Tailscale

Some peers are advertising routes but --accept-routes is false tailscale

Some peers are advertising routes but --accept-routes is false tailscale
  1. Is Tailscale peer to peer?
  2. How do I know if Tailscale is working?
  3. Does Tailscale route all traffic?
  4. How do I know if my Tailscale is using Derp?
  5. Can Tailscale be trusted?
  6. Is peer-to-peer same as mesh?
  7. Does Tailscale require port forwarding?
  8. What are the requirements for Tailscale?
  9. Does Tailscale keep logs?
  10. What is Tailscale good for?
  11. What are the advantages of Tailscale?
  12. What are the drawbacks of Tailscale?
  13. What type of VPN is Tailscale?
  14. What are the drawbacks of Tailscale?
  15. What protocol does Tailscale VPN use?
  16. Is there a peer-to-peer server?
  17. Can I use Tailscale with another VPN?
  18. What are the requirements for Tailscale?
  19. What is Tailscale good for?

Is Tailscale peer to peer?

Tailscale routes traffic over the shortest path possible. In most cases, this is a direct, peer-to-peer connection. In cases where a direct connection cannot be established, devices will communicate by bouncing traffic off of one or more geographically distributed relay servers, called DERPs.

How do I know if Tailscale is working?

Also, the tailscale ping command will indicate whether a successful ping was by direct path or via DERP. tailscale ping will keep trying until it either sends 10 pings (the default if not using the --c flag) through the relays, or finds a direct path.

Does Tailscale route all traffic?

By default, Tailscale acts as an overlay network: it only routes traffic between devices running Tailscale, but doesn't touch your public internet traffic, such as when you visit Google or Twitter.

How do I know if my Tailscale is using Derp?

You can use tailscale ping to see if a given connection uses DERP. To find the closest DERP server to a device, look at the list of Relays on the device details page in the admin console or run tailscale netcheck --verbose .

Can Tailscale be trusted?

Tailscale is a secure network for WireGuard-encrypted traffic, requiring no configuration and no new firewall rules. It uses OAuth2 (SSO), OpenID, or SAML for authentication, and creates point-to-point, fully-encrypted connections between clients and servers.

Is peer-to-peer same as mesh?

Peer-to-peer refers to the hierarchy, that all stations are on the same level. Mesh refers to the cabling scheme, a many-to-many network. A peer-to-peer network may connect may use bus, ring, or mesh cabling.

Does Tailscale require port forwarding?

Nearly all of the time, you don't need to open any firewall ports for Tailscale. Tailscale uses various NAT traversal techniques to safely connect to other Tailscale nodes without manual intervention—it “just works.”

What are the requirements for Tailscale?

Tailscale requires a Single Sign-On (SSO) provider, so you'll need a Google, Microsoft, GitHub, Okta, OneLogin, or other supported SSO identity provider account to begin.

Does Tailscale keep logs?

Each Tailscale agent in your distributed network streams its logs to a central log server (at log.tailscale.io ). This includes real-time events for open and close events for every inter-machine connection (TCP or UDP) on your network.

What is Tailscale good for?

A frustratingly simple VPN. Tailscale lets you easily manage access to private resources, quickly SSH into devices on your network, and work securely from anywhere in the world.

What are the advantages of Tailscale?

The Tailscale approach avoids centralization where possible, resulting in both higher throughput and lower latency as network traffic can flow directly between machines. Additionally, decentralization improves stability and reliability by reducing single points of failure. Tailscale is simple and effortless.

What are the drawbacks of Tailscale?

Tailscale is not as privacy-friendly as other VPNs out there. Even though it allows you to create your own private network, it does require some communication with Tailscale's coordination server.

What type of VPN is Tailscale?

Tailscale is a peer-to-peer mesh VPN which allows for direct connections between devices, whereas OpenVPN is a VPN with a concentrator that funnels traffic between devices. OpenVPN is an SSL VPN, which makes it flexible for use with many firewalls and NATs. OpenVPN can be run in pfSense, whereas Tailscale cannot.

What are the drawbacks of Tailscale?

Tailscale is not as privacy-friendly as other VPNs out there. Even though it allows you to create your own private network, it does require some communication with Tailscale's coordination server.

What protocol does Tailscale VPN use?

Tailscale is a VPN service that makes the devices and applications you own accessible anywhere in the world, securely and effortlessly. It enables encrypted point-to-point connections using the open source WireGuard protocol, which means only devices on your private network can communicate with each other.

Is there a peer-to-peer server?

Peer-to-Peer Network. In a peer-to-peer network, there is no central server controlling the network. Instead, all the computers in the network are connected to one another and share resources such as files, applications, and programs.

Can I use Tailscale with another VPN?

In most cases, you can't use Tailscale alongside other VPNs. In theory, it should work. Tailscale only routes a small subset of your internet traffic (100. x.y.z addresses and subnets), by default, leaving the rest for other VPNs to manage.

What are the requirements for Tailscale?

Tailscale requires a Single Sign-On (SSO) provider, so you'll need a Google, Microsoft, GitHub, Okta, OneLogin, or other supported SSO identity provider account to begin.

What is Tailscale good for?

A frustratingly simple VPN. Tailscale lets you easily manage access to private resources, quickly SSH into devices on your network, and work securely from anywhere in the world.

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