A web frontend for the headscale Tailscale-compatible coordination server.
Headscale-UI is currently released as a static site: just take the release and host with your favorite web server. Headscale-UI expects to be served from the /web
path to avoid overlap with headscale on the same domain. Note that due to CORS (see juanfont/headscale#623), headscale UI must be served on the same subdomain, or CORS headers injected via reverse proxy.
If you are using docker, you can install headscale
alongside headscale-ui
, like so:
version: '3.5'
services:
headscale:
image: headscale/headscale:latest
container_name: headscale
volumes:
- ./container-config:/etc/headscale
- ./container-data/data:/var/lib/headscale
# ports:
# - 27896:8080
command: headscale serve
restart: unless-stopped
headscale-ui:
image: ghcr.io/gurucomputing/headscale-ui:latest
restart: unless-stopped
container_name: headscale-ui
# ports:
# - 9443:443
Headscale UI serves on port 443 and uses a self signed cert by default. You will need to add a config.yaml
file under your container-config
folder so that headscale
has all of the required settings declared. An example from the official headscale
repo is here.
The docker container lets you set the following settings:
Variable | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
HTTP_PORT | Sets the HTTP port to an alternate value | 80 |
HTTPS_PORT | Sets the HTTPS port to an alternate value | 443 |
You will need a reverse proxy to install headscale-ui
on your domain. Here is an example Caddy Config to achieve this:
https://hs.yourdomain.com.au {
reverse_proxy /web* https://headscale-ui {
transport http {
tls_insecure_skip_verify
}
}
reverse_proxy * http://headscale:8080
}
If you do not want to configure headscale-ui on the same subdomain as headscale, you must intercept headscale traffic via your reverse proxy to fix CORS (see juanfont/headscale#623). Here is an example fix with Caddy, replacing your headscale UI domain with hs-ui.yourdomain.com.au
:
https://hs.yourdomain.com.au {
@hs-options {
host hs.yourdomain.com.au
method OPTIONS
}
@hs-other {
host hs.yourdomain.com.au
}
handle @hs-options {
header {
Access-Control-Allow-Origin https://hs-ui.yourdomain.au
Access-Control-Allow-Headers *
Access-Control-Allow-Methods "POST, GET, OPTIONS, DELETE"
}
respond 204
}
handle @hs-other {
reverse_proxy http://headscale:8080 {
header_down Access-Control-Allow-Origin https://hs-ui.yourdomain.com.au
header_down Access-Control-Allow-Methods "POST, GET, OPTIONS, DELETE"
header_down Access-Control-Allow-Headers *
}
}
}
See Other Configurations for further proxy examples, such as Traefik
The following versions correspond to the appropriate headscale version
Headscale Version | HS-UI Version |
---|---|
19+ | 2023-01-30+ |
<19 | <2023-01-30 |
Make sure you are using the latest version of headscale. Headscale-UI is only tested against:
- The current stable version of headscale
- Chrome/Chrome Mobile
- Firefox/Firefox Mobile
Note that while mobile is checked for functionality, the web experience is not mobile optimised.
If you are getting errors about preflight checks, it's probably CORS related. Make sure your UI sits on the same subdomain as headscale or inject CORS headers.
Your API key is either not saved or you haven't configured your reverse proxy. Create an API key in headscale
(via command line) with headscale apikeys create
or docker exec <headscale container> headscale apikeys create
and save it in settings
.
HS-UI has to be ran on the same subdomain as headscale or you need to configure CORS. Yes you need to use a reverse proxy to do this. Use a reverse proxy. If you are trying to use raw IPs and ports, it will not work.
see security for details
see development for details
see style for details
See architecture for details