Zoltán Papp db371a0263 [client/ui] Fix tray submenu not updating on KDE/Plasma
The Profiles and Exit Node submenus (and the About version/Update rows)
stopped reflecting changes on KDE/Plasma: after the first profile switch
the menu froze on its initial snapshot, and "Manage Profiles" — plus the
profile rows themselves — stopped responding to clicks entirely.

Root cause (confirmed via dbus-monitor): Plasma's StatusNotifierItem host
caches a submenu's layout the first time it is opened (GetLayout for that
submenu id) and never re-fetches it on a LayoutUpdated(parent=0) signal.
The old submenu.Clear()+Add() repaint allocated fresh monotonic item ids
each time but reused the same submenu container id, so Plasma kept showing
the stale snapshot and, on click, sent the stale ids back — which the
rebuilt itemMap no longer knew, silently no-op'ing the click.

Fix: route every dynamic tray-menu change through a new relayoutMenu that
rebuilds the whole tree (buildMenu + repaint cached state + a single
SetMenu), allocating brand-new submenu container ids. Plasma treats those
as unseen and re-queries them on next open, fixing both the stale paint
and the dead clicks. loadProfiles/refreshExitNodes now cache their rows
and drive relayoutMenu; the update row goes through a new onMenuChange
hook; the daemon-version row relayouts too. relayoutMenu is serialised by
menuMu and the fill*Submenu helpers are pure UI (no fetch, no SetMenu) so
it never recurses. The whole-tree SetMenu also subsumes the prior darwin
detached-NSMenu workaround.
2026-06-04 18:28:30 +02:00
2022-10-22 16:19:16 +02:00
2026-06-04 17:27:56 +02:00
2025-04-09 20:18:52 +01:00
2024-10-30 17:18:27 +01:00
2026-06-01 11:19:02 +02:00
2026-06-01 11:19:02 +02:00
2022-12-02 13:54:22 +01:00

Start using NetBird at netbird.io
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NetBird combines a configuration-free peer-to-peer private network and a centralized access control system in a single platform, making it easy to create secure private networks for your organization or home.

Connect. NetBird creates a WireGuard-based overlay network that automatically connects your machines over an encrypted tunnel, leaving behind the hassle of opening ports, complex firewall rules, VPN gateways, and so forth.

Secure. NetBird enables secure remote access by applying granular access policies while allowing you to manage them intuitively from a single place. Works universally on any infrastructure.

https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/10cec749-bb56-4ab3-97af-4e38850108d2

Self-host NetBird (video)

Watch the video

Key features

Connectivity Management Security Automation Platforms
Kernel WireGuard Admin Web UI SSO & MFA support Public API Linux
Peer-to-peer connections ✓ Auto peer discovery and configuration Access control: groups & rules Setup keys for bulk provisioning macOS
✓ Connection relay fallback IdP integrations Activity logging Self-hosting quickstart script Windows
Routes to external networks Private DNS Traffic events IdP groups sync with JWT Android
Domain-based DNS routes Custom DNS zones Device posture checks Terraform provider Android TV
Exit nodes Multiuser support ✓ Peer-to-peer encryption Ansible collection iOS
IPv6 dual-stack overlay Multi-account profile switching SSH with central access policies Apple TV
Browser SSH & RDP Quantum-resistance with Rosenpass ✓ FreeBSD
Reverse proxy with auto-TLS Periodic re-authentication pfSense
OPNsense
MikroTik RouterOS
✓ OpenWRT
Synology
TrueNAS
Proxmox
Raspberry Pi
Serverless
Container

Quickstart with NetBird Cloud

Quickstart with self-hosted NetBird

This is the quickest way to try self-hosted NetBird. It should take around 5 minutes to get started if you already have a public domain and a VM. Follow the Advanced guide with a custom identity provider for installations with different IdPs.

Infrastructure requirements:

  • A Linux VM with at least 1 CPU and 2 GB of memory.
  • The VM should be publicly accessible on TCP ports 80 and 443 and UDP port 3478.
  • A public domain name pointing to the VM.

Software requirements:

Steps

  • Download and run the installation script:
export NETBIRD_DOMAIN=netbird.example.com; curl -fsSL https://github.com/netbirdio/netbird/releases/latest/download/getting-started.sh | bash

A bit on NetBird internals

  • Every machine in the network runs the NetBird agent, which manages WireGuard.
  • Every agent connects to the Management Service, which holds network state, manages peer IPs, and distributes updates to agents.
  • Agents use ICE (via pion/ice) to discover connection candidates for peer-to-peer connections.
  • Candidates are discovered with the help of STUN servers.
  • Agents negotiate a connection through the Signal Service, exchanging end-to-end encrypted messages with candidates.
  • When NAT traversal fails (e.g. mobile carrier-grade NAT) and a direct p2p connection isn't possible, the system falls back to a Relay Service and a secure WireGuard tunnel is established through it.

NetBird high-level architecture diagram

See a complete architecture overview for details.

Community projects

Note: The main branch may be in an unstable or even broken state during development. For stable versions, see releases.

Support acknowledgement

In November 2022, NetBird joined the StartUpSecure program sponsored by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research of the Federal Republic of Germany. Together with the CISPA Helmholtz Center for Information Security, NetBird brings security best practices and simplicity to private networking.

CISPA_Logo_BLACK_EN_RZ_RGB (1)

Acknowledgements

We build on open-source technologies like WireGuard®, Pion ICE, and Rosenpass. We greatly appreciate the work these projects are doing, and we'd love it if you could support them too (e.g., by starring or contributing).

This repository is licensed under the BSD-3-Clause license, which applies to all parts of the repository except for the directories management/, signal/ and relay/. Those directories are licensed under the GNU Affero General Public License version 3.0 (AGPLv3). See the respective LICENSE files inside each directory.

WireGuard and the WireGuard logo are registered trademarks of Jason A. Donenfeld.

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