Kristoffer Dalby 2764e5f228 testdata: re-run ssh tscap corpus with localpart anonymization
Regenerates ssh_results/*.hujson on top of the tscap fix
(kradalby/tscap@833a50a + 837f1f6) that rewrites localpart:*@<domain>
patterns in policy text alongside user email substitution. Before the
fix, anonymized captures kept the raw @passkey domain in policy while
the users landed on @example.com, so localpart:*@passkey matched zero
users and headscale emitted only the wildcard rule, diffing against
SaaS's per-user rules on 40 failing leaves across 14 scenarios
(ssh-d2..d12 minus d1/d10, ssh-e6, ssh-f3..f5).

With the new corpus:

  - localpart:*@passkey in policy → localpart:*@example.com
  - thor moves from thor@example.com to thor@dalby.cc so that
    "localpart:*@example.com" resolves to exactly odin+freya (matching
    SaaS output), and "localpart:*@dalby.cc" in ssh-d1 keeps matching
    exactly one user.

Test code update: setupSSHDataCompatUsers() now pins thor on
@dalby.cc to match the capture topologies. All other compat tests
(routes, grants, acl, via-grant) use their own per-file topology
loaders and are unaffected — thor's email change is scoped to the
SSH hardcoded setup.

TestSSHDataCompat: 41 failing leaves → 1 failing leaf. The single
remaining ssh-b6/beedrill failure is a pre-existing, unrelated
duplicate-principals bug in headscale's SSH compiler (same diff
shape before and after this change).

Updates #3157
2026-04-09 08:51:57 +00:00
2026-03-11 03:18:14 -07:00
2026-03-31 13:36:31 +02:00
2022-03-19 09:23:03 +00:00
2021-10-26 20:37:37 +00:00
2026-03-25 22:30:03 +01:00
2024-09-04 07:55:16 +02:00
2026-03-11 03:18:14 -07:00
2026-03-11 03:18:14 -07:00
2026-03-14 02:52:28 -07:00
2026-03-14 02:52:28 -07:00
2026-03-14 02:52:28 -07:00
2020-06-21 11:21:07 +02:00
2026-03-01 09:24:52 +01:00

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An open source, self-hosted implementation of the Tailscale control server.

Join our Discord server for a chat.

Note: Always select the same GitHub tag as the released version you use to ensure you have the correct example configuration. The main branch might contain unreleased changes. The documentation is available for stable and development versions:

What is Tailscale

Tailscale is a modern VPN built on top of Wireguard. It works like an overlay network between the computers of your networks - using NAT traversal.

Everything in Tailscale is Open Source, except the GUI clients for proprietary OS (Windows and macOS/iOS), and the control server.

The control server works as an exchange point of Wireguard public keys for the nodes in the Tailscale network. It assigns the IP addresses of the clients, creates the boundaries between each user, enables sharing machines between users, and exposes the advertised routes of your nodes.

A Tailscale network (tailnet) is private network which Tailscale assigns to a user in terms of private users or an organisation.

Design goal

Headscale aims to implement a self-hosted, open source alternative to the Tailscale control server. Headscale's goal is to provide self-hosters and hobbyists with an open-source server they can use for their projects and labs. It implements a narrow scope, a single Tailscale network (tailnet), suitable for a personal use, or a small open-source organisation.

Supporting Headscale

If you like headscale and find it useful, there is a sponsorship and donation buttons available in the repo.

Features

Please see "Features" in the documentation.

Client OS support

Please see "Client and operating system support" in the documentation.

Running headscale

Please note that we do not support nor encourage the use of reverse proxies and container to run Headscale.

Please have a look at the documentation.

For NixOS users, a module is available in nix/.

Builds from main

Development builds from the main branch are available as container images and binaries. See the development builds documentation for details.

Talks

Disclaimer

This project is not associated with Tailscale Inc.

However, one of the active maintainers for Headscale is employed by Tailscale and he is allowed to spend work hours contributing to the project. Contributions from this maintainer are reviewed by other maintainers.

The maintainers work together on setting the direction for the project. The underlying principle is to serve the community of self-hosters, enthusiasts and hobbyists - while having a sustainable project.

Contributing

Please read the CONTRIBUTING.md file.

Requirements

To contribute to headscale you would need the latest version of Go and Buf (Protobuf generator).

We recommend using Nix to setup a development environment. This can be done with nix develop, which will install the tools and give you a shell. This guarantees that you will have the same dev env as headscale maintainers.

Code style

To ensure we have some consistency with a growing number of contributions, this project has adopted linting and style/formatting rules:

The Go code is linted with golangci-lint and formatted with golines (width 88) and gofumpt. Please configure your editor to run the tools while developing and make sure to run make lint and make fmt before committing any code.

The Proto code is linted with buf and formatted with clang-format.

The docs are formatted with mdformat.

The rest (Markdown, YAML, etc) is formatted with prettier.

Check out the .golangci.yaml and Makefile to see the specific configuration.

Install development tools

  • Go
  • Buf
  • Protobuf tools

Install and activate:

nix develop

Testing and building

Some parts of the project require the generation of Go code from Protobuf (if changes are made in proto/) and it must be (re-)generated with:

make generate

Note: Please check in changes from gen/ in a separate commit to make it easier to review.

To run the tests:

make test

To build the program:

make build

Development workflow

We recommend using Nix for dependency management to ensure you have all required tools. If you prefer to manage dependencies yourself, you can use Make directly:

With Nix (recommended):

nix develop
make test
make build

With your own dependencies:

make test
make build

The Makefile will warn you if any required tools are missing and suggest running nix develop. Run make help to see all available targets.

Contributors

Made with contrib.rocks.

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Description
An open source, self-hosted implementation of the Tailscale control server
Readme BSD-3-Clause 88 MiB
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