet node.
519 pub async fn connect_by_name(
520 &self,
521 name: &str,
522 port: u16,
523 ) -> Result<netstack::TcpStream, Error> {
524 let addr = self
525 .resolve(name)
526 .await?
527 .ok_or(Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::BadRequest))?;
528
529 self.tcp_connect((addr, port).into()).await
530 }
531
532 /// Resolve a `host:port` string to a tailnet [`SocketAddr`], honoring the family forced by a
533 /// `network` suffix. The host may be an IP literal (parsed directly) or a MagicDNS name
534 /// (resolved via [`Device::resolve`], which yields a tailnet IPv4). Shared by [`Device::dial`]
535 /// and [`Device::dial_tcp`]. The IPv4-only invariant is enforced here: a `…6` network, or any v6
536 /// destination, requires `Config::enable_ipv6` and otherwise returns
537 /// [`InternalErrorKind::BadRequest`] (a clean typed error rather than a downstream actor error).
538 async fn resolve_dial_addr(
539 &self,
540 network: dial::Network,
541 addr: &str,
542 ) -> Result<SocketAddr, Error> {
543 let (host, port) = dial::split_host_port(addr)?;
544
545 // An IP literal is used directly; otherwise resolve the MagicDNS name (IPv4 only).
546 let ip: IpAddr = if let Ok(ip) = host.parse::<IpAddr>() {
547 ip
548 } else {
549 self.resolve(host)
550 .await?
551 .ok_or(Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::BadRequest))?
552 .into()
553 };
554
555 dial::check_family(network.family, ip)?;
556
557 // IPv4-only invariant: a v6 destination is only reachable when IPv6 is provisioned.
558 if ip.is_ipv6() && !self.enable_ipv6 {
559 return Err(Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::BadRequest));
560 }
561
562 Ok((ip, port).into())
563 }
564
565 /// Connect to a tailnet address over TCP or UDP, the Rust analog of Go
566 /// `tsnet.Server.Dial(ctx, network, address)`.
567 ///
568 /// `network` is one of `"tcp"`, `"tcp4"`, `"tcp6"`, `"udp"`, `"udp4"`, `"udp6"`; `addr` is a
569 /// `host:port` string where `host` is a MagicDNS name, an IPv4 literal, or a bracketed IPv6
570 /// literal (`[2001:db8::1]:443`). The host is resolved in-process via [`Device::resolve`] (no DNS
571 /// server). Returns a [`DialConn`] whose arm matches the transport — use [`Device::dial_tcp`]
572 /// when you want the TCP stream directly.
573 ///
574 /// Differences from Go (documented for parity): ports must be **numeric** (Go's `LookupPort`
575 /// also resolves named ports like `"http"`; this fork avoids a services-file dependency), and
576 /// `…6`/v6 destinations require `Config::enable_ipv6` (the tailnet is IPv4-only by default).
577 ///
578 /// # Errors
579 /// [`InternalErrorKind::BadRequest`] for an unsupported `network`, a malformed/portless `addr`,
580 /// an unresolvable name, or a v6 destination while IPv6 is disabled; otherwise the transport's
581 /// own connect error.
582 pub async fn dial(&self, network: &str, addr: &str) -> Result<DialConn, Error> {
583 let net = dial::parse_network(network)?;
584 let remote = self.resolve_dial_addr(net, addr).await?;
585
586 match net.transport {
587 dial::Transport::Tcp => Ok(DialConn::Tcp(self.tcp_connect(remote).await?)),
588 dial::Transport::Udp => {
589 // Bind an ephemeral local UDP socket on this node's tailnet address of the SAME
590 // family as the remote, then connect it (Go's `Dial("udp", …)` returns a connected
591 // UDP `net.Conn`, with the local source picked by `IfElse(dst.Is6(), v6, v4)`). A v4
592 // local socket cannot send to a v6 peer, so the family must match `remote`. (TCP gets
593 // this for free: `tcp_connect` already picks the source family from `remote`.)
594 let local_ip: IpAddr = if remote.is_ipv6() {
595 self.ipv6_addr().await?.into()
596 } else {
597 self.ipv4_addr().await?.into()
598 };
599 let sock = self.udp_bind((local_ip, 0).into()).await?;
600 Ok(DialConn::Udp(ConnectedUdpSocket::new(sock, remote)))
601 }
602 }
603 }
604
605 /// Connect to a tailnet address over TCP, returning the stream directly — the common case of
606 /// [`Device::dial`] for `"tcp"`. `addr` is a `host:port` string (MagicDNS name or IP literal).
607 /// This is the building block for HTTP-over-tailnet: an embedder's `hyper`/`reqwest` client can
608 /// route requests by calling `dial_tcp(&format!("{host}:{port}"))` from its connector, mirroring
609 /// how Go `tsnet.Server.HTTPClient` sets `http.Transport.DialContext = Server.Dial`.
610 ///
611 /// # Errors
612 /// As [`Device::dial`] for the `"tcp"` network.
613 pub async fn dial_tcp(&self, addr: &str) -> Result<netstack::TcpStream, Error> {
614 let remote = self
615 .resolve_dial_addr(
616 dial::Network {
617 transport: dial::Transport::Tcp,
618 family: dial::Family::Any,
619 },
620 addr,
621 )
622 .await?;
623 self.tcp_connect(remote).await
624 }
625
626 /// Connect to a tailnet address over UDP, returning a connected socket directly — the `"udp"`
627 /// sibling of [`dial_tcp`](Device::dial_tcp) and the common case of [`Device::dial`] for
628 /// `"udp"`. `addr` is a `host:port` string (MagicDNS name or IP literal).
629 ///
630 /// Returns a [`ConnectedUdpSocket`] (`send`/`recv` against a fixed peer), the connected
631 /// UDP-`net.Conn` shape Go's `tsnet.Server.Dial("udp", …)` returns — as opposed to
632 /// [`listen_packet`](Device::listen_packet), which yields an unconnected `net.PacketConn`. An
633 /// ephemeral local UDP socket is bound on this node's tailnet address of the same family as the
634 /// resolved remote (a v4 local socket cannot send to a v6 peer).
635 ///
636 /// # Errors
637 /// As [`Device::dial`] for the `"udp"` network (name resolution, the IPv4-only / `enable_ipv6`
638 /// family invariant, or TUN transport mode having no application netstack to bind on).
639 pub async fn dial_udp(&self, addr: &str) -> Result<ConnectedUdpSocket, Error> {
640 let remote = self
641 .resolve_dial_addr(
642 dial::Network {
643 transport: dial::Transport::Udp,
644 family: dial::Family::Any,
645 },
646 addr,
647 )
648 .await?;
649 let local_ip: IpAddr = if remote.is_ipv6() {
650 self.ipv6_addr().await?.into()
651 } else {
652 self.ipv4_addr().await?.into()
653 };
654 let sock = self.udp_bind((local_ip, 0).into()).await?;
655 Ok(ConnectedUdpSocket::new(sock, remote))
656 }
657
658 /// Bind a UDP socket from a `host:port` string, the Rust analog of Go
659 /// `tsnet.Server.ListenPacket(network, addr)`.
660 ///
661 /// `network` is one of `"udp"`, `"udp4"`, `"udp6"`; `addr` must be a **valid IP literal**
662 /// `host:port` (Go's `ListenPacket` rejects a name or empty host — unlike `Listen`). An
663 /// unspecified host (`0.0.0.0`/`[::]`) binds on this node's tailnet address. Returns the
664 /// unconnected [`netstack::UdpSocket`] (a `net.PacketConn`).
665 ///
666 /// # Errors
667 /// [`InternalErrorKind::BadRequest`] for a non-UDP/unsupported `network`, a malformed addr, a
668 /// non-IP host, a family mismatch, or a v6 bind while IPv6 is disabled.
669 pub async fn listen_packet(
670 &self,
671 network: &str,
672 addr: &str,
673 ) -> Result<netstack::UdpSocket, Error> {
674 let net = dial::parse_network(network)?;
675 if net.transport != dial::Transport::Udp {
676 return Err(Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::BadRequest));
677 }
678 let (host, port) = dial::split_host_port(addr)?;
679
680 // ListenPacket requires a valid IP host (Go rejects a name here).
681 let ip: IpAddr = host
682 .parse()
683 .map_err(|_| Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::BadRequest))?;
684 dial::check_family(net.family, ip)?;
685
686 // A v6 bind (whether an explicit literal or an unspecified `[::]`) requires IPv6 to be
687 // provisioned — enforce the gate for BOTH cases (the unspecified `[::]` path used to skip it).
688 if ip.is_ipv6() && !self.enable_ipv6 {
689 return Err(Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::BadRequest));
690 }
691
692 // An unspecified bind host (`0.0.0.0` / `[::]`) means "this node's tailnet address" — of the
693 // SAME family as the requested address, so a `udp6` `[::]:0` binds a v6 socket (it used to
694 // fall through to the v4 address regardless, silently yielding an IPv4 socket for a v6 listen).
695 let bind_ip: IpAddr = if ip.is_unspecified() {
696 if ip.is_ipv6() {
697 self.ipv6_addr().await?.into()
698 } else {
699 self.ipv4_addr().await?.into()
700 }
701 } else {
702 ip
703 };
704
705 self.udp_bind((bind_ip, port).into()).await
706 }
707
708 /// Connect to a TCP socket at the remote address.
709 ///
710 /// Returns an error in TUN transport mode (there is no application netstack to dial from).
711 pub async fn tcp_connect(&self, remote: SocketAddr) -> Result<netstack::TcpStream, Error> {
712 let channel = self.channel()?;
713
714 let ip: IpAddr = match remote.is_ipv4() {
715 true => self.ipv4_addr().await?.into(),
716 false => self.ipv6_addr().await?.into(),
717 };
718
719 // TODO(npry): collision checking
720 let ephemeral_port = rand::random_range(49152..=u16::MAX);
721
722 channel
723 .tcp_connect((ip, ephemeral_port).into(), remote)
724 .await
725 .map_err(Into::into)
726 }
727
728 /// Start a SOCKS5 proxy on a host loopback address that dials into the tailnet (Go
729 /// `tsnet.Server.Loopback`, SOCKS5 half).
730 ///
731 /// Binds a TCP listener on `127.0.0.1:0` (host loopback only — never an external interface) and
732 /// serves SOCKS5 (RFC 1928) with required username/password auth (RFC 1929): username `tsnet`,
733 /// password = the returned `proxy_cred`. Each `CONNECT` is dialed INTO the overlay via
734 /// [`Device::connect_by_name`] / [`Device::tcp_connect`] and spliced to the accepted host socket, so
735 /// a non-Rust host process can reach tailnet peers through the proxy. Returns the bound address, the
736 /// proxy credential, and a [`LoopbackHandle`] whose drop stops the listener.
737 ///
738 /// Anti-leak: the listener is loopback-only and every connection egresses over the overlay, never a
739 /// host socket — the host's real origin IP is never used to reach the destination. Unlike Go, the
740 /// LocalAPI HTTP surface is not served (this fork exposes status/whois/id-token natively on
741 /// `Device`); only the SOCKS5 proxy is provided.
742 ///
743 /// Returns an error in TUN transport mode (no application netstack to dial from).
744 pub async fn loopback(&self) -> Result<(std::net::SocketAddr, String, LoopbackHandle), Error> {
745 // Capture only cloneable pieces — never `&self` — for the spawned accept loop: a clone of the
746 // netstack command channel, this device's own overlay IPv4 (fetched once), and a boxed
747 // resolver closure over clones of the control + peer-tracker actor refs. The resolver
748 // replicates `Device::resolve` (peer-by-name, falling back to this node's own name).
749 let channel = self.channel()?.clone();
750 let self_ipv4 = self.ipv4_addr().await?;
751
752 let control = self.runtime.control.clone();
753 let peer_tracker = self.runtime.peer_tracker.clone();
754 let resolve: loopback::Resolver = std::sync::Arc::new(move |name: String| {
755 let control = control.clone();
756 let peer_tracker = peer_tracker.clone();
757 Box::pin(async move {
758 let pt = peer_tracker
759 .upgrade()
760 .ok_or(Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::Actor))?;
761 let peer = pt
762 .ask(ts_runtime::peer_tracker::PeerByName { name: name.clone() })
763 .await
764 .map_err(ts_runtime::Error::from)?;
765 if let Some(peer) = peer {
766 return Ok(Some(peer.tailnet_address.ipv4.addr()));
767 }
768 // tsnet's dnsMap also resolves our own name; fall back to self.
769 let me = control
770 .ask(ts_runtime::control_runner::SelfNode)
771 .await
772 .map_err(ts_runtime::Error::from)?
773 .ok_or(Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::Actor))?;
774 if me.matches_name(&name) {
775 Ok(Some(me.tailnet_address.ipv4.addr()))
776 } else {
777 Ok(None)
778 }
779 }) as std::pin::Pin<Box<dyn std::future::Future<Output = _> + Send>>
780 });
781
782 let dialer = loopback::OverlayDialer::new(channel, self_ipv4, resolve);
783 loopback::start(dialer).await
784 }
785
786 /// Get our node info.
787 pub async fn self_node(&self) -> Result<NodeInfo, Error> {
788 self.runtime
789 .control
790 .ask(ts_runtime::control_runner::SelfNode)
791 .await
792 .map_err(ts_runtime::Error::from)?
793 .ok_or(Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::Actor))
794 }
795
796 /// The DNS names this node can obtain TLS certificates for — Go `tsnet.Server.CertDomains()`.
797 ///
798 /// These are the `CertDomains` control pushed in the netmap DNS config: the names a TLS-serving
799 /// consumer (e.g. a `ListenTLS`/`GetCertificate`-style caller) should request a cert for. Returns
800 /// an empty `Vec` before the first netmap, or when control granted none — mirroring Go returning a
801 /// clone of `nm.DNS.CertDomains` (empty/`nil` when absent).
802 pub async fn cert_domains(&self) -> Result<Vec<String>, Error> {
803 self.runtime
804 .control
805 .ask(ts_runtime::control_runner::CertDomains)
806 .await
807 .map_err(ts_runtime::Error::from)
808 .map_err(Into::into)
809 }
810
811 /// The DNS configuration control pushed in the latest netmap — Go `tsnet`'s view of
812 /// `netmap.NetworkMap.DNS` (what `tailscale dns status` reports).
813 ///
814 /// Returns the full [`DnsConfig`] — MagicDNS on/off, search domains, global + fallback resolvers,
815 /// split-DNS routes, extra records, cert domains — or `None` before the first netmap / when
816 /// control has sent no DNS config. A superset of [`cert_domains`](Device::cert_domains), which
817 /// remains a separate narrower accessor for the TLS-cert use. Mirrors Go reading a clone of
818 /// `nm.DNS` (absent ⇒ `None`).
819 pub async fn dns_config(&self) -> Result<Option<DnsConfig>, Error> {
820 self.runtime
821 .control
822 .ask(ts_runtime::control_runner::DnsConfig)
823 .await
824 .map_err(ts_runtime::Error::from)
825 .map_err(Into::into)
826 }
827
828 /// The URL control last asked this node to open in a browser (`MapResponse.PopBrowserURL`), or
829 /// `None` if control has never sent one.
830 ///
831 /// This is the interactive-login / consent URL an embedder driving a non-authkey (interactive)
832 /// login must surface to the user — the Rust analog of Go `ipn` delivering `BrowseToURL` through
833 /// the notification bus. A daemon polls this after starting an interactive login to obtain the
834 /// auth URL to present.
835 ///
836 /// **Sticky semantics** (Go `controlclient`'s `sess.lastPopBrowserURL`): once control sends a
837 /// URL it remains the returned value until control sends a *different* non-empty one — it is
838 /// **never cleared back to `None`** (control sends `PopBrowserURL` empty on nearly every netmap
839 /// tick; those empty updates are ignored, not treated as "clear"). So a non-`None` result does
840 /// **not** signal "control is asking *right now*" vs. "already handled" — it is the last URL
841 /// seen this session. A consumer that acts on it should de-duplicate on the URL value rather than
842 /// re-acting on every poll. For a push stream of *new* consent URLs (rather than polling this
843 /// sticky value), subscribe to [`watch_ipn_bus`](Self::watch_ipn_bus) and react to
844 /// [`Notify::browse_to_url`](crate::Notify::browse_to_url).
845 pub async fn pop_browser_url(&self) -> Result<Option<Url>, Error> {
846 self.runtime
847 .control
848 .ask(ts_runtime::control_runner::PopBrowserUrl)
849 .await
850 .map_err(ts_runtime::Error::from)
851 .map_err(Into::into)
852 }
853
854 /// This node's latest network-conditions report — the Rust analog of Go's `netcheck.Report` as
855 /// `tailscale netcheck` surfaces it.
856 ///
857 /// Returns the [`NetcheckReport`]: the preferred (lowest-latency) DERP region and the per-region
858 /// latency map this node last measured. Empty (default) before the first measurement. This fork's
859 /// net-report path measures only DERP-region latency, so the report carries that subset rather
860 /// than fabricating the UDP/port-mapping fields Go also reports (see [`NetcheckReport`]).
861 pub async fn netcheck(&self) -> Result<NetcheckReport, Error> {
862 self.runtime
863 .control
864 .ask(ts_runtime::control_runner::Netcheck)
865 .await
866 .map_err(ts_runtime::Error::from)
867 .map_err(Into::into)
868 }
869
870 /// This node's key-expiry instant as Unix seconds (`Node.KeyExpiry` in Go), or `Ok(None)` if
871 /// the key never expires.
872 ///
873 /// Like Go, this fork is **reactive** about key expiry — it reports it rather than rotating the
874 /// node key in the background. A caller can schedule re-authentication around this time; on
875 /// expiry, re-create the [`Device`] (which re-registers), supplying a fresh node key + the prior
876 /// `old_node_key` to rotate, or the same key to refresh.
877 pub async fn self_key_expiry_unix(&self) -> Result<Option<i64>, Error> {
878 Ok(self.self_node().await?.key_expiry_unix())
879 }
880
881 /// Whether this node's key has expired as of now (`!KeyExpiry.IsZero() && KeyExpiry.Before(now)`
882 /// in Go). A key with no expiry is never expired. See [`Device::self_key_expiry_unix`] for the
883 /// reactive-rotation note.
884 pub async fn self_key_expired(&self) -> Result<bool, Error> {
885 let now = std::time::SystemTime::now()
886 .duration_since(std::time::UNIX_EPOCH)
887 .map(|d| d.as_secs() as i64)
888 // An unreadable clock (pre-epoch) is treated as the far future so a time-limited key
889 // looks expired — fail-safe toward prompting re-auth rather than trusting a stale key.
890 .unwrap_or(i64::MAX);
891 Ok(self.self_node().await?.key_expired_at_unix(now))
892 }
893
894 /// Fetch the current Tailscale SSH policy pushed by control, if any.
895 ///
896 /// Returns `Ok(None)` when control has not sent an SSH policy. The SSH server treats an absent
897 /// or empty policy as **deny-all** (fail-closed). Used by the SSH auth path
898 /// ([`SshPolicy::evaluate`][ts_control::SshPolicy::evaluate]) to authorize incoming
899 /// connections.
900 pub async fn ssh_policy(&self) -> Result<Option<ts_control::SshPolicy>, Error> {
901 self.runtime
902 .control
903 .ask(ts_runtime::control_runner::CurrentSshPolicy)
904 .await
905 .map_err(ts_runtime::Error::from)
906 .map_err(Into::into)
907 }
908
909 /// Look up a peer by name.
910 pub async fn peer_by_name(&self, name: &str) -> Result<Option<NodeInfo>, Error> {
911 let pt = self
912 .runtime
913 .peer_tracker
914 .upgrade()
915 .ok_or(Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::Actor))?;
916
917 pt.ask(ts_runtime::peer_tracker::PeerByName {
918 name: name.to_string(),
919 })
920 .await
921 .map_err(ts_runtime::Error::from)
922 .map_err(Into::into)
923 }
924
925 /// Look up a peer by ip.
926 pub async fn peer_by_tailnet_ip(&self, ip: IpAddr) -> Result<Option<NodeInfo>, Error> {
927 let pt = self
928 .runtime
929 .peer_tracker
930 .upgrade()
931 .ok_or(Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::Actor))?;
932
933 pt.ask(ts_runtime::peer_tracker::PeerByTailnetIp { ip })
934 .await
935 .map_err(ts_runtime::Error::from)
936 .map_err(Into::into)
937 }
938
939 /// Look up the peer(s) with the most-specific route matches for `ip`.
940 ///
941 /// This reports which peers *advertise* a route covering `ip`, independent of this device's
942 /// `accept_routes` setting — analogous to the Go client's informational `PrimaryRoutes`. It is
943 /// not a reachability oracle: with `accept_routes` off, the dataplane will not actually route
944 /// to (or accept return traffic from) advertised subnet routes even if this returns a peer.
945 pub async fn peers_with_route(&self, ip: IpAddr) -> Result<Vec<NodeInfo>, Error> {
946 let pt = self
947 .runtime
948 .peer_tracker
949 .upgrade()
950 .ok_or(Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::Actor))?;
951
952 pt.ask(ts_runtime::peer_tracker::PeerByAcceptedRoute { ip })
953 .await
954 .map_err(ts_runtime::Error::from)
955 .map_err(Into::into)
956 }
957
958 /// List the Taildrop files this device has fully received and not yet consumed (Go LocalAPI
959 /// `WaitingFiles`).
960 ///
961 /// Returns the files waiting under the configured `taildrop_dir`, sorted by name. Returns an
962 /// empty list when Taildrop is disabled (`Config::taildrop_dir` unset) — fail-closed, never an
963 /// error for the disabled case. A filesystem error while listing surfaces as
964 /// [`InternalErrorKind::Actor`].
965 pub fn taildrop_waiting_files(&self) -> Result<Vec<WaitingFile>, Error> {
966 let Some(store) = self.runtime.taildrop_store() else {
967 return Ok(Vec::new());
968 };
969 store
970 .waiting_files()
971 .map_err(|_| Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::Actor))
972 }
973
974 /// Open a received Taildrop file by name for reading, returning the handle and its size (Go
975 /// LocalAPI `OpenFile`).
976 ///
977 /// The `name` is validated (path-traversal-safe) inside the store before any path is built.
978 /// Returns [`InternalErrorKind::BadRequest`] when Taildrop is disabled or the name is invalid,
979 /// and [`InternalErrorKind::Actor`] for a filesystem error (e.g. the file does not exist).
980 pub fn taildrop_open_file(&self, name: &str) -> Result<(std::fs::File, u64), Error> {
981 let store = self
982 .runtime
983 .taildrop_store()
984 .ok_or(Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::BadRequest))?;
985 store.open_file(name).map_err(taildrop_err)
986 }
987
988 /// Delete a received Taildrop file by name (Go LocalAPI `DeleteFile`).
989 ///
990 /// The `name` is validated (path-traversal-safe) inside the store before any path is built.
991 /// Returns [`InternalErrorKind::BadRequest`] when Taildrop is disabled or the name is invalid,
992 /// and [`InternalErrorKind::Actor`] for a filesystem error (e.g. the file does not exist).
993 pub fn taildrop_delete_file(&self, name: &str) -> Result<(), Error> {
994 let store = self
995 .runtime
996 .taildrop_store()
997 .ok_or(Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::BadRequest))?;
998 store.delete_file(name).map_err(taildrop_err)
999 }
1000
1001 /// Send a local file to a tailnet `peer` via Taildrop (Go `PushFile` / `tailscale file cp`).
1002 ///
1003 /// Pushes `content_length` bytes from `reader` to the peer's peerAPI as
1004 /// `PUT /v0/put/<name>` over the overlay netstack — the sending counterpart to the receive store
1005 /// surfaced by [`Device::taildrop_waiting_files`]. The transfer rides the encrypted WireGuard
1006 /// overlay, never a host socket. The body is streamed from offset 0 (no resume).
1007 ///
1008 /// The destination is derived **solely from `peer`'s own node record**
1009 /// ([`NodeInfo::peerapi_addr`][ts_control::Node::peerapi_addr]): its advertised tailnet IPv4 and
1010 /// `peerapi4` port. The caller obtains `peer` from [`Device::peer_by_name`] /
1011 /// [`Device::peer_by_tailnet_ip`], so it is always a current netmap peer — a raw control-supplied
1012 /// or attacker-chosen address can never be targeted. As defense in depth, the resolved address is
1013 /// additionally asserted to be a Tailscale CGNAT IP before dialing.
1014 ///
1015 /// Returns [`InternalErrorKind::BadRequest`] when the peer advertises no IPv4 peerAPI (so it
1016 /// cannot receive files), when the name is invalid, or when the peer refuses the transfer
1017 /// (`403`/`409`/unexpected status); [`Error::Timeout`] on a dial failure or timeout; and
1018 /// [`InternalErrorKind::Io`] on a mid-transfer stream error.
1019 pub async fn send_file<R>(
1020 &self,
1021 peer: &NodeInfo,
1022 name: &str,
1023 content_length: u64,
1024 reader: R,
1025 ) -> Result<(), Error>
1026 where
1027 R: tokio::io::AsyncRead + Unpin,
1028 {
1029 let channel = self.channel()?;
1030
1031 // Destination comes only from the peer's own node record — never an arbitrary address.
1032 let dst = peer
1033 .peerapi_addr()
1034 .ok_or(Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::BadRequest))?;
1035 // Defense in depth: refuse to dial anything outside the Tailscale CGNAT range, so a
1036 // malformed node record can't steer the PUT at a non-tailnet host.
1037 if !ts_control::is_tailscale_ip(dst.ip()) {
1038 return Err(Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::BadRequest));
1039 }
1040
1041 let self_ipv4 = self.ipv4_addr().await?;
1042
1043 ts_runtime::taildrop_send::send_file(channel, self_ipv4, dst, name, content_length, reader)
1044 .await
1045 .map_err(taildrop_send_err)
1046 }
1047
1048 /// List the tailnet peers this node can Taildrop a file *to* — the Rust analog of Go's LocalAPI
1049 /// `FileTargets`.
1050 ///
1051 /// Each [`FileTarget`] pairs a peer's node record with the `http://ip:port` base of its peerAPI;
1052 /// pass `target.node` straight to [`Device::send_file`]. A peer qualifies when it advertises a
1053 /// reachable IPv4 peerAPI **and** is either owned by the same user as this node **or** explicitly
1054 /// granted the file-sharing-target capability — mirroring upstream's send-path filter. The list is
1055 /// gated on this node holding the file-sharing capability (control grants it when the admin
1056 /// enables Taildrop); absent that, the result is empty (fail-closed, not an error). Sorted by the
1057 /// peer's MagicDNS name. Targets are listed regardless of online state (matching upstream — an
1058 /// offline target's [`send_file`](Device::send_file) simply times out). Empty before the first
1059 /// netmap.
1060 pub async fn file_targets(&self) -> Result<Vec<FileTarget>, Error> {
1061 self.runtime.file_targets().await.map_err(Into::into)
1062 }
1063
1064 /// Begin a debug packet capture, streaming a pcap of every packet crossing the dataplane to
1065 /// `writer` (Go `tsnet.Server.CapturePcap`).
1066 ///
1067 /// Installs a capture hook on the running dataplane: from now until [`Device::stop_capture`] is
1068 /// called (or another capture replaces this one), a copy of every plaintext IP packet on the
1069 /// datapath — outbound (pre-encrypt) and inbound (post-decrypt) — is framed and written to
1070 /// `writer`. The 24-byte pcap global header is written immediately on success.
1071 ///
1072 /// The format is byte-faithful classic pcap with Tailscale's `LINKTYPE_USER0` + 4-byte path
1073 /// preamble per record (see [`ts_runtime::capture`]); a resulting file opens in Wireshark, and
1074 /// with Tailscale's `ts-dissector.lua` the direction/path of each packet decodes.
1075 ///
1076 /// The hook runs **inline on the single-threaded dataplane step**, so `writer` must not block for
1077 /// long — a slow writer back-pressures the datapath. Records are **not** flushed per packet (that
1078 /// would be a syscall on every packet on the dataplane thread); buffered bytes are flushed when
1079 /// the writer is dropped on [`Device::stop_capture`]. Wrap `writer` in a [`std::io::BufWriter`] if
1080 /// you want buffering. A write error is swallowed per-packet (the capture silently drops that
1081 /// record) rather than tearing down the datapath; call [`Device::stop_capture`] to end it. Returns
1082 /// an error only if the dataplane actor is unreachable or the initial global-header write fails.
1083 pub async fn capture_pcap<W>(&self, writer: W) -> Result<(), Error>
1084 where
1085 W: std::io::Write + Send + 'static,
1086 {
1087 let sink = std::sync::Arc::new(std::sync::Mutex::new(
1088 ts_runtime::capture::PcapSink::new(writer)
1089 .map_err(|_| Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::Io))?,
1090 ));
1091 let hook: ts_runtime::CaptureHook = std::sync::Arc::new(move |path, pkt: &[u8]| {
1092 if let Ok(mut sink) = sink.lock() {
1093 // A per-packet write failure (e.g. a closed pipe) silently drops that record rather
1094 // than tearing down the datapath; the caller ends capture via `stop_capture`.
1095 drop(sink.log_packet(path.code(), pkt));
1096 }
1097 });
1098 self.runtime.install_capture(Some(hook)).await?;
1099 Ok(())
1100 }
1101
1102 /// Stop a debug packet capture started by [`Device::capture_pcap`] (Go `ClearCaptureSink`).
1103 ///
1104 /// Clears the dataplane capture hook; the writer is dropped (its remaining buffered bytes are
1105 /// flushed by its own `Drop`). Idempotent — clearing when no capture is installed is a no-op.
1106 /// Returns an error only if the dataplane actor is unreachable.
1107 pub async fn stop_capture(&self) -> Result<(), Error> {
1108 self.runtime.install_capture(None).await?;
1109 Ok(())
1110 }
1111
1112 /// Snapshot of this device and its tailnet peers (like `tailscale status`).
1113 ///
1114 /// Combines this node's self info with the current peer set: each [`StatusNode`] reports the
1115 /// stable id, display name, tailnet IPs, advertised routes, and exit-node flag. (Per-peer
1116 /// `online`/user/capabilities are honestly `None`/empty in this fork — the domain node model
1117 /// does not yet carry the wire-level liveness/login fields; see `ts_runtime::status` docs.)
1118 pub async fn status(&self) -> Result<Status, Error> {
1119 self.runtime.status().await.map_err(Into::into)
1120 }
1121
1122 /// Fetch the current Tailnet Lock (TKA) status pushed by control, if any.
1123 ///
1124 /// Returns `Ok(None)` when control has sent no `TKAInfo` (tailnet lock not in use, or no change
1125 /// observed yet). The returned [`TkaStatus`][ts_control::TkaStatus] carries the authority head
1126 /// (a base32 `AUMHash`, decode with [`tka::AumHash::from_base32`][ts_tka::AumHash::from_base32])
1127 /// and the disablement signal. Signature verification of a peer's node-key signature against the
1128 /// authority is performed with the [`tka`] module's [`tka::Authority`][ts_tka::Authority].
1129 pub async fn tka_status(&self) -> Result<Option<ts_control::TkaStatus>, Error> {
1130 self.runtime
1131 .control
1132 .ask(ts_runtime::control_runner::CurrentTkaStatus)
1133 .await
1134 .map_err(ts_runtime::Error::from)
1135 .map_err(Into::into)
1136 }
1137
1138 /// Request an OIDC **ID token** from control for this node, scoped to `audience` (workload-
1139 /// identity federation, like `tailscale`'s `id-token` LocalAPI).
1140 ///
1141 /// Returns a signed JWT whose `sub` claim is this node's MagicDNS name and whose `aud` claim is
1142 /// `audience`, suitable for presenting to a third-party relying party (e.g. AWS/GCP
1143 /// workload-identity federation). The node is the token *subject*, not the authenticator — this
1144 /// is token issuance over the Noise transport (`POST /machine/id-token`), not a login path.
1145 /// Requires the control plane to support capability version ≥ 30.
1146 pub async fn fetch_id_token(&self, audience: &str) -> Result<String, ts_control::IdTokenError> {
1147 self.runtime.fetch_id_token(audience.to_string()).await
1148 }
1149
1150 /// Publish a `TXT` DNS record for this node into the tailnet's `ts.net` zone via control's
1151 /// `/machine/set-dns` RPC — the Rust analog of Go `tailscale.com/client/tailscale`'s
1152 /// `LocalClient.SetDNS(ctx, name, value)`.
1153 ///
1154 /// `name` is the full record name (e.g. `_acme-challenge.host.tailnet.ts.net`) and `value` is
1155 /// the record value (e.g. the base64url DNS-01 digest). Like Go's `SetDNS`, this publishes a
1156 /// `TXT` record specifically — its canonical use is satisfying an ACME DNS-01 challenge so a CA
1157 /// can verify control of a `*.ts.net` name. Issuance over the Noise transport (`POST
1158 /// /machine/set-dns`), not a login path.
1159 pub async fn set_dns(&self, name: &str, value: &str) -> Result<(), ts_control::SetDnsError> {
1160 self.runtime
1161 .set_dns(name.to_string(), value.to_string())
1162 .await
1163 }
1164
1165 /// Log this node out of the tailnet — deregister it from the control plane (the equivalent of
1166 /// Go `tsnet`'s `LocalClient.Logout`).
1167 ///
1168 /// Re-`POST`s `/machine/register` with this node's current node key and a past expiry, which the
1169 /// control plane honors by **expiring the node now**: it drops out of every peer's netmap and
1170 /// must re-register (re-authenticate) to rejoin.
1171 ///
1172 /// This is primarily for **non-ephemeral** nodes. An ephemeral node is garbage-collected by
1173 /// control shortly after it disconnects, but a persistent node lingers in the tailnet
1174 /// (visible to peers, counting against the machine limit) for up to ~24h after the process exits
1175 /// unless explicitly logged out. Call this before [`shutdown`](Self::shutdown) to deregister
1176 /// immediately. Calling it on an ephemeral node simply brings the GC forward; it is idempotent,
1177 /// so logging out an already-gone node is not an error.
1178 ///
1179 /// This is a **control-plane state change only**: it does not tear down the local datapath (do
1180 /// that via [`shutdown`](Self::shutdown)), and it does not delete or rotate the on-disk node key
1181 /// — re-registering with the same key (a fresh [`Device::new`]) is the re-login path.
1182 pub async fn logout(&self) -> Result<(), ts_control::LogoutError> {
1183 self.runtime.logout().await
1184 }
1185
1186 /// Snapshot this node's client metrics in Prometheus text exposition format.
1187 ///
1188 /// Mirrors Go Tailscale's `clientmetric` registry: process-global counters/gauges incremented
1189 /// on the datapath hot loops (e.g. `magicsock_send_udp`, `magicsock_recv_data_bytes_udp`),
1190 /// rendered as `# TYPE <name> <kind>\n<name> <value>\n` per metric, sorted by name. (Go `tsnet`
1191 /// exposes no metrics method of its own, so this is the fork's clean public surface.) The
1192 /// registry is process-global, so the output covers every `Device` in the process.
1193 pub fn metrics(&self) -> String {
1194 ts_metrics::write_prometheus()
1195 }
1196
1197 /// Map a tailnet source `addr` to the node that owns its IP (like `tsnet`'s `WhoIs`).
1198 ///
1199 /// Only the IP of `addr` is used; the port is ignored. Returns `Ok(None)` if no tailnet node
1200 /// owns that address.
1201 pub async fn whois(&self, addr: SocketAddr) -> Result<Option<WhoIs>, Error> {
1202 self.runtime.whois(addr).await.map_err(Into::into)
1203 }
1204
1205 /// Change the selected exit node at runtime, without recreating the [`Device`] — the equivalent
1206 /// of Go `tsnet`'s `LocalClient.EditPrefs(ExitNodeID/ExitNodeIP)`.
1207 ///
1208 /// The peer may be named by stable node ID, tailnet IP, or MagicDNS name via
1209 /// [`ExitNodeSelector`] (a bare IP or name parses with `selector.parse()`); this is the same
1210 /// selector type as [`Config::exit_node`](crate::Config::exit_node), so the construction-time
1211 /// and runtime paths are identical. Passing `None` clears the exit node — internet-bound traffic
1212 /// is then dropped (fail-closed) unless this node egresses directly.
1213 ///
1214 /// The change is applied immediately: the new selector is re-resolved against the live peer set
1215 /// and the outbound route + inbound source filter are recomputed at once. A selector for a peer
1216 /// not yet in the netmap simply takes effect once that peer appears.
1217 ///
1218 /// Only NEW flows use the changed exit; in-flight connections are not torn down and continue
1219 /// egressing via the previously-selected exit until they close.
1220 pub async fn set_exit_node(&self, exit_node: Option<ExitNodeSelector>) -> Result<(), Error> {
1221 self.runtime
1222 .set_exit_node(exit_node)
1223 .await
1224 .map_err(Into::into)
1225 }
1226
1227 /// The currently-selected exit node, or `None` if none is selected.
1228 pub fn exit_node(&self) -> Option<ExitNodeSelector> {
1229 self.runtime.exit_node()
1230 }
1231
1232 /// Toggle whether this node accepts peer-advertised subnet routes at runtime, without recreating
1233 /// the [`Device`] — the equivalent of Go `tsnet`'s `LocalClient.EditPrefs(RouteAll)` /
1234 /// `tailscale set --accept-routes`.
1235 ///
1236 /// This is a purely **local** preference: unlike [`set_advertise_routes`](Self::set_advertise_routes)
1237 /// it is never reported to control, so it only changes which peer-advertised subnet routes *this*
1238 /// node installs. The change is applied immediately — the outbound route table and the inbound
1239 /// source filter are recomputed together against the live peer set, so turning it on installs (and
1240 /// accepts traffic from) newly-accepted subnets and turning it off removes them from both in
1241 /// lock-step. A peer's own tailnet address is always reachable regardless; the exit-node default
1242 /// route is governed by [`set_exit_node`](Self::set_exit_node), not this flag.
1243 ///
1244 /// Only NEW flows are affected; in-flight connections are not torn down. In TUN transport mode the
1245 /// netstack data path honors the toggle immediately, but the host routing table is not re-steered
1246 /// until the device is rebuilt.
1247 pub async fn set_accept_routes(&self, accept: bool) -> Result<(), Error> {
1248 self.runtime
1249 .set_accept_routes(accept)
1250 .await
1251 .map_err(Into::into)
1252 }
1253
1254 /// Whether this node currently accepts peer-advertised subnet routes (`--accept-routes`).
1255 pub fn accept_routes(&self) -> bool {
1256 self.runtime.accept_routes()
1257 }
1258
1259 /// Toggle whether this node accepts the tailnet's DNS configuration at runtime, without
1260 /// recreating the [`Device`] — the equivalent of Go `tsnet`'s `LocalClient.EditPrefs(CorpDNS)` /
1261 /// `tailscale set --accept-dns`.
1262 ///
1263 /// Like [`set_accept_routes`](Self::set_accept_routes) this is a purely **local** preference,
1264 /// never reported to control. When `false`, the MagicDNS responder ignores the control-pushed DNS
1265 /// configuration and answers every query `REFUSED` (mirroring Go applying an empty `dns.Config`
1266 /// when `CorpDNS` is off), so the node can join the tailnet for connectivity without taking over
1267 /// its DNS. The change is applied immediately to the netstack responder and the peerAPI DoH server
1268 /// that shares its view; flipping it back to `true` restores serving from the still-current config
1269 /// (the config is only gated at the read site, never destroyed), so the OFF→ON restore is
1270 /// automatic.
1271 ///
1272 /// In TUN transport mode the in-datapath responder honors the toggle immediately, but the host
1273 /// resolver/route programming (which points the host at `100.100.100.100`) is applied once at
1274 /// device build and is not re-steered until the device is rebuilt.
1275 pub async fn set_accept_dns(&self, accept: bool) -> Result<(), Error> {
1276 self.runtime
1277 .set_accept_dns(accept)
1278 .await
1279 .map_err(Into::into)
1280 }
1281
1282 /// Whether this node currently accepts the tailnet's DNS configuration (`--accept-dns` / `CorpDNS`).
1283 pub fn accept_dns(&self) -> bool {
1284 self.runtime.accept_dns()
1285 }
1286
1287 /// Change the subnet routes this node advertises at runtime — Go `tailscale set
1288 /// --advertise-routes`. This is the runtime equivalent of
1289 /// [`Config::advertise_routes`](crate::Config::advertise_routes): the node re-advertises the
1290 /// prefixes to control (so it is granted the subnet-router role for them) AND starts forwarding
1291 /// them on the data path, applied together so the two never disagree.
1292 ///
1293 /// `routes` is filtered to the IPv4-only, deduplicated set this fork honors (IPv6 prefixes are
1294 /// dropped under the IPv6-off posture). This sets the explicit subnet prefixes only; it does not
1295 /// affect the exit-node `0.0.0.0/0` advertisement. Only NEW forwarded flows use the changed set;
1296 /// in-flight flows keep their existing routing until they close.
1297 pub async fn set_advertise_routes(&self, routes: Vec<ipnet::IpNet>) -> Result<(), Error> {
1298 self.runtime
1299 .set_advertise_routes(routes)
1300 .await
1301 .map_err(Into::into)
1302 }
1303
1304 /// Advertise (or stop advertising) this node as an **exit node** at runtime — Go `tailscale set
1305 /// --advertise-exit-node`. The runtime equivalent of
1306 /// [`Config::advertise_exit_node`](crate::Config::advertise_exit_node): when `enable` it adds the
1307 /// `0.0.0.0/0` default route to what this node advertises (and forwards), when `false` it removes
1308 /// it.
1309 ///
1310 /// Composes with [`set_advertise_routes`](Device::set_advertise_routes): the explicit subnet
1311 /// routes and the exit-node advertisement are independent — toggling one preserves the other.
1312 /// Advertising an exit node only makes this node *eligible*; control + the peer still decide
1313 /// whether to route through it. Only NEW forwarded flows see the change; in-flight flows keep
1314 /// their routing.
1315 pub async fn set_advertise_exit_node(&self, enable: bool) -> Result<(), Error> {
1316 self.runtime
1317 .set_advertise_exit_node(enable)
1318 .await
1319 .map_err(Into::into)
1320 }
1321
1322 /// Change this node's hostname at runtime — Go `tailscale set --hostname`. Re-reports
1323 /// `Hostinfo.Hostname` to control on the live connection (no rebuild, no reconnect); control
1324 /// reflects the new name in the netmap (it drives the node's MagicDNS name / `tailscale status`
1325 /// display). Hostname is display metadata, so there is no data-path effect. The new value also
1326 /// persists across a later re-registration.
1327 pub async fn set_hostname(&self, hostname: String) -> Result<(), Error> {
1328 self.runtime
1329 .set_hostname(hostname)
1330 .await
1331 .map_err(Into::into)
1332 }
1333
1334 /// Re-bind the underlay UDP socket after a **network/link change** — Wi-Fi switch, sleep/wake,
1335 /// or any event that invalidates the device's local address/NAT mapping. This is the Rust
1336 /// analog of Go magicsock's `Conn.Rebind()`.
1337 ///
1338 /// The embedder owns deciding *when* to call this (it watches the OS for link changes — there is
1339 /// no built-in network monitor); `rebind` is the engine half that does the socket work:
1340 /// - Re-binds the underlay UDP socket, preferring the same local port (so the advertised
1341 /// endpoint stays stable) and falling back to an ephemeral port. The IPv4-only-by-default
1342 /// invariant is preserved.
1343 /// - Invalidates the now-stale local mapping: learned reflexive (STUN) addresses and every
1344 /// peer's *confirmed* direct path are cleared, while candidate endpoints are kept — so peers
1345 /// are re-probed over the new socket and **relay over DERP (never a direct host dial) until a
1346 /// path re-confirms**. Endpoint discovery re-runs on its normal cadence.
1347 /// - Leaves peers, control, the netmap, disco keys, and DERP connections untouched; existing
1348 /// WireGuard sessions survive (they ride whatever underlay carries them).
1349 ///
1350 /// A no-op if the underlay socket failed to bind at startup (the device is DERP-only). Existing
1351 /// connectivity is preserved on a re-bind error (the old socket is kept; the error is returned).
1352 pub async fn rebind(&self) -> Result<(), Error> {
1353 self.runtime.rebind().await.map_err(Into::into)
1354 }
1355
1356 /// The stable id of the exit node traffic is **currently** egressing through, or `None` if none
1357 /// is engaged (the equivalent of Go `tsnet`'s `Status.ExitNodeStatus.ID`).
1358 ///
1359 /// This differs from [`exit_node`](Self::exit_node), which returns the *configured* selector:
1360 /// the active exit node is the route updater's resolved, fail-closed answer. It is `None` when
1361 /// no exit node is configured, the configured selector matches no current peer, or the matched
1362 /// peer no longer advertises a default route (egress is then dropped, fail-closed). Match the id
1363 /// against [`Status::peers`](crate::Status::peers) (via [`status`](Self::status)) for details.
1364 pub fn active_exit_node(&self) -> Option<ts_control::StableNodeId> {
1365 self.runtime.active_exit_node()
1366 }
1367
1368 /// Watch for netmap changes: the returned receiver's value is the current set of peer
1369 /// [`StatusNode`]s and updates on every netmap change. This is the narrow peer-only view; for
1370 /// the unified Go-`WatchIPNBus` feed (peers + device-state + login URL in one stream) use
1371 /// [`watch_ipn_bus`](Self::watch_ipn_bus).
1372 pub async fn watch_netmap(
1373 &self,
1374 ) -> Result<tokio::sync::watch::Receiver<Vec<StatusNode>>, Error> {
1375 self.runtime.watch_netmap().await.map_err(Into::into)
1376 }
1377
1378 /// The current device connection-[`DeviceState`] (`Connecting` / `Running` / `NeedsLogin` /
1379 /// `Expired` / `Failed`).
1380 pub fn device_state(&self) -> DeviceState {
1381 self.runtime.device_state()
1382 }
1383
1384 /// Watch the device connection-[`DeviceState`], reacting push-style to control connection
1385 /// transitions instead of polling [`status`](Self::status).
1386 ///
1387 /// Returns a [`tokio::sync::watch::Receiver`]; await its
1388 /// [`changed`](tokio::sync::watch::Receiver::changed) to be woken on each transition. The
1389 /// initial value is the current state.
1390 pub fn watch_state(&self) -> tokio::sync::watch::Receiver<DeviceState> {
1391 self.runtime.watch_state()
1392 }
1393
1394 /// Subscribe to the unified IPN notification bus (Go `ipn`'s `WatchIPNBus`).
1395 ///
1396 /// Returns an [`IpnBusWatcher`]; await [`next`](IpnBusWatcher::next) to receive [`Notify`]
1397 /// events that merge device-[`DeviceState`] transitions (with the interactive-login URL surfaced
1398 /// as [`Notify::browse_to_url`]) and netmap peer-set changes into one feed — the single stream a
1399 /// consumer porting from Go's `WatchNotifications` expects, instead of composing
1400 /// [`watch_state`](Self::watch_state) and [`watch_netmap`](Self::watch_netmap) by hand. `mask`
1401 /// ([`NotifyWatchOpt`]) front-loads the current state as an initial snapshot on subscribe
1402 /// (`INITIAL_STATE` / `INITIAL_NETMAP`), mirroring Go's `NotifyInitialState` /
1403 /// `NotifyInitialNetMap`. Delivery is best-effort (a slow consumer drops notifications rather
1404 /// than stalling the runtime); the stream ends when the device shuts down.
1405 pub async fn watch_ipn_bus(&self, mask: NotifyWatchOpt) -> Result<IpnBusWatcher, Error> {
1406 self.runtime.watch_ipn_bus(mask).await.map_err(Into::into)
1407 }
1408
1409 /// Wait until the device finishes registering, returning a typed outcome — the clean
1410 /// replacement for polling [`ipv4_addr`](Self::ipv4_addr) in a loop.
1411 ///
1412 /// Resolves `Ok(())` once the device is [`DeviceState::Running`]. On a non-running outcome it
1413 /// returns a typed [`RegistrationError`]:
1414 /// - [`AuthRejected`](RegistrationError::AuthRejected) — bad/expired/unknown auth key;
1415 /// **permanent** (re-pair).
1416 /// - [`NeedsLogin`](RegistrationError::NeedsLogin) — interactive authorization required;
1417 /// **not permanent** (the runtime keeps retrying and reaches `Running` once the user
1418 /// authorizes). Auth-key callers treat this as failure; interactive callers should ignore it
1419 /// and drive the flow via [`watch_state`](Self::watch_state).
1420 /// - [`NetworkUnreachable`](RegistrationError::NetworkUnreachable) — **transient** (retry).
1421 /// - [`Timeout`](RegistrationError::Timeout) — no settled state within `timeout` (`None` waits
1422 /// indefinitely).
1423 ///
1424 /// [`KeyExpired`](RegistrationError::KeyExpired) is not produced here (a key expires only after
1425 /// the node is up); observe it via [`watch_state`](Self::watch_state). Use
1426 /// [`RegistrationError::is_permanent`] to branch "re-pair" vs. "retry / drive login".
1427 pub async fn wait_until_running(
1428 &self,
1429 timeout: Option<Duration>,
1430 ) -> Result<(), RegistrationError> {
1431 self.runtime.wait_until_running(timeout).await
1432 }
1433
1434 /// Ping a tailnet peer over the overlay with an ICMPv4 echo, returning the round-trip time
1435 /// (like `tailscale ping`).
1436 ///
1437 /// The echo is sent from this device's own tailnet IPv4 over the overlay netstack — never a
1438 /// host socket. IPv6 destinations return [`PingError::Ipv6Unsupported`] (this fork is
1439 /// IPv4-only on the tailnet). A peer answers from its own OS stack; this netstack does not
1440 /// auto-reply to echo requests.
1441 ///
1442 /// In TUN transport mode there is no application netstack to ping from; this surfaces as
1443 /// [`PingError::Timeout`] (the same error this method already uses for an unavailable source
1444 /// address — `PingError` carries no dedicated "unsupported" variant).
1445 pub async fn ping(&self, dst: IpAddr, timeout: Duration) -> Result<Duration, PingError> {
1446 let channel = self.channel().map_err(|_| PingError::Timeout)?;
1447 let src = self.ipv4_addr().await.map_err(|_| PingError::Timeout)?;
1448 ts_netstack_smoltcp::ping(channel, src, dst, timeout).await
1449 }
1450
1451 /// The current **direct path** to the peer at tailnet IP `dst`: its confirmed direct UDP
1452 /// endpoint and that path's last-measured round-trip latency, or `None` when traffic to the peer
1453 /// is **relayed via DERP** (no trusted direct path right now), the peer is unknown, or it has no
1454 /// disco key.
1455 ///
1456 /// This is the direct-path analog of Go's `tailscale ping`/`PeerStatus` connectivity: a present
1457 /// result means packets reach the peer directly at the returned address, with roughly the
1458 /// returned RTT. The latency is a live snapshot taken from the most recent disco ping/pong that
1459 /// confirmed the path (up to one probe interval stale) — not a fresh on-demand round-trip. Unlike
1460 /// [`ping`](Device::ping) (an ICMP echo over the netstack), this reports the *underlay* path the
1461 /// data plane actually uses, distinguishing a direct connection from a DERP-relayed one.
1462 pub async fn direct_path(&self, dst: IpAddr) -> Result<Option<(SocketAddr, Duration)>, Error> {
1463 self.runtime.direct_path(dst).await.map_err(Into::into)
1464 }
1465
1466 /// Send a disco ping to the peer at tailnet IP `dst` **now** and await the pong — a fresh,
1467 /// on-demand round-trip measurement (Go's `tailscale ping`, `PingType::Disco`). Returns the
1468 /// endpoint that answered and the measured RTT, or `None` if no pong arrives within `timeout`
1469 /// (or the peer is unknown / has no candidate direct path).
1470 ///
1471 /// Unlike [`direct_path`](Device::direct_path) — which reports the *last periodic probe's* RTT
1472 /// from cache — this actively sends a ping and waits for the reply, so the latency is current. A
1473 /// `None` here means "no direct path confirmed within the timeout" (the peer may still be
1474 /// reachable via DERP). Unlike [`ping`](Device::ping) (an ICMP echo over the netstack), this
1475 /// measures the disco/underlay path the data plane uses for direct connections.
1476 pub async fn ping_disco(
1477 &self,
1478 dst: IpAddr,
1479 timeout: Duration,
1480 ) -> Result<Option<(SocketAddr, Duration)>, Error> {
1481 self.runtime
1482 .ping_disco(dst, timeout)
1483 .await
1484 .map_err(Into::into)
1485 }
1486
1487 /// Obtain a TLS certificate for a node's MagicDNS `name` (like `tsnet`'s `GetCertificate`).
1488 ///
1489 /// **Fail-closed without the `acme` feature.** By default this fork has no client-side ACME
1490 /// engine wired in, so this returns [`ts_control::CertError::Unimplemented`] (after a
1491 /// tailnet-name check) — it NEVER self-signs and NEVER returns a placeholder certificate
1492 /// ([`ts_control::MISSING_CERT_RPC`] names what is missing).
1493 ///
1494 /// **With the `acme` feature** this instead drives the client-side ACME DNS-01 engine to issue a
1495 /// real Let's Encrypt certificate for `name`, publishing the challenge TXT via the node's
1496 /// `POST /machine/set-dns` RPC (routed through the control runner). SaaS-only: a self-hosted
1497 /// control plane may 501 on set-dns, surfaced as [`ts_control::CertError::Acme`].
1498 #[cfg(not(feature = "acme"))]
1499 pub async fn get_certificate(&self, name: &str) -> Result<CertifiedKey, ts_control::CertError> {
1500 ts_control::get_certificate(name).await
1501 }
1502
1503 /// See the no-`acme` variant for the contract; with `acme` this issues a real cert via the
1504 /// runtime's ACME engine (`Device → Runtime → ControlRunner → issue_certificate_via_setdns`).
1505 #[cfg(feature = "acme")]
1506 pub async fn get_certificate(&self, name: &str) -> Result<CertifiedKey, ts_control::CertError> {
1507 self.runtime.get_certificate(name.to_string()).await
1508 }
1509
1510 /// Issue a real Let's Encrypt certificate for a node's MagicDNS `name` and return the **PEM
1511 /// pair** `(cert_chain_pem, key_pem)` — the analog of Go's `LocalClient.CertPairWithValidity`,
1512 /// for writing the daemon's on-disk `.crt` + `.key` (`tnet cert`). **`acme` feature only.**
1513 ///
1514 /// This drives the same client-side ACME DNS-01 issuance as [`Device::get_certificate`] (one
1515 /// order, the challenge TXT published via the node's `POST /machine/set-dns` RPC, routed through
1516 /// the runtime → control runner); it differs only in returning the raw leaf+chain PEM and the
1517 /// leaf private-key PEM instead of the opaque [`CertifiedKey`]. The second tuple element is
1518 /// **secret key material**: it is never logged anywhere on this path — persist it to a `0600`
1519 /// file and never trace it.
1520 ///
1521 /// **`min_validity` (honest "always fresh").** Go's `CertPairWithValidity` reuses a cached cert
1522 /// when it has at least `min_validity` of its lifetime remaining, re-issuing otherwise. This
1523 /// fork keeps **no cert cache** — every call issues fresh — so `min_validity` is accepted for
1524 /// signature compatibility but does not alter behavior: a freshly issued (full-lifetime) cert
1525 /// satisfies any `min_validity`. A reuse cache is separate future work; this does NOT fake one.
1526 ///
1527 /// Fail-closed: returns a [`ts_control::CertError`] (never a self-signed or partial pair) on any
1528 /// ACME/HTTP failure. SaaS-only: a self-hosted control plane may 501 on set-dns, surfaced as
1529 /// [`ts_control::CertError::Acme`].
1530 #[cfg(feature = "acme")]
1531 pub async fn cert_pair(
1532 &self,
1533 name: &str,
1534 min_validity: Option<Duration>,
1535 ) -> Result<(String, String), ts_control::CertError> {
1536 self.runtime.cert_pair(name.to_string(), min_validity).await
1537 }
1538
1539 /// Build a [`TlsAcceptor`] terminating TLS for `cfg.name` on the overlay (like `tsnet`'s
1540 /// `ListenTLS`).
1541 ///
1542 /// Obtains the certificate via [`Device::get_certificate`] — so with the `acme` feature this
1543 /// issues a real Let's Encrypt cert (when the control plane answers `set-dns`), and without it
1544 /// (or when issuance is unavailable) it surfaces the same fail-closed
1545 /// [`ts_control::CertError`] rather than ever serving a self-signed cert or downgrading to
1546 /// plaintext. Terminate accepted overlay streams with [`ts_control::accept_tls`].
1547 pub async fn listen_tls(
1548 &self,
1549 cfg: &ts_control::ServeConfig,
1550 ) -> Result<TlsAcceptor, ts_control::CertError> {
1551 // Route through Device::get_certificate (the acme-aware issuance path) rather than
1552 // ts_control::listen_tls, which only knows the non-acme stub. Validate the serve config
1553 // first (same fail-closed checks ts_control::listen_tls applies), then assemble the acceptor.
1554 cfg.validate()?;
1555 let cert = self.get_certificate(&cfg.name).await?;
1556 ts_control::tls_acceptor(cert)
1557 }
1558
1559 /// The currently-stored Serve config (like `tsnet`'s `GetServeConfig`).
1560 ///
1561 /// Returns the config last passed to [`Device::set_serve_config`], or an empty
1562 /// [`ts_control::ServeState`] (no ports) if none was ever set. Pure read — does not touch the
1563 /// network.
1564 pub fn get_serve_config(&self) -> ts_control::ServeState {
1565 match &*self.serve.lock().unwrap_or_else(|e| e.into_inner()) {
1566 Some(mgr) => mgr.get(),
1567 None => ts_control::ServeState::default(),
1568 }
1569 }
1570
1571 /// Replace this node's Serve config and (re)bind its tailnet ports (like `tsnet`'s
1572 /// `SetServeConfig`, REPLACE semantics).
1573 ///
1574 /// `state` becomes the **whole** config (full-replace reconcile: every previously-bound serve
1575 /// port's accept loop is torn down and the new config's ports are bound from scratch). For each
1576 /// configured port the manager binds an overlay listener on this node's tailnet IPv4 and
1577 /// dispatches per [`ts_control::ServeTarget`]:
1578 /// - [`Accept`](ts_control::ServeTarget::Accept) — the TLS-terminated stream is handed back over
1579 /// the returned [`ServeAcceptedReceiver`](ts_runtime::serve::ServeAcceptedReceiver) (the
1580 /// in-process stand-in for `ListenTLS`'s `net.Listener`).
1581 /// - [`Proxy`](ts_control::ServeTarget::Proxy) — reverse-proxy the decrypted stream to a local
1582 /// host backend.
1583 /// - [`Text`](ts_control::ServeTarget::Text) — write a fixed body and close.
1584 /// - [`TcpForward`](ts_control::ServeTarget::TcpForward) — forward the **raw** (non-TLS) stream
1585 /// to a local host backend.
1586 ///
1587 /// **Fail-closed.** `state.validate()` runs first. Every TLS-terminating port's acceptor is
1588 /// obtained up-front via [`Device::listen_tls`] (the ACME-aware cert path); if any cert cannot be
1589 /// issued the whole call fails with that [`ts_control::CertError`] and **nothing is bound** — a
1590 /// TLS port never downgrades to plaintext.
1591 ///
1592 /// **Anti-leak.** Listeners bind the overlay netstack only (never a host socket). The
1593 /// `Proxy`/`TcpForward` backend dial is a local host socket to the embedder's own backend (like
1594 /// Go's reverse-proxy to `127.0.0.1`), intentionally NOT routed through the exit-egress
1595 /// forwarder. A backend dial failure drops that connection; it never falls back.
1596 ///
1597 /// Returns an error in TUN transport mode (there is no application netstack to bind on). The
1598 /// previous config's accept loops (and any earlier `ServeAcceptedReceiver`) stop when this
1599 /// returns; the new receiver delivers every `Accept`-port connection.
1600 pub async fn set_serve_config(
1601 &self,
1602 state: ts_control::ServeState,
1603 ) -> Result<ts_runtime::serve::ServeAcceptedReceiver, Error> {
1604 state
1605 .validate()
1606 .map_err(|_| Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::BadRequest))?;
1607
1608 // Fail-closed: build every TLS-terminating port's acceptor up-front via the ACME-aware cert
1609 // path. If any cert can't be issued, return before binding anything (no plaintext downgrade).
1610 let mut resolved = std::collections::BTreeMap::new();
1611 for (port, target) in &state.ports {
1612 let acceptor = if target.terminates_tls() {
1613 let cfg = ts_control::ServeConfig {
1614 name: state.name.clone(),
1615 port: *port,
1616 target: target.clone(),
1617 };
1618 Some(self.listen_tls(&cfg).await.map_err(|_| {
1619 // Cert issuance is fail-closed in this fork; surface as a request error rather
1620 // than ever binding a plaintext TLS port.
1621 Error::Internal(InternalErrorKind::BadRequest)
1622 })?)
1623 } else {
1624 None
1625 };
1626 resolved.insert(
1627 *port,
1628 ts_runtime::serve::ResolvedPort {
1629 target: target.clone(),
1630 acceptor,
1631 },
1632 );
1633 }
1634
1635 // The manager binds the OVERLAY netstack on this node's own tailnet IPv4.
1636 let self_ipv4 = self.ipv4_addr().await?;
1637 let channel = self.channel()?.clone();
1638
1639 let mut slot = self.serve.lock().unwrap_or_else(|e| e.into_inner());
1640 let mgr =
1641 slot.get_or_insert_with(|| ts_runtime::serve::ServeManager::new(channel, self_ipv4));
1642 Ok(mgr.set(state, resolved))
1643 }
1644
1645 /// Expose a tailnet TLS service to the public internet via Tailscale Funnel (like `tsnet`'s
1646 /// `ListenFunnel`), returning a [`FunnelAcceptedReceiver`](ts_runtime::funnel::FunnelAcceptedReceiver)
1647 /// that delivers each TLS-terminated public connection.
1648 ///
1649 /// **Two fail-closed gates, then the live ingress listener.** First the node-attribute gate is
1650 /// fully enforced from this node's own capability map (mirroring Go `ipn.NodeCanFunnel` +
1651 /// `ipn.CheckFunnelPort`): the tailnet admin must have enabled HTTPS and granted the `funnel`
1652 /// node attribute, and `cfg.port` must be in the set the `funnel-ports` capability allows —
1653 /// otherwise this returns [`ts_control::FunnelError::NotAllowed`] /
1654 /// [`ts_control::FunnelError::PortNotAllowed`] before touching any cert or network. Then the
1655 /// node's `*.ts.net` certificate is obtained via the ACME-aware [`Device::get_certificate`] (the
1656 /// Funnel hostname *is* the node's MagicDNS name, so its DNS-01 cert matches); fail-closed on
1657 /// [`ts_control::FunnelError::Cert`] — no self-signed or plaintext fallback.
1658 ///
1659 /// On success a [`FunnelManager`](ts_runtime::funnel::FunnelManager) is registered: its ingress
1660 /// sink is installed into the runtime's peerAPI `/v0/ingress` slot (making that route live without
1661 /// restarting the peerAPI server), and the `HostInfo.IngressEnabled` map-request signal is set so
1662 /// control routes Funnel traffic to this node. Public Funnel bytes arrive as a relay POST to
1663 /// `/v0/ingress`, are membership-gated + `101`-hijacked into a raw stream, TLS-terminated by the
1664 /// manager, and delivered over the returned receiver.
1665 ///
1666 /// **Where the relay comes from.** The public ingress **relay + DNS mapping** that feed
1667 /// `/v0/ingress` are Tailscale infrastructure ([`ts_control::MISSING_FUNNEL_RELAY`]), provisioned
1668 /// automatically against real Tailscale SaaS with a Funnel-enabled ACL; against a self-hosted
1669 /// control plane no relay exists, so the listener is correct but never fed.
1670 ///
1671 /// Anti-leak: Funnel TLS terminates only on the overlay netstack (the hijacked ingress stream
1672 /// arrives on the overlay peerAPI listener), never a host socket; there is no self-signed or
1673 /// plaintext fallback. A new `listen_funnel` replaces the previous manager (its pump + sink tear
1674 /// down); dropping the `Device` tears it down too.
1675 pub async fn listen_funnel(
1676 &self,
1677 cfg: &ts_control::ServeConfig,
1678 opts: ts_control::FunnelOptions,
1679 ) -> Result<ts_runtime::funnel::FunnelAcceptedReceiver, ts_control::FunnelError> {
1680 // Gate 1 (fail-closed, no network): node-attribute + funnel-port access from our cap map.
1681 let me = self
1682 .self_node()
1683 .await
1684 .map_err(|_| ts_control::FunnelError::NotAllowed)?;
1685 cfg.validate()?;
1686 ts_control::funnel_access(&me, cfg.port)?;
1687
1688 // Gate 2 (fail-closed): obtain the node's `*.ts.net` cert via the ACME-aware path and build
1689 // the TLS acceptor. A cert failure surfaces as FunnelError::Cert — never a plaintext listener.
1690 let cert = self
1691 .get_certificate(&cfg.name)
1692 .await
1693 .map_err(ts_control::FunnelError::Cert)?;
1694 let acceptor = ts_control::tls_acceptor(cert).map_err(ts_control::FunnelError::Cert)?;
1695
1696 // `opts.funnel_only` (reject tailnet-internal connections) is accepted for surface stability;
1697 // the ingress data path only ever carries relay-delivered public traffic, so there is no
1698 // tailnet-internal leg on this listener to reject. Documented as a no-op here for now.
1699 let _ = opts;
1700
1701 // Build the funnel manager + its ingress sink + the hand-back receiver, install the sink into
1702 // the runtime's shared peerAPI `/v0/ingress` slot (making the route live), and flip the
1703 // IngressEnabled map signal. Hold the manager on the device so its pump/sink live as long as
1704 // the listener; replacing a prior manager tears the old one down on drop at end of scope.
1705 let (manager, sink, receiver) = ts_runtime::funnel::FunnelManager::new(acceptor);
1706 {
1707 let slot = self.runtime.funnel_ingress_slot();
1708 *slot.lock().unwrap_or_else(|e| e.into_inner()) = Some(sink);
1709 }
1710 self.runtime
1711 .ingress_active_flag()
1712 .store(true, std::sync::atomic::Ordering::Relaxed);
1713
1714 let old = {
1715 let mut held = self.funnel.lock().unwrap_or_else(|e| e.into_inner());
1716 held.replace(manager)
1717 };
1718 drop(old);
1719
1720 Ok(receiver)
1721 }
1722
1723 /// Host a Tailscale **VIP service** (`svc:<label>`) by binding an overlay listener on the
1724 /// service's control-assigned virtual IP (like `tsnet`'s `ListenService`).
1725 ///
1726 /// **Fail-closed.** Mirrors Go `tsnet.Server.ListenService`'s preconditions, enforced from this
1727 /// node's own netmap state ([`ts_control::resolve_service_listen`]): the `name` must be a valid
1728 /// `svc:<dns-label>`, this node must be **tagged** (Go `ErrUntaggedServiceHost`), and control
1729 /// must have assigned the service a VIP address on this node (delivered via the `service-host`
1730 /// node-capability — see [`ts_control::Node::service_addresses`]). Any unmet precondition
1731 /// returns a typed [`ts_control::ServiceError`] before binding anything.
1732 ///
1733 /// When all hold, this binds a [`tcp_listen`][Device::tcp_listen] on the service VIP and the
1734 /// configured `mode` port over the **overlay netstack** (never a host socket) and returns the
1735 /// listener. The netstack already accepts packets for control-assigned VIPs (they are injected
1736 /// alongside the node's own tailnet address), so the listener is reachable by tailnet peers.
1737 ///
1738 /// The `Tun`/L3 service mode is unsupported (a TODO in upstream tsnet); only TCP/HTTP modes
1739 /// (which bind the same VIP:port at the listen layer) are offered. Returns an error in TUN
1740 /// transport mode (there is no application netstack to bind on).
1741 pub async fn listen_service(
1742 &self,
1743 name: &str,
1744 mode: ts_control::ServiceMode,
1745 ) -> Result<netstack::TcpListener, ts_control::ServiceError> {
1746 let me = self
1747 .self_node()
1748 .await
1749 .map_err(|e| ts_control::ServiceError::Listen(e.to_string()))?;
1750 let listen_addr = ts_control::resolve_service_listen(&me, name, mode, self.enable_ipv6)?;
1751 self.tcp_listen(listen_addr)
1752 .await
1753 .map_err(|e| ts_control::ServiceError::Listen(e.to_string()))
1754 }
1755
1756 /// Attempt to gracefully shut down this device's runtime.
1757 ///
1758 /// Reports whether the device was fully shut down before the timeout. It is still shut
1759 /// down if it timed out, just more violently and with potential resource leaks.
1760 ///
1761 /// If `timeout` is `None`, then shutdown will never time-out.
1762 pub async fn shutdown(self, timeout: Option<Duration>) -> bool {
1763 self.runtime.graceful_shutdown(timeout).await
1764 }
1765}
1766
1767/// Command-channel-driven userspace network stack.
1768///
1769/// This is an opinionated wrapper around [smoltcp](https://docs.rs/smoltcp) that provides an
1770/// easier-to-integrate, more-portable API.
1771pub mod netstack {
1772 #[doc(inline)]
1773 pub use ts_netstack_smoltcp::netcore::Error;
1774 #[doc(inline)]
1775 pub use ts_netstack_smoltcp::netcore::InternalErrorKind;
1776 #[doc(inline)]
1777 pub use ts_netstack_smoltcp::netsock::{TcpListener, TcpStream, UdpSocket};
1778}
1779
1780/// Geneve (RFC 8926) framing for Tailscale **peer-relay** traffic. A peer that advertises
1781/// [`NodeInfo::is_peer_relay`] runs a UDP relay server; relayed disco + WireGuard frames are
1782/// Geneve-encapsulated with a VNI. This module exposes the header codec so the framing is
1783/// recognizable. NOTE: the active relay *data path* (the relay-allocation handshake +
1784/// magicsock integration) is **not yet implemented** in this fork — this is the wire-aware slice.
1785pub mod geneve {
1786 #[doc(inline)]
1787 pub use ts_packet::geneve::{
1788 GENEVE_FIXED_HEADER_LEN, GENEVE_PROTOCOL_DISCO, GENEVE_PROTOCOL_WIREGUARD, GeneveError,
1789 GeneveHeader,
1790 };
1791}
1792
1793/// Tailnet Lock (TKA) verification: the [`tka::Authority`] checks a peer's node-key signature
1794/// against the trusted-key state, mirroring Go's `tka` package. Pair with [`Device::tka_status`]
1795/// (the control-pushed head/disablement signal).
1796pub mod tka {
1797 #[doc(inline)]
1798 pub use ts_tka::{
1799 AumHash, AumKind, Authority, Key, KeyKind, NodeKeySignature, SigKind, State, TkaError,
1800 aum_hash,
1801 };
1802}
1803
1804/// Tailscale cryptographic key types.
1805pub mod keys {
1806 #[doc(inline)]
1807 pub use ts_keys::{
1808 DiscoKeyPair, DiscoPrivateKey, DiscoPublicKey, MachineKeyPair, MachinePrivateKey,
1809 MachinePublicKey, NetworkLockKeyPair, NetworkLockPrivateKey, NetworkLockPublicKey,
1810 NodeKeyPair, NodePrivateKey, NodePublicKey, NodeState, PersistState,
1811 };
1812}
1813
1814const ENV_MAGIC_VAR: &str = "TS_RS_EXPERIMENT";
1815const ENV_MAGIC_VALUE: &str = "this_is_unstable_software";
1816
1817fn check_magic_env() -> Result<(), Error> {
1818 if std::env::var(ENV_MAGIC_VAR).as_deref() != Ok(ENV_MAGIC_VALUE) {
1819 let warning = format!(
1820 "
1821check failed: set {ENV_MAGIC_VAR}={ENV_MAGIC_VALUE} to acknowledge that tailscale-rs is early-days
1822experimental software containing bugs, unvalidated cryptography, and no stability or compatibility
1823guarantees.
1824 "
1825 );
1826
1827 eprintln!("{}", warning.trim());
1828
1829 return Err(Error::UnstableEnvVar);
1830 };
1831
1832 Ok(())
1833}
1834
1835#[cfg(test)]
1836mod tests {
1837 use secrecy::ExposeSecret as _;
1838
1839 use super::*;
1840
1841 // `Device::new`/`new_with_secret` cannot be unit-tested end-to-end without a live control
1842 // server (registration). The only behavioral difference `new_with_secret` introduces over `new`
1843 // is exposing the `SecretString` to a plain `String` on the last inch; everything after is the
1844 // shared `new` path. So we assert that equivalence at the auth-key-resolution level: the secret
1845 // path must resolve to the exact same key the plain path feeds into `resolve_auth_key`.
1846 const SAMPLE_KEY: &str = "tskey-auth-koCgSLP5R811CNTRL-EXAMPLEEXAMPLEEXAMPLEEXAMPLE";
1847
1848 // The mapping `new_with_secret` applies (`Option<SecretString>` -> `Option<String>`) must be a
1849 // byte-for-byte round-trip, so the spawn arg is identical to a direct `new(config, Some(..))`.
1850 #[test]
1851 fn secret_exposes_to_identical_string() {
1852 let plain = Some(SAMPLE_KEY.to_string());
1853 let from_secret =
1854 Some(SecretString::from(SAMPLE_KEY)).map(|s| s.expose_secret().to_string());
1855 assert_eq!(from_secret, plain);
1856
1857 // `None` must pass through unchanged (so it falls back to `config.auth_key` exactly as `new`).
1858 let none_secret: Option<SecretString> = None;
1859 assert_eq!(
1860 none_secret.map(|s| s.expose_secret().to_string()),
1861 None::<String>
1862 );
1863 }
1864
1865 // End-to-end equivalence at the resolve layer: feeding the exposed secret through
1866 // `resolve_auth_key` yields the same `Option<String>` as feeding the plain string — i.e. both
1867 // constructors reach the same spawn argument, without registering against a control server.
1868 #[tokio::test]
1869 async fn new_with_secret_resolves_same_as_new() {
1870 let config = Config::default();
1871
1872 let via_plain = resolve_auth_key(&config, Some(SAMPLE_KEY.to_string()))
1873 .await
1874 .expect("plain auth key resolves");
1875
1876 let exposed = Some(SecretString::from(SAMPLE_KEY)).map(|s| s.expose_secret().to_string());
1877 let via_secret = resolve_auth_key(&config, exposed)
1878 .await
1879 .expect("secret-derived auth key resolves");
1880
1881 assert_eq!(via_plain, via_secret);
1882 // Without the `identity-federation` feature `resolve_auth_key` is a pass-through, so the
1883 // resolved key is the input verbatim; assert that too to pin the default-build behavior.
1884 #[cfg(not(feature = "identity-federation"))]
1885 assert_eq!(via_secret, Some(SAMPLE_KEY.to_string()));
1886 }
1887}