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File Contents

# Content
1 =head1 NAME
2
3 vped.conf - configuration file for the GNU VPE daemon
4
5 =head1 SYNOPSIS
6
7 enable-udp = yes
8 udp-port = 407
9 mtu = 1492
10 ifname = vpn0
11
12 node = branch1
13 hostname = 1.2.3.4
14
15 node = branch2
16 hostname = www.example.net
17 udp-port = 500 # this host uses a different udp-port
18
19 node = branch3
20 connect = ondemand
21
22 =head1 DESCRIPTION
23
24 The vpe config file consists of a series of lines that contain C<variable
25 = value> pairs. Empty lines are ignored. Comments start with a C<#> and
26 extend to the end of the line. They can be used on their own lines, or
27 after any directives. Spaces are allowed before or after the C<=> sign or
28 after values, but not within the variable names or values themselves.
29
30 The only exception to the above is the "on" directive that can prefix any
31 C<name = value> setting and will only "execute" it on the named node, or
32 (if the nodename starts with "!") on all nodes except the named one.
33
34 name = value
35 on branch1 loglevel = noise
36 on !branch2 connect = ondemand
37
38 All settings are executed "in order", that is, later settings of the same
39 variable overwrite earlier ones.
40
41 =head1 ANATOMY OF A CONFIG FILE
42
43 Usually, a config file starts with global settings (like the udp port to
44 listen on), followed by node-specific sections that begin with a C<node =
45 nickname> line.
46
47 Every node that is part of the network must have a section that starts
48 with C<node = nickname>. The number and order of the nodes is important
49 and must be the same on all hosts. It is not uncommon for node sections to
50 be completely empty - if the default values are right.
51
52 Node-specific settings can be used at any time. If used before the first
53 node section they will set the default values for all following nodes.
54
55 =head1 CONFIG VARIABLES
56
57 =head2 GLOBAL SETTINGS
58
59 Global settings will affect the behaviour of the running vped daemon, that
60 is, they are in some sense node-specific (config files can set different
61 values on different nodes using C<on>), but will affect the behaviour of
62 the vped daemon and all connections it creates.
63
64 =over 4
65
66 =item loglevel = noise|trace|debug|info|notice|warn|error|critical
67
68 Set the logging level. Connection established messages are logged at level
69 C<info>, notable errors are logged with C<error>. Default is C<info>.
70
71 =item node = nickname
72
73 Not really a config setting but introduces a node section. The nickname is
74 used to select the right configuration section and must be passed as an
75 argument to the vped daemon.
76
77 =item private-key = relative-path-to-key
78
79 Sets the path (relative to the config directory) to the private key
80 (default: C<hostkey>). This is a printf format string so every C<%> must
81 be doubled. A single C<%s> is replaced by the hostname, so you could
82 use paths like C<hostkeys/%s> to fetch the files at the location where
83 C<vpectrl> puts them.
84
85 Since only the private key file of the current node is used and the
86 private key file should be kept secret per-host to avoid spoofings, it is
87 not recommended to use this feature.
88
89 =item ifpersist = yes|true|on | no|false|off
90
91 Should the tun/tap device be made persistent, that is, should the device
92 stay up even when vped exits? Some versions of the tunnel device have
93 problems sending packets when vped is restarted in persistent mode, so
94 if the connections can be established but you cannot send packets from
95 the local node, try to set this to C<off> and do an ifconfig down on the
96 device.
97
98 =item ifname = devname
99
100 Sets the tun interface name to the given name. The default is OS-specific
101 and most probably something like C<tun0>.
102
103 =item rekey = seconds
104
105 Sets the rekeying interval in seconds (default: C<3600>). Connections are
106 reestablished every C<rekey> seconds.
107
108 =item keepalive = seconds
109
110 Sets the keepalive probe interval in seconds (default: C<60>). After this
111 many seconds of inactivity the daemon will start to send keepalive probe
112 every 5 seconds until it receives a reply from the other end. If no reply
113 is received within 30 seconds, the peer is considered unreachable and the
114 connection is closed.
115
116 =item mtu = bytes
117
118 Sets the maximum MTU that should be used on outgoing packets (basically
119 the MTU of the outgoing interface) The daemon will automatically calculate
120 maximum overhead (e.g. udp header size, encryption blocksize...) and pass
121 this information to the C<if-up> script.
122
123 Recommended values are 1500 (ethernet), 1492 (pppoe), 1472 (pptp).
124
125 This value must be the minimum of the mtu values of all hosts.
126
127 =item ip-proto = numerical-ip-protocol
128
129 Sets the protocol number to be used for the rawip protocol. This is a
130 global option because all hosts must use the same protocol, and since
131 there are no port numbers, you cannot easily run more than one vped
132 instance using the same protocol, nor can you share the protocol with
133 other programs.
134
135 The default is 47 (GRE), which has a good chance of tunneling through
136 firewalls (but note that the rawip protocol is not GRE compatible). Other
137 common choices are 50 (IPSEC, ESP), 51 (IPSEC, AH), 4 (IPIP tunnels) or 98
138 (ENCAP, rfc1241)
139
140 =item if-up = relative-or-absolute-path
141
142 Sets the path of a script that should be called immediately after the
143 network interface is initialized (but not neccessarily up). The following
144 environment variables are passed to it (the values are just examples):
145
146 =over 4
147
148 =item CONFBASE=/etc/vpe
149
150 The configuration base directory.
151
152 =item IFNAME=vpn0
153
154 The interface to initialize.
155
156 =item MTU=1436
157
158 The MTU to set the interface to. You can use lower values (if done
159 consistently on all hosts), but this is usually ineffective.
160
161 =item MAC=fe:fd:80:00:00:01
162
163 The MAC address to set the interface to. The script *must* set the
164 interface MAC to this value. You will most likely use one of these:
165
166 ip link set $IFNAME address $MAC mtu $MTU up # GNU/Linux
167 ifconfig $IFNAME ether $MAC mtu $MTU up # FreeBSD
168
169 Please see the C<vpe.osdep(5)> manpage for platform-specific information.
170
171 =item IFTYPE=native # or tincd
172
173 =item IFSUBTYPE=linux # or freebsd, darwin etc..
174
175 The interface type (C<native> or C<tincd>) and the subtype (usually the os
176 name in lowercase) that this vpe was configured for. Can be used to select
177 the correct syntax to use for network-related commands.
178
179 =item NODENAME=branch1
180
181 The nickname of the current node, as passed to the vped daemon.
182
183 =item NODEID=1
184
185 The numerical node id of the current node. The first node mentioned in the
186 config file gets ID 1, the second ID 2 and so on.
187
188 =back
189
190 Here is a simple if-up script:
191
192 #!/bin/sh
193 ip link set $IFNAME address $MAC mtu $MTU up
194 [ $NODENAME = branch1 ] && ip addr add 10.0.0.1 dev $IFNAME
195 [ $NODENAME = branch2 ] && ip addr add 10.1.0.1 dev $IFNAME
196 ip route add 10.0.0.0/8 dev $IFNAME
197
198 More complicated examples (using routing to reduce arp traffic) can be
199 found in the etc/ subdirectory of the distribution.
200
201 =item node-up = relative-or-absolute-path
202
203 Sets a command (default: no script) that should be called whenever a
204 connection is established (even on rekeying operations). In addition
205 to the variables passed to C<if-up> scripts, the following environment
206 variables will be set:
207
208 =over 4
209
210 =item DESTNODE=branch2
211
212 The name of the remote node.
213
214 =item DESTID=2
215
216 The node id of the remote node.
217
218 =item DESTIP=188.13.66.8
219
220 The numerical IP address of the remote host (vped accepts connections from
221 everywhere, as long as the other host can authenticate itself).
222
223 =item DESTPORT=655 # deprecated
224
225 The UDP port used by the other side.
226
227 =item STATE=UP
228
229 Node-up scripts get called with STATE=UP, node-down scripts get called
230 with STATE=DOWN.
231
232 =back
233
234 Here is a nontrivial example that uses nsupdate to update the name => ip
235 mapping in some dns zone:
236
237 #!/bin/sh
238 {
239 echo update delete $DESTNODE.lowttl.example.net. a
240 echo update add $DESTNODE.lowttl.example.net. 1 in a $DESTIP
241 echo
242 } | nsupdate -d -k $CONFBASE:key.example.net.
243
244 =item node-down = relative-or-absolute-path
245
246 Same as C<node-up>, but gets called whenever a connection is lost.
247
248 =item http-proxy-host = hostname/ip
249
250 The C<http-proxy-*> family of options are only available if vpe was
251 compiled with the C<--enable-http-proxy> option and enable tunneling of
252 tcp connections through a http proxy server.
253
254 C<http-proxy-host> and C<http-proxy-port> should specify the hostname and
255 port number of the proxy server. See C<http-proxy-loginpw> if your proxy
256 requires authentication.
257
258 Please note that vpe will still try to resolve all hostnames in the
259 configuration file, so if you are behind a proxy without access to a dns
260 server better use numerical IP addresses.
261
262 To make best use of this option disable all protocols except tcp in your
263 config file and make sure your routers (or all other hosts) are listening
264 on a port that the proxy allows (443, https, is a common choice).
265
266 If you have a router, connecting to it will suffice. Otherwise tcp must be
267 enabled on all hosts.
268
269 Example:
270
271 http-proxy-host = proxy.example.com
272 http-proxy-port = 3128 # 8080 is another common choice
273 http-proxy-auth = schmorp:grumbeere
274
275 =item http-proxy-port = proxy-tcp-port
276
277 The port where your proxy server listens.
278
279 =item http-proxy-auth = login:password
280
281 The optional login and password used to authenticate to the proxy server,
282 seperated by a literal colon (C<:>). Only basic authentication is
283 currently supported.
284
285 =item pid-file = path
286
287 The path to the pid file to check and create (Default:
288
289 =back
290
291 =head2 NODE SPECIFIC SETTINGS
292
293 The following settings are node-specific, that is, every node can have
294 different settings, even within the same vped instance. Settings that are
295 executed before the first node section set the defaults, settings that are
296 executed within a node section only apply to the given node.
297
298 =over 4
299
300 =item udp-port = port-number
301
302 Sets the port number used by the UDP protocol (default: C<655>, not
303 officially assigned by IANA!).
304
305 =item tcp-port = port-number
306
307 Similar to C<udp-port> (default: C<655>), but sets the TCP port number.
308
309 =item enable-rawip = yes|true|on | no|false|off
310
311 Enable the RAW IPv4 transport using the C<ip-proto> protocol
312 (default: C<no>). This is the best choice, since the overhead per packet
313 is only 38 bytes, as opposed to UDP's 58 (or TCP's 60+).
314
315 =item enable-udp = yes|true|on | no|false|off
316
317 Enable the UDPv4 transport using the C<udp-port> port (default: C<yes>,
318 but this will change!). This is a good general choice since UDP tunnels
319 well through many firewalls.
320
321 NOTE: Please specify C<enable-udp = yes> even though it is the default, as
322 some future version will have all protocols disabled by default.
323
324 =item enable-tcp = yes|true|on | no|false|off
325
326 Enable the TCPv4 transport using the C<tcp-port> port
327 (default: C<no>). Support for this horribly unsuitable protocol is only
328 available when vpe was compiled using the C<--enable-tcp> option. Never
329 use this transport unless you really must, it is horribly ineffiecent and
330 resource-intensive compared to the other transports.
331
332 =item router-priority = positive-number
333
334 Sets the router priority of the given host (default: C<0>, disabled). If
335 some host tries to connect to another host without a hostname, it asks
336 the router host for it's IP address. The router host is the one with the
337 highest priority that is currently reachable. Make sure all clients always
338 connect to the router hosts, otherwise conencting to them is impossible.
339
340 =item connect = ondemand|never|always|disabled
341
342 Sets the connect mode (default: C<always>). It can be C<always> (always
343 try to establish and keep a conenction to the given host), C<never>
344 (nevr initiate a connection to the given host, but accept connections),
345 C<ondemand> (try to establish a connection on the first packet sent, and
346 take it down after the keepalive interval) or C<disabled> (node is bad,
347 don't talk to it).
348
349 =item inherit-tos = yes|true|on | no|false|off
350
351 Wether to inherit the TOS settings of packets sent to the tunnel when
352 sending packets to this node (default: C<yes>). If set to C<yes> then
353 outgoing tunnel packets will have the same TOS setting as the packets sent
354 to the tunnel device, which is usually what you want.
355
356 =item compress = yes|true|on | no|false|off
357
358 Wether to compress data packets sent to this host (default: C<yes>).
359 Compression is really cheap even on slow computers and has no size
360 overhead at all, so enabling this is a good idea.
361
362 =back
363
364 =head1 CONFIG DIRECTORY LAYOUT
365
366 The default (or recommended) directory layout for the config directory is:
367
368 =over 4
369
370 =item vped.conf
371
372 The config file.
373
374 =item if-up
375
376 The if-up script
377
378 =item node-up, node-down
379
380 If used the node up or node-down scripts.
381
382 =item hostkey
383
384 The private key (taken from C<hostkeys/nodename>) of the current host.
385
386 =item pubkey/nodename
387
388 The public keys of the other nodes, one file per node.
389
390 =back
391
392 =head1 SEE ALSO
393
394 vpe(5), vped(8), vpectrl(8).
395
396 =head1 AUTHOR
397
398 Marc Lehmann <vpe@plan9.de>
399