9.1 KiB
name, description, version, author, license, platforms, metadata
| name | description | version | author | license | platforms | metadata | ||||||||||||||||
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| tailscale-infrastructure-access | Set up and manage Tailscale for private infrastructure access — install, authenticate, Tailscale Serve for internal HTTPS, device enrollment, and the policy that internal services stay behind the tailnet. | 1.0.0 | ShoNuff | MIT |
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Tailscale Infrastructure Access
Tailscale provides a zero-config VPN for private infrastructure access. Internal services (Vaultwarden, future databases, admin panels) live behind the tailnet — no public ports, no DNS, no TLS cert worries.
Policy
Internal services stay behind Tailscale. No public exposure. No DNS records for admin-only services. Access is via:
- Tailscale Serve — HTTPS proxy within the tailnet (for web UIs)
- Direct Tailscale IP + port — for API/CLI access
- SSH over Tailscale — once public SSH is locked down
Installation
curl -fsSL https://tailscale.com/install.sh | sh
Authentication
tailscale up
# Prints: https://login.tailscale.com/a/XXXXX
# Open in browser, sign in with any identity provider (Google, Microsoft, GitHub, Apple)
# A self-hosted email domain works fine — the email is just a login identity
Verify
tailscale status
# Shows: <tailscale-ip> <hostname> <user> <os>
Device Enrollment
Users install the Tailscale app on each device:
| Device | Where to get it |
|---|---|
| macOS | tailscale.com/download-mac or Mac App Store |
| iOS/iPad | App Store → "Tailscale" |
| iPhone | App Store → "Tailscale" |
| Linux | `curl -fsSL https://tailscale.com/install.sh |
| Windows | tailscale.com/download-windows |
All devices log in with the same identity provider (Google Workspace account recommended).
Renaming the server hostname for clarity
# Default hostname is the OS hostname (e.g. v2202607377162478911)
# Rename to something readable:
tailscale set --hostname app1
# Verify:
tailscale status
# → 100.71.155.7 app1 user@email.com linux
Tailscale Serve (internal HTTPS)
Expose a local port as HTTPS within your tailnet — no public domain needed, no Let's Encrypt, automatic TLS certs.
tailscale serve --bg --https 443 --set-path / http://127.0.0.1:<port>
# Result:
# https://<hostname>.tail<XXXXX>.ts.net/
# |-- proxy http://127.0.0.1:<port>
The URL is only resolvable within the tailnet. Anyone outside gets a DNS failure.
Updating the Serve config after renaming
If you rename the hostname, Tailscale Serve doesn't move automatically. Remove and re-add:
# Old approach:
tailscale serve --https=443 off
# Then re-add with --bg --https 443
"Web page keeps spinning / 404" troubleshooting
If the page loads but the app hangs, check:
- DOMAIN environment variable on the service matches the actual URL
- For Bitwarden-compatible apps, the API must advertise the same URL users type
curl http://localhost:<port>from the server to confirm the service is healthy
"Password incorrect" after changing domain
Changing the URL (and thus DOMAIN) changes KDF/key derivation parameters cached by the client app. Fix:
- In the Bitwarden app: Settings → Account → "Delete account from device" (not "Delete account")
- Re-add server with new URL
- The app fetches fresh parameters before prompting for password
Ambiguous characters in the URL — mobile app can't connect
The auto-generated hostname (e.g. vaultwarden.tailc2f3b0.ts.net) can contain characters that mobile apps confuse (e.g. 0 vs O, 1 vs l, 5 vs S). If a mobile Bitwarden app shows "This is not a recognized Bitwarden server" or just spins:
Fix — rename hostname, re-add Serve, update DOMAIN:
# 1. Rename hostname to something with no ambiguous chars
tailscale set --hostname vaultwarden
# 2. Re-add Tailscale Serve (it auto-generates new URL)
tailscale serve --https=443 off 2>/dev/null || true
tailscale serve --bg --https 443 --set-path / http://127.0.0.1:<port>
# 3. Update the service's DOMAIN env var to match new URL
# In docker-compose.yml, update DOMAIN=https://new-hostname.tailXXXXX.ts.net
docker compose up -d
# 4. Force the client app to re-fetch config
# Delete the server entry from device, force-close app, re-add fresh URL
If the Bitwarden app still says "not a recognized server": The API config at /api/config advertises what the server expects. What you type in the app must match the vault URL exactly — including http vs https and any port. Verify with curl https://new-hostname.tailXXXXX.ts.net/api/config | jq '.environment'.
Accessing Services
Vaultwarden example
# On any enrolled device:
# Open: https://<hostname>.tail<XXXXX>.ts.net/
# Or if using raw Tailscale IP:
# Open: http://100.71.155.7:8080
The Bitwarden app configuration:
- Server URL:
https://vaultwarden.tailcXXXXX.ts.net(or IP) - Self-hosted environment → enter URL once, app fetches API/identity/sso URLs from
/api/config
SSH over Tailscale
Once Tailscale is the only access method:
ssh root@100.71.155.7
# No public IP needed. No port forwarding.
Firewall
UFW should block service ports on all interfaces and open them only on tailscale0:
# Block all external access
ufw deny <port>/tcp
# Allow only from tailscale interface
ufw allow in on tailscale0 to any port <port> proto tcp comment '<Service> via Tailscale'
Current rules on app1:
- 22 (SSH) — all interfaces (public, may lock down later)
- 80, 443 — all interfaces (public web)
- 8080 — tailscale0 only (Vaultwarden)
Security safeguards: user preferences
This user asked explicitly about safeguards against hallucinations and unauthorized actions. See references/security-preferences.md for the full document.
Hard rules carried forward from user feedback:
- Before any destructive action (reboot, config deploy, DNS change, firewall edit, container destroy), state target hostname + IP to the user and wait for confirmation. Never act on opaque IDs alone.
- Default to read-only. Unless told to enter "write mode," explore only.
- No inventing config keys or features. If a Hermes feature isn't confirmed in docs/skill/source, say "I don't know."
- API keys get minimum permissions — Cloudflare DNS-only, Wasabi write-only to backup buckets, Stripe read-only.
- Kill switch:
/lockdown→ remove SSH key, stop all cron jobs, stop email processing, report done.
Pitfalls
-
Tailscale Serve and hostname are linked. If you change the server's Tailscale hostname, the Serve URL changes. Re-add Serve to pick up the new name, then update any service DOMAIN config.
-
Tailscale can conflict with local Caddy on port 443. When Tailscale is installed and running,
tailscaledbinds port 443 on its Tailnet IP (e.g.100.71.155.7:443). If you also run a local Caddy HTTPS server on :443, Caddy fails withbind: address already in usebecause:443captures all interfaces including the Tailscale one. Check withss -tlnp | grep 443— iftailscaledholds the port on a specific IP (not0.0.0.0), the clean fix is:Add
default_bind <public-ip>to the Caddyfile global block — this tells Caddy to bind only to the public IP, avoiding the Tailscale interface. Both services then run on port 443 simultaneously without conflict. Seereferences/caddy-tailscale-port-443-conflict.mdfor the full fix.If
default_bindisn't suitable, fallback options:- Run Caddy on an alt port (e.g., 8443) and use iptables/redirect
- Disable Tailscale's port 443 usage:
tailscale serve --https=443 off - Accept that Caddy can't serve :443 alongside Tailscale
- Update the
service-health-check.shscript to skip the Caddy check if Tailscale port 443 is intentional
-
Public ports + Tailscale = redundant. Every port open on all interfaces that's also served via Tailscale is a wasted attack surface. Lock down to
tailscale0once you confirm the tunnel works. -
Tailscale is not a replacement for backups. It's a network layer — doesn't protect against data loss. The 15-min S3 sync is still the backup strategy.
-
Standby server should also have Tailscale. If the live box dies and the standby takes over, you need a way to reach it. Install Tailscale on the standby too so it's reachable via tailnet IP even if public SSH is locked down.
-
The Tailscale auth email doesn't need to be a real email domain. A self-hosted domain (
info@itpropartner.com) works — Tailscale uses it only as an identity label. Sign up with any Google/Microsoft/GitHub/Apple account. -
Unlinking Tailscale from the box. If you need to remove a server from your tailnet:
tailscale logouton the server, then remove it from the Tailscale admin console. -
Telegram IPv6 timeout on netcup. This netcup KVM box prefers IPv6 DNS resolution, but Telegram's IPv6 endpoint (
2001:67c:4e8:f004::9) is unreachable. The Hermes gateway gets stuck in connection retries indefinitely. Fix:sysctl -w net.ipv6.conf.all.disable_ipv6=1and restart the gateway. Seereferences/telegram-ipv6-timeout.md.