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7afc2fd180
* 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
76 lines
4.4 KiB
Markdown
76 lines
4.4 KiB
Markdown
# Running the service via TLS (optional)
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## Bring your own certificate
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Headscale can be configured to expose its web service via TLS. To configure the certificate and key file manually, set the `tls_cert_path` and `tls_cert_path` configuration parameters. If the path is relative, it will be interpreted as relative to the directory the configuration file was read from.
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```yaml
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tls_cert_path: ""
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tls_key_path: ""
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```
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## Let's Encrypt / ACME
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To get a certificate automatically via [Let's Encrypt](https://letsencrypt.org/), set `tls_letsencrypt_hostname` to the desired certificate hostname. This name must resolve to the IP address(es) headscale is reachable on (i.e., it must correspond to the `server_url` configuration parameter). The certificate and Let's Encrypt account credentials will be stored in the directory configured in `tls_letsencrypt_cache_dir`. If the path is relative, it will be interpreted as relative to the directory the configuration file was read from.
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```yaml
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tls_letsencrypt_hostname: ""
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tls_letsencrypt_listen: ":http"
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tls_letsencrypt_cache_dir: ".cache"
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tls_letsencrypt_challenge_type: HTTP-01
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```
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### Challenge types
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Headscale only supports two values for `tls_letsencrypt_challenge_type`: `HTTP-01` (default) and `TLS-ALPN-01`.
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#### HTTP-01
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For `HTTP-01`, headscale must be reachable on port 80 for the Let's Encrypt automated validation, in addition to whatever port is configured in `listen_addr`. By default, headscale listens on port 80 on all local IPs for Let's Encrypt automated validation.
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If you need to change the ip and/or port used by headscale for the Let's Encrypt validation process, set `tls_letsencrypt_listen` to the appropriate value. This can be handy if you are running headscale as a non-root user (or can't run `setcap`). Keep in mind, however, that Let's Encrypt will _only_ connect to port 80 for the validation callback, so if you change `tls_letsencrypt_listen` you will also need to configure something else (e.g. a firewall rule) to forward the traffic from port 80 to the ip:port combination specified in `tls_letsencrypt_listen`.
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#### TLS-ALPN-01
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For `TLS-ALPN-01`, headscale listens on the ip:port combination defined in `listen_addr`. Let's Encrypt will _only_ connect to port 443 for the validation callback, so if `listen_addr` is not set to port 443, something else (e.g. a firewall rule) will be required to forward the traffic from port 443 to the ip:port combination specified in `listen_addr`.
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### Technical description
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Headscale uses [autocert](https://pkg.go.dev/golang.org/x/crypto/acme/autocert), a Golang library providing [ACME protocol](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automatic_Certificate_Management_Environment) verification, to facilitate certificate renewals via [Let's Encrypt](https://letsencrypt.org/about/). Certificates will be renewed automatically, and the following can be expected:
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- Certificates provided from Let's Encrypt have a validity of 3 months from date issued.
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- Renewals are only attempted by headscale when 30 days or less remains until certificate expiry.
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- Renewal attempts by autocert are triggered at a random interval of 30-60 minutes.
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- No log output is generated when renewals are skipped, or successful.
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#### Checking certificate expiry
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If you want to validate that certificate renewal completed successfully, this can be done either manually, or through external monitoring software. Two examples of doing this manually:
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1. Open the URL for your Headscale server in your browser of choice, and manually inspecting the expiry date of the certificate you receive.
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2. Or, check remotely from CLI using `openssl`:
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```bash
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$ openssl s_client -servername [hostname] -connect [hostname]:443 | openssl x509 -noout -dates
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(...)
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notBefore=Feb 8 09:48:26 2024 GMT
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notAfter=May 8 09:48:25 2024 GMT
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```
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#### Log output from the autocert library
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As these log lines are from the autocert library, they are not strictly generated by headscale itself.
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```plaintext
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acme/autocert: missing server name
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```
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Likely caused by an incoming connection that does not specify a hostname, for example a `curl` request directly against the IP of the server, or an unexpected hostname.
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```plaintext
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acme/autocert: host "[foo]" not configured in HostWhitelist
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```
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Similarly to the above, this likely indicates an invalid incoming request for an incorrect hostname, commonly just the IP itself.
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The source code for autocert can be found [here](https://cs.opensource.google/go/x/crypto/+/refs/tags/v0.19.0:acme/autocert/autocert.go)
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