headscale/docs/ref/acls.md

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Headscale implements the same policy ACLs as Tailscale.com, adapted to the self-hosted environment.
For instance, instead of referring to users when defining groups you must
use users (which are the equivalent to user/logins in Tailscale.com).
Please check https://tailscale.com/kb/1018/acls/ for further information.
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When using ACL's the User borders are no longer applied. All machines
whichever the User have the ability to communicate with other hosts as
long as the ACL's permits this exchange.
## ACLs use case example
Let's build an example use case for a small business (It may be the place where
ACL's are the most useful).
We have a small company with a boss, an admin, two developers and an intern.
The boss should have access to all servers but not to the user's hosts. Admin
should also have access to all hosts except that their permissions should be
limited to maintaining the hosts (for example purposes). The developers can do
anything they want on dev hosts but only watch on productions hosts. Intern
can only interact with the development servers.
There's an additional server that acts as a router, connecting the VPN users
to an internal network `10.20.0.0/16`. Developers must have access to those
internal resources.
Each user have at least a device connected to the network and we have some
servers.
- database.prod
- database.dev
- app-server1.prod
- app-server1.dev
- billing.internal
- router.internal
Restructure headscale documentation (#2163) * 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
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![ACL implementation example](../images/headscale-acl-network.png)
## ACL setup
Note: Users will be created automatically when users authenticate with the
Restructure headscale documentation (#2163) * 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
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headscale server.
ACLs have to be written in [huJSON](https://github.com/tailscale/hujson).
When registering the servers we will need to add the flag
`--advertise-tags=tag:<tag1>,tag:<tag2>`, and the user that is
registering the server should be allowed to do it. Since anyone can add tags to
a server they can register, the check of the tags is done on headscale server
and only valid tags are applied. A tag is valid if the user that is
registering it is allowed to do it.
To use ACLs in headscale, you must edit your `config.yaml` file. In there you will find a `policy.path` parameter. This will need to point to your ACL file. More info on how these policies are written can be found [here](https://tailscale.com/kb/1018/acls/).
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Here are the ACL's to implement the same permissions as above:
```json
{
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// groups are collections of users having a common scope. A user can be in multiple groups
// groups cannot be composed of groups
"groups": {
"group:boss": ["boss"],
"group:dev": ["dev1", "dev2"],
"group:admin": ["admin1"],
"group:intern": ["intern1"]
},
// tagOwners in tailscale is an association between a TAG and the people allowed to set this TAG on a server.
// This is documented [here](https://tailscale.com/kb/1068/acl-tags#defining-a-tag)
// and explained [here](https://tailscale.com/blog/rbac-like-it-was-meant-to-be/)
"tagOwners": {
// the administrators can add servers in production
"tag:prod-databases": ["group:admin"],
"tag:prod-app-servers": ["group:admin"],
// the boss can tag any server as internal
"tag:internal": ["group:boss"],
// dev can add servers for dev purposes as well as admins
"tag:dev-databases": ["group:admin", "group:dev"],
"tag:dev-app-servers": ["group:admin", "group:dev"]
// interns cannot add servers
},
// hosts should be defined using its IP addresses and a subnet mask.
// to define a single host, use a /32 mask. You cannot use DNS entries here,
// as they're prone to be hijacked by replacing their IP addresses.
// see https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/3800 for more information.
Restructure headscale documentation (#2163) * 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
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"hosts": {
"postgresql.internal": "10.20.0.2/32",
"webservers.internal": "10.20.10.1/29"
},
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"acls": [
// boss have access to all servers
{
"action": "accept",
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"src": ["group:boss"],
"dst": [
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"tag:prod-databases:*",
"tag:prod-app-servers:*",
"tag:internal:*",
"tag:dev-databases:*",
"tag:dev-app-servers:*"
]
},
// admin have only access to administrative ports of the servers, in tcp/22
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{
"action": "accept",
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"src": ["group:admin"],
"proto": "tcp",
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"dst": [
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"tag:prod-databases:22",
"tag:prod-app-servers:22",
"tag:internal:22",
"tag:dev-databases:22",
"tag:dev-app-servers:22"
]
},
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// we also allow admin to ping the servers
{
"action": "accept",
"src": ["group:admin"],
"proto": "icmp",
"dst": [
"tag:prod-databases:*",
"tag:prod-app-servers:*",
"tag:internal:*",
"tag:dev-databases:*",
"tag:dev-app-servers:*"
]
},
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// developers have access to databases servers and application servers on all ports
// they can only view the applications servers in prod and have no access to databases servers in production
{
"action": "accept",
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"src": ["group:dev"],
"dst": [
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"tag:dev-databases:*",
"tag:dev-app-servers:*",
"tag:prod-app-servers:80,443"
]
},
// developers have access to the internal network through the router.
// the internal network is composed of HTTPS endpoints and Postgresql
// database servers. There's an additional rule to allow traffic to be
// forwarded to the internal subnet, 10.20.0.0/16. See this issue
// https://github.com/juanfont/headscale/issues/502
{
"action": "accept",
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"src": ["group:dev"],
"dst": ["10.20.0.0/16:443,5432", "router.internal:0"]
},
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// servers should be able to talk to database in tcp/5432. Database should not be able to initiate connections to
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// applications servers
{
"action": "accept",
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"src": ["tag:dev-app-servers"],
"proto": "tcp",
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"dst": ["tag:dev-databases:5432"]
},
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{
"action": "accept",
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"src": ["tag:prod-app-servers"],
"dst": ["tag:prod-databases:5432"]
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},
// interns have access to dev-app-servers only in reading mode
{
"action": "accept",
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"src": ["group:intern"],
"dst": ["tag:dev-app-servers:80,443"]
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},
// We still have to allow internal users communications since nothing guarantees that each user have
// their own users.
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{ "action": "accept", "src": ["boss"], "dst": ["boss:*"] },
{ "action": "accept", "src": ["dev1"], "dst": ["dev1:*"] },
{ "action": "accept", "src": ["dev2"], "dst": ["dev2:*"] },
{ "action": "accept", "src": ["admin1"], "dst": ["admin1:*"] },
{ "action": "accept", "src": ["intern1"], "dst": ["intern1:*"] }
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]
}
```