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Revision: 1.3
Committed: Thu Jan 27 06:58:48 2005 UTC (19 years, 3 months ago) by pcg
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# Content
1 =head1 NAME
2
3 GNU-VPE - Overview of the GNU Virtual Private Ethernet suite.
4
5 =head1 DESCRIPTION
6
7 GVPE is a suite designed to provide a virtual private network for multiple
8 nodes over an untrusted network.
9
10 =over 4
11
12 =item X<Virtual>
13
14 Virtual means that no physical network is created (of course), but an
15 ethernet is emulated by creating multiple tunnels between the member
16 nodes.
17
18 =item X<Private>
19
20 Private means that non-participating nodes cannot decode ("sniff)" nor
21 inject ("spoof") packets.
22
23 In the case of gvpe, even participating nodes cannot sniff packets send to
24 other nodes or spoof packets as if sent from other nodes.
25
26 =item X<Network>
27
28 Network means that more than two parties can participate in the network,
29 so for instance it's possible to connect multiple branches of a company
30 into a single network. Many so-called "vpn" solutions only create
31 point-to-point tunnels.
32
33 =back
34
35 =head2 DESIGN GOALS
36
37 =over 4
38
39 =item SIMPLE DESIGN
40
41 Cipher, HMAC algorithms and other key parameters must be selected
42 at compile time - this makes it possible to only link in algorithms
43 you actually need. It also makes the crypto part of the source very
44 transparent and easy to inspect.
45
46 =item EASY TO SETUP
47
48 A few lines of config (the config file is shared unmodified between all
49 hosts) and a single run of C<gvpectrl> to generate the keys suffices to
50 make it work.
51
52 =item MAC-BASED SECURITY
53
54 Since every host has it's own private key, other hosts cannot spoof
55 traffic from this host. That makes it possible to filter packet by MAC
56 address, e.g. to ensure that packets from a specific IP address come, in
57 fact, from a specific host that is associated with that IP and not from
58 another host.
59
60 =back
61
62 =head1 PROGRAMS
63
64 Vpe comes with two programs: one daemon (C<gvpe>) and one control program
65 (C<gvpectrl>).
66
67 =over 4
68
69 =item gvpectrl
70
71 Is used to generate the keys, check and give an overview of of the
72 configuration and contorl the daemon (restarting etc.).
73
74 =item gvpe
75
76 Is the daemon used to establish and maintain connections to the other
77 network members. It should be run on the gateway machine.
78
79 =back
80
81 =head1 COMPILETIME CONFIGURATION
82
83 Please have a look at the C<gvpe.osdep(5)> manpage for platform-specific
84 information.
85
86 Here are a few recipes for compiling your gvpe:
87
88 =head2 AS LOW PACKET OVERHEAD AS POSSIBLE
89
90 ./configure --enable-hmac-length=4 --enable-rand-length=0
91
92 Minimize the header overhead of VPN packets (the above will result in only
93 4 bytes of overhead over the raw ethernet frame).
94
95 =head2 MINIMIZE CPU TIME REQUIRED
96
97 ./configure --enable-cipher=bf --enable-digest=md4
98
99 Use the fastest cipher and digest algorithms currently available in gvpe.
100
101 =head2 MAXIMIZE SECURITY
102
103 ./configure --enable-hmac-length=16 --enable-rand-length=8 --enable-digest=sha1
104
105 This uses a 16 byte HMAC checksum to authenticate packets (I guess 8-12
106 would also be pretty secure ;) and will additionally prefix each packet
107 with 8 bytes of random data. In the long run, people should move to
108 SHA-224 and beyond, but support in openssl is missing as of writing this
109 document.
110
111 In general, remember that AES-128 seems to be more secure and faster than
112 AES-192 or AES-256, more randomness helps against sniffing and a longer
113 HMAC helps against spoofing. MD4 is a fast digest, SHA1 or RIPEMD160 are
114 better, and Blowfish is a fast cipher (and also quite secure).
115
116 =head1 HOW TO SET UP A SIMPLE VPN
117
118 In this section I will describe how to get a simple VPN consisting of
119 three hosts up and running.
120
121 =head2 STEP 1: configuration
122
123 First you have to create a daemon configuation file and put it into the
124 configuration directory. This is usually C</etc/gvpe>, depending on how you
125 configured gvpe, and can be overwritten using the C<-c> commandline switch.
126
127 Put the following lines into C</etc/gvpe/gvpe.conf>:
128
129 udp-port = 50000 # the external port to listen on (configure your firewall)
130 mtu = 1400 # minimum MTU of all outgoing interfaces on all hosts
131 ifname = vpn0 # the local network device name
132
133 node = first # just a nickname
134 hostname = first.example.net # the DNS name or IP address of the host
135
136 node = second
137 hostname = 133.55.82.9
138
139 node = third
140 hostname = third.example.net
141
142 The only other file neccessary if the C<if-up> script that initializes the
143 local ethernet interface. Put the following lines into C</etc/gvpe/if-up>
144 and make it execute (C<chmod 755 /etc/gvpe/if-up>):
145
146 #!/bin/sh
147 ip link set $IFNAME address $MAC mtu $MTU up
148 [ $NODENAME = first ] && ip addr add 10.0.1.1 dev $IFNAME
149 [ $NODENAME = second ] && ip addr add 10.0.2.1 dev $IFNAME
150 [ $NODENAME = third ] && ip addr add 10.0.3.1 dev $IFNAME
151 ip route add 10.0.0.0/16 dev $IFNAME
152
153 This script will give each node a different IP address in the C<10.0/16>
154 network. The internal network (e.g. the C<eth0> interface) should then be
155 set to a subset of that network, e.g. C<10.0.1.0/24> on node C<first>,
156 C<10.0.2.0/24> on node C<second>, and so on.
157
158 By enabling routing on the gateway host that runs C<gvpe> all nodes will
159 be able to reach the other nodes. You can, of course, also use proxy arp
160 or other means of pseudo-bridging (or even real briding), or (best) full
161 routing - the choice is yours.
162
163 =head2 STEP 2: create the RSA key pairs for all hosts
164
165 Run the following command to generate all key pairs (that might take a
166 while):
167
168 gvpectrl -c /etc/gvpe -g
169
170 This command will put the public keys into C<<
171 /etc/gvpe/pubkeys/I<nodename> >> and the private keys into C<<
172 /etc/gvpe/hostkeys/I<nodename> >>.
173
174 =head2 STEP 3: distribute the config files to all nodes
175
176 Now distribute the config files to the other nodes. This should be done in two steps, since the
177 private keys should not be distributed. The example uses rsync-over-ssh
178
179 First all the config files without the hostkeys should be distributed:
180
181 rsync -avzessh /etc/gvpe first.example.net:/etc/. --exclude hostkeys
182 rsync -avzessh /etc/gvpe 133.55.82.9:/etc/. --exclude hostkeys
183 rsync -avzessh /etc/gvpe third.example.net:/etc/. --exclude hostkeys
184
185 Then the hostkeys should be copied:
186
187 rsync -avzessh /etc/gvpe/hostkeys/first first.example.net:/etc/hostkey
188 rsync -avzessh /etc/gvpe/hostkeys/second 133.55.82.9:/etc/hostkey
189 rsync -avzessh /etc/gvpe/hostkeys/third third.example.net:/etc/hostkey
190
191 You should now check the configration by issuing the command C<gvpectrl -c
192 /etc/gvpe -s> on each node and verify it's output.
193
194 =head2 STEP 4: starting gvpe
195
196 You should then start gvpe on each node by issuing a command like:
197
198 gvpe -D -linfo first # first is the nodename
199
200 This will make the gvpe stay in foreground. You should then see
201 "connection established" messages. If you don't see them check your
202 firewall and routing (use tcpdump ;).
203
204 If this works you should check your networking setup by pinging various
205 endpoints.
206
207 To make gvpe run more permanently you can either run it as a daemon
208 (by starting it without the C<-D> switch), or, much better, from your
209 inittab. I use a line like this on my systems:
210
211 t1:2345:respawn:/opt/gvpe/sbin/gvpe -D -L first >/dev/null 2>&1
212
213 =head2 STEP 5: enjoy
214
215 ... and play around. Sending a -HUP (C<gvpectrl -kHUP>) to the daemon
216 will make it try to connect to all other nodes again. If you run it from
217 inittab, as is recommended, C<gvpectrl -k> (or simply C<killall gvpe>) will
218 kill the daemon, start it again, making it read it's configuration files
219 again.
220
221 =head1 SEE ALSO
222
223 gvpe.osdep(5) for OS-depedendent information, gvpe.conf(5), gvpectrl(8), and
224 for a description of the protocol and routing algorithms, gvpe.protocol(7).
225
226 =head1 AUTHOR
227
228 Marc Lehmann <gvpe@plan9.de>
229
230 =head1 COPYRIGHTS AND LICENSES
231
232 GVPE itself is distributed under the GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE (see the file
233 COPYING that should be part of your distribution).
234
235 In some configurations it uses modified versions of the tinc vpn suite,
236 which is also available under the GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE.
237