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tailscale/gokrazy
Andrew Dunham f572286bf9 gokrazy, various: use point versions of Go and update Nix deps
This un-breaks vim-go (which doesn't understand "go 1.23") and allows
the natlab tests to work in a Nix shell (by adding the "qemu-img" and
"mkfs.ext4" binaries to the shell). These binaries are available even on
macOS, as I'm testing on my M1 Max.

Updates #13038

Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca>
Change-Id: I99f8521b5de93ea47dc33b099d5b243ffc1303da
1 month ago
..
natlabapp gokrazy, various: use point versions of Go and update Nix deps 1 month ago
natlabapp.arm64 gokrazy, various: use point versions of Go and update Nix deps 1 month ago
tsapp gokrazy, various: use point versions of Go and update Nix deps 1 month ago
.gitignore gokrazy,tstest/integration/nat: add Gokrazy appliance just for natlab 3 months ago
Makefile gokrazy,tstest/integration/nat: add Gokrazy appliance just for natlab 3 months ago
README.md
UTM.md
build.go gokrazy{,/natlabapp.arm64}: start adding arm64 appliance support 2 months ago
go.mod gokrazy, various: use point versions of Go and update Nix deps 1 month ago
go.sum gokrazy: bump 3 months ago
gok gokrazy: update breakglass with now-upstreamed ec2 change 5 months ago
tidy-deps.go

README.md

Tailscale Appliance Gokrazy Image

This is (as of 2024-06-02) a WORK IN PROGRESS (pre-alpha) experiment to package Tailscale as a Gokrazy appliance image for use on both VMs (AWS, GCP, Azure, Proxmox, ...) and Rasperry Pis.

See https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/1866

Overview

It makes a ~70MB image (about the same size as tailscale-setup-full-1.66.4.exe and smaller than the combined Tailscale Android APK) that combines the Linux kernel and Tailscale and that's it. Nothing written in C. (except optional busybox for debugging) So no operating system to maintain. Gokrazy has three partitions: two read-only ones (one active at a time, the other for updates for the next boot) and one optional stateful, writable partition that survives upgrades (/perm/)

Initial bootstrap configuration of this appliance will be over either serial or configuration files (auth keys, subnet routes, etc) baked into the image (for Raspberry Pis) or in cloud-init/user-data (for AWS, etc). As of 2024-06-02, AWS user-data config files work.

Quick start

Install dependencies:

$ brew install qemu e2fsprogs

Build + launch:

$ make qemu

That puts serial on stdio. To exit the serial console and escape to the qemu monitor, type Ctrl-a c. Then type quit in the monitor to quit.

Building

make image to build just the image (tsapp.img), without uploading it.

UTM

You can also use UTM, but the qemu path above is easier. For UTM, see the UTM instructions.

AWS

Build an AMI

go run build.go --bucket=your-S3-temp-bucket to build an AMI. Make sure your "aws" command is in your path and has access.

Creating an instance

When creating an instance, you need a Nitro machine type to get a virtual serial console. Notably, that means the t2.* instance types that AWS pushes as a free option are not new enough. Use t3.* at least.

As of 2024-06-02 this builder tool only supports x86_64 (arm64 should be trivial and will come soon), so don't use a Graviton machine type.

To connect to the serial console, you can either use the web console, or use the CLI like:

$ aws ec2-instance-connect send-serial-console-ssh-public-key --instance-id i-0b4a0eabc43629f13 --serial-port 0 --ssh-public-key file:///your/home/.ssh/id_ed25519.pub --region us-west-2
{
    "RequestId": "a93b0ea3-9ff9-45d5-b8ed-b1e70ccc0410",
    "Success": true
}
$ ssh i-0b4a0eabc43629f13.port0@serial-console.ec2-instance-connect.us-west-2.aws