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@bnhf
Last active July 21, 2025 11:20
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Tailscale - Deploying with Docker and Portainer

Just thought I'd put together some detail on deploying Tailscale using Docker and Portainer. These bits-and-pieces are available elsewhere, but not together, so hopefully this will save someone a bit of time if you'd like to add Tailscale to an existing Docker install:

Here's my annotated recommended docker-compose, to use with Portainer-Stacks. Note that I'm not using a pre-made Auth Key. I started that way, but realized it was very easy to simply check the Portainer log for the tailscaled container once the stack is running. In that log you'll see the standard Auth link that you can use to authorize the container. This way you don't need to create a key in advance, or create a reusable key that introduces a security risk:

version: '3.9'
services:
  tailscale:
    image: tailscale/tailscale
    container_name: tailscaled
    cap_add:
      - NET_ADMIN
      - NET_RAW
    environment:
#      - TS_HOSTNAME=${TS_HOSTNAME} # Usually not necessary for your hostname to be the same name on the tailscale network
#      - TS_AUTHKEY=${TS_AUTHKEY} # Generate auth keys here: https://login.tailscale.com/admin/settings/keys
#      - TS_ROUTES=${TS_ROUTES} # Creates a subnet router for Tailscale. Use your subnet's CIDR in the form: 192.168.1.0/24
#      - TS_ACCEPT_DNS=${TS_ACCEPT_DNS} # Set to false for Pi-hole Docker setups
      - TS_SOCKET=${TS_SOCKET} # Specifying the /var/lib/tailscale/tailscaled.sock location allows use of standard Tailscale commands 
      - TS_EXTRA_ARGS=${TS_EXTRA_ARGS} # Add any other supported arguments in the docker commandline style: e.g. --advertise-exit-node
      - TS_STATE_DIR=${TS_STATE_DIR} # Required to create a persistent container state that will survive reboots
    volumes:
      - /data:/var/lib # Creates a tailscale directory under /data for persistence
      - /dev/net/tun:/dev/net/tun
    network_mode: host
    restart: unless-stopped

These are the minimum environment variables you'll want to define in the Portainer-Environment section:

TS_SOCKET=/var/run/tailscale/tailscaled.sock
TS_EXTRA_ARGS=--accept-routes
TS_STATE_DIR=/var/lib/tailscale

With these variables, you'll be able to exec into the container to run commands like "tailscale version" and "tailscale status". Your container will accept routes advertised by a designated node, and your setup (including authorization) will persist across reboots.

@jpatel207
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I can't get this to work when I have TS_EXTRA_ARGS=--advertise-exit-node. It only works when I have it set to --accept-routes. Is there something else I have to do to get the device to work as an exit node?

@bnhf
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bnhf commented Jun 1, 2025

Is there something else I have to do to get the device to work as an exit node?

Have you authorized it as an exit node in the Tailscale Admin Console?

@jpatel207
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I set the variable with both --advertise-exit-node --accept-routes and it works now. Originally, I had only --advertise-exit-node set and Tailscale wouldn't show the device and the container would constantly restart over and over. I guess I have to set both values for the TS_EXTRA_ARGS variable.

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