* 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
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.
* 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
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>
As indicated by the comment, the default /var/lib/headscale path is not writable in the container. However the sample setting is not following that like `private_key_path`
It appears to be causing confusion for users on Discord when copying/pasting from the example here, if Headscale crashes on launch then the container will be removed and logs can't be viewed with `docker logs`.
- Fix URLs referring to files in this repository
- Better explain that we are creating the headscale directory and running the commands on the host Docker node
- Place instructions to download example config file to use as config file, as recommended steps.
This commit starts restructuring the documentation and updating it to be
compliant with 0.12.x+ releases.
The main change is that the documentation has been rewritten for the
ground up, and hopefully simplified.
The documentation has been split into an official documentation for
running headscale as a binary under Linux with SystemD and a "community"
provided documentation for Docker.
This should make the two documents a lot easier to read and follow than
the mishmash document we had.