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[secnet] / INSTALL
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1INSTALLATION INSTRUCTIONS for SECNET
2
3USE AT YOUR OWN RISK. THIS IS ALPHA TEST SOFTWARE. I DO NOT
4GUARANTEE THAT THERE WILL BE PROTOCOL COMPATIBILITY BETWEEN DIFFERENT
5VERSIONS.
6
7* Preparation
8
9** System software support
10
11Ensure that you have libgmp3-dev and adns installed (and bison and
12flex, and for that matter gcc...).
13
14[On BSD install /usr/ports/devel/bison]
15
16If you intend to configure secnet to obtain packets from the kernel
17through userv-ipif, install and configure userv-ipif. It is part of
18userv-utils, available from ftp.chiark.greenend.org.uk in
19/users/ian/userv
20
21If you intend to configure secnet to obtain packets from the kernel
22using the universal TUN/TAP driver, make sure it's configured in your
23kernel (it's under "network device support" in Linux-2.4) and that
24you've created the appropriate device files; see
25linux/Documentation/networking/tuntap.txt
26
27If you're using TUN/TAP on a platform other than Linux-2.4, see
28http://vtun.sourceforge.net/tun/
29
30You will probably be using the supplied `make-secnet-sites' program to
31generate your VPN's list of sites as a secnet configuration from a
32more-human-writeable form. If so you need to install the standard
33`ipaddr' Python module (python-ipaddr on Debian-derived systems).
34
35** System and network configuration
36
37If you intend to start secnet as root, I suggest you create a userid
38for it to run as once it's ready to drop its privileges. Example (on
39Debian):
40# adduser --system --no-create-home secnet
41
42If you're using the 'soft routes' feature (for some classes of mobile
43device) you'll have to run as root all the time, to enable secnet to
44add and remove routes from your kernel's routing table. (This
45restriction may be relaxed later if someone writes a userv service to
46modify the routing table.)
47
48If you are joining an existing VPN, read that VPN's documentation now.
49It may supersede the next paragraph.
50
51In most configurations, you will need to allocate two IP addresses for
52use by secnet. One will be for the tunnel interface on your tunnel
53endpoint machine (i.e. the address you see in 'ifconfig' when you look
54at the tunnel interface). The other will be for secnet itself. These
55addresses should probably be allocated from the range used by your
56internal network: if you do this, you should provide appropriate
57proxy-ARP on the internal network interface of the machine running
58secnet (eg. add an entry net/ipv4/conf/eth_whatever/proxy_arp = 1 to
59/etc/sysctl.conf on Debian systems and run sysctl -p). Alternatively
60the addresses could be from some other range - this works well if the
61machine running secnet is the default route out of your network - but
62this requires more thought.
63
64http://www.ucam.org/cam-grin/ may be useful.
65
66* Installation
67
68If you installed the Debian package of secnet, skip to "If installing
69for the first time", below, and note that example.conf can be found in
70/usr/share/doc/secnet/examples.
71
72To install secnet do
73
74$ ./configure
75$ make
76# make install
77# mkdir /etc/secnet
78
79(Note: you may see the following warning while compiling
80conffile.tab.c; this is a bug in bison-1.28:
81/usr/share/bison/bison.simple: In function `yyparse':
82/usr/share/bison/bison.simple:285: warning: `yyval' might be used
83 uninitialized in this function
84
85You may if you wish apply the following patch to bison.simple:
86diff -pu -r1.28.0.1 -r1.28.0.3
87--- bison.s1 1999/08/30 19:23:24 1.28.0.1
88+++ bison.s1 1999/08/30 21:15:18 1.28.0.3
89@@ -523,8 +523,14 @@ yydefault:
90 /* Do a reduction. yyn is the number of a rule to reduce with. */
91 yyreduce:
92 yylen = yyr2[yyn];
93- if (yylen > 0)
94- yyval = yyvsp[1-yylen]; /* implement default value of the action */
95+
96+ /* If yylen is nonzero, implement the default value of the action.
97+ Otherwise, the following line sets yyval to the semantic value of
98+ the lookahead token. This behavior is undocumented and bison
99+ users should not rely upon it. Assigning to yyval
100+ unconditionally makes the parser a bit smaller, and it avoids a
101+ GCC warning that yyval may be used uninitialized. */
102+ yyval = yyvsp[1-yylen];
103
104 #if YYDEBUG != 0
105 if (yydebug)
106)
107
108Any other warnings or errors should be reported to
109steve@greenend.org.uk.
110
111If installing for the first time, do
112
113# cp example.conf /etc/secnet/secnet.conf
114# cd /etc/secnet
115# ssh-keygen -f key -t rsa1 -N ""
116
117[On BSD use
118$ LDFLAGS="-L/usr/local/lib" ./configure
119$ gmake CFLAGS="-I/usr/local/include" LDFLAGS="-L/usr/local/lib"
120XXX this should eventually be worked out automatically by 'configure'.]
121
122Generate a site file fragment for your site (see your VPN's
123documentation, or see below), and submit it for inclusion in your
124VPN's 'sites' file. Download the vpn-sites file to /etc/secnet/sites
125- MAKE SURE YOU GET AN AUTHENTIC COPY because the sites file contains
126public keys for all the sites in the VPN. Use the make-secnet-sites
127program provided with the secnet distribution to convert the
128distributed sites file into one that can be included in a secnet
129configuration file:
130
131# make-secnet-sites /etc/secnet/sites /etc/secnet/sites.conf
132
133* Configuration
134
135Should be reasonably obvious - edit /etc/secnet/secnet.conf as
136prompted by the comments in example.conf. XXX Fuller documentation of
137the configuration file format should be forthcoming in time. Its
138syntax is described in the README file at the moment.
139
140* Constructing your site file fragment
141
142You need the following information:
143
1441. the name of your VPN.
145
1462. the name of your location(s).
147
1483. a short name for your site, eg. "sinister". This is used to
149identify your site in the vpn-sites file, and should probably be the
150same as its hostname.
151
1524. the DNS name of the machine that will be the "front-end" for your
153secnet installation. This will typically be the name of the gateway
154machine for your network, eg. sinister.dynamic.greenend.org.uk
155
156secnet does not actually have to run on this machine, as long as the
157machine can be configured to forward UDP packets to the machine that
158is running secnet.
159
1605. the port number used to contact secnet at your site. This is the
161port number on the front-end machine, and does not necessarily have to
162match the port number on the machine running secnet. If you want to
163use a privileged port number we suggest 410. An appropriate
164unprivileged port number is 51396.
165
1666. the list of networks accessible at your site over the VPN.
167
1687. the public part of the RSA key you generated during installation
169(in /etc/secnet/key.pub if you followed the installation
170instructions). This file contains three numbers and a comment on one
171line.
172
173If you are running secnet on a particularly slow machine, you may like
174to specify a larger value for the key setup retry timeout than the
175default, to prevent unnecessary retransmissions of key setup packets.
176See the notes in the example configuration file for more on this.
177
178The site file fragment should look something like this:
179
180vpn sgo
181location greenend
182contact steve@greenend.org.uk
183site sinister
184 networks 192.168.73.0/24 192.168.1.0/24 172.19.71.0/24
185 address sinister.dynamic.greenend.org.uk 51396
186 pubkey 1024 35 142982503......[lots more].....0611 steve@sinister