Files
tailscale/tsnet
Brad Fitzpatrick 2105c97de0 wgengine/wgcfg,wgengine,ipn/ipnlocal: remove Peers from wgcfg.Config
The wireguard-go device now learns its peer set solely from the live
per-peer config source that LocalBackend installs with
Engine.SetPeerConfigFunc, backed by the route manager. Peers are
created lazily on first packet and converged per peer with
Engine.SyncDevicePeer, so the full-peer-list snapshot in wgcfg.Config
and the diff-and-reconfigure machinery around it (wgcfg.Peer,
SyncPeers, ReconfigDevice) are dead weight: they duplicated state that
the route manager already owns and forced every netmap change to
rebuild and rehash the entire peer list.

Delete the Peers field and the Peer type from wgcfg, along with
SyncPeers and ReconfigDevice. Engine.Reconfig no longer does any
device peer work; it only manages the private key, addresses, and the
non-peer subsystems. Full-netmap application converges the device by
syncing exactly the peers whose routes the route manager reports as
changed or removed.

Updates #12542

Change-Id: Ic776e42cfaa5be6b9329b3d381d5cbde17d7078b
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
2026-07-13 17:34:01 +00:00
..
2026-07-10 17:39:16 -07:00

tsnet

Go Reference

Package tsnet embeds a Tailscale node directly into a Go program, allowing it to join a tailnet and accept or dial connections without running a separate tailscaled daemon or requiring any system-level configuration.

Overview

Normally, Tailscale runs as a background system service (tailscaled) that manages a virtual network interface for the whole machine. tsnet takes a different approach: it runs a fully self-contained Tailscale node inside your process using a userspace TCP/IP stack (gVisor). This means:

  • No root privileges required.
  • No system daemons to install or manage.
  • Multiple independent Tailscale nodes can run within a single binary.
  • The node's Tailscale identity and state are stored in a directory you control.

The core type is Server, which represents one embedded Tailscale node. Calling Server.Listen or Server.Dial routes traffic exclusively over the tailnet. The standard library's net.Listener and net.Conn interfaces are returned, so any existing Go HTTP server, gRPC server, or other net-based code works without modification.

Usage

import "tailscale.com/tsnet"

s := &tsnet.Server{
	Hostname: "my-service",
	AuthKey:  os.Getenv("TS_AUTHKEY"),
}
defer s.Close()

ln, err := s.Listen("tcp", ":80")
if err != nil {
	log.Fatal(err)
}
log.Fatal(http.Serve(ln, myHandler))

On first run, if no Server.AuthKey is provided and the node is not already enrolled, the server logs an authentication URL. Open it in a browser to add the node to your tailnet.

Authentication

A Server authenticates using, in order of precedence:

  1. Server.AuthKey.

  2. The TS_AUTHKEY environment variable.

  3. The TS_AUTH_KEY environment variable.

  4. An OAuth client secret (Server.ClientSecret or TS_CLIENT_SECRET), used to mint an auth key.

  5. Workload identity federation (Server.ClientID plus Server.IDToken or Server.Audience). Available only if the program imports the feature:

    import _ "tailscale.com/feature/identityfederation"

    The feature is not linked by default to keep the AWS SDK and other cloud-provider dependencies out of programs that don't use workload identity federation.

  6. An interactive login URL printed to Server.UserLogf.

If the node is already enrolled (state found in Server.Store), the auth key is ignored unless TSNET_FORCE_LOGIN=1 is set.

Identifying callers

Use the WhoIs method on the client returned by Server.LocalClient to identify who is making a request:

lc, _ := srv.LocalClient()
http.Serve(ln, http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
	who, err := lc.WhoIs(r.Context(), r.RemoteAddr)
	if err != nil {
		http.Error(w, err.Error(), 500)
		return
	}
	fmt.Fprintf(w, "Hello, %s!", who.UserProfile.LoginName)
}))

Tailscale Funnel

Server.ListenFunnel exposes your service on the public internet. Tailscale Funnel currently supports TCP on ports 443, 8443, and 10000. HTTPS must be enabled in the Tailscale admin console.

ln, err := srv.ListenFunnel("tcp", ":443")
// ln is a TLS listener; connections can come from anywhere on the
// internet as well as from your tailnet.

// To restrict to public traffic only:
ln, err = srv.ListenFunnel("tcp", ":443", tsnet.FunnelOnly())

Tailscale Services

Server.ListenService advertises the node as a host for a named Tailscale Service. The node must use a tag-based identity. To advertise multiple ports, call ListenService once per port.

srv.AdvertiseTags = []string{"tag:myservice"}

ln, err := srv.ListenService("svc:my-service", tsnet.ServiceModeHTTP{
	HTTPS: true,
	Port:  443,
})
log.Printf("Listening on https://%s", ln.FQDN)

Running multiple nodes in one process

Each Server instance is an independent node. Give each a unique Server.Dir and Server.Hostname:

for _, name := range []string{"frontend", "backend"} {
	srv := &tsnet.Server{
		Hostname:  name,
		Dir:       filepath.Join(baseDir, name),
		AuthKey:   os.Getenv("TS_AUTHKEY"),
		Ephemeral: true,
	}
	srv.Start()
}