* Document to either use a minimal configuration file or environment
variables to connect with a remote headscale instance.
* Document a workaround specific for headscale 0.23.0.
* Remove reference to ancient headscale version.
* Use `cli.insecure: true` or `HEADSCALE_CLI_INSECURE=1` to skip
certificate verification.
* Style and typo fixes
Ref: #2193
* Setup mkdocs-redirects
* Restructure existing documentation
* Move client OS support into the documentation
* Move existing Client OS support table into its own documentation page
* Link from README.md to the rendered documentation
* Document minimum Tailscale client version
* Reuse CONTRIBUTING.md" in the documentation
* Include "CONTRIBUTING.md" from the repository root
* Update FAQ and index page and link to the contributing docs
* Add configuration reference
* Add a getting started page and explain the first steps with headscale
* Use the existing "Using headscale" sections and combine them into a
single getting started guide with a little bit more explanation.
* Explain how to get help from the command line client.
* Remove duplicated sections from existing installation guides
* Document requirements and assumptions
* Document packages provided by the community
* Move deb install guide to official releases
* Move manual install guide to official releases
* Move container documentation to setup section
* Move sealos documentation to cloud install page
* Move OpenBSD docs to build from source
* Simplify DNS documentation
* Add sponsor page
* Add releases page
* Add features page
* Add help page
* Add upgrading page
* Adjust mkdocs nav
* Update wording
Use the term headscale for the project, Headscale on the beginning of a
sentence and `headscale` when refering to the CLI.
* Welcome to headscale
* Link to existing documentation in the FAQ
* Remove the goal header and use the text as opener
* Indent code block in OIDC
* Make a few pages linter compatible
Also update ignored files for prettier
* Recommend HTTPS on port 443
Fixes: #2164
* Use hosts in acl documentation
thx @efficacy38 for noticing this
Ref: #1863
* Use mkdocs-macros to set headscale version once
* Update headscale user creation settings in .deb
Update the headscale user settings to:
- shell = /usr/sbin/nologin
- home-dir = /var/lib/headscale
This syncs the .deb installation behavior with the current Linux docs:
fe68f50328/docs/running-headscale-linux-manual.md (L39-L45)Fixesjuanfont/headscale#2133
* slight refactor to use existing variables.
* Fixup for HOME_DIR var
Some commands such as `nodes delete` require user interaction and they
fail if `-it` is no supplied to `docker exec`. Use `docker exec -it` in
documentation examples to also make them work in interactive commands.
* Rename docs/ios-client.md to docs/apple-client.md. Add instructions
for macOS; those are copied from the /apple endpoint and slightly
modified. Fix doc links in the README.
* Move infoboxes for /apple and /windows under the "Goal" section to the
top. Those should be seen by users first as they contain *their*
specific headscale URL.
* Swap order of macOS and iOS to move "Profiles" further down.
* Remove apple configuration profiles
* Remove Tailscale versions hints
* Mention /apple and /windows in the README along with their docs
See: #2096
* Simplify /windows to the bare minimum. Also remove the
/windows/tailscale.reg endpoint as its generated file is no longer
valid for current Tailscale versions.
* Update and simplify the windows documentation accordingly.
* Add a "Unattended mode" section to the troubleshooting section
explaining how to enable "Unattended mode" in the via the Tailscale
tray icon.
* Add infobox about /windows to the docs
Tested on Windows 10, 22H2 with Tailscale 1.72.0
Replaces: #1995
See: #2096
* Add support for service reload and sync service file
* Copy the systemd.service file to the manual linux docs and adjust the
path to the headscale binary to match with the previous documentation
blocks. Unfortunately, there seems to be no easy way to include a
file in mkdocs.
* Remove a redundant "deprecation" block. The beginning of the
documentation already states that.
* Add `ExecReload` to the systemd.service file.
Fixes: #2016
* Its called systemd
* Fix link to systemd homepage
* docs/acl: fix path to policy file
* docs/exit-node: fixup for 0.23
* Add newlines between commands to improve readability
* Use nodes instead on name
* Remove query parameter from link to Tailscale docs
* docs/remote-cli: fix formatting
* Indent blocks below line numbers to restore numbering
* Fix minor typos
* docs/reverse-proxy: remove version information
* Websocket support is always required now
* s/see detail/see details
* docs/exit-node: add warning to manual documentation
* Replace the warning section with a warning admonition
* Fix TODO link back to the regular linux documentation
* docs/openbsd: fix typos
* the database is created on-the-fly
* docs/sealos: fix typos
* docs/container: various fixes
* Remove a stray sentence
* Remove "headscale" before serve
* Indent line continuation
* Replace hardcoded 0.22 with <VERSION>
* Fix path in debug image to /ko-app/headscale
Fixes: #1822
aa
* docs: Add docs for running headscale on sealos
Signed-off-by: Carson Yang <yangchuansheng33@gmail.com>
* run prettier
---------
Signed-off-by: Carson Yang <yangchuansheng33@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: ohdearaugustin <ohdearaugustin@users.noreply.github.com>
* Add test stage to docs
Add new file with docs tets
Run only in pulls
* set explicit python version
* Revert "set explicit python version"
This reverts commit 4dd7b81f26.
* docs/requirements: update mkdocs-material
---------
Co-authored-by: ohdearaugustin <ohdearaugustin@users.noreply.github.com>
A lot of things are breaking in 0.23 so instead of having this
be a long process, just rip of the plaster.
Updates #1758
Signed-off-by: Kristoffer Dalby <kristoffer@tailscale.com>
* TLS documentation updates
Move "Bring your own certificates" to the top
since the letsencrypt section is now much longer, it seems wrong to
keep such a short section way down at the bottom.
Restructure "Challenge types" into separate sections
Add technical description of letsencrypt renewals
this aims to answer:
- what can be expected in terms of renewals
- what logs can be expected (none)
- how to validate that renewal happened successfully
- the reason for some of the 'acme/autocert' logs, or at least
some best-effort assumptions
* +prettier