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by lucideer
237 days ago
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Fwiw I bought an Asus router that came with Wireguard pre-installed & has a nice management UI. It handles client onboarding via a simple QR code that integrates with the Wireguard mobile app - even my mother had no issue setting it up. Buying hardware is an investment (& not something everyone can do) but I've really never understood the point of the control server from the perspective of an open-source self-hoster (for a business like Tailscale it makes sense as it introduces an element of control, user dependency & likely analytics of some value). There's still a lot that can be done to improve Wireguard's UX but I think the Asus example proves it can be done well. Headscale seems to be doing the worst of both worlds (promoting an architecture & user-flow of a proprietary closed-source competitor, while still requiring CLI setup & instance maintenance). For example, it seems to me like it would be better for them to wrap Wireguard directly & integrate with the actual Wireguard mobile app instead of having people install proprietary Tailscale app on their phones to use your own open-source self-hosted control server. |
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I would agree that stock WireGuard is going to have the fewest dependencies, and I don’t mean to nitpick or be disagreeable because I do agree with you, that fewer third party dependencies is usually better than more.
The Asus-Merlin firmware is also nice, though the stock Asus firmwares have gotten pretty good and work for most folks for many use cases. I think VLAN config and tagging support might be one of the only features I wanted that stock Asus firmware didn’t handle when I used them last.