lneto f674b82e2a TUN-10413: Centralize TLS curve configuration in crypto/ and adopt X25519MLKEM768 for QUIC/H2
Introduce a new crypto/ package as the single source of truth for TLS
curve preferences used on every edge-facing connection, and adopt
X25519MLKEM768 as the primary post-quantum key exchange for both QUIC
and HTTP/2:

  PQ Prefer (default):     X25519MLKEM768, P256Kyber768Draft00, CurveP256
  PQ Strict (--post-quantum): X25519MLKEM768, P256Kyber768Draft00

The curve list is identical under FIPS and non-FIPS builds, so
crypto.GetCurvePreferences takes only a features.PostQuantumMode and
returns a fresh slice on every call.

HTTP/2 now applies these curve preferences the same way QUIC does. The
previous PostQuantumStrict rejection in serveHTTP2 and the forced
QUIC-only selection in NewProtocolSelector are removed since both
transports support the same post-quantum curves; the needPQ parameter
is dropped from NewProtocolSelector accordingly.

Also fix a shared tls.Config race: both the QUIC and HTTP/2 paths now
Clone() the per-protocol entry from TunnelConfig.EdgeTLSConfigs before
mutating CurvePreferences instead of writing through the shared map
entry.

Legacy Kyber draft curve X25519Kyber768Draft00
and the unused removeDuplicates helper are removed along with the old
supervisor/pqtunnels.go / _test.go files.

AGENTS.md is updated with guidance on the new crypto/ package, the
cfdcrypto import alias, the tls.Config cloning rule, and the lint
workflow implications of .golangci.yaml's whole-files: true setting.
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Cloudflare Tunnel client

Contains the command-line client for Cloudflare Tunnel, a tunneling daemon that proxies traffic from the Cloudflare network to your origins. This daemon sits between Cloudflare network and your origin (e.g. a webserver). Cloudflare attracts client requests and sends them to you via this daemon, without requiring you to poke holes on your firewall --- your origin can remain as closed as possible. Extensive documentation can be found in the Cloudflare Tunnel section of the Cloudflare Docs. All usages related with proxying to your origins are available under cloudflared tunnel help.

You can also use cloudflared to access Tunnel origins (that are protected with cloudflared tunnel) for TCP traffic at Layer 4 (i.e., not HTTP/websocket), which is relevant for use cases such as SSH, RDP, etc. Such usages are available under cloudflared access help.

You can instead use WARP client to access private origins behind Tunnels for Layer 4 traffic without requiring cloudflared access commands on the client side.

Before you get started

Before you use Cloudflare Tunnel, you'll need to complete a few steps in the Cloudflare dashboard: you need to add a website to your Cloudflare account. Note that today it is possible to use Tunnel without a website (e.g. for private routing), but for legacy reasons this requirement is still necessary:

  1. Add a website to Cloudflare
  2. Change your domain nameservers to Cloudflare

Installing cloudflared

Downloads are available as standalone binaries, a Docker image, and Debian, RPM, and Homebrew packages. You can also find releases here on the cloudflared GitHub repository.

User documentation for Cloudflare Tunnel can be found at https://developers.cloudflare.com/cloudflare-one/networks/connectors/cloudflare-tunnel/

Creating Tunnels and routing traffic

Once installed, you can authenticate cloudflared into your Cloudflare account and begin creating Tunnels to serve traffic to your origins.

TryCloudflare

Want to test Cloudflare Tunnel before adding a website to Cloudflare? You can do so with TryCloudflare using the documentation available here.

Deprecated versions

Cloudflare currently supports versions of cloudflared that are within one year of the most recent release. Breaking changes unrelated to feature availability may be introduced that will impact versions released more than one year ago. You can read more about upgrading cloudflared in our developer documentation.

For example, as of January 2023 Cloudflare will support cloudflared version 2023.1.1 to cloudflared 2022.1.1.

Development

Requirements

Build

To build cloudflared locally run make cloudflared

Test

To locally run the tests run make test

Linting

To format the code and keep a good code quality use make fmt and make lint

Mocks

After changes on interfaces you might need to regenerate the mocks, so run make mocks

Git Hooks

To avoid CI errors, you can install pre-push hooks that run linting and tests before each push:

make install-hooks

This will configure git to use the hooks in .githooks/ that run make fmt-check lint test before each push.

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