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# Content
1 \input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
2 @c GENERATED FILE, gvpe.texi.pod is the source, not gvpe.texi!
3 @c GENERATED FILE, gvpe.texi.pod is the source, not gvpe.texi!
4 @c GENERATED FILE, gvpe.texi.pod is the source, not gvpe.texi!
5 @c GENERATED FILE, gvpe.texi.pod is the source, not gvpe.texi!
6 @c GENERATED FILE, gvpe.texi.pod is the source, not gvpe.texi!
7 @c GENERATED FILE, gvpe.texi.pod is the source, not gvpe.texi!
8 @c %**start of header
9 @finalout
10 @setfilename gvpe.info
11 @settitle GNU Virtual Private Ethernet Manual
12 @setchapternewpage odd
13 @c %**end of header
14
15 @ifinfo
16 @dircategory Networking tools
17 @direntry
18 * gvpe: (gvpe). The GNU VPE Manual.
19 @end direntry
20
21 This is the info manual for vpe, the Virtual Private Ethernet daemon.
22
23 Copyright @copyright{} 2003-2008 Marc Lehmann <gvpe@@schmorp.de>.
24
25 Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this
26 manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are
27 preserved on all copies.
28
29 Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
30 manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the
31 entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
32 permission notice identical to this one.
33
34 @end ifinfo
35
36 @titlepage
37 @title gvpe Manual
38 @author Marc Lehmann
39
40 @page
41 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
42 @cindex copyright
43
44 Copyright @copyright{} 2003-2008 Marc Lehmann <gvpe@@schmorp.de>.
45
46 Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this
47 manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are
48 preserved on all copies.
49
50 Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
51 manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the
52 entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
53 permission notice identical to this one.
54
55 @end titlepage
56
57 @contents
58
59 @node Top,Overview,,(dir)
60
61 @chapter Introduction
62 This is the documentation for the GNU Virtual Private Ethernet suite.
63 @refill
64 The GNU Virtual Private Ethernet suite implements a virtual (uses udp, tcp, rawip and other protocols for tunneling), private (encrypted, authenticated) ethernet (mac-based, broadcast-based network) that is shared among multiple nodes, in effect implementing an ethernet bus over public networks.
65 @refill
66
67 @menu
68 * Overview:: Introduction to and Tutorial for GVPE (gvpe(5))
69 * OS Dependencies:: OS-Dependent Installation and Configuration Notes (gvpe.osdep(5))
70 * gvpe.conf:: The main configuration file (gvpe.conf(5))
71 * gvpectrl:: Configuration/Control Program Reference (gvpectrl(8))
72 * gvpe:: The GVPE Daemon (gvpe(8))
73 * gvpe.protocol:: The GVPE Transport and VPN Protocols (gvpe.protocol(7))
74 * Simple Example:: A simple yet realistic Example
75 * Complex Example:: A non-trivial Example
76 * Index:: Keyword and Concept index
77 @end menu
78
79
80 @node Overview,OS Dependencies,Top,Top
81
82 @chapter Overview
83
84 @section NAME
85 GNU-VPE - Overview of the GNU Virtual Private Ethernet suite.
86 @refill
87
88
89 @section DESCRIPTION
90 GVPE is a suite designed to provide a virtual private network for multiple nodes over an untrusted network. This document first gives an introduction to VPNs in general and then describes the specific implementation of GVPE.
91 @refill
92
93
94 @subsection WHAT IS A VPN?
95 VPN is an acronym, it stands for:
96 @refill
97
98
99 @itemize
100
101
102 @item
103 Virtual
104
105 Virtual means that no physical network is created (of course), but a network is @emph{emulated} by creating multiple tunnels between the member nodes by encapsulating and sending data over another transport network.
106 @refill
107 Usually the emulated network is a normal IP or Ethernet, and the transport network is the Internet. However, using a VPN system like GVPE to connect nodes over other untrusted networks such as Wireless LAN is not uncommon.
108 @refill
109
110
111 @item
112 Private
113
114 Private means that non-participating nodes cannot decode ("sniff)" nor inject ("spoof") packets. This means that nodes can be connected over untrusted networks such as the public Internet without fear of being eavesdropped while at the same time being able to trust data sent by other nodes.
115 @refill
116 In the case of GVPE, even participating nodes cannot sniff packets send to other nodes or spoof packets as if sent from other nodes, so communications between any two nodes is private to those two nodes.
117 @refill
118
119
120 @item
121 Network
122
123 Network means that more than two parties can participate in the network, so for instance it's possible to connect multiple branches of a company into a single network. Many so-called "VPN" solutions only create point-to-point tunnels, which in turn can be used to build larger networks.
124 @refill
125 GVPE provides a true multi-point network in which any number of nodes (at least a few dozen in practise, the theoretical limit is 4095 nodes) can participate.
126 @refill
127 @end itemize
128
129
130
131 @subsection GVPE DESIGN GOALS
132
133
134 @itemize
135
136
137 @item
138 SIMPLE DESIGN
139
140 Cipher, HMAC algorithms and other key parameters must be selected at compile time - this makes it possible to only link in algorithms you actually need. It also makes the crypto part of the source very transparent and easy to inspect, and last not least this makes it possible to hardcode the layout of all packets into the binary. GVPE goes a step further and internally reserves blocks of the same length for all packets, which virtually removes all possibilities of buffer overflows, as there is only a single type of buffer and it's always of fixed length.
141 @refill
142
143
144 @item
145 EASY TO SETUP
146
147 A few lines of config (the config file is shared unmodified between all hosts) and a single run of @t{gvpectrl} to generate the keys suffices to make it work.
148 @refill
149
150
151 @item
152 MAC-BASED SECURITY
153
154 Since every host has it's own private key, other hosts cannot spoof traffic from this host. That makes it possible to filter packet by MAC address, e.g. to ensure that packets from a specific IP address come, in fact, from a specific host that is associated with that IP and not from another host.
155 @refill
156 @end itemize
157
158
159
160 @section PROGRAMS
161 Gvpe comes with two programs: one daemon (@t{gvpe}) and one control program (@t{gvpectrl}).
162 @refill
163
164
165 @itemize
166
167
168 @item
169 gvpectrl
170
171 This program is used to generate the keys, check and give an overview of of the configuration and to control the daemon (restarting etc.).
172 @refill
173
174
175 @item
176 gvpe
177
178 This is the daemon used to establish and maintain connections to the other network nodes. It should be run on the gateway of each VPN subnet.
179 @refill
180 @end itemize
181
182
183
184 @section COMPILETIME CONFIGURATION
185 Please have a look at the @t{gvpe.osdep(5)} manpage for platform-specific information.
186 @refill
187 Gvpe hardcodes most encryption parameters. While this reduces flexibility, it makes the program much simpler and helps making buffer overflows impossible under most circumstances.
188 @refill
189 Here are a few recipes for compiling your gvpe, showing the extremes (fast, small, insecure OR slow, large, more secure), between which you should choose:
190 @refill
191
192
193 @subsection AS LOW PACKET OVERHEAD AS POSSIBLE
194
195
196 @example
197 ./configure --enable-hmac-length=4 --enable-rand-length=0
198 @end example
199
200 Minimize the header overhead of VPN packets (the above will result in only 4 bytes of overhead over the raw ethernet frame). This is a insecure configuration because a HMAC length of 4 makes collision attacks based on the birthday paradox pretty easy.
201 @refill
202
203
204 @subsection MINIMIZE CPU TIME REQUIRED
205
206
207 @example
208 ./configure --enable-cipher=bf --enable-digest=md4
209 @end example
210
211 Use the fastest cipher and digest algorithms currently available in gvpe. MD4 has been broken and is quite insecure, though, so using another digest algorithm is recommended.
212 @refill
213
214
215 @subsection MAXIMIZE SECURITY
216
217
218 @example
219 ./configure --enable-hmac-length=16 --enable-rand-length=8 --enable-digest=sha1
220 @end example
221
222 This uses a 16 byte HMAC checksum to authenticate packets (I guess 8-12 would also be pretty secure ;) and will additionally prefix each packet with 8 bytes of random data. In the long run, people should move to SHA-256 and beyond).
223 @refill
224 In general, remember that AES-128 seems to be as secure but faster than AES-192 or AES-256, more randomness helps against sniffing and a longer HMAC helps against spoofing. MD4 is a fast digest, SHA1, RIPEMD160, SHA256 are consecutively better, and Blowfish is a fast cipher (and also quite secure).
225 @refill
226
227
228 @section HOW TO SET UP A SIMPLE VPN
229 In this section I will describe how to get a simple VPN consisting of three hosts up and running.
230 @refill
231
232
233 @subsection STEP 1: configuration
234 First you have to create a daemon configuration file and put it into the configuration directory. This is usually @t{/etc/gvpe}, depending on how you configured gvpe, and can be overwritten using the @t{-c} command line switch.
235 @refill
236 Put the following lines into @t{/etc/gvpe/gvpe.conf}:
237 @refill
238
239
240 @example
241 udp-port = 50000 # the external port to listen on (configure your firewall)
242 mtu = 1400 # minimum MTU of all outgoing interfaces on all hosts
243 ifname = vpn0 # the local network device name
244
245 node = first # just a nickname
246 hostname = first.example.net # the DNS name or IP address of the host
247
248 node = second
249 hostname = 133.55.82.9
250
251 node = third
252 hostname = third.example.net
253 @end example
254
255 The only other file necessary is the @t{if-up} script that initializes the virtual ethernet interface on the local host. Put the following lines into @t{/etc/gvpe/if-up} and make it executable (@t{chmod 755 /etc/gvpe/if-up}):
256 @refill
257
258
259 @example
260 #!/bin/sh
261 ip link set $IFNAME address $MAC mtu $MTU up
262 [ $NODENAME = first ] && ip addr add 10.0.1.1 dev $IFNAME
263 [ $NODENAME = second ] && ip addr add 10.0.2.1 dev $IFNAME
264 [ $NODENAME = third ] && ip addr add 10.0.3.1 dev $IFNAME
265 ip route add 10.0.0.0/16 dev $IFNAME
266 @end example
267
268 This script will give each node a different IP address in the @t{10.0/16} network. The internal network (if gvpe runs on a router) should then be set to a subset of that network, e.g. @t{10.0.1.0/24} on node @t{first}, @t{10.0.2.0/24} on node @t{second}, and so on.
269 @refill
270 By enabling routing on the gateway host that runs @t{gvpe} all nodes will be able to reach the other nodes. You can, of course, also use proxy ARP or other means of pseudo-bridging, or (best) full routing - the choice is yours.
271 @refill
272
273
274 @subsection STEP 2: create the RSA key pairs for all hosts
275 Run the following command to generate all key pairs for all nodes (that might take a while):
276 @refill
277
278
279 @example
280 gvpectrl -c /etc/gvpe -g
281 @end example
282
283 This command will put the public keys into @t{/etc/gvpe/pubkeys/@emph{nodename}} and the private keys into @t{/etc/gvpe/hostkeys/@emph{nodename}}.
284 @refill
285
286
287 @subsection STEP 3: distribute the config files to all nodes
288 Now distribute the config files and private keys to the other nodes. This should be done in two steps, since only the private keys meant for a node should be distributed (so each node has only it's own private key).
289 @refill
290 The example uses rsync-over-ssh
291 @refill
292 First all the config files without the hostkeys should be distributed:
293 @refill
294
295
296 @example
297 rsync -avzessh /etc/gvpe first.example.net:/etc/. --exclude hostkeys
298 rsync -avzessh /etc/gvpe 133.55.82.9:/etc/. --exclude hostkeys
299 rsync -avzessh /etc/gvpe third.example.net:/etc/. --exclude hostkeys
300 @end example
301
302 Then the hostkeys should be copied:
303 @refill
304
305
306 @example
307 rsync -avzessh /etc/gvpe/hostkeys/first first.example.net:/etc/hostkey
308 rsync -avzessh /etc/gvpe/hostkeys/second 133.55.82.9:/etc/hostkey
309 rsync -avzessh /etc/gvpe/hostkeys/third third.example.net:/etc/hostkey
310 @end example
311
312 You should now check the configuration by issuing the command @t{gvpectrl -c /etc/gvpe -s} on each node and verify it's output.
313 @refill
314
315
316 @subsection STEP 4: starting gvpe
317 You should then start gvpe on each node by issuing a command like:
318 @refill
319
320
321 @example
322 gvpe -D -l info first # first is the nodename
323 @end example
324
325 This will make the gvpe daemon stay in foreground. You should then see "connection established" messages. If you don't see them check your firewall and routing (use tcpdump ;).
326 @refill
327 If this works you should check your networking setup by pinging various endpoints.
328 @refill
329 To make gvpe run more permanently you can either run it as a daemon (by starting it without the @t{-D} switch), or, much better, from your inittab or equivalent. I use a line like this on all my systems:
330 @refill
331
332
333 @example
334 t1:2345:respawn:/opt/gvpe/sbin/gvpe -D -L first >/dev/null 2>&1
335 @end example
336
337
338
339 @subsection STEP 5: enjoy
340 ... and play around. Sending a -HUP (@t{gvpectrl -kHUP}) to the daemon will make it try to connect to all other nodes again. If you run it from inittab, as is recommended, @t{gvpectrl -k} (or simply @t{killall gvpe}) will kill the daemon, start it again, making it read it's configuration files again.
341 @refill
342
343
344 @section COPYRIGHTS AND LICENSES
345 GVPE itself is distributed under the GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE (see the file COPYING that should be part of your distribution).
346 @refill
347 In some configurations it uses modified versions of the tinc vpn suite, which is also available under the GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE.
348 @refill
349
350
351
352 @node OS Dependencies,gvpe.conf,Overview,Top
353
354 @chapter OS Dependencies
355
356 @section NAME
357 gvpe.osdep - os dependent information
358 @refill
359
360
361 @section DESCRIPTION
362 This file tries to capture OS-dependent configuration or build issues, quirks and platform limitations, as known.
363 @refill
364
365
366 @section TUN vs. TAP interface
367 Most operating systems nowadays support something called a @emph{tunnel}-device, which makes it possible to divert IPv4 (and often other protocols, too) into a user space daemon like @t{gvpe}. This is being referred to as a TUN-device.
368 @refill
369 This is fine for point-to-point tunnels, but for a virtual ethernet, an additional ethernet header is needed. This functionality (called a TAP device here) is only provided by a subset of the configurations.
370 @refill
371 On platforms only supporting a TUN-device, gvpe will invoke it's magical ethernet emulation package, which currently only handles ARP requests for the IPv4 protocol (but more could be added, bu the tincd network drivers might need to be modified for this to work). This means that on those platforms, only IPv4 will be supported.
372 @refill
373 Also, since there is no way (currently) to tell gvpe which IP subnets are found on a specific host, you will either need to hardwire the MAC address for TUN-style hosts on all networks (and avoid ARP altogether, which is possible), or you need to send a packet from these hosts into the vpn network to tell gvpe the local interface address.
374 @refill
375
376
377 @section Interface Initialisation
378 Unless otherwise notes, the network interface will be initialized with the expected MAC address and correct MTU value. With most interface drivers, this is done by running @t{/sbin/ifconfig}, so make sure that this command exists.
379 @refill
380
381
382 @section Interface Types
383
384
385 @subsection native/linux
386 TAP-device; already part of the kernel (only 2.4+ supported, but see tincd/linux). This is the configuration tested best, as gvpe is being developed on this platform.
387 @refill
388 @t{ifname} should be set to the name of the network device.
389 @refill
390 To hardwire ARP addresses, use iproute2 (@t{arp} can do it, too):
391 @refill
392
393
394 @example
395 MAC=fe:fd:80:00:00:$(printf "%02x" $NODEID)
396 ip neighbour add 10.11.12.13 lladdr $MAC nud permanent dev $IFNAME
397 @end example
398
399
400
401 @subsection tincd/linux
402 TAP-device; already part of the kernel (2.2 only). See @t{native/linux} for more info.
403 @refill
404 @t{ifname} should be set to the path of a tap device, e.g. @t{/dev/tap0}. The interface will be named accordingly.
405 @refill
406
407
408 @subsection native/cygwin
409 TAP-device; The TAP device to be used must either be the CIPE driver (@t{http://cipe-win32.sourceforge.net/}), or (highly recommended) the newer TAP-Win32 driver bundled with openvpn (http://openvpn.sf.net/). Just download and run the openvpn installer. The only option you need to select is the TAP driver.
410 @refill
411 @t{ifname} should be set to the name of the device, found in the registry at (no kidding :):
412 @refill
413
414
415 @example
416 HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Network\@{4D36E972-E325-11CE-BFC1-08002BE10318@}\<adapterid>\Connection\Name
417 @end example
418
419 The MAC address is dynamically being patched into packets and ARP-requests, so only IPv4 works with ARP on this platform.
420 @refill
421
422
423 @subsection tincd/bsd
424 TAP-device, maybe; migth work for many bsd variants.
425 @refill
426 This driver is a newer version of the @t{tincd/*bsd} drivers. It @emph{might} provide a TAP device, or might not work at all. You might try this interface type first, and, if it doesn't work, try one of the OS-specific drivers.
427 @refill
428
429
430 @subsection tincd/freebsd
431 TAP-device; part of the kernel (since 4.x, maybe earlier).
432 @refill
433 @t{ifname} should be set to the path of a tap device, e.g. @t{/dev/tap0}. The interface will be named accordingly.
434 @refill
435 These commands might be helpful examples:
436 @refill
437
438
439 @example
440 ifconfig $IFNAME 10.0.0.$NODEID
441 route add -net 10.0.0.0 -netmask 255.255.255.0 -interface $IFNAME 10.0.0.$NODEID
442 @end example
443
444
445
446 @subsection tincd/netbsd
447 TUN-device; The interface is a point-to-point device. To initialize it, you currently need to configure it as a point-to-point device, giving it an address on your vpn (the exact address doesn't matter), like this:
448 @refill
449
450
451 @example
452 ifconfig $IFNAME mtu $MTU up
453 ifconfig $IFNAME 10.11.12.13 10.55.66.77
454 route add -net 10.0.0.0 10.55.66.77 255.0.0.0
455 ping -c1 10.55.66.77 # ping once to tell gvpe your gw ip
456 @end example
457
458 The ping is required to tell the ARP emulator inside GVPE the local IP address.
459 @refill
460 @t{ifname} should be set to the path of a tun device, e.g. @t{/dev/tun0}. The interface will be named accordingly.
461 @refill
462
463
464 @subsection tincd/openbsd
465 TUN-device; already part of the kernel. See @t{tincd/netbsd} for more information.
466 @refill
467
468
469 @subsection native/darwin
470 TAP-device;
471 @refill
472 The necessary kernel extension can be found here:
473 @refill
474
475
476 @example
477 http://www-user.rhrk.uni-kl.de/~nissler/tuntap/
478 @end example
479
480 There are two drivers, the one to use is the "tap" driver. It driver must be loaded before use, read the docs on how to install it as a startup item.
481 @refill
482 @t{ifname} should be set to the path of a tap device, e.g. @t{/dev/tap0}. The interface will be named accordingly.
483 @refill
484 These commands might be helpful examples:
485 @refill
486
487
488 @example
489 ifconfig $IFNAME 10.0.0.$NODEID
490 route add -net 10.0.0.0 -interface $IFNAME 255.255.255.0
491 @end example
492
493
494
495 @subsection tincd/darwin
496 TUN-device; See @t{tincd/netbsd} for more information. @t{native/darwin} is preferable.
497 @refill
498 The necessary kernel extension can be found here:
499 @refill
500
501
502 @example
503 http://chrisp.de/en/projects/tunnel.html
504 @end example
505
506 @t{ifname} should be set to the path of a tun device, e.g. @t{/dev/tun0}. The interface will be named accordingly.
507 @refill
508 The driver must be loaded before use:
509 @refill
510
511
512 @example
513 kmodload tunnel
514 @end example
515
516
517
518 @subsection tincd/solaris
519 TUN-device; already part of the kernel(?), or available here:
520 @refill
521
522
523 @example
524 http://vtun.sourceforge.net/tun/
525 @end example
526
527 Some precompiled tun drivers might be available here:
528 @refill
529
530
531 @example
532 http://www.monkey.org/~dugsong/fragroute/
533 @end example
534
535 The interface MAC and MTU are @emph{NOT} set up for you. Please try it out and send me an @t{ifconfig} command invocation that does that.
536 @refill
537 See @t{tincd/netbsd} for more information.
538 @refill
539 Completely untested so far.
540 @refill
541
542
543 @subsection tincd/mingw
544 TAP-device; see @t{native/cygwin} for more information.
545 @refill
546 The setup is likely to be similar to @t{native/cygwin}.
547 @refill
548 Completely untested so far.
549 @refill
550
551
552 @subsection tincd/raw_socket
553 TAP-device; purpose unknown and untested, probably binds itself on an existing ethernet device (given by @t{ifname}). It must be down prior to running the command, and GVPE will try to set it's MAC address and MTU to the "correct" values.
554 @refill
555 Completely untested so far.
556 @refill
557
558
559 @subsection tincd/uml_socket
560 TAP-device; purpose unknown and untested, probably creates a UNIX datagram socket (path given by @t{ifname}) and reads and writes raw packets, so might be useful in other than UML contexts.
561 @refill
562 No network interface is created, and the MAC and MTU must be set as appropriate on the other side of the socket. GVPE will exit if the MAC address doesn't match what it expects.
563 @refill
564 Completely untested so far.
565 @refill
566
567
568 @subsection tincd/cygwin
569 Known to be broken, use @t{native/cygwin} instead.
570 @refill
571
572
573
574 @node gvpe.conf,gvpectrl,OS Dependencies,Top
575
576 @chapter gvpe.conf
577
578 @section NAME
579 gvpe.conf - configuration file for the GNU VPE daemon
580 @refill
581
582
583 @section SYNOPSIS
584
585
586 @example
587 # global options for all nodes
588 udp-port = 407
589 mtu = 1492
590 ifname = vpn0
591
592 # first node is named branch1 and is at 1.2.3.4
593 node = branch1
594 hostname = 1.2.3.4
595
596 # second node uses dns to resolve the address
597 node = branch2
598 hostname = www.example.net
599 udp-port = 500 # this host uses a different udp-port
600
601 # third node has no fixed ip address
602 node = branch3
603 connect = ondemand
604 @end example
605
606
607
608 @section DESCRIPTION
609 The gvpe config file consists of a series of lines that contain @t{variable = value} pairs. Empty lines are ignored. Comments start with a @t{#} and extend to the end of the line. They can be used on their own lines, or after any directives. Whitespace is allowed around the @t{=} sign or after values, but not within the variable names or values themselves.
610 @refill
611 The only exception to the above is the "on" directive that can prefix any @t{name = value} setting and will only "execute" it on the named node, or (if the nodename starts with "!") on all nodes except the named one.
612 @refill
613 For example, set the MTU to @t{1450} everywhere, loglevel to @t{noise} on branch1, and connect to @t{ondemand} everywhere but on branch2:
614 @refill
615
616
617 @example
618 mtu = 1450
619 on branch1 loglevel = noise
620 on !branch2 connect = ondemand
621 @end example
622
623 All settings are applied "in order", that is, later settings of the same variable overwrite earlier ones.
624 @refill
625
626
627 @section ANATOMY OF A CONFIG FILE
628 Usually, a config file starts with a few global settings (like the UDP port to listen on), followed by node-specific sections that begin with a @t{node = nickname} line.
629 @refill
630 Every node that is part of the network must have a section that starts with @t{node = nickname}. The number and order of the nodes is important and must be the same on all nodes. It is not uncommon for node sections to be completely empty - if the default values are right.
631 @refill
632 Node-specific settings can be used at any time. If used before the first node section they will set the default values for all following nodes.
633 @refill
634
635
636 @section CONFIG VARIABLES
637
638
639 @subsection GLOBAL SETTINGS
640 Global settings will affect the behaviour of the running gvpe daemon, that is, they are in some sense node-specific (config files can set different values on different nodes using @t{on}), but will affect the behaviour of the gvpe daemon and all connections it creates.
641 @refill
642
643
644 @itemize
645
646
647 @item
648 dns-forw-host = hostname/ip
649
650 @cindex dns-forw-host
651 The DNS server to forward DNS requests to for the DNS tunnel protocol (default: @t{127.0.0.1}, changing it is highly recommended).
652 @refill
653
654
655 @item
656 dns-forw-port = port-number
657
658 @cindex dns-forw-port
659 The port where the @t{dns-forw-host} is to be contacted (default: @t{53}, which is fine in most cases).
660 @refill
661
662
663 @item
664 dns-max-outstanding = integer-number-of-requests
665
666 @cindex dns-max-outstanding
667 The maximum number of outstanding DNS transport requests (default: @t{100}). GVPE will never issue more requests then the given limit without receiving replies. In heavily overloaded situations it might help to set this to a low number (e.g. @t{3} or even @t{1}) to limit the number of parallel requests.
668 @refill
669 The default should be working OK for most links.
670 @refill
671
672
673 @item
674 dns-overlap-factor = float
675
676 @cindex dns-overlap-factor
677 The DNS transport uses the minimum request latency (@strong{min_latency}) seen during a connection as it's timing base. This factor (default: @t{0.5}, must be > 0) is multiplied by @strong{min_latency} to get the maximum sending rate (= minimum send interval), i.e. a factor of @t{1} means that a new request might be generated every @strong{min_latency} seconds, which means on average there should only ever be one outstanding request. A factor of @t{0.5} means that GVPE will send requests twice as often as the minimum latency measured.
678 @refill
679 For congested or picky DNS forwarders you could use a value nearer to or exceeding @t{1}.
680 @refill
681 The default should be working OK for most links.
682 @refill
683
684
685 @item
686 dns-send-interval = send-interval-in-seconds
687
688 @cindex dns-send-interval
689 The minimum send interval (= maximum rate) that the DNS transport will use to send new DNS requests. GVPE will not exceed this rate even when the latency is very low. The default is @t{0.01}, which means GVPE will not send more than 100 DNS requests per connection per second. For high-bandwidth links you could go lower, e.g. to @t{0.001} or so. For congested or rate-limited links, you might want to go higher, say @t{0.1}, @t{0.2} or even higher.
690 @refill
691 The default should be working OK for most links.
692 @refill
693
694
695 @item
696 dns-timeout-factor = float
697
698 @cindex dns-timeout-factor
699 Factor to multiply the @t{min_latency} (see @t{dns-overlap-factor}) by to get request timeouts. The default of @t{8} means that the DNS transport will resend the request when no reply has been received for longer than eight times the minimum (= expected) latency, assuming the request or reply has been lost.
700 @refill
701 For congested links a higher value might be necessary (e.g. @t{30}). If the link is very stable lower values (e.g. @t{2}) might work nicely. Values near or below @t{1} makes no sense whatsoever.
702 @refill
703 The default should be working OK for most links but will result in low throughput if packet loss is high.
704 @refill
705
706
707 @item
708 if-up = relative-or-absolute-path
709
710 @cindex if-up
711 Sets the path of a script that should be called immediately after the network interface is initialized (but not necessarily up). The following environment variables are passed to it (the values are just examples).
712 @refill
713 Variables that have the same value on all nodes:
714 @refill
715
716
717 @itemize
718
719
720 @item
721 CONFBASE=/etc/gvpe
722
723 @cindex CONFBASE
724 The configuration base directory.
725 @refill
726
727
728 @item
729 IFNAME=vpn0
730
731 @cindex IFNAME
732 The network interface to initialize.
733 @refill
734
735
736 @item
737 IFTYPE=native # or tincd
738
739 @cindex IFTYPE
740
741
742 @item
743 IFSUBTYPE=linux # or freebsd, darwin etc..
744
745 @cindex IFSUBTYPE
746 The interface type (@t{native} or @t{tincd}) and the subtype (usually the OS name in lowercase) that this GVPE was configured for. Can be used to select the correct syntax to use for network-related commands.
747 @refill
748
749
750 @item
751 MTU=1436
752
753 @cindex MTU
754 The MTU to set the interface to. You can use lower values (if done consistently on all nodes), but this is usually either inefficient or simply ineffective.
755 @refill
756
757
758 @item
759 NODES=5
760
761 @cindex NODES
762 The number of nodes in this GVPE network.
763 @refill
764 @end itemize
765
766 Variables that are node-specific and with values pertaining to the node running this GVPE:
767 @refill
768
769
770 @itemize
771
772
773 @item
774 IFUPDATA=string
775
776 @cindex IFUPDATA
777 The value of the configuration directive @t{if-up-data}.
778 @refill
779
780
781 @item
782 MAC=fe:fd:80:00:00:01
783
784 @cindex MAC
785 The MAC address the network interface has to use.
786 @refill
787 Might be used to initialize interfaces on platforms where GVPE does not do this automatically. Please see the @t{gvpe.osdep(5)} man page for platform-specific information.
788 @refill
789
790
791 @item
792 NODENAME=branch1
793
794 @cindex NODENAME
795 The nickname of the node.
796 @refill
797
798
799 @item
800 NODEID=1
801
802 @cindex NODEID
803 The numerical node ID of the node running this instance of GVPE. The first node mentioned in the config file gets ID 1, the second ID 2 and so on.
804 @refill
805 @end itemize
806
807 In addition, all node-specific variables (except @t{NODEID}) will be available with a postfix of @t{_nodeid}, which contains the value for that node, e.g. the @t{MAC_1} variable contains the MAC address of node #1, while the @t{NODENAME_22} variable contains the name of node #22.
808 @refill
809 Here is a simple if-up script:
810 @refill
811
812
813 @example
814 #!/bin/sh
815 ip link set $IFNAME up
816 [ $NODENAME = branch1 ] && ip addr add 10.0.0.1 dev $IFNAME
817 [ $NODENAME = branch2 ] && ip addr add 10.1.0.1 dev $IFNAME
818 ip route add 10.0.0.0/8 dev $IFNAME
819 @end example
820
821 More complicated examples (using routing to reduce ARP traffic) can be found in the @file{etc/} subdirectory of the distribution.
822 @refill
823
824
825 @item
826 ifname = devname
827
828 @cindex ifname
829 Sets the tun interface name to the given name. The default is OS-specific and most probably something like @t{tun0}.
830 @refill
831
832
833 @item
834 ifpersist = yes|true|on | no|false|off
835
836 @cindex ifpersist
837 Should the tun/tap device be made persistent, that is, should the device stay up even when gvpe exits? Some versions of the tunnel device have problems sending packets when gvpe is restarted in persistent mode, so if the connections can be established but you cannot send packets from the local node, try to set this to @t{off} and do an ifconfig down on the device.
838 @refill
839
840
841 @item
842 ip-proto = numerical-ip-protocol
843
844 @cindex ip-proto
845 Sets the protocol number to be used for the rawip protocol. This is a global option because all nodes must use the same protocol, and since there are no port numbers, you cannot easily run more than one gvpe instance using the same protocol, nor can you share the protocol with other programs.
846 @refill
847 The default is 47 (GRE), which has a good chance of tunneling through firewalls (but note that gvpe's rawip protocol is not GRE compatible). Other common choices are 50 (IPSEC, ESP), 51 (IPSEC, AH), 4 (IPIP tunnels) or 98 (ENCAP, rfc1241).
848 @refill
849 Many versions of Linux seem to have a bug that causes them to reorder packets for some ip protocols (GRE, ESP) but not for others (AH), so choose wisely (that is, use 51, AH).
850 @refill
851
852
853 @item
854 http-proxy-host = hostname/ip
855
856 @cindex http-proxy-host
857 The @t{http-proxy-*} family of options are only available if gvpe was compiled with the @t{--enable-http-proxy} option and enable tunneling of tcp connections through a http proxy server.
858 @refill
859 @t{http-proxy-host} and @t{http-proxy-port} should specify the hostname and port number of the proxy server. See @t{http-proxy-loginpw} if your proxy requires authentication.
860 @refill
861 Please note that gvpe will still try to resolve all hostnames in the configuration file, so if you are behind a proxy without access to a DNS server better use numerical IP addresses.
862 @refill
863 To make best use of this option disable all protocols except TCP in your config file and make sure your routers (or all other nodes) are listening on a port that the proxy allows (443, https, is a common choice).
864 @refill
865 If you have a router, connecting to it will suffice. Otherwise TCP must be enabled on all nodes.
866 @refill
867 Example:
868 @refill
869
870
871 @example
872 http-proxy-host = proxy.example.com
873 http-proxy-port = 3128 # 8080 is another common choice
874 http-proxy-auth = schmorp:grumbeere
875 @end example
876
877
878
879 @item
880 http-proxy-port = proxy-tcp-port
881
882 @cindex http-proxy-port
883 The port where your proxy server listens.
884 @refill
885
886
887 @item
888 http-proxy-auth = login:password
889
890 @cindex http-proxy-auth
891 The optional login and password used to authenticate to the proxy server, separated by a literal colon (@t{:}). Only basic authentication is currently supported.
892 @refill
893
894
895 @item
896 keepalive = seconds
897
898 @cindex keepalive
899 Sets the keepalive probe interval in seconds (default: @t{60}). After this many seconds of inactivity the daemon will start to send keepalive probe every 3 seconds until it receives a reply from the other end. If no reply is received within 15 seconds, the peer is considered unreachable and the connection is closed.
900 @refill
901
902
903 @item
904 loglevel = noise|trace|debug|info|notice|warn|error|critical
905
906 @cindex loglevel
907 Set the logging level. Connection established messages are logged at level @t{info}, notable errors are logged with @t{error}. Default is @t{info}.
908 @refill
909
910
911 @item
912 mtu = bytes
913
914 @cindex mtu
915 Sets the maximum MTU that should be used on outgoing packets (basically the MTU of the outgoing interface) The daemon will automatically calculate maximum overhead (e.g. UDP header size, encryption blocksize...) and pass this information to the @t{if-up} script.
916 @refill
917 Recommended values are 1500 (ethernet), 1492 (pppoe), 1472 (pptp).
918 @refill
919 This value must be the minimum of the MTU values of all nodes.
920 @refill
921
922
923 @item
924 node = nickname
925
926 @cindex node
927 Not really a config setting but introduces a node section. The nickname is used to select the right configuration section and must be passed as an argument to the gvpe daemon.
928 @refill
929
930
931 @item
932 node-up = relative-or-absolute-path
933
934 @cindex node-up
935 Sets a command (default: none) that should be called whenever a connection is established (even on rekeying operations). Note that node-up/down scripts will be run asynchronously, but execution is serialised, so there will only ever be one such script running.
936 @refill
937 In addition to all the variables passed to @t{if-up} scripts, the following environment variables will be set (values are just examples):
938 @refill
939
940
941 @itemize
942
943
944 @item
945 DESTNODE=branch2
946
947 @cindex DESTNODE
948 The name of the remote node.
949 @refill
950
951
952 @item
953 DESTID=2
954
955 @cindex DESTID
956 The node id of the remote node.
957 @refill
958
959
960 @item
961 DESTSI=rawip/88.99.77.55:0
962
963 @cindex DESTSI
964 The "socket info" of the target node, protocol dependent but usually in the format protocol/ip:port.
965 @refill
966
967
968 @item
969 DESTIP=188.13.66.8
970
971 @cindex DESTIP
972 The numerical IP address of the remote node (gvpe accepts connections from everywhere, as long as the other node can authenticate itself).
973 @refill
974
975
976 @item
977 DESTPORT=655 # deprecated
978
979 @cindex DESTPORT
980 The protocol port used by the other side, if applicable.
981 @refill
982
983
984 @item
985 STATE=up
986
987 @cindex STATE
988 Node-up scripts get called with STATE=up, node-change scripts get called with STATE=change and node-down scripts get called with STATE=down.
989 @refill
990 @end itemize
991
992 Here is a nontrivial example that uses nsupdate to update the name => ip mapping in some DNS zone:
993 @refill
994
995
996 @example
997 #!/bin/sh
998 @{
999 echo update delete $DESTNODE.lowttl.example.net. a
1000 echo update add $DESTNODE.lowttl.example.net. 1 in a $DESTIP
1001 echo
1002 @} | nsupdate -d -k $CONFBASE:key.example.net.
1003 @end example
1004
1005
1006
1007 @item
1008 node-change = relative-or-absolute-path
1009
1010 @cindex node-change
1011 Same as @t{node-change}, but gets called whenever something about a connection changes (such as the source IP address).
1012 @refill
1013
1014
1015 @item
1016 node-down = relative-or-absolute-path
1017
1018 @cindex node-down
1019 Same as @t{node-up}, but gets called whenever a connection is lost.
1020 @refill
1021
1022
1023 @item
1024 pid-file = path
1025
1026 @cindex pid-file
1027 The path to the pid file to check and create (default: @t{LOCALSTATEDIR/run/gvpe.pid}).
1028 @refill
1029
1030
1031 @item
1032 private-key = relative-path-to-key
1033
1034 @cindex private-key
1035 Sets the path (relative to the config directory) to the private key (default: @t{hostkey}). This is a printf format string so every @t{%} must be doubled. A single @t{%s} is replaced by the hostname, so you could use paths like @t{hostkeys/%s} to fetch the files at the location where @t{gvpectrl} puts them.
1036 @refill
1037 Since only the private key file of the current node is used and the private key file should be kept secret per-node to avoid spoofing, it is not recommended to use this feature.
1038 @refill
1039
1040
1041 @item
1042 rekey = seconds
1043
1044 @cindex rekey
1045 Sets the rekeying interval in seconds (default: @t{3600}). Connections are reestablished every @t{rekey} seconds, making them use a new encryption key.
1046 @refill
1047
1048
1049 @item
1050 nfmark = integer
1051
1052 @cindex nfmark
1053 This advanced option, when set to a nonzero value (default: @t{0}), tries to set the netfilter mark (or fwmark) value on all sockets gvpe uses to send packets.
1054 @refill
1055 This can be used to make gvpe use a different set of routing rules. For example, on GNU/Linux, the @t{if-up} could set @t{nfmark} to 1000 and then put all routing rules into table @t{99} and then use an ip rule to make gvpe traffic avoid that routing table, in effect routing normal traffic via gvpe and gvpe traffic via the normal system routing tables:
1056 @refill
1057
1058
1059 @example
1060 ip rule add not fwmark 1000 lookup 99
1061 @end example
1062
1063 @end itemize
1064
1065
1066
1067 @subsection NODE SPECIFIC SETTINGS
1068 The following settings are node-specific, that is, every node can have different settings, even within the same gvpe instance. Settings that are set before the first node section set the defaults, settings that are set within a node section only apply to the given node.
1069 @refill
1070
1071
1072 @itemize
1073
1074
1075 @item
1076 allow-direct = nodename
1077
1078 @cindex allow-direct
1079 Allow direct connections to this node. See @t{deny-direct} for more info.
1080 @refill
1081
1082
1083 @item
1084 compress = yes|true|on | no|false|off
1085
1086 @cindex compress
1087 For the current node, this specified whether it will accept compressed packets, and for all other nodes, this specifies whether to try to compress data packets sent to this node (default: @t{yes}). Compression is really cheap even on slow computers, has no size overhead at all and will only be used when the other side supports compression, so enabling this is often a good idea.
1088 @refill
1089
1090
1091 @item
1092 connect = ondemand | never | always | disabled
1093
1094 @cindex connect
1095 Sets the connect mode (default: @t{always}). It can be @t{always} (always try to establish and keep a connection to the given node), @t{never} (never initiate a connection to the given host, but accept connections), @t{ondemand} (try to establish a connection when there are outstanding packets in the queue and take it down after the keepalive interval) or @t{disabled} (node is bad, don't talk to it).
1096 @refill
1097 Routers will automatically be forced to @t{always} unless they are @t{disabled}, to ensure all nodes can talk to each other.
1098 @refill
1099
1100
1101 @item
1102 deny-direct = nodename | *
1103
1104 @cindex deny-direct
1105 Deny direct connections to the specified node (or all nodes when @t{*} is given). Only one node can be specified, but you can use multiple @t{allow-direct} and @t{deny-direct} statements. This only makes sense in networks with routers, as routers are required for indirect connections.
1106 @refill
1107 Sometimes, a node cannot reach some other nodes for reasons of network connectivity. For example, a node behind a firewall that only allows connections to/from a single other node in the network. In this case one should specify @t{deny-direct = *} and @t{allow-direct = othernodename} (the other node @emph{must} be a router for this to work).
1108 @refill
1109 The algorithm to check whether a connection may be direct is as follows:
1110 @refill
1111 1. Other node mentioned in an @t{allow-direct}? If yes, allow the connection.
1112 @refill
1113 2. Other node mentioned in a @t{deny-direct}? If yes, deny direct connections.
1114 @refill
1115 3. Allow the connection.
1116 @refill
1117 That is, @t{allow-direct} takes precedence over @t{deny-direct}.
1118 @refill
1119 The check is done in both directions, i.e. both nodes must allow a direct connection before one is attempted, so you only need to specify connect limitations on one node.
1120 @refill
1121
1122
1123 @item
1124 dns-domain = domain-suffix
1125
1126 @cindex dns-domain
1127 The DNS domain suffix that points to the DNS tunnel server for this node.
1128 @refill
1129 The domain must point to a NS record that points to the @emph{dns-hostname}, i.e.
1130 @refill
1131
1132
1133 @example
1134 dns-domainname = tunnel.example.net
1135 dns-hostname = tunnel-server.example.net
1136 @end example
1137
1138 Corresponds to the following DNS entries in the @t{example.net} domain:
1139 @refill
1140
1141
1142 @example
1143 tunnel.example.net. NS tunnel-server.example.net.
1144 tunnel-server.example.net. A 13.13.13.13
1145 @end example
1146
1147
1148
1149 @item
1150 dns-hostname = hostname/ip
1151
1152 @cindex dns-hostname
1153 The address to bind the DNS tunnel socket to, similar to the @t{hostname}, but for the DNS tunnel protocol only. Default: @t{0.0.0.0}, but that might change.
1154 @refill
1155
1156
1157 @item
1158 dns-port = port-number
1159
1160 @cindex dns-port
1161 The port to bind the DNS tunnel socket to. Must be @t{53} on DNS tunnel servers.
1162 @refill
1163
1164
1165 @item
1166 enable-dns = yes|true|on | no|false|off
1167
1168 @cindex enable-dns
1169 See gvpe.protocol(7) for a description of the DNS transport protocol. Avoid this protocol if you can.
1170 @refill
1171 Enable the DNS tunneling protocol on this node, either as server or as client. Support for this transport protocol is only available when gvpe was compiled using the @t{--enable-dns} option.
1172 @refill
1173
1174
1175 @item
1176 enable-icmp = yes|true|on | no|false|off
1177
1178 @cindex enable-icmp
1179 See gvpe.protocol(7) for a description of the ICMP transport protocol.
1180 @refill
1181 Enable the ICMP transport using ICMP packets of type @t{icmp-type} on this node.
1182 @refill
1183
1184
1185 @item
1186 enable-rawip = yes|true|on | no|false|off
1187
1188 @cindex enable-rawip
1189 See gvpe.protocol(7) for a description of the RAW IP transport protocol.
1190 @refill
1191 Enable the RAW IPv4 transport using the @t{ip-proto} protocol (default: @t{no}).
1192 @refill
1193
1194
1195 @item
1196 enable-tcp = yes|true|on | no|false|off
1197
1198 @cindex enable-tcp
1199 See gvpe.protocol(7) for a description of the TCP transport protocol.
1200 @refill
1201 Enable the TCPv4 transport using the @t{tcp-port} port (default: @t{no}). Support for this transport protocol is only available when gvpe was compiled using the @t{--enable-tcp} option.
1202 @refill
1203
1204
1205 @item
1206 enable-udp = yes|true|on | no|false|off
1207
1208 @cindex enable-udp
1209 See gvpe.protocol(7) for a description of the UDP transport protocol.
1210 @refill
1211 Enable the UDPv4 transport using the @t{udp-port} port (default: @t{no}, unless no other protocol is enabled for a node, in which case this protocol is enabled automatically).
1212 @refill
1213 NOTE: Please specify @t{enable-udp = yes} if you want to use it even though it might get switched on automatically, as some future version might default to another default protocol.
1214 @refill
1215
1216
1217 @item
1218 hostname = hostname | ip [can not be defaulted]
1219
1220 @cindex hostname
1221 Forces the address of this node to be set to the given DNS hostname or IP address. It will be resolved before each connect request, so dyndns should work fine. If this setting is not specified and a router is available, then the router will be queried for the address of this node. Otherwise, the connection attempt will fail.
1222 @refill
1223 Note that DNS resolving is done synchronously, pausing the daemon. If that is an issue you need to specify IP addresses.
1224 @refill
1225
1226
1227 @item
1228 icmp-type = integer
1229
1230 @cindex icmp-type
1231 Sets the type value to be used for outgoing (and incoming) packets sent via the ICMP transport.
1232 @refill
1233 The default is @t{0} (which is @t{echo-reply}, also known as "ping-reply"). Other useful values include @t{8} (@t{echo-request}, a.k.a. "ping") and @t{11} (@t{time-exceeded}), but any 8-bit value can be used.
1234 @refill
1235
1236
1237 @item
1238 if-up-data = value
1239
1240 @cindex if-up-data
1241 The value specified using this directive will be passed to the @t{if-up} script in the environment variable @t{IFUPDATA}.
1242 @refill
1243
1244
1245 @item
1246 inherit-tos = yes|true|on | no|false|off
1247
1248 @cindex inherit-tos
1249 Whether to inherit the TOS settings of packets sent to the tunnel when sending packets to this node (default: @t{yes}). If set to @t{yes} then outgoing tunnel packets will have the same TOS setting as the packets sent to the tunnel device, which is usually what you want.
1250 @refill
1251
1252
1253 @item
1254 max-retry = positive-number
1255
1256 @cindex max-retry
1257 The maximum interval in seconds (default: @t{3600}, one hour) between retries to establish a connection to this node. When a connection cannot be established, gvpe uses exponential back-off capped at this value. It's sometimes useful to set this to a much lower value (e.g. @t{120}) on connections to routers that usually are stable but sometimes are down, to assure quick reconnections even after longer downtimes.
1258 @refill
1259
1260
1261 @item
1262 max-ttl = seconds
1263
1264 @cindex max-ttl
1265 Expire packets that couldn't be sent after this many seconds (default: @t{60}). Gvpe will normally queue packets for a node without an active connection, in the hope of establishing a connection soon. This value specifies the maximum lifetime a packet will stay in the queue, if a packet gets older, it will be thrown away.
1266 @refill
1267
1268
1269 @item
1270 max-queue = positive-number>=1
1271
1272 @cindex max-queue
1273 The maximum number of packets that will be queued (default: @t{512}) for this node. If more packets are sent then earlier packets will be expired. See @t{max-ttl}, above.
1274 @refill
1275
1276
1277 @item
1278 router-priority = 0 | 1 | positive-number>=2
1279
1280 @cindex router-priority
1281 Sets the router priority of the given node (default: @t{0}, disabled).
1282 @refill
1283 If some node tries to connect to another node but it doesn't have a hostname, it asks a router node for it's IP address. The router node chosen is the one with the highest priority larger than @t{1} that is currently reachable. This is called a @emph{mediated} connection, as the connection itself will still be direct, but it uses another node to mediate between the two nodes.
1284 @refill
1285 The value @t{0} disables routing, that means if the node receives a packet not for itself it will not forward it but instead drop it.
1286 @refill
1287 The special value @t{1} allows other hosts to route through the router host, but they will never route through it by default (i.e. the config file of another node needs to specify a router priority higher than one to choose such a node for routing).
1288 @refill
1289 The idea behind this is that some hosts can, if required, bump the @t{router-priority} setting to higher than @t{1} in their local config to route through specific hosts. If @t{router-priority} is @t{0}, then routing will be refused, so @t{1} serves as a "enable, but do not use by default" switch.
1290 @refill
1291 Nodes with @t{router-priority} set to @t{2} or higher will always be forced to @t{connect} = @t{always} (unless they are @t{disabled}).
1292 @refill
1293
1294
1295 @item
1296 tcp-port = port-number
1297
1298 @cindex tcp-port
1299 Similar to @t{udp-port} (default: @t{655}), but sets the TCP port number.
1300 @refill
1301
1302
1303 @item
1304 udp-port = port-number
1305
1306 @cindex udp-port
1307 Sets the port number used by the UDP protocol (default: @t{655}, not officially assigned by IANA!).
1308 @refill
1309 @end itemize
1310
1311
1312
1313 @section CONFIG DIRECTORY LAYOUT
1314 The default (or recommended) directory layout for the config directory is:
1315 @refill
1316
1317
1318 @itemize
1319
1320
1321 @item
1322 gvpe.conf
1323
1324 The config file.
1325 @refill
1326
1327
1328 @item
1329 if-up
1330
1331 The if-up script
1332 @refill
1333
1334
1335 @item
1336 node-up, node-down
1337
1338 If used the node up or node-down scripts.
1339 @refill
1340
1341
1342 @item
1343 hostkey
1344
1345 The private key (taken from @t{hostkeys/nodename}) of the current host.
1346 @refill
1347
1348
1349 @item
1350 pubkey/nodename
1351
1352 The public keys of the other nodes, one file per node.
1353 @refill
1354 @end itemize
1355
1356
1357
1358
1359 @node gvpectrl,gvpe,gvpe.conf,Top
1360
1361 @chapter gvpectrl
1362
1363 @section NAME
1364 @t{gvpectrl} - GNU Virtual Private Ethernet Control Program
1365 @refill
1366
1367
1368 @section SYNOPSIS
1369 @t{gvpectrl} [@strong{-ckgs}] [@strong{--config=}@emph{DIR}] [@strong{--generate-keys}] [@strong{--help}] [@strong{--kill}[@strong{=}@emph{SIGNAL}]] [@strong{--show-config}] [@strong{--version}]
1370 @refill
1371
1372
1373 @section DESCRIPTION
1374 This is the control program for the @t{gvpe}, the virtual private ethernet daemon.
1375 @refill
1376
1377
1378 @section OPTIONS
1379
1380
1381 @itemize
1382
1383
1384 @item
1385 @strong{-c}, @strong{--config=}@emph{DIR}
1386
1387 Read configuration options from @emph{DIR}.
1388 @refill
1389
1390
1391 @item
1392 @strong{-g}, @strong{--generate-keys}
1393
1394 Generate public/private RSA key-pair and exit.
1395 @refill
1396
1397
1398 @item
1399 @strong{-q}, @strong{--quiet}
1400
1401 Suppresses messages the author finds nonessential for scripting purposes.
1402 @refill
1403
1404
1405 @item
1406 @strong{--help}
1407
1408 Display short list of options.
1409 @refill
1410
1411
1412 @item
1413 @strong{--kill}[@strong{=}@emph{SIGNAL}]
1414
1415 Attempt to kill a running @t{gvpectrl} (optionally with the specified @emph{SIGNAL} instead of @t{SIGTERM}) and exit.
1416 @refill
1417
1418
1419 @item
1420 @strong{--show-config}
1421
1422 Show a summary of the configuration, and how gvpe interprets it. Can also be very useful when designing firewall scripts.
1423 @refill
1424
1425
1426 @item
1427 @strong{--version}
1428
1429 Output version information and exit.
1430 @refill
1431 @end itemize
1432
1433
1434
1435 @section BUGS
1436 If you find any bugs, report them to @t{gvpe@@schmorp.de}.
1437 @refill
1438
1439
1440
1441 @node gvpe,gvpe.protocol,gvpectrl,Top
1442
1443 @chapter gvpe
1444
1445 @section NAME
1446 @t{gvpe} - GNU Virtual Private Ethernet Daemon
1447 @refill
1448
1449
1450 @section SYNOPSIS
1451 @t{gvpe} [@strong{-cDlL}] [@strong{--config=}@emph{DIR}] [@strong{--no-detach}] [@strong{-l=}@emph{LEVEL]}] [@strong{--kill}[@strong{=}@emph{SIGNAL}]] [@strong{--mlock}] [@strong{--help}] [@strong{--version}] @emph{NODENAME} [@emph{option...}]
1452 @refill
1453
1454
1455 @section DESCRIPTION
1456 See the gvpe(5) man page for an introduction to the gvpe suite.
1457 @refill
1458 This is the manual page for gvpe, the virtual private ethernet daemon. When started, @t{gvpe} will read it's configuration file to determine the network topology, and other configuration information, assuming the role of node @emph{NODENAME}
1459 @refill
1460 It will then create/connect to the tun/tap device and set up a socket for incoming connections. Then a @t{if-up} script will be executed to further configure the virtual network device. If that succeeds, it will detach from the controlling terminal and continue in the background, accepting and setting up connections to other gvpe daemons that are part of the same virtual private ethernet.
1461 @refill
1462 The optional arguments after the node name have to be of the form:
1463 @refill
1464
1465
1466 @example
1467 [I<nodename>.]var=value
1468 @end example
1469
1470 If the argument has a prefix of @t{nodename.} (i.e. @t{laptop.enable-dns=yes}) then it will be parsed after all the config directives for that node, if not, it is parsed before the first node directive in the config file, and can be used to set global options or default variables.
1471 @refill
1472 For example, to start @t{gvpe} in the foreground, with log-level @t{info} on the node @t{laptop}, with TCP enabled and HTTP-Proxy host and Port set, use this:
1473 @refill
1474
1475
1476 @example
1477 gvpe -D -l info laptop \
1478 http-proxy-host=10.0.0.18 http-proxy-port=3128 \
1479 laptop.enable-tcp=yes
1480 @end example
1481
1482
1483
1484 @section OPTIONS
1485
1486
1487 @itemize
1488
1489
1490 @item
1491 @strong{-c}, @strong{--config=}@emph{DIR}
1492
1493 Read configuration options from @emph{DIR}
1494 @refill
1495
1496
1497 @item
1498 @strong{-d}, @strong{--l=}@emph{LEVEL}
1499
1500 Set logging level to @emph{LEVEL} (one of: noise, trace, debug, info, notice, warn, error, critical).
1501 @refill
1502
1503
1504 @item
1505 @strong{--help}
1506
1507 Display short list of options.
1508 @refill
1509
1510
1511 @item
1512 @strong{-D}, @strong{--no-detach}
1513
1514 Don't fork and detach but stay in foreground and log messages to stderr in addition to syslog.
1515 @refill
1516
1517
1518 @item
1519 @strong{-L}, @strong{--mlock}
1520
1521 Lock @t{gvpe} into main memory. This will prevent sensitive data like shared private keys to be written to the system swap files/partitions.
1522 @refill
1523
1524
1525 @item
1526 @strong{--version}
1527
1528 Output version information and exit.
1529 @refill
1530 @end itemize
1531
1532
1533
1534 @section SIGNALS
1535
1536
1537 @itemize
1538
1539
1540 @item
1541 HUP
1542
1543 Closes/resets all connections, resets the retry time and will start connecting again (it will NOT re-read the config file). This is useful e.g. in a @t{/etc/ppp/if-up} script.
1544 @refill
1545
1546
1547 @item
1548 TERM
1549
1550 Closes/resets all connections and exits.
1551 @refill
1552
1553
1554 @item
1555 USR1
1556
1557 Dump current network status into the syslog (at loglevel @t{notice}, so make sure your loglevel allows this).
1558 @refill
1559 @end itemize
1560
1561
1562
1563 @section FILES
1564
1565
1566 @itemize
1567
1568
1569 @item
1570 @t{/etc/gvpe/gvpe.conf}
1571
1572 The configuration file for @t{gvpe}.
1573 @refill
1574
1575
1576 @item
1577 @t{/etc/gvpe/if-up}
1578
1579 Script which is executed as soon as the virtual network device has been allocated. Purpose is to further configure that device.
1580 @refill
1581
1582
1583 @item
1584 @t{/etc/gvpe/node-up}
1585
1586 Script which is executed whenever a node connects to this node. This can be used for example to run nsupdate.
1587 @refill
1588
1589
1590 @item
1591 @t{/etc/gvpe/node-down}
1592
1593 Script which is executed whenever a connection to another node is lost. for example to run nsupdate.
1594 @refill
1595
1596
1597 @item
1598 @t{/etc/gvpe/pubkey/*}
1599
1600 The directory containing the public keys for every node, usually autogenerated by executing @t{gvpectrl --generate-keys}.
1601 @refill
1602
1603
1604 @item
1605 @t{/var/run/gvpe.pid}
1606
1607 The PID of the currently running @t{gvpe} is stored in this file.
1608 @refill
1609 @end itemize
1610
1611
1612
1613 @section BUGS
1614 The cryptography in gvpe has not been thoroughly checked by many people yet. Use it at your own risk!
1615 @refill
1616 If you find any bugs, report them to @t{gvpe@@schmorp.de}.
1617 @refill
1618
1619
1620
1621 @node gvpe.protocol,Simple Example,gvpe,Top
1622
1623 @chapter gvpe.protocol
1624
1625 @section The GNU-VPE Protocols
1626
1627
1628 @section Overview
1629 GVPE can make use of a number of protocols. One of them is the GNU VPE protocol which is used to authenticate tunnels and send encrypted data packets. This protocol is described in more detail the second part of this document.
1630 @refill
1631 The first part of this document describes the transport protocols which are used by GVPE to send it's data packets over the network.
1632 @refill
1633
1634
1635 @section PART 1: Transport protocols
1636 GVPE offers a wide range of transport protocols that can be used to interchange data between nodes. Protocols differ in their overhead, speed, reliability, and robustness.
1637 @refill
1638 The following sections describe each transport protocol in more detail. They are sorted by overhead/efficiency, the most efficient transport is listed first:
1639 @refill
1640
1641
1642 @subsection RAW IP
1643 This protocol is the best choice, performance-wise, as the minimum overhead per packet is only 38 bytes.
1644 @refill
1645 It works by sending the VPN payload using raw IP frames (using the protocol set by @t{ip-proto}).
1646 @refill
1647 Using raw IP frames has the drawback that many firewalls block "unknown" protocols, so this transport only works if you have full IP connectivity between nodes.
1648 @refill
1649
1650
1651 @subsection ICMP
1652 This protocol offers very low overhead (minimum 42 bytes), and can sometimes tunnel through firewalls when other protocols can not.
1653 @refill
1654 It works by prepending an ICMP header with type @t{icmp-type} and a code of @t{255}. The default @t{icmp-type} is @t{echo-reply}, so the resulting packets look like echo replies, which looks rather strange to network administrators.
1655 @refill
1656 This transport should only be used if other transports (i.e. raw IP) are not available or undesirable (due to their overhead).
1657 @refill
1658
1659
1660 @subsection UDP
1661 This is a good general choice for the transport protocol as UDP packets tunnel well through most firewalls and routers, and the overhead per packet is moderate (minimum 58 bytes).
1662 @refill
1663 It should be used if RAW IP is not available.
1664 @refill
1665
1666
1667 @subsection TCP
1668 This protocol is a very bad choice, as it not only has high overhead (more than 60 bytes), but the transport also retries on it's own, which leads to congestion when the link has moderate packet loss (as both the TCP transport and the tunneled traffic will retry, increasing congestion more and more). It also has high latency and is quite inefficient.
1669 @refill
1670 It's only useful when tunneling through firewalls that block better protocols. If a node doesn't have direct internet access but a HTTP proxy that supports the CONNECT method it can be used to tunnel through a web proxy. For this to work, the @t{tcp-port} should be @t{443} (@t{https}), as most proxies do not allow connections to other ports.
1671 @refill
1672 It is an abuse of the usage a proxy was designed for, so make sure you are allowed to use it for GVPE.
1673 @refill
1674 This protocol also has server and client sides. If the @t{tcp-port} is set to zero, other nodes cannot connect to this node directly. If the @t{tcp-port} is non-zero, the node can act both as a client as well as a server.
1675 @refill
1676
1677
1678 @subsection DNS
1679 @strong{WARNING:} Parsing and generating DNS packets is rather tricky. The code almost certainly contains buffer overflows and other, likely exploitable, bugs. You have been warned.
1680 @refill
1681 This is the worst choice of transport protocol with respect to overhead (overhead can be 2-3 times higher than the transferred data), and latency (which can be many seconds). Some DNS servers might not be prepared to handle the traffic and drop or corrupt packets. The client also has to constantly poll the server for data, so the client will constantly create traffic even if it doesn't need to transport packets.
1682 @refill
1683 In addition, the same problems as the TCP transport also plague this protocol.
1684 @refill
1685 It's only use is to tunnel through firewalls that do not allow direct internet access. Similar to using a HTTP proxy (as the TCP transport does), it uses a local DNS server/forwarder (given by the @t{dns-forw-host} configuration value) as a proxy to send and receive data as a client, and an @t{NS} record pointing to the GVPE server (as given by the @t{dns-hostname} directive).
1686 @refill
1687 The only good side of this protocol is that it can tunnel through most firewalls mostly undetected, iff the local DNS server/forwarder is sane (which is true for most routers, wireless LAN gateways and nameservers).
1688 @refill
1689 Fine-tuning needs to be done by editing @t{src/vpn_dns.C} directly.
1690 @refill
1691
1692
1693 @section PART 2: The GNU VPE protocol
1694 This section, unfortunately, is not yet finished, although the protocol is stable (until bugs in the cryptography are found, which will likely completely change the following description). Nevertheless, it should give you some overview over the protocol.
1695 @refill
1696
1697
1698 @subsection Anatomy of a VPN packet
1699 The exact layout and field lengths of a VPN packet is determined at compile time and doesn't change. The same structure is used for all transport protocols, be it RAWIP or TCP.
1700 @refill
1701
1702
1703 @example
1704 +------+------+--------+------+
1705 | HMAC | TYPE | SRCDST | DATA |
1706 +------+------+--------+------+
1707 @end example
1708
1709 The HMAC field is present in all packets, even if not used (e.g. in auth request packets), in which case it is set to all zeroes. The checksum itself is calculated over the TYPE, SRCDST and DATA fields in all cases.
1710 @refill
1711 The TYPE field is a single byte and determines the purpose of the packet (e.g. RESET, COMPRESSED/UNCOMPRESSED DATA, PING, AUTH REQUEST/RESPONSE, CONNECT REQUEST/INFO etc.).
1712 @refill
1713 SRCDST is a three byte field which contains the source and destination node IDs (12 bits each).
1714 @refill
1715 The DATA portion differs between each packet type, naturally, and is the only part that can be encrypted. Data packets contain more fields, as shown:
1716 @refill
1717
1718
1719 @example
1720 +------+------+--------+------+-------+------+
1721 | HMAC | TYPE | SRCDST | RAND | SEQNO | DATA |
1722 +------+------+--------+------+-------+------+
1723 @end example
1724
1725 RAND is a sequence of fully random bytes, used to increase the entropy of the data for encryption purposes.
1726 @refill
1727 SEQNO is a 32-bit sequence number. It is negotiated at every connection initialization and starts at some random 31 bit value. VPE currently uses a sliding window of 512 packets/sequence numbers to detect reordering, duplication and replay attacks.
1728 @refill
1729
1730
1731 @subsection The authentication protocol
1732 Before nodes can exchange packets, they need to establish authenticity of the other side and a key. Every node has a private RSA key and the public RSA keys of all other nodes.
1733 @refill
1734 A host establishes a simplex connection by sending the other node an RSA encrypted challenge containing a random challenge (consisting of the encryption key to use when sending packets, more random data and PKCS1_OAEP padding) and a random 16 byte "challenge-id" (used to detect duplicate auth packets). The destination node will respond by replying with an (unencrypted) RIPEMD160 hash of the decrypted challenge, which will authenticate that node. The destination node will also set the outgoing encryption parameters as given in the packet.
1735 @refill
1736 When the source node receives a correct auth reply (by verifying the hash and the id, which will expire after 120 seconds), it will start to accept data packets from the destination node.
1737 @refill
1738 This means that a node can only initiate a simplex connection, telling the other side the key it has to use when it sends packets. The challenge reply is only used to set the current IP address of the other side and protocol parameters.
1739 @refill
1740 This protocol is completely symmetric, so to be able to send packets the destination node must send a challenge in the exact same way as already described (so, in essence, two simplex connections are created per node pair).
1741 @refill
1742
1743
1744 @subsection Retrying
1745 When there is no response to an auth request, the node will send auth requests in bursts with an exponential back-off. After some time it will resort to PING packets, which are very small (8 bytes + protocol header) and lightweight (no RSA operations required). A node that receives ping requests from an unconnected peer will respond by trying to create a connection.
1746 @refill
1747 In addition to the exponential back-off, there is a global rate-limit on a per-IP base. It allows long bursts but will limit total packet rate to something like one control packet every ten seconds, to avoid accidental floods due to protocol problems (like a RSA key file mismatch between two nodes).
1748 @refill
1749 The intervals between retries are limited by the @t{max-retry} configuration value. A node with @t{connect} = @t{always} will always retry, a node with @t{connect} = @t{ondemand} will only try (and re-try) to connect as long as there are packets in the queue, usually this limits the retry period to @t{max-ttl} seconds.
1750 @refill
1751 Sending packets over the VPN will reset the retry intervals as well, which means as long as somebody is trying to send packets to a given node, GVPE will try to connect every few seconds.
1752 @refill
1753
1754
1755 @subsection Routing and Protocol translation
1756 The GVPE routing algorithm is easy: there isn't much routing to speak of: When routing packets to another node, GVPE trues the following options, in order:
1757 @refill
1758
1759
1760 @itemize
1761
1762
1763 @item
1764 If the two nodes should be able to reach each other directly (common protocol, port known), then GVPE will send the packet directly to the other node.
1765
1766
1767
1768 @item
1769 If this isn't possible (e.g. because the node doesn't have a @t{hostname} or known port), but the nodes speak a common protocol and a router is available, then GVPE will ask a router to "mediate" between both nodes (see below).
1770
1771
1772
1773 @item
1774 If a direct connection isn't possible (no common protocols) or forbidden (@t{deny-direct}) and there are any routers, then GVPE will try to send packets to the router with the highest priority that is connected already @emph{and} is able (as specified by the config file) to connect directly to the target node.
1775
1776
1777
1778 @item
1779 If no such router exists, then GVPE will simply send the packet to the node with the highest priority available.
1780
1781
1782
1783 @item
1784 Failing all that, the packet will be dropped.
1785
1786 @end itemize
1787
1788 A host can usually declare itself unreachable directly by setting it's port number(s) to zero. It can declare other hosts as unreachable by using a config-file that disables all protocols for these other hosts. Another option is to disable all protocols on that host in the other config files.
1789 @refill
1790 If two hosts cannot connect to each other because their IP address(es) are not known (such as dial-up hosts), one side will send a @emph{mediated} connection request to a router (routers must be configured to act as routers!), which will send both the originating and the destination host a connection info request with protocol information and IP address of the other host (if known). Both hosts will then try to establish a direct connection to the other peer, which is usually possible even when both hosts are behind a NAT gateway.
1791 @refill
1792 Routing via other nodes works because the SRCDST field is not encrypted, so the router can just forward the packet to the destination host. Since each host uses it's own private key, the router will not be able to decrypt or encrypt packets, it will just act as a simple router and protocol translator.
1793 @refill
1794
1795
1796
1797 @node Simple Example,Complex Example,gvpe.protocol,Top
1798
1799 @chapter Simple Example
1800 In this example, gvpe is used to implement a simple, UDP-based ethernet on three hosts.
1801 @refill
1802 The config file (@t{gvpe.conf}) is the same on all hosts:
1803 @refill
1804
1805
1806 @example
1807 enable-udp = yes # use UDP
1808 udp-port = 407 # use this UDP port
1809 mtu = 1492 # handy for TDSL
1810 ifname = vpn0 # I prefer vpn0 over e.g. tap0
1811
1812 node = huffy # arbitrary node name
1813 hostname = 1.2.3.4 # ip address if this host
1814
1815 node = welshy
1816 hostname = www.example.net # resolve at connection time
1817
1818 node = wheelery
1819 # no hostname, will be determinded dynamically using router1 or router2
1820 @end example
1821
1822 @t{gvpe} will execute the @t{if-up} script on every hosts, which, for linux, could look like this for all three hosts:
1823 @refill
1824
1825
1826 @example
1827 ifconfig $IFNAME hw ether $MAC mtu $MTU
1828 ifconfig $IFNAME 10.0.0.$NODE
1829 route add -net 10.0.0.0 netmask 255.0.0.0 dev $IFNAME
1830 @end example
1831
1832 The @t{10.0.0.$NODE} resolves to @t{10.0.0.1} on @t{huffy}, @t{10.0.0.2} on @t{welshy} and so on. Other schemes, such as @t{10.$NODE.0.1} might be useful, too.
1833 @refill
1834 After generating the keys (gvpectrl) and starting the daemon (@t{gvpe -D -l info }@emph{NODENAME} for test purposes) the three hosts should be able to ping each other.
1835 @refill
1836 If you have an internal @t{10.x.x.x} network (with a tighter netmask then @t{255.0.0.0}, e.g. @t{10.1.0.0} on @t{huffy}, @t{10.2.0.0} on @t{welshy} and so on), you can now enable ip-forwarding and proxy-arp (or set the hosts as default gateway), and your three hosts should forward traffic from each network to each other.
1837 @refill
1838
1839
1840 @node Complex Example,complex/gvpe.conf,Simple Example,Top
1841
1842 @chapter Complex Example
1843 These files are configuration files for "our" internal network.
1844
1845 It is highly non-trivial, so don't use this configuration as the basis of
1846 your network unless you know what you are doing.
1847
1848 It features: around 30 hosts, many of them have additional networks behind
1849 them and use an assortment of different tunneling protocols. The vpn is
1850 fully routed, no arp is used at all.
1851
1852 The public IP addresses of connecting nodes are automatically registered
1853 via dns on the node ruth, using a node-up/node-down script.
1854
1855 And last not least: the if-up script can generate information to be used
1856 in firewall rules (IP-net/MAC-address pairs) so ensure packet integrity so
1857 you can use your iptables etc. firewall to filter by IP address only.
1858
1859 @menu
1860 * complex/gvpe.conf:: An example gvpe configuration
1861 * complex/if-up:: A fully-routing if-up config
1862 * complex/node-up:: A node-up/node-down script utilizing dynds
1863 @end menu
1864
1865
1866 @node complex/gvpe.conf,complex/if-up,Complex Example,Complex Example
1867
1868 @chapter complex/gvpe.conf
1869
1870
1871 @example
1872 # sample configfile
1873 # the config file must be exactly(!) the same on all nodes
1874
1875 rekey = 54321 # the rekeying interval
1876 keepalive = 300 # the keepalive interval
1877 on ruth keepalive = 120 # ruth is important and demands lower keepalives
1878 on surfer keepalive = 40
1879 mtu = 1492 # the mtu (minimum mtu of attached host)
1880 ifname = vpn0 # the tunnel interface name to use
1881 ifpersist = no # the tun device should be persistent
1882 inherit-tos = yes # should tunnel packets inherit tos flags?
1883 compress = yes # wether compression should be used (NYI)
1884 connect = ondemand # connect to this host always/never or ondemand
1885 router-priority = 1 # route for everybody - if necessary
1886
1887 loglevel = notice # info logs connects, notice only important messages
1888 on mobil loglevel = info
1889 on doom loglevel = info
1890 on ruth loglevel = info
1891
1892 udp-port = 407 # the udp port to use for sending/receiving packets
1893 tcp-port = 443 # the tcp port to listen for connections (we use https over proxy)
1894 ip-proto = 50 # (ab)use the ipsec protocol as rawip
1895 icmp-type = 0 # (ab)use echo replies for tunneling
1896 enable-udp = yes # udp is spoken almost everywhere
1897 enable-tcp = no # tcp is not spoken everywhere
1898 enable-rawip = no # rawip is not spoken everywhere
1899 enable-icmp = no # most hosts don't bother to icmp
1900
1901 # every "node =" introduces a new node in the network
1902 # the options following it don't set defaults but are
1903 # node-specific.
1904
1905 # marc@@lap
1906 node = mobil
1907
1908 # marc@@home
1909 node = doom
1910 enable-rawip = yes
1911 enable-tcp = yes
1912
1913 # marc@@uni
1914 node = ruth
1915 enable-rawip = yes
1916 enable-tcp = yes
1917 enable-icmp = yes
1918 hostname = 200.100.162.95
1919 connect = always
1920 router-priority = 30
1921 on ruth node-up = node-up
1922 on ruth node-down = node-up
1923
1924 # marc@@mu
1925 node = frank
1926 enable-rawip = yes
1927 hostname = 44.88.167.250
1928 router-priority = 20
1929 connect = always
1930
1931 # nethype
1932 node = rain
1933 enable-rawip = yes
1934 hostname = 145.253.105.130
1935 router-priority = 10
1936 connect = always
1937
1938 # marco@@home
1939 node = marco
1940 enable-rawip = yes
1941
1942 # stefan@@ka
1943 node = wappla
1944 connect = never
1945
1946 # stefan@@lap
1947 node = stefan
1948 udp-port = 408
1949 connect = never
1950
1951 # paul@@wg
1952 node = n8geil
1953 on ruth enable-icmp = yes
1954 on n8geil enable-icmp = yes
1955 enable-udp = no
1956
1957 # paul@@lap
1958 node = syrr
1959
1960 # paul@@lu
1961 node = donomos
1962
1963 # marco@@hn
1964 node = core
1965
1966 # elmex@@home
1967 node = elmex
1968 enable-rawip = yes
1969 hostname = 100.251.143.181
1970
1971 # stefan@@kwc.at
1972 node = fwkw
1973 connect = never
1974 on stefan connect = always
1975 on wappla connect = always
1976 hostname = 182.73.81.146
1977
1978 # elmex@@home
1979 node = jungfrau
1980 enable-rawip = yes
1981
1982 # uni main router
1983 node = surfer
1984 enable-rawip = yes
1985 enable-tcp = no
1986 enable-icmp = yes
1987 hostname = 200.100.162.79
1988 connect = always
1989 router-priority = 40
1990
1991 # jkneer@@marvin
1992 node = marvin
1993 enable-rawip = yes
1994 enable-udp = no
1995
1996 # jkneer@@entrophy
1997 node = entrophy
1998 enable-udp = no
1999 enable-tcp = yes
2000
2001 # mr. primitive
2002 node = voyager
2003 enable-udp = no
2004 enable-tcp = no
2005 on voyager enable-tcp = yes
2006 on voyager enable-udp = yes
2007
2008 # v-server (barbados.dn-systems.de)
2009 #node = vserver
2010 #enable-udp = yes
2011 #hostname = 193.108.181.74
2012 @end example
2013
2014
2015
2016 @node complex/if-up,complex/node-up,complex/gvpe.conf,Complex Example
2017
2018 @chapter complex/if-up
2019
2020
2021 @example
2022 #!/bin/bash
2023
2024 # Some environment variables will be set:
2025 #
2026 # CONFBASE=/etc/vpe # the configuration directory prefix
2027 # IFNAME=vpn0 # the network interface (ifname)
2028 # MAC=fe:fd:80:00:00:01 # the mac-address to use for the interface
2029 # NODENAME=cerebro # the selected nodename (-n switch)
2030 # NODEID=1 # the numerical node id
2031 # MTU=1436 # the tunnel packet overhead (set mtu to 1500-$OVERHEAD)
2032
2033 # this if-up script is rather full-featured, and is used to
2034 # generate a fully-routed (no arp traffic) vpn. the main portion
2035 # consists of "ipn" calls (see below).
2036
2037 # some hosts require additional specific configuration, this is handled
2038 # using if statements near the end of the script.
2039
2040 # with the --fw switch, outputs mac/net pairs for your firewall use:
2041 # if-up --fw | while read mac net; do
2042 # iptables -t filter -A INPUT -i vpn0 -p all -m mac --mac-source \! $mac -s $net -j DROP
2043 # done
2044
2045 ipn() @{
2046 local id="$1"; shift
2047 local mac=fe:fd:80:00:00:$(printf "%02x" $id)
2048 if [ -n "$FW" ]; then
2049 for net in "$@@"; do
2050 echo "$mac $net"
2051 done
2052 else
2053 local ip="$1"; shift
2054 if [ "$id" == $NODEID ]; then
2055 [ -n "$ADDR_ONLY" ] && ip addr add $ip broadcast 10.255.255.255 dev $IFNAME
2056 elif [ -z "$ADDR_ONLY" ]; then
2057 ip neighbour add $ip lladdr $mac nud permanent dev $IFNAME
2058 for route in "$@@"; do
2059 ip route add $route via $ip dev vpn0
2060 done
2061 fi
2062 fi
2063 @}
2064
2065 ipns() @{
2066 # this contains the generic routing information for the vpn
2067 # each call to ipn has the following parameters:
2068 # ipn <node-id> <gateway-ip> [<route> ...]
2069 # the second line (ipn 2) means:
2070 # the second node (doom in the config file) has the ip address 10.0.0.5,
2071 # which is the gateway for the 10.0/28 network and three additional ip
2072 # addresses
2073
2074 ipn 1 10.0.0.20
2075 ipn 2 10.0.0.5 10.0.0.0/28 #200.100.162.92 200.100.162.93 100.99.218.222
2076 ipn 3 10.0.0.17
2077 ipn 4 10.0.0.18
2078 ipn 5 10.0.0.19 10.3.0.0/16
2079 ipn 6 10.0.0.21 10.0.2.0/26 #200.100.162.17
2080 ipn 7 10.0.0.22 10.1.2.0/24 # wappla, off
2081 ipn 8 10.0.0.23 # stefan, off
2082 ipn 9 10.0.0.24 10.13.0.0/16
2083 ipn 10 10.0.0.25
2084 ipn 11 10.0.0.26
2085 ipn 12 10.0.0.27 10.0.2.64/26
2086 ipn 13 10.0.0.28 10.0.3.0/24
2087 ipn 14 10.0.0.29 10.1.1.0/24 # fwkw, off
2088 # mind the gateway ip gap
2089 ipn 15 10.9.0.30 10.0.4.0/24
2090 ipn 16 10.9.0.31
2091 ipn 17 10.9.0.32 10.42.0.0/16
2092 ipn 18 10.9.0.33
2093 ipn 19 10.9.0.34
2094 #ipn 20 10.9.0.35
2095 @}
2096
2097 if [ "$1" == "--fw" ]; then
2098 FW=1
2099
2100 ipns
2101 else
2102 exec >/var/log/vpe.if-up 2>&1
2103 set -x
2104
2105 [ $NODENAME = "ruth" ] && ip link set $IFNAME down # hack
2106
2107 # first set the link up and initialize the interface ip
2108 # address.
2109 ip link set $IFNAME address $MAC
2110 ip link set $IFNAME mtu $MTU up
2111 ADDR_ONLY=1 ipns # set addr only
2112
2113 # now initialize the main vpn routes (10.0/8)
2114 # the second route is a hack to to reach some funnily-connected
2115 # machines.
2116 ip route add 10.0.0.0/8 dev $IFNAME
2117 ip route add 10.0.0.0/27 dev $IFNAME
2118
2119 ipns # set the interface routes
2120
2121 # now for something completely different, ehr, something not
2122 # easily doable with ipn, namely some extra specific highly complicated
2123 # and non-regular setups for some machines.
2124 if [ $NODENAME = doom ]; then
2125 ip addr add 200.100.162.92 dev $IFNAME
2126 ip route add 200.100.0.0/16 via 10.0.0.17 dev $IFNAME
2127 ip route flush table 101
2128 ip route add table 101 default src 200.100.162.92 via 10.0.0.17 dev $IFNAME
2129
2130 ip addr add 100.99.218.222 dev $IFNAME
2131 ip route add 100.99.218.192/27 via 10.0.0.19 dev $IFNAME
2132 ip route flush table 103
2133 ip route add table 103 default src 100.99.218.222 via 10.0.0.19
2134
2135 elif [ $NODENAME = marco ]; then
2136 ip addr add 200.100.162.17 dev $IFNAME
2137
2138 for addr in 79 89 90 91 92 93 94 95; do
2139 ip route add 200.100.162.$addr dev ppp0
2140 done
2141 ip route add 200.100.76.0/23 dev ppp0
2142 ip route add src 200.100.162.17 200.100.0.0/16 via 10.0.0.17 dev $IFNAME
2143
2144 elif [ $NODENAME = ruth ]; then
2145 ip route add 200.100.162.17 via 10.0.0.21 dev vpn0
2146 ip route add 200.100.162.92 via 10.0.0.5 dev vpn0
2147 ip route add 200.100.162.93 via 10.0.0.5 dev vpn0
2148
2149 fi
2150
2151 # and this is the second part of the 10.0/27 hack. don't ask.
2152 [ $NODENAME != fwkw ] && ip route add 10.0.0.0/24 via 10.0.0.29 dev $IFNAME
2153 fi
2154 @end example
2155
2156
2157
2158 @node complex/node-up,Index,complex/if-up,Complex Example
2159
2160 @chapter complex/node-up
2161
2162
2163 @example
2164 #!/bin/sh
2165
2166 # Some environment variables will be set (in addition the ones
2167 # set in if-up, too):
2168 #
2169 # DESTNODE=doom # others nodename
2170 # DESTID=5 # others node id
2171 # DESTIP=188.13.66.8 # others ip
2172 # DESTPORT=407 # others port
2173 # STATE=up/down # node-up gets UP, node-down script gets DOWN
2174
2175 if [ $STATE = up ]; then
2176 @{
2177 echo update delete $DESTNODE.lowttl.example.com. a
2178 echo update delete $DESTNODE-last.lowttl.example.com. a
2179 echo update add $DESTNODE.lowttl.example.com. 1 in a $DESTIP
2180 echo update add $DESTNODE-last.lowttl.example.com. 1 in a $DESTIP
2181 echo
2182 @} | nsupdate -d -k $CONFBASE:marc.example.net.
2183 else
2184 @{
2185 echo update delete $DESTNODE.lowttl.example.com. a
2186 echo update delete $DESTNODE-last.lowttl.example.com. a
2187 echo update add $DESTNODE-last.lowttl.example.com. 1 in a $DESTIP
2188 echo
2189 @} | nsupdate -d -k $CONFBASE:marc.example.net.
2190 fi
2191 @end example
2192
2193
2194
2195 @node Index,,complex/node-up,Top
2196
2197 @chapter Index
2198 @printindex cp
2199
2200
2201
2202 @bye
2203