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3ca86f6d RK |
1 | .TH secnet 8 |
2 | ||
3 | .SH NAME | |
4 | secnet \- VPN router daemon | |
5 | ||
6 | .SH SYNOPSIS | |
7 | \fBsecnet\fR [\fIOPTIONS\fR] | |
8 | ||
9 | .SH DESCRIPTION | |
10 | \fBsecnet\fR allows virtual private networks to be constructed | |
11 | spanning multiple separate sites. | |
12 | ||
13 | .SH OPTIONS | |
14 | .TP | |
15 | .B --verbose\fR, \fB-v | |
16 | Enable extra diagnostics. | |
17 | .TP | |
18 | .B --nowarnings\fR, \fB-w | |
19 | Suppress warnings. | |
20 | .TP | |
21 | .B --help | |
22 | Display usage message. | |
23 | .TP | |
24 | .B --version | |
25 | Display version string. | |
26 | .TP | |
27 | .B --nodetach\fR, \fB-n | |
28 | Don't go into background. | |
29 | The default behaviour is to become a daemon during startup. | |
30 | .TP | |
31 | .B --silent\fR, \fB--quiet\fR, \fB-f | |
32 | Suppress error messages. | |
33 | .TP | |
34 | .B --debug\fR, \fB-d | |
35 | Enable debug messages. | |
36 | .TP | |
37 | .B --config\fR, \fB-c \fIPATH | |
38 | Specify configuration file. | |
39 | The default is \fI/etc/secnet/secnet.conf\fR. | |
40 | .TP | |
41 | .B --just-check-config\fR, \fB-j | |
42 | Check configuration and exit. | |
43 | .TP | |
44 | .B --sites-key\fR, \fB-s \fIKEY | |
45 | Configuration file key defining active sites. | |
46 | The default is \fBsites\fR. | |
47 | ||
48 | .SH "CONFIGURATION FILE" | |
49 | .SS Overview | |
50 | The default configuration file is \fI/etc/secnet/secnet.conf\fR. | |
51 | This can be overridden with the \fB--config\fR option. | |
52 | .PP | |
53 | The configuration file defines a dictionary (a mapping from keys to | |
54 | values) of configuration information for secnet. | |
55 | It is recursive in nature, i.e. values may themselves include dictionaries. | |
56 | Any node in the nested structure thus defined can be identified by a | |
57 | \fIpath\fR, which is the sequence of keys necessary to reach it from | |
58 | the root, separated by "/" characters. | |
59 | See \fBPaths\fR below for how this is used. | |
60 | .PP | |
61 | Furthermore, when a key is looked up in a dictionary, if it cannot be | |
62 | found, it is sought in the parent dictionary, and so on back to the | |
63 | root. | |
64 | For instance, each \fIsite\fR must contain the \fBresolver\fR key, but | |
65 | in a typical configuration there is no value in having different | |
66 | resolvers for each site. | |
67 | Therefore \fBresolver\fR is defined at the root and thus automatically | |
68 | incorporated into all sites. | |
69 | .SS Whitespace | |
70 | Whitespace, including newlines, is ignored except to the extent that | |
71 | it bounds other symbols. | |
72 | .PP | |
73 | Comment begin with "#" and continues to the end of the line. | |
74 | Comments are ignored. | |
75 | .SS Inclusion | |
76 | A file may be recursively included into the configuration file using a | |
77 | line of the form: | |
78 | .IP | |
79 | \fBinclude \fIPATH | |
80 | .PP | |
81 | This is handled at a higher level than the main parser and so | |
82 | precludes the possibility of using the string \fBinclude\fR for any | |
83 | other purpose. | |
84 | .\" check if this is true. it's probably a bug! | |
85 | .SS Assignments | |
86 | The configuration file contains one or more assigments. | |
87 | Each assignment is written: | |
88 | .IP | |
89 | \fIkey\fR [\fB=\fR] \fIlist\fR\fB;\fR | |
90 | .PP | |
91 | i.e. the equals sign is optional. | |
92 | The semicolon is mandatory in all contexts. | |
93 | .PP | |
94 | Keys start with a letter or "_" and continue with any numbers of | |
95 | letters, digits, "_" and "-". | |
96 | .PP | |
97 | Each \fIkey\fR is a list of one or more \fIvalues\fR, separated by commas. | |
98 | Possible values types are \fIboolean\fR, \fIstring\fR, \fInumber\fR, | |
99 | \fIdictionary\fR, \fIpath\fR and \fIclosure evaluation\fR. | |
100 | .\" This man page draws a distinction between a closure (the thing | |
101 | .\" evaluated) and a closure evaluation (the closure plus is | |
102 | .\" arguments). | |
103 | .SS "Strings" | |
104 | Strings are contained within "double quotes". | |
105 | There is (currently) no escape syntax and no way to include quotes | |
106 | inside strings. | |
107 | .PP | |
108 | Example: | |
109 | .nf | |
110 | filename "/var/log/secnet"; | |
111 | .fi | |
112 | .SS "Numbers" | |
113 | Numbers are encoded in decimal and do not include a sign. | |
114 | Numbers must lie in the range 0 to 4294967295. | |
115 | .PP | |
116 | Example: | |
117 | .nf | |
118 | mtu 1400; | |
119 | .fi | |
120 | .SS "Dictionaries" | |
121 | .\" In conffile.y dictionaries can be preceded by a search path, but | |
122 | .\" this is not implemented elsewhere, so not documented here. | |
123 | Dictionaries consist of one or more assignments, in the same syntax as | |
124 | given above, enclosed in "{" and "}". | |
125 | .PP | |
126 | Example: | |
127 | .nf | |
128 | system { | |
129 | userid "secnet"; | |
130 | pidfile "/var/run/secnet.pid"; | |
131 | }; | |
132 | .fi | |
133 | .SS "Paths" | |
134 | Paths allow a key already defined in the configuration to be aliased. | |
135 | .PP | |
136 | Paths consist of a sequence of keys separated by "/". | |
137 | If the path starts with a "/" then it is an \fIabsolute path\fR and | |
138 | the search starts at the root of the configuration. | |
139 | Otherwise it is a \fIrelative path\fR and starts in the containing | |
140 | dictionary or in any of its parents, down to and including the root. | |
141 | If there is more than one match, the one furthest from the root "wins". | |
142 | .PP | |
143 | The value of a path is the list assigned to the key it refers to. | |
144 | Lists are flattened; for example if a key is defined as a list of two | |
145 | paths, and each of those refers to a list of two integers, the | |
146 | original key is therefore defined to be a list of four integers, not | |
147 | a list consisting of two lists. | |
148 | .PP | |
149 | It is not possible to refer to a \fIlater\fR key using a path. | |
150 | .PP | |
151 | Example: | |
152 | .nf | |
153 | vpn { | |
154 | test { | |
155 | kakajou vpn-data/test/kakajou/kakajou; | |
156 | araminta vpn-data/test/araminta/araminta; | |
157 | deodand vpn-data/test/deodand/deodand; | |
158 | all-sites kakajou,araminta,deodand; | |
159 | }; | |
160 | }; | |
161 | all-sites vpn/test/all-sites; | |
162 | .fi | |
163 | .PP | |
164 | Here, each of \fBvpn/test/kakajou\fR, \fBvpn/test/araminta\fR and | |
165 | \fBvpn/test/deodand\fR are defined as aliases to values defined | |
166 | elsewhere. | |
167 | \fBvpn/tests/all-sites\fR is defined as the list of all three of those | |
168 | values, and \fBall-sites\fR is then defined to be an alias for that. | |
169 | .SS "Booleans" | |
170 | The (single-element) paths \fBfalse\fR, \fBno\fR and \fBnowise\fR are | |
171 | predefined and refer to a boolean false value. | |
172 | Similarly \fBtrue\fR, \fByes\fR and \fBverily\fR point at a boolean | |
173 | true value. | |
174 | .PP | |
175 | In all six cases, variants with just the first letter capitalized, and | |
176 | with all letters capitalized, are also provided. | |
177 | .PP | |
178 | Example: | |
179 | .nf | |
180 | random randomfile("/dev/urandom",no); | |
181 | .fi | |
182 | .SS "Closure Evaluation" | |
183 | Closure evaluation uses the following syntax: | |
184 | .IP | |
185 | \fICLOSURE \fB( \fIARGUMENTS \fB) | |
186 | .PP | |
187 | \fICLOSURE\fR may be a path referring to a closure, or may itself be a | |
188 | closure evaluation. | |
189 | .PP | |
190 | \fIARGUMENTS\fR is a list of zero or more values, separated by commas. | |
191 | As a shortcut, if the arguments consist of a single dictionary, the | |
192 | parentheses may be ommitted: | |
193 | .IP | |
194 | \fICLOSURE \fB{ \fR... \fB} | |
195 | .PP | |
196 | Example: | |
197 | .nf | |
198 | sites map(site, vpn/test/all-sites); | |
199 | .fi | |
200 | .PP | |
201 | When a closure is evaluated it returns a value (a list, much as above) | |
202 | and may also have side effects (which may be immediate or may be | |
203 | deferred to some later phase of execution). | |
204 | A list of built-in closures is given below. | |
205 | .SS "Mandatory Keys" | |
206 | Two keys are mandatory. | |
207 | \fBsystem\fR must be a dictionary in which the following keys can be | |
208 | looked up: | |
209 | .TP | |
210 | .B log | |
211 | A \fIlog closure\fR; see the \fBlogfile\fR documentation below. | |
212 | The destination for log messages. | |
213 | Mandatory. | |
214 | .TP | |
215 | .B userid | |
216 | A string. | |
217 | The userid to run as after dropping privilege. | |
218 | Optional. | |
219 | .TP | |
220 | .B pidfile | |
221 | A string. | |
222 | The path to write a pidfile. | |
223 | Optional. | |
224 | .PP | |
225 | \fBsites\fR should be a list of \fIsite closures\fR; see the \fBsite\fR documentation below. | |
226 | This defines the collection of tunnel endpoints that \fBsecnet\fR will | |
227 | communicate with. | |
228 | .PP | |
229 | Recall the recursive lookup logic described in \fBOverview\fR above: | |
230 | if (for instance) \fBlog\fR is defined in the top level dictionary but | |
231 | not in \fBsystem\fR, it will nevertheless be found when looked up in | |
232 | the latter. | |
233 | ||
234 | .SH CLOSURES | |
235 | \fBsecnet\fR contains a collection of built-in closures | |
236 | with names (i.e. single-element paths) given below. | |
237 | .PP | |
238 | Most of them return anonymous closures of various types, | |
239 | which are described contextually. | |
240 | ||
241 | .SS adns | |
242 | \fBadns(\fIDICT\fB)\fR => \fIresolver closure\fR | |
243 | .TP | |
244 | .I DICT | |
245 | This either be empty or contain the single key \fBconfig\fR, with a | |
246 | string value giving configuration to supply to ADNS. | |
247 | This might be read from a file using \fBreadfile\fR. | |
248 | .PP | |
249 | A \fIresolver closure\fR is a means of converting hostnames into | |
250 | network addresses. | |
251 | ||
252 | .SS diffie-hellman | |
253 | .PP | |
254 | \fBdiffie-hellman(\fIMODULUS\fB, \fIGENERATOR\fR[\fB, \fICHECK\fR]\fB)\fR => \fIdh closure\fR | |
255 | .TP | |
256 | .I MODULUS | |
257 | String. | |
258 | The prime modulus \fIp\fR in hex. | |
259 | .TP | |
260 | .I GENERATOR | |
261 | String. | |
262 | The generator \fIg\fR in hex. | |
263 | .TP | |
264 | .I CHECK | |
265 | Boolean. | |
266 | If \fBtrue\fR (the default) then check if \fIp\fR is prime. | |
267 | .PP | |
268 | A \fIdh closure\fR defines a group to be used for key exchange. | |
269 | The same group must be used by all sites in the VPN. | |
270 | ||
271 | .SS logfile | |
272 | \fBlogfile(\fIDICT\fB)\fR => \fIlog closure\fR | |
273 | .PP | |
274 | Valid keys in the \fIDICT\fR argument are: | |
275 | .TP | |
276 | .B filename | |
277 | The path to log to. | |
278 | .TP | |
279 | .B class | |
280 | A list of strings defining which classes of message to log. | |
281 | The possible message classes are \fBdebug-config\fR, | |
282 | \fBdebug-phase\fR, \fBdebug\fR, \fBinfo\fR, \fBnotice\fR, | |
283 | \fBwarning\fR, \fBerror\fR, \fBsecurity\fR and \fBfatal\fR. | |
284 | .IP | |
285 | \fBall-debug\fR is the union of all the \fBdebug\fR... classes. | |
286 | \fBdefault\fR is equivalent to \fBwarning, error, security, fatal\fR. | |
287 | \fBverbose\fR is equivalent to \fBinfo, notice, warning, error, | |
288 | security, fatal\fR. | |
289 | \fBquiet\fR is equivalent to \fBfatal\fR. | |
290 | .PP | |
291 | A \fIlog closure\fR is a means of saving log messages. | |
292 | See also \fBsyslog\fR below. | |
293 | ||
294 | .SS makelist | |
295 | \fBmakelist(\fIDICT\fB)\fR => \fILIST\fR | |
296 | .PP | |
297 | Returns the (flattened) list of values from the dictionary, discarding | |
298 | the keys. | |
299 | ||
300 | .SS map | |
301 | \fBmap(\fICLOSURE\fB, \fIINPUT\fR...\fB)\fR => \fILIST\fR | |
302 | .PP | |
303 | Applies \fICLOSURE\fR to all its additional input arguments and | |
304 | returns the resulting list. | |
305 | ||
306 | .SS md5 | |
307 | \fBmd5\fR is a \fIhash closure\fR implementing the MD5 algorithm. | |
308 | ||
309 | .SS null-netlink | |
310 | \fBnull-netlink(\fIDICT\fB)\fR => \fInetlink closure\fR | |
311 | .br | |
312 | \fBnull-netlink(\fIDICT\fB)\fR => \fIpure closure\fR | |
313 | .\" TODO pure closure is what it's called internally but this is a | |
314 | .\" very opaque name to use in docs | |
315 | .PP | |
316 | Valid keys in the \fIDICT\fR argument are: | |
317 | .TP | |
318 | .B name | |
319 | String. | |
320 | The name for the netlink device. | |
321 | The default is \fBnull-netlink\fR. | |
322 | .TP | |
323 | .B networks | |
324 | List of strings. | |
325 | The networks on the host side of the netlink device. | |
326 | .TP | |
327 | .B remote-networks | |
328 | List of strings. | |
329 | Networks that may be claimed by remote sites using this netlink device. | |
330 | .TP | |
331 | .B secnet-address | |
332 | String. | |
333 | IP address of this netlink. | |
334 | Incompatible with \fBptp-address\fR. | |
335 | .TP | |
336 | .B ptp-address | |
337 | String. | |
338 | IP address of the other end of a point-to-point link. | |
339 | Incompatible with \fBsecnet-address\fR. | |
340 | .TP | |
341 | .B mtu | |
342 | Number. | |
343 | The MTU of the netlink device. | |
344 | The default is 1000. | |
345 | .PP | |
346 | If \fBptp-address\fR is used then the result is a \fInetlink closure\fR. | |
347 | This can be used directly with the \fBlink\fR key in the \fBsites\fR | |
348 | closure (see below). | |
349 | .PP | |
350 | If \fBsecnet-address\fR is used then the result is a \fIpure | |
351 | closure\fR. | |
352 | This must be evaluated to yield a \fInetlink closure\fR, using a | |
353 | dictionary argument with the following keys: | |
354 | .TP | |
355 | .B routes | |
356 | String list. | |
357 | networks reachable via this tunnel, in \fIaddress\fB/\fIbits\fR format. | |
358 | .TP | |
359 | .B options | |
360 | String list. | |
361 | A list of options: | |
362 | .RS | |
363 | .TP | |
364 | .B allow-route | |
365 | Allow packets received via this tunnel to be routed down other tunnels | |
366 | (without this option only packets from the host will be routed). | |
367 | .TP | |
368 | .B soft | |
369 | Remove these routes from the host routing table when the link quality | |
370 | is 0. | |
371 | .RE | |
372 | .TP | |
373 | .B mtu | |
374 | Number. | |
375 | Default MTU over this link. | |
376 | The default is inherited from the \fIpure closure\fR. | |
377 | .TP | |
378 | .B priority | |
379 | Number. | |
380 | The priority of this link. | |
381 | Higher values beat lower values. | |
382 | The default is 0. | |
383 | ||
384 | .\" TODO ptp-address turns up in sites.conf, but why? I think this | |
385 | .\" is a bug in make-secnet-sites; it is not used by | |
386 | \" netlink_inst_create. | |
387 | ||
388 | .PP | |
389 | A \fInetlink closure\fR is a virtual IP link, and is supplied to the | |
390 | \fBlink\fR key of a \fIsite\fR closure. | |
391 | .PP | |
392 | The netlink created by \fBnull-netlink\fR has no connection to the | |
393 | host. | |
394 | See \fBtun\fR and \fBuserv-ipif\fR below for more useful alternatives. | |
395 | ||
396 | ||
397 | ||
398 | .SS randomfile | |
399 | \fBrandomfile(\fIFILENAME\fR[\fB, \fIBLOCKING\fR]\fB)\fR => \fIrandomsource closure\fR | |
400 | .TP | |
401 | .I FILENAME | |
402 | String. | |
403 | Path to random device, e.g. \fI/dev/urandom\fR. | |
404 | .TP | |
405 | .I BLOCKING | |
406 | Boolean. | |
407 | \fBTrue\fR if this is a blocking device and \fBfalse\fR otherwise (the default). | |
408 | Blocking device support is not implemented so this must always be | |
409 | \fBFalse\fR or absent. | |
410 | .PP | |
411 | A \fIrandomsource closure\fR is a source of random numbers. | |
412 | ||
413 | .SS readfile | |
414 | \fBreadfile(\fIPATH\fB)\fR => \fISTRING\fR | |
415 | .PP | |
416 | Read the contents of the file \fIPATH\fR (a string) and return it as a string. | |
417 | ||
b02b720a | 418 | .SS eax-serpent |
161f20c2 | 419 | \fBeax-serpent(\fIDICT\fB)\fR => \fItransform closure\fR |
3ca86f6d RK |
420 | .PP |
421 | Valid keys in the \fIDICT\fR argument are: | |
422 | .TP | |
423 | .B max-sequence-skew | |
424 | The maximum acceptable difference between the sequence number in a | |
425 | received, decrypted message and the previous one. | |
426 | The default is 10. | |
427 | It may be necessary to increase this is if connectivity is poor. | |
b02b720a IJ |
428 | .TP |
429 | .B tag-length-bytes | |
430 | The length of the message authentication tag. The default is 16, | |
431 | for a 128-bit tag length. It must be no longer than the Serpent | |
432 | blocksize, 16. Must be have the same value at both ends. | |
433 | .TP | |
434 | .B padding-rounding | |
435 | Messages are padded to a multiple of this many bytes. This | |
436 | serves to obscure the exact length of messages. The default is 16, | |
5b5f297f IJ |
437 | .TP |
438 | .B capab-num | |
439 | The transform capability number to use when advertising this | |
440 | transform. Both ends must have the same meaning (or, at least, a | |
441 | compatible transform) for each transform capability number they have | |
442 | in common. The default for serpent-eax is 9. | |
443 | .IP | |
444 | Transform capability numbers in the range 8..15 are intended for | |
445 | allocation by the implementation, and may be assigned as the default | |
446 | for new transforms in the future. Transform capability numbers in the | |
447 | range 0..7 are reserved for definition by the user. | |
3ca86f6d RK |
448 | .PP |
449 | A \fItransform closure\fR is a reversible means of transforming | |
450 | messages for transmission over a (presumably) insecure network. | |
451 | It is responsible for both confidentiality and integrity. | |
b02b720a IJ |
452 | |
453 | .SS serpent256-cbc | |
454 | \fBserpent256-cbc(\fIDICT\fB)\fR => \fItransform closure\fR | |
455 | .PP | |
5b5f297f IJ |
456 | This transform |
457 | is deprecated as its security properties are poor; it should be | |
458 | specified only alongside a better transform such as eax-serpent. | |
459 | .PP | |
b02b720a IJ |
460 | Valid keys in the \fIDICT\fR argument are: |
461 | .TP | |
5b5f297f IJ |
462 | .B capab-num |
463 | As above. The default for serpent256-cbc is 8. | |
464 | .TP | |
b02b720a IJ |
465 | .B max-sequence-skew |
466 | As above. | |
af43f0b7 IJ |
467 | .PP |
468 | Note that this uses a big-endian variant of the Serpent block cipher | |
469 | (which is not compatible with most other Serpent implementations). | |
3ca86f6d RK |
470 | .SS rsa-private |
471 | \fBrsa-private(\fIPATH\fB\fR[, \fICHECK\fR]\fB)\fR => \fIrsaprivkey closure\fR | |
472 | .TP | |
473 | .I PATH | |
474 | String. | |
475 | The path to a file containing an RSA private key in SSH format | |
476 | (version 1). | |
477 | There must be no passphrase. | |
478 | .TP | |
479 | .I CHECK | |
480 | Boolean. | |
481 | If \fBtrue\fR (the default) then check that the key is valid. | |
482 | ||
483 | .SS rsa-public | |
484 | \fBrsa-public(\fIKEY\fB, \fIMODULUS\fB)\fR => \fIrsapubkey closure\fR | |
485 | .TP | |
486 | .I KEY | |
487 | String. | |
488 | The public key exponent (\fIe\fR), in decimal. | |
489 | .TP | |
490 | .I MODULUS | |
491 | String. | |
492 | The modulus (\fIn\fR), in decimal. | |
493 | ||
494 | .SS sha1 | |
495 | \fBsha1\fR is a \fIhash closure\fR implementing the SHA-1 algorithm. | |
496 | ||
497 | .SS site | |
498 | \fBsite(\fIDICT\fB)\fR => \fIsite closure\fR | |
499 | .PP | |
500 | Valid keys in the \fIDICT\fR argument are: | |
501 | .TP | |
502 | .B local-name | |
503 | String. | |
504 | The site's name for itself. | |
505 | .TP | |
506 | .B name | |
507 | String. | |
508 | The name of the site's peer. | |
509 | .TP | |
510 | .B link | |
511 | A \fInetlink closure\fR. | |
512 | .TP | |
513 | .B comm | |
514 | A \fIcomm closure\fR. | |
515 | .TP | |
516 | .B resolver | |
517 | A \fIresolver closure\fR. | |
518 | .TP | |
519 | .B random | |
520 | A \fIrandomsource closure\fR. | |
521 | .TP | |
522 | .B local-key | |
523 | An \fIrsaprivkey closure\fR. | |
524 | The key used to prove our identity to the peer. | |
525 | .TP | |
526 | .B address | |
527 | String. | |
528 | The DNS name of the peer. | |
529 | Optional, but if it is missing then it will not be possible to | |
530 | initiate new connections to the peer. | |
531 | .TP | |
532 | .B port | |
533 | Number. | |
534 | The port to contact the peer. | |
535 | .TP | |
536 | .B key | |
537 | An \fIrsapubkey closure\fR. | |
538 | The key used to verify the peer's identity. | |
539 | .TP | |
540 | .B transform | |
5b5f297f IJ |
541 | One or more \fItransform closures\fR. |
542 | Used to protect packets exchanged with the peer. These should | |
543 | all have distinct \fBcapab-num\fR values, and the same \fBcapab-num\fR | |
544 | value should refer to the same (or a compatible) transform at both | |
545 | ends. The list should be in order of preference, most preferred | |
546 | first. (The end which sends MSG1,MSG3 ends up choosing; the ordering | |
547 | at the other end is irrelevant.) | |
3ca86f6d RK |
548 | .TP |
549 | .B dh | |
550 | A \fIdh closure\fR. | |
551 | The group to use in key exchange. | |
552 | .TP | |
553 | .B hash | |
554 | The hash function used during setup. | |
555 | .\" TODO clarify what we actually use it for! | |
556 | .TP | |
557 | .B key-lifetime | |
558 | Number. | |
559 | The maximum lifetime of a session key in milliseconds. | |
560 | The default is one hour. | |
561 | .TP | |
562 | .B setup-retries | |
563 | Number. | |
564 | The maximum number of times a key negotiation packet will be | |
565 | transmitted before giving up. | |
566 | The default is 5. | |
567 | .TP | |
568 | .B setup-timeout | |
569 | Number. | |
570 | The time between retransmissions of key negotiation packets, in milliseconds. | |
571 | The default is one second. | |
572 | .TP | |
573 | .B wait-time | |
574 | Number. | |
575 | The time to wait after a failed key setup before making another | |
576 | attempt, in milliseconds. | |
577 | The default is 20s. | |
578 | .TP | |
579 | .B renegotiate-time | |
580 | Number. | |
581 | The time after which a new session key will be negotiated, \fIif\fR | |
582 | there is traffic on the link, in milliseconds. | |
583 | It must not be greater than the \fBkey-lifetime\fR. | |
584 | The default 5 minutes less than the key lifetime, unless the lifetime | |
585 | is less than 10 minutes in which case the default is half the | |
586 | lifetime. | |
587 | .TP | |
588 | .B keepalive | |
589 | Boolean. | |
590 | If \fBtrue\fR then attempt to always maintain a live session key. | |
591 | Not implemented. | |
592 | .TP | |
593 | .B log-events | |
594 | String list. | |
595 | Types of event to log for this site. | |
596 | .RS | |
597 | .TP | |
598 | .B unexpected | |
599 | Unexpected key setup packets (including late retransmissions). | |
600 | .TP | |
601 | .B setup-init | |
602 | Start of attempt to setup a session key. | |
603 | .TP | |
604 | .B setup-timeout | |
605 | Failure of attempt to setup a session key, through timeout. | |
606 | .TP | |
607 | .B activate-key | |
608 | Activation of a new session key. | |
609 | .TP | |
610 | .B timeout-key | |
611 | Deletion of current session key through age. | |
612 | .TP | |
613 | .B security | |
614 | Anything potentially suspicious. | |
615 | .TP | |
616 | .B state-change | |
617 | Steps in the key setup protocol. | |
618 | .TP | |
619 | .B packet-drop | |
620 | Whenever we throw away an outgoing packet. | |
621 | .TP | |
622 | .B dump-packets | |
623 | Every key setup packet we see. | |
624 | .TP | |
625 | .B errors | |
626 | Failure of name resolution, internal errors. | |
627 | .TP | |
628 | .B all | |
629 | Everything (too much!) | |
630 | .RE | |
631 | .PP | |
632 | A \fIsite closure\fR defines one site to communicate with. | |
633 | \fBsecnet\fR expects the (root) key \fBsite\fR to be a list of site | |
634 | closures. | |
635 | ||
636 | .SS sysbuffer | |
637 | \fBsysbuffer(\fR[\fISIZE\fR[\fB, \fIOPTIONS\fR]]\fB)\fR => \fIbuffer closure\fR | |
638 | .TP | |
639 | .I SIZE | |
640 | Number. | |
641 | The size of the buffer in bytes. | |
642 | This must be between 64 and 131072. | |
643 | The default is 4096. | |
644 | .TP | |
645 | .I OPTIONS | |
646 | Dictionary. | |
647 | Optional and presently unused. | |
648 | .\" lockdown is accepted but ignored. | |
649 | .PP | |
650 | A \fIbuffer closure\fR is a means of buffering packets to send or that | |
651 | have been received. | |
652 | ||
653 | .SS syslog | |
654 | \fBsyslog(\fIDICT\fB)\fR => \fIlog closure\fR | |
655 | .PP | |
656 | Valid keys in the \fIDICT\fR argument are: | |
657 | .TP | |
658 | .B ident | |
659 | String. | |
660 | The ident string to pass to \fBopenlog\fR(3); this value will appear | |
661 | in each message. | |
662 | .TP | |
663 | .B facility | |
664 | String. | |
665 | The facility to log as. | |
666 | The possible values are \fBauthpriv\fR, \fBcron\fR, \fBdaemon\fR, | |
667 | \fBkern\fR, \fBlocal0\fR-\fB7\fR, \fBlpr\fR, \fBmail\fR, \fBnews\fR, | |
668 | \fBsyslog\fR, \fBuser\fR and \fBuucp\fR. | |
669 | .PP | |
670 | See also \fBlogfile\fR above. | |
671 | ||
672 | .SS tun | |
673 | \fBtun(\fIDICT\fB)\fR => \fInetlink closure\fR | |
674 | .br | |
675 | \fBtun(\fIDICT\fB)\fR => \fIpure closure\fR | |
676 | .PP | |
677 | Valid keys in the \fIDICT\fR argument are those documented for | |
678 | \fBnull-netlink\fR above, plus: | |
679 | .TP | |
680 | .B flavour | |
681 | String. | |
682 | The type of TUN interface to use. | |
683 | Possible values are \fBlinux\fR, \fBbsd\fR, \fBstreams\fR and \fBguess\fR. | |
684 | The default is \fBguess\fR. | |
685 | .TP | |
686 | .B device | |
687 | String. | |
688 | The path to the TUN/TAP device file. | |
689 | The default is \fI/dev/net/tun\fR for the \fBlinux\fR flavour and | |
690 | \fI/dev/tun\fR for the others. | |
691 | .TP | |
692 | .B interface | |
693 | String. | |
694 | The interface to use. | |
695 | The default is to pick one automatically. | |
696 | This cannot be used with the \fBstreams\fR flavour. | |
697 | .TP | |
698 | .B local-address | |
699 | String. | |
700 | IP address of the host's tunnel interface. | |
701 | .\" README says this belongs to netlink-null but actually it's | |
702 | \" duplicated between slip & tun | |
703 | .TP | |
704 | .B ifconfig-path | |
705 | String. | |
706 | The name of the \fBifconfig\fR command. | |
707 | The default is simply "ifconfig". | |
708 | .TP | |
709 | .B route-path | |
710 | String. | |
711 | The name of the \fBroute\fR command. | |
712 | The default is simply "route". | |
713 | .TP | |
714 | .B ifconfig-type | |
715 | String. | |
716 | The syntax expected by the \fBifconfig\fR command. | |
717 | Possible values are \fBlinux\fR, \fBbsd\fR, \fBioctl\fR, | |
718 | \fBsolaris-2.5\fR and \fBguess\fR. | |
719 | The default is \fBguess\fR. | |
720 | .TP | |
721 | .B route-type | |
722 | String. | |
723 | The syntax expected by the \fBifconfig\fR command. | |
724 | Possible values are \fBlinux\fR, \fBbsd\fR, \fBioctl\fR, | |
725 | \fBsolaris-2.5\fR and \fBguess\fR. | |
726 | The default is \fBguess\fR. | |
727 | .TP | |
728 | .B buffer | |
729 | A \fIbuffer closure\fR to use for packets transferred from the host to secnet. | |
730 | The buffer size must be at least 60 greater than the MTU. | |
731 | .\" TODO rumour has is that buffers are sometimes shareable between | |
732 | .\" netlink devices - document that if the conditions are reasonable | |
733 | .\" ones. | |
734 | .PP | |
735 | The \fBifconfig-type\fR and \fBroute-type\fR values determine how | |
736 | those commands are executed. | |
737 | If they are set to \fBioctl\fR then low-level system calls are used | |
738 | directly instead of invoking the commands. | |
739 | .PP | |
740 | The netlink created by \fBtun\fR uses the \fBtun\fR device to | |
741 | communicate with the host kernel. | |
742 | ||
743 | .SS udp | |
744 | \fBudp(\fIDICT\fB)\fR => \fIcomm closure\fR | |
745 | .PP | |
746 | Valid keys in the \fIDICT\fR argument are: | |
747 | .TP | |
748 | .B address | |
749 | String. | |
750 | The IP address to bind on. | |
751 | The default is 0.0.0.0, i.e. "any". | |
752 | .TP | |
753 | .B port | |
754 | Number. | |
755 | The port number to bind to. | |
756 | The default is 0, i.e. the OS will choose one. | |
757 | It is suggested that any given VPN agree a common port number. | |
758 | .TP | |
759 | .B buffer | |
760 | A \fIbuffer closure\fR. | |
761 | See the \fBsysbuffer\fR closure above. | |
762 | .TP | |
763 | .B authbind | |
764 | String. | |
765 | The path to a helper program to bind the socket. | |
766 | Optional. | |
767 | .IP | |
768 | The program will be invoked with the address and port number as its | |
769 | arguments, and with the socket to bind as file descriptor 0. | |
770 | It should either bind the socket as requested, or exit with nonzero | |
771 | status. | |
772 | .PP | |
773 | A \fIcomm closure\fR is a means of sending and receiving messages via | |
774 | a network. | |
775 | It does not provide confidentiality, reliablity or availability. | |
776 | ||
777 | .SS userv-ipif | |
778 | \fBuserv-ipif(\fIDICT\fB)\fR => \fInetlink closure\fR | |
779 | .br | |
780 | \fBuserv-ipif(\fIDICT\fB)\fR => \fIpure closure\fR | |
781 | .PP | |
782 | Valid keys in the \fIDICT\fR argument are those documented for | |
783 | \fBnull-netlink\fR above, plus: | |
784 | .TP | |
785 | .B local-address | |
786 | String. | |
787 | IP address of the host's SLIP interface. | |
788 | .\" README says this belongs to netlink-null but actually it's | |
789 | \" duplicated between SLIP & tun | |
790 | .TP | |
791 | .B userv-path | |
792 | String. | |
793 | Where to find \fBuserv\fR(1). | |
794 | The default is \fB"userv"\fR. | |
795 | .TP | |
796 | .B service-user | |
797 | String. | |
798 | The name of the user that owns the service. | |
799 | The default is \fB"root"\fR. | |
800 | .TP | |
801 | .B service-name | |
802 | String. | |
803 | The name of the service to request. | |
804 | The default is \fB"ipif"\fR. | |
805 | .TP | |
806 | .B buffer | |
807 | A \fIbuffer closure\fR to use for packets transferred from the host to secnet. | |
808 | .PP | |
809 | The netlink created by \fBuserv-ipif\fR invokes the specified \fBuserv\fR service with pipes connected to its standard input and output. | |
810 | It uses SLIP to communicate with the host kernel via these pipes. | |
811 | ||
812 | .SH FILES | |
813 | .TP | |
814 | .I /etc/secnet/secnet.conf | |
815 | Configuration file. | |
816 | ||
817 | .SH "SEE ALSO" | |
818 | \fBuserv\fR(1) |