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@ -6,6 +6,10 @@ Catalogue of Ansible playbooks and helper scripts for server management
- Split user provisioning to get rid of `creator` and use `atmen` as fast as possible | This should be done using two differnt playbooks, and switch user between the two
- Add configuration for `creator` to lock the account after initial provisioning, only allowing short connection with returned message
### Disable creator
Change `~/.profile` to only contain a print message and `exit 0`
Add `.hushlogin` to remove ssh login message
## Node configuration process
### Setup user configuration
- Create provisioning user without password and sudo

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headscale/README.md Normal file
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Role Name
=========
A brief description of the role goes here.
Requirements
------------
Any pre-requisites that may not be covered by Ansible itself or the role should be mentioned here. For instance, if the role uses the EC2 module, it may be a good idea to mention in this section that the boto package is required.
Role Variables
--------------
A description of the settable variables for this role should go here, including any variables that are in defaults/main.yml, vars/main.yml, and any variables that can/should be set via parameters to the role. Any variables that are read from other roles and/or the global scope (ie. hostvars, group vars, etc.) should be mentioned here as well.
Dependencies
------------
A list of other roles hosted on Galaxy should go here, plus any details in regards to parameters that may need to be set for other roles, or variables that are used from other roles.
Example Playbook
----------------
Including an example of how to use your role (for instance, with variables passed in as parameters) is always nice for users too:
- hosts: servers
roles:
- { role: username.rolename, x: 42 }
License
-------
BSD
Author Information
------------------
An optional section for the role authors to include contact information, or a website (HTML is not allowed).

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---
# defaults file for headscale

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---
# handlers file for headscale

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headscale/meta/main.yml Normal file
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galaxy_info:
author: your name
description: your role description
company: your company (optional)
# If the issue tracker for your role is not on github, uncomment the
# next line and provide a value
# issue_tracker_url: http://example.com/issue/tracker
# Choose a valid license ID from https://spdx.org - some suggested licenses:
# - BSD-3-Clause (default)
# - MIT
# - GPL-2.0-or-later
# - GPL-3.0-only
# - Apache-2.0
# - CC-BY-4.0
license: license (GPL-2.0-or-later, MIT, etc)
min_ansible_version: 2.1
# If this a Container Enabled role, provide the minimum Ansible Container version.
# min_ansible_container_version:
#
# Provide a list of supported platforms, and for each platform a list of versions.
# If you don't wish to enumerate all versions for a particular platform, use 'all'.
# To view available platforms and versions (or releases), visit:
# https://galaxy.ansible.com/api/v1/platforms/
#
# platforms:
# - name: Fedora
# versions:
# - all
# - 25
# - name: SomePlatform
# versions:
# - all
# - 1.0
# - 7
# - 99.99
galaxy_tags: []
# List tags for your role here, one per line. A tag is a keyword that describes
# and categorizes the role. Users find roles by searching for tags. Be sure to
# remove the '[]' above, if you add tags to this list.
#
# NOTE: A tag is limited to a single word comprised of alphanumeric characters.
# Maximum 20 tags per role.
dependencies: []
# List your role dependencies here, one per line. Be sure to remove the '[]' above,
# if you add dependencies to this list.

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headscale/tasks/main.yml Normal file
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---
# tasks file for headscale
- name: Download headscale binary (arm64)
ansible.builtin.get_url:
url: https://github.com/juanfont/headscale/releases/download/v0.22.3/headscale_0.22.3_linux_arm64.deb
dest: /tmp/headscale_install.deb
when: ansible_architecture == "aarch64"
- name: Download headscale binary (amd64)
ansible.builtin.get_url:
url: https://github.com/juanfont/headscale/releases/download/v0.22.3/headscale_0.22.3_linux_amd64.deb
dest: /tmp/headscale_install.deb
when: ansible_architecture == "x86_64"
- name: Install headscale
apt:
deb: /tmp/headscale_install.deb
become: true
- name: Enable and start headscale service
ansible.builtin.service:
name: headscale
state: started
enabled: yes
become: true
when: inventory_hostname in groups['headscale_server']
- name: Create headscale users
loop: "{{ groups['headscale_client'] }}"
command: headscale users create "{{ hostname }}"
when: inventory_hostname in groups['headscale_server']
become: true
- name: Generate pre authentication keys
loop: "{{ groups['headscale_client'] }}"
command: headscale --user "{{ hostname }}" preauthkeys create --expiration 1h
when: inventory_hostname in groups['headscale_server']
become: true
register: headscale_preauthkey
- name: Print keys
loop: "{{ headscale_preauthkey.results }}"
debug:
msg: "{{ item.stdout }}"
when: inventory_hostname in groups['headscale_server']
#- name:
# ansible.builtin.command: headscale --
# register:

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---
# headscale will look for a configuration file named `config.yaml` (or `config.json`) in the following order:
#
# - `/etc/headscale`
# - `~/.headscale`
# - current working directory
# The url clients will connect to.
# Typically this will be a domain like:
#
# https://myheadscale.example.com:443
#
server_url: {{ headscale_url }}
# Address to listen to / bind to on the server
#
# For production:
# listen_addr: 0.0.0.0:8080
listen_addr: {{ ansible_default_ipv4.address }}
# Address to listen to /metrics, you may want
# to keep this endpoint private to your internal
# network
#
metrics_listen_addr: {{ hostvars[peer].headscale_ip }}
# Address to listen for gRPC.
# gRPC is used for controlling a headscale server
# remotely with the CLI
# Note: Remote access _only_ works if you have
# valid certificates.
#
# For production:
# grpc_listen_addr: 0.0.0.0:50443
grpc_listen_addr: 127.0.0.1:50443
# Allow the gRPC admin interface to run in INSECURE
# mode. This is not recommended as the traffic will
# be unencrypted. Only enable if you know what you
# are doing.
grpc_allow_insecure: false
# The Noise section includes specific configuration for the
# TS2021 Noise protocol
noise:
# The Noise private key is used to encrypt the
# traffic between headscale and Tailscale clients when
# using the new Noise-based protocol.
private_key_path: /var/lib/headscale/noise_private.key
# List of IP prefixes to allocate tailaddresses from.
# Each prefix consists of either an IPv4 or IPv6 address,
# and the associated prefix length, delimited by a slash.
# It must be within IP ranges supported by the Tailscale
# client - i.e., subnets of 100.64.0.0/10 and fd7a:115c:a1e0::/48.
# See below:
# IPv6: https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/blob/22ebb25e833264f58d7c3f534a8b166894a89536/net/tsaddr/tsaddr.go#LL81C52-L81C71
# IPv4: https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/blob/22ebb25e833264f58d7c3f534a8b166894a89536/net/tsaddr/tsaddr.go#L33
# Any other range is NOT supported, and it will cause unexpected issues.
ip_prefixes:
- fd7a:115c:a1e0::/48
- 100.64.0.0/10
# DERP is a relay system that Tailscale uses when a direct
# connection cannot be established.
# https://tailscale.com/blog/how-tailscale-works/#encrypted-tcp-relays-derp
#
# headscale needs a list of DERP servers that can be presented
# to the clients.
derp:
server:
# If enabled, runs the embedded DERP server and merges it into the rest of the DERP config
# The Headscale server_url defined above MUST be using https, DERP requires TLS to be in place
enabled: false
# Region ID to use for the embedded DERP server.
# The local DERP prevails if the region ID collides with other region ID coming from
# the regular DERP config.
region_id: 999
# Region code and name are displayed in the Tailscale UI to identify a DERP region
region_code: "headscale"
region_name: "Headscale Embedded DERP"
# Listens over UDP at the configured address for STUN connections - to help with NAT traversal.
# When the embedded DERP server is enabled stun_listen_addr MUST be defined.
#
# For more details on how this works, check this great article: https://tailscale.com/blog/how-tailscale-works/
stun_listen_addr: "0.0.0.0:3478"
# Private key used to encrypt the traffic between headscale DERP
# and Tailscale clients.
# The private key file will be autogenerated if it's missing.
#
private_key_path: /var/lib/headscale/derp_server_private.key
# List of externally available DERP maps encoded in JSON
urls:
- https://controlplane.tailscale.com/derpmap/default
# Locally available DERP map files encoded in YAML
#
# This option is mostly interesting for people hosting
# their own DERP servers:
# https://tailscale.com/kb/1118/custom-derp-servers/
#
# paths:
# - /etc/headscale/derp-example.yaml
paths: []
# If enabled, a worker will be set up to periodically
# refresh the given sources and update the derpmap
# will be set up.
auto_update_enabled: true
# How often should we check for DERP updates?
update_frequency: 24h
# Disables the automatic check for headscale updates on startup
disable_check_updates: true
# Time before an inactive ephemeral node is deleted?
ephemeral_node_inactivity_timeout: 30m
# Period to check for node updates within the tailnet. A value too low will severely affect
# CPU consumption of Headscale. A value too high (over 60s) will cause problems
# for the nodes, as they won't get updates or keep alive messages frequently enough.
# In case of doubts, do not touch the default 10s.
node_update_check_interval: 10s
# SQLite config
db_type: sqlite3
# For production:
db_path: /var/lib/headscale/db.sqlite
# # Postgres config
# If using a Unix socket to connect to Postgres, set the socket path in the 'host' field and leave 'port' blank.
# db_type: postgres
# db_host: localhost
# db_port: 5432
# db_name: headscale
# db_user: foo
# db_pass: bar
# If other 'sslmode' is required instead of 'require(true)' and 'disabled(false)', set the 'sslmode' you need
# in the 'db_ssl' field. Refers to https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/libpq-ssl.html Table 34.1.
# db_ssl: false
### TLS configuration
#
## Let's encrypt / ACME
#
# headscale supports automatically requesting and setting up
# TLS for a domain with Let's Encrypt.
#
# URL to ACME directory
acme_url: https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory
# Email to register with ACME provider
acme_email: "{{ headscale_tls_email }}"
# Domain name to request a TLS certificate for:
tls_letsencrypt_hostname: "{{ headscale_url }}"
# Path to store certificates and metadata needed by
# letsencrypt
# For production:
tls_letsencrypt_cache_dir: /var/lib/headscale/cache
# Type of ACME challenge to use, currently supported types:
# HTTP-01 or TLS-ALPN-01
# See [docs/tls.md](docs/tls.md) for more information
tls_letsencrypt_challenge_type: HTTP-01
# When HTTP-01 challenge is chosen, letsencrypt must set up a
# verification endpoint, and it will be listening on:
# :http = port 80
tls_letsencrypt_listen: ":http"
## Use already defined certificates:
tls_cert_path: ""
tls_key_path: ""
log:
# Output formatting for logs: text or json
format: text
level: info
# Path to a file containg ACL policies.
# ACLs can be defined as YAML or HUJSON.
# https://tailscale.com/kb/1018/acls/
acl_policy_path: ""
## DNS
#
# headscale supports Tailscale's DNS configuration and MagicDNS.
# Please have a look to their KB to better understand the concepts:
#
# - https://tailscale.com/kb/1054/dns/
# - https://tailscale.com/kb/1081/magicdns/
# - https://tailscale.com/blog/2021-09-private-dns-with-magicdns/
#
dns_config:
# Whether to prefer using Headscale provided DNS or use local.
override_local_dns: true
# List of DNS servers to expose to clients.
nameservers:
- 1.1.1.1
# NextDNS (see https://tailscale.com/kb/1218/nextdns/).
# "abc123" is example NextDNS ID, replace with yours.
#
# With metadata sharing:
# nameservers:
# - https://dns.nextdns.io/abc123
#
# Without metadata sharing:
# nameservers:
# - 2a07:a8c0::ab:c123
# - 2a07:a8c1::ab:c123
# Split DNS (see https://tailscale.com/kb/1054/dns/),
# list of search domains and the DNS to query for each one.
#
# restricted_nameservers:
# foo.bar.com:
# - 1.1.1.1
# darp.headscale.net:
# - 1.1.1.1
# - 8.8.8.8
# Search domains to inject.
domains: []
# Extra DNS records
# so far only A-records are supported (on the tailscale side)
# See https://github.com/juanfont/headscale/blob/main/docs/dns-records.md#Limitations
# extra_records:
# - name: "grafana.myvpn.example.com"
# type: "A"
# value: "100.64.0.3"
#
# # you can also put it in one line
# - { name: "prometheus.myvpn.example.com", type: "A", value: "100.64.0.3" }
# Whether to use [MagicDNS](https://tailscale.com/kb/1081/magicdns/).
# Only works if there is at least a nameserver defined.
magic_dns: true
# Defines the base domain to create the hostnames for MagicDNS.
# `base_domain` must be a FQDNs, without the trailing dot.
# The FQDN of the hosts will be
# `hostname.user.base_domain` (e.g., _myhost.myuser.example.com_).
base_domain: example.com
# Unix socket used for the CLI to connect without authentication
# Note: for production you will want to set this to something like:
unix_socket: /var/run/headscale/headscale.sock
unix_socket_permission: "0770"
#
# headscale supports experimental OpenID connect support,
# it is still being tested and might have some bugs, please
# help us test it.
# OpenID Connect
# oidc:
# only_start_if_oidc_is_available: true
# issuer: "https://your-oidc.issuer.com/path"
# client_id: "your-oidc-client-id"
# client_secret: "your-oidc-client-secret"
# # Alternatively, set `client_secret_path` to read the secret from the file.
# # It resolves environment variables, making integration to systemd's
# # `LoadCredential` straightforward:
# client_secret_path: "${CREDENTIALS_DIRECTORY}/oidc_client_secret"
# # client_secret and client_secret_path are mutually exclusive.
#
# # The amount of time from a node is authenticated with OpenID until it
# # expires and needs to reauthenticate.
# # Setting the value to "0" will mean no expiry.
# expiry: 180d
#
# # Use the expiry from the token received from OpenID when the user logged
# # in, this will typically lead to frequent need to reauthenticate and should
# # only been enabled if you know what you are doing.
# # Note: enabling this will cause `oidc.expiry` to be ignored.
# use_expiry_from_token: false
#
# # Customize the scopes used in the OIDC flow, defaults to "openid", "profile" and "email" and add custom query
# # parameters to the Authorize Endpoint request. Scopes default to "openid", "profile" and "email".
#
# scope: ["openid", "profile", "email", "custom"]
# extra_params:
# domain_hint: example.com
#
# # List allowed principal domains and/or users. If an authenticated user's domain is not in this list, the
# # authentication request will be rejected.
#
# allowed_domains:
# - example.com
# # Note: Groups from keycloak have a leading '/'
# allowed_groups:
# - /headscale
# allowed_users:
# - alice@example.com
#
# # If `strip_email_domain` is set to `true`, the domain part of the username email address will be removed.
# # This will transform `first-name.last-name@example.com` to the user `first-name.last-name`
# # If `strip_email_domain` is set to `false` the domain part will NOT be removed resulting to the following
# user: `first-name.last-name.example.com`
#
# strip_email_domain: true
# Logtail configuration
# Logtail is Tailscales logging and auditing infrastructure, it allows the control panel
# to instruct tailscale nodes to log their activity to a remote server.
logtail:
# Enable logtail for this headscales clients.
# As there is currently no support for overriding the log server in headscale, this is
# disabled by default. Enabling this will make your clients send logs to Tailscale Inc.
enabled: false
# Enabling this option makes devices prefer a random port for WireGuard traffic over the
# default static port 41641. This option is intended as a workaround for some buggy
# firewall devices. See https://tailscale.com/kb/1181/firewalls/ for more information.
randomize_client_port: false

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localhost

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headscale/tests/test.yml Normal file
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---
- hosts: localhost
remote_user: root
roles:
- headscale

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---
# vars file for headscale

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include_role:
name: node-configuration
when: enable_setup|bool == true
- name: Configure wireguard
ansible.builtin.import_playbook: wireguard/wireguard.yml
- name: Configure headscale
include_role:
name: headscale
when: enable_wireguard|bool == true
#- name: Configure wireguard
# ansible.builtin.import_playbook: wireguard/wireguard.yml
# when: enable_wireguard|bool == true
- name: Configure k3s
ansible.builtin.import_playbook: k3s-ansible/site.yml
when: enable_k3s|bool == true

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name: sshd
state: restarted
listen: "restart sshd"
ignore_errors: yes

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name: gnupg
state: present
- name: Download OMV-extras
ansible.builtin.get_url:
url: https://github.com/OpenMediaVault-Plugin-Developers/installScript/raw/master/install
dest: /tmp/omv-extras.install
mode: u+rwx
# B: Beta to enable installation on Debian 12
# N: Skip networking installation
# F: Skip flashmemory plugin installation
- name: Install OMV-extras
ansible.builtin.shell: /tmp/omv-extras.install -n -f >> /tmp/omv-extras.log
# TODO: Only enable this within Homelab configuration
- name: Add Vagrant user to ssh group
ansible.builtin.user:
@ -17,11 +29,18 @@
groups: ssh
append: yes
- name: Download OMV-extras
ansible.builtin.get_url:
url: https://github.com/OpenMediaVault-Plugin-Developers/installScript/raw/master/install
dest: /tmp/omv-extras.install
mode: u+rwx
- name: Upgrade packages
ansible.builtin.apt:
update_cache: yes
name: "*"
state: latest
- name: Install OMV-extras
ansible.builtin.shell: /tmp/omv-extras.install -n -f >> /tmp/omv-extras.log
- name: Install ZFS, S3 with Minio and Filebrowser
ansible.builtin.apt:
pkg:
- openmediavault-zfs
- openmediavault-s3
- openmediavault-filebrowser
- name: Reboot to enable ZFS module and finish upgrade
ansible.builtin.reboot: