# headscale will look for a configuration file named `config.yaml` (or `config.json`) in the following order: # # - `/etc/headscale` # - `~/.headscale` # - current working directory # The url clients will connect to. # Typically this will be a domain like: # # https://myheadscale.example.com:443 # server_url: https://headscale.jakehoward.tech # Address to listen to / bind to on the server # # For production: # listen_addr: 0.0.0.0:8080 listen_addr: 127.0.0.1:8416 # Address to listen to /metrics, you may want # to keep this endpoint private to your internal # network # metrics_listen_addr: "{{ private_ip }}:9090" # Address to listen for gRPC. # gRPC is used for controlling a headscale server # remotely with the CLI # Note: Remote access _only_ works if you have # valid certificates. # # For production: # grpc_listen_addr: 0.0.0.0:50443 grpc_listen_addr: 127.0.0.1:50443 # Allow the gRPC admin interface to run in INSECURE # mode. This is not recommended as the traffic will # be unencrypted. Only enable if you know what you # are doing. grpc_allow_insecure: false # Private key used to encrypt the traffic between headscale # and Tailscale clients. # The private key file will be autogenerated if it's missing. # private_key_path: /var/lib/headscale/private.key # The Noise section includes specific configuration for the # TS2021 Noise protocol noise: # The Noise private key is used to encrypt the # traffic between headscale and Tailscale clients when # using the new Noise-based protocol. It must be different # from the legacy private key. private_key_path: /var/lib/headscale/noise_private.key # List of IP prefixes to allocate tailaddresses from. # Each prefix consists of either an IPv4 or IPv6 address, # and the associated prefix length, delimited by a slash. # It must be within IP ranges supported by the Tailscale # client - i.e., subnets of 100.64.0.0/10 and fd7a:115c:a1e0::/48. # See below: # IPv6: https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/blob/22ebb25e833264f58d7c3f534a8b166894a89536/net/tsaddr/tsaddr.go#LL81C52-L81C71 # IPv4: https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/blob/22ebb25e833264f58d7c3f534a8b166894a89536/net/tsaddr/tsaddr.go#L33 # Any other range is NOT supported, and it will cause unexpected issues. prefixes: v6: fd7a:115c:a1e0::/48 v4: 100.64.0.0/10 allocation: sequential # DERP is a relay system that Tailscale uses when a direct # connection cannot be established. # https://tailscale.com/blog/how-tailscale-works/#encrypted-tcp-relays-derp # # headscale needs a list of DERP servers that can be presented # to the clients. derp: server: # If enabled, runs the embedded DERP server and merges it into the rest of the DERP config # The Headscale server_url defined above MUST be using https, DERP requires TLS to be in place enabled: true # Region ID to use for the embedded DERP server. # The local DERP prevails if the region ID collides with other region ID coming from # the regular DERP config. region_id: 999 # Region code and name are displayed in the Tailscale UI to identify a DERP region region_code: headscale region_name: Headscale Embedded DERP # Listens over UDP at the configured address for STUN connections - to help with NAT traversal. # When the embedded DERP server is enabled stun_listen_addr MUST be defined. # # For more details on how this works, check this great article: https://tailscale.com/blog/how-tailscale-works/ stun_listen_addr: 0.0.0.0:3478 # List of externally available DERP maps encoded in JSON urls: [] # Locally available DERP map files encoded in YAML # # This option is mostly interesting for people hosting # their own DERP servers: # https://tailscale.com/kb/1118/custom-derp-servers/ # # paths: # - /etc/headscale/derp-example.yaml paths: [] # If enabled, a worker will be set up to periodically # refresh the given sources and update the derpmap # will be set up. auto_update_enabled: true # How often should we check for DERP updates? update_frequency: 24h # Disables the automatic check for headscale updates on startup disable_check_updates: true # Time before an inactive ephemeral node is deleted? ephemeral_node_inactivity_timeout: 30m # Period to check for node updates within the tailnet. A value too low will severely affect # CPU consumption of Headscale. A value too high (over 60s) will cause problems # for the nodes, as they won't get updates or keep alive messages frequently enough. # In case of doubts, do not touch the default 10s. node_update_check_interval: 20s # SQLite config database: type: sqlite gorm: # Enable prepared statements. prepare_stmt: true # Enable parameterized queries. parameterized_queries: true # Skip logging "record not found" errors. skip_err_record_not_found: true # Threshold for slow queries in milliseconds. slow_threshold: 3000 sqlite: path: /var/lib/headscale/db.sqlite write_ahead_log: true # # Postgres config # If using a Unix socket to connect to Postgres, set the socket path in the 'host' field and leave 'port' blank. # db_type: postgres # db_host: localhost # db_port: 5432 # db_name: headscale # db_user: foo # db_pass: bar # If other 'sslmode' is required instead of 'require(true)' and 'disabled(false)', set the 'sslmode' you need # in the 'db_ssl' field. Refers to https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/libpq-ssl.html Table 34.1. # db_ssl: false ### TLS configuration # ## Let's encrypt / ACME # # headscale supports automatically requesting and setting up # TLS for a domain with Let's Encrypt. # # URL to ACME directory acme_url: https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory # Email to register with ACME provider acme_email: "" # Domain name to request a TLS certificate for: tls_letsencrypt_hostname: "" # Path to store certificates and metadata needed by # letsencrypt # For production: tls_letsencrypt_cache_dir: /var/lib/headscale/cache # Type of ACME challenge to use, currently supported types: # HTTP-01 or TLS-ALPN-01 # See [docs/tls.md](docs/tls.md) for more information tls_letsencrypt_challenge_type: HTTP-01 # When HTTP-01 challenge is chosen, letsencrypt must set up a # verification endpoint, and it will be listening on: # :http = port 80 tls_letsencrypt_listen: :http ## Use already defined certificates: tls_cert_path: "" tls_key_path: "" log: # Output formatting for logs: text or json format: text level: info # Path to a file containg ACL policies. # ACLs can be defined as YAML or HUJSON. # https://tailscale.com/kb/1018/acls/ policy: mode: file path: /etc/headscale/acls.json ## DNS # # headscale supports Tailscale's DNS configuration and MagicDNS. # Please have a look to their KB to better understand the concepts: # # - https://tailscale.com/kb/1054/dns/ # - https://tailscale.com/kb/1081/magicdns/ # - https://tailscale.com/blog/2021-09-private-dns-with-magicdns/ # dns: # Whether to prefer using Headscale provided DNS or use local. override_local_dns: false # List of DNS servers to expose to clients. nameservers: global: [] # NextDNS (see https://tailscale.com/kb/1218/nextdns/). # "abc123" is example NextDNS ID, replace with yours. # # With metadata sharing: # nameservers: # - https://dns.nextdns.io/abc123 # # Without metadata sharing: # nameservers: # - 2a07:a8c0::ab:c123 # - 2a07:a8c1::ab:c123 # Split DNS (see https://tailscale.com/kb/1054/dns/), # list of search domains and the DNS to query for each one. # # restricted_nameservers: # foo.bar.com: # - 1.1.1.1 # darp.headscale.net: # - 1.1.1.1 # - 8.8.8.8 # Search domains to inject. domains: [] # Extra DNS records # so far only A-records are supported (on the tailscale side) # See https://github.com/juanfont/headscale/blob/main/docs/dns-records.md#Limitations # extra_records: # - name: "grafana.myvpn.example.com" # type: "A" # value: "100.64.0.3" # # # you can also put it in one line # - { name: "prometheus.myvpn.example.com", type: "A", value: "100.64.0.3" } # Whether to use [MagicDNS](https://tailscale.com/kb/1081/magicdns/). # Only works if there is at least a nameserver defined. magic_dns: false # Defines the base domain to create the hostnames for MagicDNS. # `base_domain` must be a FQDNs, without the trailing dot. # The FQDN of the hosts will be # `hostname.user.base_domain` (e.g., _myhost.myuser.example.com_). base_domain: hs.sys.theorangeone.net # Unix socket used for the CLI to connect without authentication # Note: for production you will want to set this to something like: unix_socket: /var/run/headscale/headscale.sock unix_socket_permission: "0770" # headscale supports experimental OpenID connect support, # it is still being tested and might have some bugs, please # help us test it. # oidc: # only_start_if_oidc_is_available: true # issuer: "{{ vault_oidc_issuer }}" # client_id: "{{ vault_oidc_client_id }}" # client_secret: "{{ vault_oidc_client_secret }}" # expiry: 0 # Logtail configuration # Logtail is Tailscales logging and auditing infrastructure, it allows the control panel # to instruct tailscale nodes to log their activity to a remote server. logtail: # Enable logtail for this headscales clients. # As there is currently no support for overriding the log server in headscale, this is # disabled by default. Enabling this will make your clients send logs to Tailscale Inc. enabled: false # Enabling this option makes devices prefer a random port for WireGuard traffic over the # default static port 41641. This option is intended as a workaround for some buggy # firewall devices. See https://tailscale.com/kb/1181/firewalls/ for more information. randomize_client_port: false