James Tucker 6c992d3e60
*: replace ossfuzz with go native fuzz invocations
The fuzzing actions are the longest actions in our CI right now. This
would be a good and happy thing if the bulk of the time was spent
fuzzing, but sadly the bulk of the time is spent doing build
preparations due to the nature of the ossfuzz docker setup.

Only two out of our 5 packages that contain fuzzers were ossfuzz
fuzzers, the rest are Go 1.18+ fuzzers. These two are converted to go
fuzzers, and then the github workflow is updated to just go test fuzz.

The action setup contains two separate steps for actions-cache, one that
handles the fuzzing corpus specifically so that we shuttle forward any
interesting corpus over time.

If the action fails, it will upload all the testdata/* directories,
which will include the data necessary to commit interesting cases for
permanent redistribution.

Signed-off-by: James Tucker <james@tailscale.com>
2023-04-14 22:14:00 -07:00
2023-03-03 10:09:26 -10:00
2023-03-09 11:13:09 -08:00
2023-04-14 11:35:33 -07:00
2023-02-14 00:59:09 +00:00
2020-02-10 22:16:30 -08:00
2023-02-14 00:59:09 +00:00
2023-02-16 22:39:09 +00:00
2023-03-14 13:50:57 -07:00

Tailscale

https://tailscale.com

Private WireGuard® networks made easy

Overview

This repository contains the majority of Tailscale's open source code. Notably, it includes the tailscaled daemon and the tailscale CLI tool. The tailscaled daemon runs on Linux, Windows, macOS, and to varying degrees on FreeBSD and OpenBSD. The Tailscale iOS and Android apps use this repo's code, but this repo doesn't contain the mobile GUI code.

Other Tailscale repos of note:

For background on which parts of Tailscale are open source and why, see https://tailscale.com/opensource/.

Using

We serve packages for a variety of distros and platforms at https://pkgs.tailscale.com.

Other clients

The macOS, iOS, and Windows clients use the code in this repository but additionally include small GUI wrappers. The GUI wrappers on non-open source platforms are themselves not open source.

Building

We always require the latest Go release, currently Go 1.20. (While we build releases with our Go fork, its use is not required.)

go install tailscale.com/cmd/tailscale{,d}

If you're packaging Tailscale for distribution, use build_dist.sh instead, to burn commit IDs and version info into the binaries:

./build_dist.sh tailscale.com/cmd/tailscale
./build_dist.sh tailscale.com/cmd/tailscaled

If your distro has conventions that preclude the use of build_dist.sh, please do the equivalent of what it does in your distro's way, so that bug reports contain useful version information.

Bugs

Please file any issues about this code or the hosted service on the issue tracker.

Contributing

PRs welcome! But please file bugs. Commit messages should reference bugs.

We require Developer Certificate of Origin Signed-off-by lines in commits.

See git log for our commit message style. It's basically the same as Go's style.

About Us

Tailscale is primarily developed by the people at https://github.com/orgs/tailscale/people. For other contributors, see:

WireGuard is a registered trademark of Jason A. Donenfeld.

Description
The easiest, most secure way to use WireGuard and 2FA.
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