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Tailscale Funnel · Tailscale Docs Tailscale Funnel lets you route traffic from the broader internet to a local service running on a device in your Tailscale network (known as a tailnet) You can use it to share a local service, like a web app, for anyone to access—even if they don't use Tailscale
Tailscale Funnel: Share Your Web Server with the Public Internet Learn how Tailscale Funnel lets users securely share local web servers with the public internet Learn how to set up Funnel with TLS encryption, DNS management, and improved CLI commands for an easy, secure connection
Tailscale Funnel examples With Tailscale Funnel, you can expose local services, folders, or text to the public internet over HTTPS We've collected these examples from Tailscale users to inspire you to try it in new ways You can share nearly any HTTP or TCP service listening on your local device with Funnel
tailscale funnel command tailscale funnel lets you share a local service over the internet You can also choose to use Tailscale Serve using the tailscale serve command to limit sharing within your tailnet
Reintroducing Serve and Funnel: even simpler sharing with . . . - Tailscale Tailscale Funnel lets you expose a local service, file, or directory to the entire internet You can use it to host a website on a Raspberry Pi, test your local webhook development project, or share the web app you’re developing on your laptop with the world
Funnel vs. sharing devices · Tailscale Docs Tailscale offers more than one way to serve and share resources You can use Tailscale Funnel to share resources outside your Tailscale network (known as a tailnet) or use device sharing to share an entire device with someone
Enabling HTTPS · Tailscale Docs Using tailscale cert (with sudo as needed), Tailscale will automatically request a certificate for this machine on this domain, using Let's Encrypt Tailscale creates a * ts net DNS TXT record for your nodes to complete their DNS-01 challenges
Tailscale Serve · Tailscale Docs Tailscale Serve requires you to enable HTTPS certificates in your tailnet If you do not have HTTPS enabled in your tailnet, the Tailscale CLI command tailscale serve provides an interactive web UI that will prompt you to allow Tailscale to enable HTTPS on your behalf
Tailscale CLI · Tailscale Docs The Tailscale client includes a built-in command-line interface (CLI) you can use to manage and troubleshoot your device within your Tailscale network (known as a tailnet)