| ▲ | ghthor 6 hours ago | |
You can ack based on groups, and you can out users into groups. So if you auth a node, it’s now your node and the ACL for your user / group will apply. But yes I don’t think you can ACL based o the hostname | ||
| ▲ | andrew-d 5 hours ago | parent [-] | |
Hi there, I work at Tailscale. Part of the reason that we don't (currently) let you do this is that a hostname is a user-reported field, and can change over time; it's not a durable form of identity that you can write ACLs on. One could imagine, for example: 1. Creating an ACL rule that allows hostname "webserver" to hostname "db". 2. (time passes) 3. Hostname "webserver" is deleted/changed to "web"/etc. 4. Someone can now register a user device with the system hostname set to "webserver" Should they be allowed to inherit the pre-existing ACL rule? However, you can accomplish something very close to what you're asking for, I think, by defining a "host" in the policy file (https://tailscale.com/docs/reference/syntax/policy-file#host...) that points to a single Tailscale IP. Since we don't allow non-admins to change their Tailscale IP, this uniquely identifies a single device even if the hostname changes, and thus you can write a policy similar to: | ||