This commit is contained in:
@@ -7,6 +7,8 @@ A minimal Tailscale Docker image built for MikroTik routers running
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16 MB internal flash. Built from source with only router-relevant features
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included.
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> Disclaimer: This project has been largely vibe-coded, but I stand behind design and implementation choices made.
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- **~4 MB** extracted rootfs (`FROM scratch` + UPX'd Tailscale binary + a custom
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static busybox debug shell).
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- **Multi-arch**: amd64, arm64, arm/v7 — one tag, RouterOS pulls the right one.
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@@ -16,6 +18,23 @@ included.
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- **Flash-wear conscious**: minimal persistent state, no netmap disk-caching,
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tmpfs for scratch and runtime.
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## Motivation
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There is no built-in Tailscale integration in MikroTik, and other solutions
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feel underwhelming. I've used Fluent-networks' tailscale-mikrotik until now,
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but that basically forced me to connect external storage to my router
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just to use Tailscale. This approach, while works, is fragile, wasteful
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and overcomplicated, so I decided to do better one myself.
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| | **This project** | Fluent-networks/tailscale-mikrotik |
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|---|---|---|
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| Size | **~4 MB** | ~106 MB |
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| Size reduction technique | **Minimal container with custom Tailscale and Busybox builds, compressed by UPX** | Alpine Linux base, Tailscale binary compressed by UPX on build, but auto-update completely nullifies that on first launch |
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| Update mechanism | **Automatically released optimized container images with new Tailscale versions, scheduled script updating deployment on new version** | None, opt-in Tailscale built-in auto-update downloading official binaries |
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| Flash wear | **Write-heavy functionality compiled out, suitable for low-endurance flash chips** | High, constant netmap cache updates |
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| Stability | **Immutable container** | Tailscale app can update on its own |
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| Features | **Only router-useful Tailscale features compiled, Busybox providing shell and utils** | Full tailscale, OpenSSH server, Bash, IPTables |
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## Documentation
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- **[Usage](docs/USAGE.md)** — deploy the published image on a MikroTik router
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+41
-48
@@ -10,64 +10,58 @@ reasoning behind these choices, see [DESIGN.md](DESIGN.md).
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## Deploy on MikroTik (RouterOS)
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Verified on RouterOS 7.21.2 (arm64, CRS418). Commands are grouped into
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copy-paste blocks; **only the values marked `CHANGE ME` need editing**.
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copy-paste blocks, defaults should fit most configurations.
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> Because the image has no built-in updater (the `clientupdate` feature is
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> [intentionally compiled out](DESIGN.md#why-the-built-in-updater-is-removed)),
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> updates are handled by a small script that only re-pulls when the published
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> image actually changed — see [step 7](#7-enable-automatic-updates).
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> updates are handled by a small script that recreates container when
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> the update is published — see [step 7](#7-enable-automatic-updates).
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### 0. Prerequisites
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- RouterOS 7.x with the **container** package installed.
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- Container mode enabled (needs physical access — press reset / cold-boot when
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prompted):
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- RouterOS >7.13 with the **container** package installed.
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- Container mode enabled ([documentation](https://manual.mikrotik.com/docs/System%20Information%20and%20Utilities/device-mode/#changing-mode-of-device-mode)):
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```
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/system/device-mode/update container=yes
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```
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- A Tailscale **auth key** from the admin console
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(**Settings → Keys**, reusable, optionally tagged). You'll use it in step 6.
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### 1. Networking (veth + routing)
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### 1. Networking (veth + bridge + NAT)
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Gives the container an internal IP and outbound internet via NAT. Pick a subnet
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that doesn't clash with your LAN.
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Gives the container an internal IP and configures routing to the tailnet.
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Pick a subnet that doesn't clash with your LAN.
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```
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/interface/veth/add name=veth-tailscale address=172.20.0.2/24 gateway=172.20.0.1
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/interface/bridge/add name=containers
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/ip/address/add address=172.20.0.1/24 interface=containers
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/interface/bridge/port/add bridge=containers interface=veth-tailscale
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/ip/firewall/nat/add chain=srcnat action=masquerade src-address=172.20.0.0/24
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/ip/route/add dst-address=100.64.0.0/10 gateway=172.20.0.2 comment=Tailnet
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```
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If you want the router to have access to subnets shared by other tailscale nodes,
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add route for each one.
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```
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/ip/route/add dst-address=[subnet CIDR] gateway=172.20.0.2 comment="Another network via tailscale"
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```
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If you want to share your LAN via tailscale, add it as an advertised route in
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[step 5](#5-authenticate). You may also need additional firewall configuration
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to accept connections to or from tailnet if you have one configured.
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You should not need any additional NAT rules.
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### 2. Extraction scratch dir (tmpfs)
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Put the image extraction scratch dir on **tmpfs** (RAM) so the pull/extract
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never writes to flash:
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happen in RAM and doesn't fill up or wear out flash:
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```
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/disk/add type=tmpfs tmpfs-max-size=256M slot=tmp
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/container/config/set tmpdir=tmp
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```
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> **No `registry-url` change needed.** This guide puts the full registry host in
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> `remote-image` (step 5), and RouterOS pulls directly from that host — the
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> global `registry-url` is ignored when the image reference includes a host.
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> This is intentional: it leaves your existing `registry-url` untouched, so
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> other containers (e.g. ones pulling from Docker Hub or ghcr.io) keep working,
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> and multiple registries can be used side by side.
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### 3. Authentication note (no env needed)
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This image runs `tailscaled` directly and does **not** bundle Tailscale's
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`containerboot` wrapper, so the `TS_AUTHKEY` environment variable is **not**
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read automatically. You authenticate with `tailscale up --authkey=...` after the
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container starts (step 6) — this keeps the image minimal and needs no env list.
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### 4. Persistent state mount (the only thing on flash)
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### 3. Persistent state mount (the only thing on flash)
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Only the tiny `tailscaled.state` (node identity / key) needs to persist. Mount
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just that directory:
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@@ -76,14 +70,7 @@ just that directory:
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/container/mounts/add list=tailscale_state src=tailscale/state dst=/var/lib/tailscale
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```
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`src=tailscale/state` is on internal storage. This holds `tailscaled.state`
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(and `derpmap.cached.json`), written only on auth / key rotation / prefs
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change — **not** on every netmap update, because netmap disk-caching is omitted
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([why](DESIGN.md#why-netmap-disk-caching-is-removed)). Flash wear is therefore
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minimal. If you want *zero* persistent writes, point `src` at a tmpfs disk slot
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instead and accept re-authentication after a reboot.
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### 5. Add and start the container
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### 4. Add and start the container
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```
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/container/add \
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@@ -106,16 +93,24 @@ Wait for the pull/extract to finish (`status=stopped`), then start it:
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The daemon is now running but **not yet authenticated**.
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### 6. Authenticate
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### 5. Authenticate
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Enter the container shell and bring Tailscale up with your auth key. You can set
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subnet routes / exit-node advertisement in the same command:
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> This image runs `tailscaled` directly and does **not** bundle Tailscale's
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`containerboot` wrapper, so the `TS_AUTHKEY` environment variable is **not**
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read automatically. You authenticate with `tailscale up --authkey=...` after the
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container starts.
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Enter the container shell and bring Tailscale up with your auth key.
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Use `tailscale up --help` to see list of commands, customize it to your needs,
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add subnets (eg. your LAN) or exit-node advertisements in command below.
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```
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/container/shell [find where name=tailscale]
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# inside the container — CHANGE ME: your key (and adjust routes/subnet):
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tailscale up --authkey=tskey-auth-CHANGEME \
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--advertise-routes=192.168.88.0/24 \
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--accept-routes \
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--snat-subnet-routes=false \
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--advertise-routes=172.20.0.0/24 \
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--advertise-exit-node
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exit
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```
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@@ -124,7 +119,7 @@ The node now appears in your Tailscale admin console. Approve the advertised
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routes / exit node there. Because the auth state is written to the persisted
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`tailscaled.state`, you only do this once — it survives reboots and updates.
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### 7. Enable automatic updates
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### 6. Enable automatic updates
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First, edit the `CONFIG` block at the top of `routeros/update-tailscale.rsc` if
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you changed any names in the steps above. The defaults match this guide
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@@ -136,8 +131,6 @@ create a **named script** from it and schedule it:
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```
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# Create the named script from the uploaded file's contents.
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# (Do NOT use `/import` — that just runs the file once and does not create a
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# reusable script for the scheduler to call.)
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/system/script/add name=update-tailscale source=[/file/get update-tailscale.rsc contents]
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# Run it daily.
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@@ -179,14 +172,14 @@ queries to Tailscale's magic DNS resolver:
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add name="ts.net" type=FWD forward-to=100.100.100.100 match-subdomain=yes
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```
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This avoids writing to `/etc/resolv.conf` inside the container (which would
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happen if `--accept-dns` is passed to `tailscale up`). The container resolves
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Tailscale node names; the rest of the router uses its own DNS.
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When this is configured, you can connect to other tailscale machines using
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`[device name].[tailnet name].ts.net`. You can see and change assigned
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Tailnet DNS name in Tailscale admin panel under DNS tab.
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## Updating
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You don't normally do anything: when a new release is published, the
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auto-update script ([step 7](#7-enable-automatic-updates)) detects the changed
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auto-update script ([step 6](#6-enable-automatic-updates)) detects the changed
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`:stable` image on its next scheduled run and recreates the container. Your
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node identity and settings persist across the update via the state mount.
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