DERP
This is the code for the Tailscale DERP server.
In general, you should not need to or want to run this code. The overwhelming
majority of Tailscale users (both individuals and companies) do not.
In the happy path, Tailscale establishes direct connections between peers and
data plane traffic flows directly between them, without using DERP for more than
acting as a low bandwidth side channel to bootstrap the NAT traversal. If you
find yourself wanting DERP for more bandwidth, the real problem is usually the
network configuration of your Tailscale node(s), making sure that Tailscale can
get direction connections via some mechanism.
If you've decided or been advised to run your own derper
, then read on.
Caveats
-
Node sharing and other cross-Tailnet features don't work when using custom
DERP servers.
-
DERP servers only see encrypted WireGuard packets and thus are not useful for
network-level debugging.
-
The Tailscale control plane does certain geo-level steering features and
optimizations that are not available when using custom DERP servers.
Guide to running cmd/derper
-
You must build and update the cmd/derper
binary yourself. There are no
packages. Use go install tailscale.com/cmd/derper@latest
with the latest
version of Go. You should update this binary approximately as regularly as
you update Tailscale nodes. If using --verify-clients
, the derper
binary
and tailscaled
binary on the machine must be built from the same git revision.
(It might work otherwise, but they're developed and only tested together.)
-
The DERP protocol does a protocol switch inside TLS from HTTP to a custom
bidirectional binary protocol. It is thus incompatible with many HTTP proxies.
Do not put derper
behind another HTTP proxy.
-
The tailscaled
client does its own selection of the fastest/nearest DERP
server based on latency measurements. Do not put derper
behind a global load
balancer.
-
DERP servers should ideally have both a static IPv4 and static IPv6 address.
Both of those should be listed in the DERP map so the client doesn't need to
rely on its DNS which might be broken and dependent on DERP to get back up.
-
A DERP server should not share an IP address with any other DERP server.
-
Avoid having multiple DERP nodes in a region. If you must, they all need to be
meshed with each other and monitored. Having two one-node "regions" in the
same datacenter is usually easier and more reliable than meshing, at the cost
of more required connections from clients in some cases. If your clients
aren't mobile (battery constrained), one node regions are definitely
preferred. If you really need multiple nodes in a region for HA reasons, two
is sufficient.
-
Monitor your DERP servers with cmd/derpprobe
.
-
If using --verify-clients
, a tailscaled
must be running alongside the
derper
, and all clients must be visible to the derper tailscaled in the ACL.
-
If using --verify-clients
, a tailscaled
must also be running alongside
your derpprobe
, and derpprobe
needs to use --derp-map=local
.
-
The firewall on the derper
should permit TCP ports 80 and 443 and UDP port
3478.
-
Only LetsEncrypt certs are rotated automatically. Other cert updates require a
restart.
-
Don't use a firewall in front of derper
that suppresses RST
s upon
receiving traffic to a dead or unknown connection.
-
Don't rate-limit UDP STUN packets.
-
Don't rate-limit outbound TCP traffic (only inbound).
Diagnostics
This is not a complete guide on DERP diagnostics.
Running your own DERP services requires exeprtise in multi-layer network and
application diagnostics. As the DERP runs multiple protocols at multiple layers
and is not a regular HTTP(s) server you will need expertise in correlative
analysis to diagnose the most tricky problems. There is no "plain text" or
"open" mode of operation for DERP.
-
The debug handler is accessible at URL path /debug/
. It is only accessible
over localhost or from a Tailscale IP address.
-
Go pprof can be accessed via the debug handler at /debug/pprof/
-
Prometheus compatible metrics can be gathered from the debug handler at
/debug/varz
.
-
cmd/stunc
in the Tailscale repository provides a basic tool for diagnosing
issues with STUN.
-
cmd/derpprobe
provides a service for monitoring DERP cluster health.
-
tailscale debug derp
and tailscale netcheck
provide additional client
driven diagnostic information for DERP communications.
-
Tailscale logs may provide insight for certain problems, such as if DERPs are
unreachable or peers are regularly not reachable in their DERP home regions.
There are many possible misconfiguration causes for these problems, but
regular log entries are a good first indicator that there is a problem.