polypath: Break out polypath_sendmsg_interf
[secnet] / README
1 secnet - flexible VPN software
2
3 * Copying
4
5 secnet is
6 Copyright 1995-2003 Stephen Early <steve@greenend.org.uk>
7 Copyright 2002-2014 Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
8 Copyright 1991 Massachusetts Institute of Technology
9 Copyright 1998 Ross Anderson, Eli Biham, Lars Knudsen
10 Copyright 1993 Colin Plumb
11 Copyright 1998 James H. Brown, Steve Reid
12 Copyright 2000 Vincent Rijmen, Antoon Bosselaers, Paulo Barreto
13 Copyright 2001 Saul Kravitz
14 Copyright 2004 Fabrice Bellard
15 Copyright 2002 Guido Draheim
16 Copyright 2005-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
17 Copyright 1995-2001 Jonathan Amery
18 Copyright 1995-2003 Peter Benie
19 Copyright 2011 Richard Kettlewell
20 Copyright 2012 Matthew Vernon
21 Copyright 2013 Mark Wooding
22 Copyright 1995-2013 Simon Tatham
23
24 secnet is distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public
25 License, version 3 or later. Some individual files have more
26 permissive licences; where this is the case, it is documented in the
27 header comment for the files in question.
28
29 secnet is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
30 ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
31 FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
32 for more details.
33
34 The file COPYING contains a copy of the GNU GPL v3.
35
36
37 * Introduction
38
39 secnet allows large virtual private networks to be constructed
40 spanning multiple separate sites. It is designed for the case where a
41 private network connecting many hosts is 'hidden' behind a single
42 globally-routable IP address, but can also be applied in other
43 circumstances. It communicates entirely using UDP, and works well
44 with gateways that implement network address translation.
45
46 If you are installing secnet to join an existing VPN, you should read
47 the 'INSTALL' file and your particular VPN's documentation now. You
48 may need to refer back to this file for information on the netlink and
49 comm sections of the configuration file.
50
51 If you are thinking about setting up a new VPN of any size (from one
52 providing complete links between multiple sites to a simple
53 laptop-to-host link), read the section in this file on 'Creating a
54 VPN'.
55
56 * Mailing lists and bug reporting
57
58 There are two mailing lists associated with secnet: an 'announce' list
59 and a 'discuss' list. Their addresses are:
60 http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/secnet-announce
61 http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/secnet-discuss
62
63 The -announce list receives one message per secnet release. The
64 -discuss list is for general discussion, including help with
65 configuration, bug reports, feature requests, etc.
66
67 Bug reports should be sent to <steve@greenend.org.uk>; they will be
68 forwarded to the -discuss list by me.
69
70 * Creating a VPN
71
72 XXX TODO
73
74 * secnet configuration file format
75
76 By default secnet on linux reads /etc/secnet/secnet.conf. The default
77 may be different on other platforms.
78
79 This file defines a dictionary (a mapping from keys to values) full of
80 configuration information for secnet. Two keys must be defined in
81 this file for secnet to start. One is "system", a dictionary
82 containing systemwide control parameters. The other is "sites", a
83 list of all the sites that you intend to communicate with.
84
85 The configuration file has a very simple syntax; keys are defined as
86 follows:
87
88 key definition;
89 or
90 key = definition;
91
92 (the "=" is optional)
93
94 Keys must match the following regular expression:
95 [[:alpha:]_][[:alnum:]\-_]*
96
97 i.e. the first character must be an alpha or an underscore, and the
98 remaining characters may be alphanumeric, '-' or '_'.
99
100 Keys can be defined to be a comma-separated list of any of the
101 following types:
102
103 a boolean
104 a string, in quotes
105 a number, in decimal
106 a dictionary of definitions, enclosed in { }
107 a "closure", followed by arguments
108 a path to a key that already exists, to reference that definition
109
110 Note that dictionaries can be nested: a key in one dictionary can
111 refer to another dictionary. When secnet looks for a key in a
112 particular directory and can't find it, it looks in the dictionary's
113 lexical 'parents' in turn until it finds it (or fails to find it at
114 all and stops with an error).
115
116 Definitions can refer to previous definitions by naming them with a
117 path. Paths are key1/key2/key3... (starting from wherever we find
118 key1, i.e. in the current dictionary or any of its parents), or
119 alternatively /key1/key2/key3... (to start from the root).
120 Definitions cannot refer to future definitions.
121
122 Example:
123
124 a=1;
125 b=2;
126 c={ d=3; e=a; };
127 f={ a=4; g=c; };
128
129 The following paths are valid:
130 a is 1
131 b is 2
132 c is a dictionary:
133 c/d is 3
134 c/e is 1
135 f is a dictionary:
136 f/a is 4
137 f/g is a dictionary:
138 f/g/d is 3
139 f/g/e is 1
140
141 Note that f/g/e is NOT 4.
142
143 Elements that are lists are inserted into lists in definitions, not
144 referenced by them (i.e. you can't have lists of lists).
145
146 Some closures may be followed by an argument list in ( ), and may
147 return any number of whatever type they like (including other
148 closures). Some types of closure (typically those returned from
149 invokations of other closures) cannot be invoked.
150
151 closure { definitions } is short for closure({definitions}).
152
153 The main body of secnet, and all the additional modules, predefine
154 some keys in the root dictionary. The main ones are:
155
156 yes, true, True, TRUE, on: the boolean value True
157 no, false, False, FALSE, off: the boolean value False
158 makelist: turns a dictionary (arg1) into a list of definitions
159 (ignoring the keys)
160 readfile: reads a file (arg1) and returns it as a string
161 map: applies the closure specified as arg1 to each of the
162 remaining elements in the list in turn. Returns a list
163 made up of the outputs of the closure.
164
165 Keys defined by modules are described below, in the module
166 documentation.
167
168 Other configuration files can be included inline by writing "include
169 filename" at the start of a line.
170
171 After the configuration file is read, secnet looks for particular keys
172 in configuration space to tell it what to do:
173
174 system: a dictionary which can contain the following keys:
175 log (log closure): a destination for system messages
176 userid (string): the userid for secnet to run as once it drops privileges
177 pidfile (string): where to store its PID
178
179 sites: a list of closures of type 'site', which define other tunnel
180 endpoints that secnet will attempt to communicate with
181
182 * secnet command line options
183
184 Usage: secnet [OPTION]...
185
186 -f, --silent, --quiet suppress error messages
187 -w, --nowarnings suppress warnings
188 -v, --verbose output extra diagnostics
189 -c, --config=filename specify a configuration file
190 -j, --just-check-config stop after reading configfile
191 -n, --nodetach do not run in background
192 -d, --debug=item,... set debug options
193 --help display this help and exit
194 --version output version information and exit
195
196 * secnet builtin modules
197
198 ** resolver
199
200 Defines:
201 adns (closure => resolver closure)
202
203 adns: dict argument
204 config (string): optional, a resolv.conf for ADNS to use
205
206 ** random
207
208 Defines:
209 randomsrc (closure => randomsrc closure)
210
211 randomsrc: string[,bool]
212 arg1: filename of random source
213 arg2: if True then source is blocking
214
215 ** udp
216
217 Defines:
218 udp (closure => comm closure)
219
220 udp: dict argument
221 address (string list): IPv6 or IPv4 addresses to listen and send on;
222 default is all local addresses
223 port (integer): UDP port to listen and send on; optional if you
224 don't need to have a stable address for your peers to talk to
225 (in which case your site ought probably to have `local-mobile true').
226 buffer (buffer closure): buffer for incoming packets
227 authbind (string): optional, path to authbind-helper program
228
229 ** polypath
230
231 Defines:
232 polypath (closure => comm closure)
233
234 polypath: dict argument
235 port (integer): UDP port to listen and send on
236 buffer (buffer closure): buffer for incoming packets
237 authbind (string): optional, path to authbind-helper program
238 max-interfaces (number): optional, max number of different interfaces to
239 use (also, maximum steady-state amount of packet multiplication)
240 interfaces (string list): which interfaces to process; each entry is
241 optionally `!' or `+' followed by a glob pattern (which is applied to a
242 prospective interface using fnmatch with no flags). If no list is
243 specified, or the list ends with a `!' entry, a default list is
244 used/appended: "!tun*","!tap*","!sl*","!userv*","!lo","*". Patterns
245 which do not start with `*' or an alphanumeric need to be preceded
246 by `!' or `+'.
247 monitor-command (string list): Program to use to monitor appearance
248 and disappearance of addresses on local network interfaces. Should
249 produce lines of the form `+|-<ifname> 4|6 <addr>' where <addr> is
250 an address literal. Each - line should relate to a previously
251 printed + line. On startup, should produce a + line for each
252 currently existing address. secnet does filtering so there is no
253 need to strip out tun interfaces, multicast addresses, and so on.
254 The command is run as the user secnet is started as (not the one
255 which secnet may drop privilege to due to the configured `userid').
256 The default depends on the operating system.
257 permit-loopback (boolean): Normally, loopback IPv6 and IPv4
258 addresses on local interfaces are disregarded, because such
259 interfaces are not interesting for communicating with distant
260 hosts. Setting this option will ignore that check, which can be
261 useful for testing. Setting this option also removes "!lo*" from
262 the default interface pattern list.
263
264 When using this comm, packets are sent out of every active interface
265 on the host (where possible). It is important that interfaces created
266 by secnet itself are not included! secnet's default filter list tries
267 to do this.
268
269 This comm only makes sense for sites which are mobile. That is, the
270 site closures used with this comm should all have the `local-mobile'
271 parameter set to `true'. When the local site site is not marked
272 mobile the address selection machinery might fixate on an unsuitable
273 address.
274
275 For an interface to work with polypath, it must either have a suitable
276 default route, or be a point-to-point interface. In the general case
277 this might mean that the host would have to have multiple default
278 routes. However in practice the most useful configuration is two
279 interfaces being (1) wifi (2) mobile internet.
280
281 I have had success on Linux by using network-manager for wifi and
282 invoking ppp directly for mobile internet. ppp sets up a
283 point-to-point link, and does not add a default route if there already
284 is one. network-manager always sets up a default route. The result
285 is that the wifi always has a default route (so is useable); ppp
286 (being a point-to-point link) does not need one.
287
288 The use of polypath requires that secnet be started with root
289 privilege, to make the setsockopt(,,SO_BINDTODEVICE,) calls. If the
290 configuration specifies that secnet should drop privilege (see
291 `userid' above), secnet will keep a special process around for this
292 purpose; that process will handle local network interface changes but
293 does not deal with any packets, key exchange, etc.
294
295 polypath support is only available when secnet is built against an
296 IPv6-capable version of adns (because it wants features in the newer
297 adns).
298
299 ** log
300
301 Defines:
302 logfile (closure => log closure)
303 syslog (closure => log closure)
304
305 logfile: dict argument
306 filename (string): where to log to
307 class (string list): what type of messages to log
308 { "debug-config", M_DEBUG_CONFIG },
309 { "debug-phase", M_DEBUG_PHASE },
310 { "debug", M_DEBUG },
311 { "all-debug", M_DEBUG|M_DEBUG_PHASE|M_DEBUG_CONFIG },
312 { "info", M_INFO },
313 { "notice", M_NOTICE },
314 { "warning", M_WARNING },
315 { "error", M_ERROR },
316 { "security", M_SECURITY },
317 { "fatal", M_FATAL },
318 { "default", M_WARNING|M_ERROR|M_SECURITY|M_FATAL },
319 { "verbose", M_INFO|M_NOTICE|M_WARNING|M_ERROR|M_SECURITY|M_FATAL },
320 { "quiet", M_FATAL }
321
322 logfile will close and reopen its file upon receipt of SIGHUP.
323
324 syslog: dict argument
325 ident (string): include this string in every log message
326 facility (string): facility to log as
327 { "authpriv", LOG_AUTHPRIV },
328 { "cron", LOG_CRON },
329 { "daemon", LOG_DAEMON },
330 { "kern", LOG_KERN },
331 { "local0", LOG_LOCAL0 },
332 { "local1", LOG_LOCAL1 },
333 { "local2", LOG_LOCAL2 },
334 { "local3", LOG_LOCAL3 },
335 { "local4", LOG_LOCAL4 },
336 { "local5", LOG_LOCAL5 },
337 { "local6", LOG_LOCAL6 },
338 { "local7", LOG_LOCAL7 },
339 { "lpr", LOG_LPR },
340 { "mail", LOG_MAIL },
341 { "news", LOG_NEWS },
342 { "syslog", LOG_SYSLOG },
343 { "user", LOG_USER },
344 { "uucp", LOG_UUCP }
345
346 ** util
347
348 Defines:
349 sysbuffer (closure => buffer closure)
350
351 sysbuffer: integer[,dict]
352 arg1: buffer length
353 arg2: options:
354 lockdown (boolean): if True, mlock() the buffer
355
356 ** site
357
358 Defines:
359 site (closure => site closure)
360
361 site: dict argument
362 local-name (string): this site's name for itself
363 name (string): the name of the site's peer
364 link (netlink closure)
365 comm (one or more comm closures): if there is more than one, the
366 first one will be used for any key setups initiated by us using the
367 configured address. Others are only used if our peer talks to
368 them.
369 resolver (resolver closure)
370 random (randomsrc closure)
371 local-key (rsaprivkey closure)
372 address (string list): optional, DNS name(s) used to find our peer;
373 address literals are supported too if enclosed in `[' `]'.
374 port (integer): mandatory if 'address' is specified: the port used
375 to contact our peer
376 key (rsapubkey closure): our peer's public key
377 transform (transform closure): how to mangle packets sent between sites
378 dh (dh closure)
379 hash (hash closure)
380 key-lifetime (integer): max lifetime of a session key, in ms
381 [one hour; mobile: 2 days]
382 setup-retries (integer): max number of times to transmit a key negotiation
383 packet [5; mobile: 30]
384 setup-timeout (integer): time between retransmissions of key negotiation
385 packets, in ms [2000; mobile: 1000]
386 wait-time (integer): after failed key setup, wait this long (in ms) before
387 allowing another attempt [20000; mobile: 10000]
388 renegotiate-time (integer): if we see traffic on the link after this time
389 then renegotiate another session key immediately (in ms)
390 [half key-lifetime, or key-lifetime minus 5 mins (mobile: 12 hours),
391 whichever is longer].
392 keepalive (bool): if True then attempt always to keep a valid session key.
393 [false]
394 log-events (string list): types of events to log for this site
395 unexpected: unexpected key setup packets (may be late retransmissions)
396 setup-init: start of attempt to setup a session key
397 setup-timeout: failure of attempt to setup a session key, through timeout
398 activate-key: activation of a new session key
399 timeout-key: deletion of current session key through age
400 security: anything potentially suspicious
401 state-change: steps in the key setup protocol
402 packet-drop: whenever we throw away an outgoing packet
403 dump-packets: every key setup packet we see
404 errors: failure of name resolution, internal errors
405 peer-addrs: changes to sets of peer addresses (interesting for mobile peers)
406 all: everything (too much!)
407 mobile (bool): if True then peer is "mobile" ie we assume it may
408 change its apparent IP address and port number without either it
409 or us being aware of the change; so, we remember the last several
410 port/addr pairs we've seen and send packets to all of them
411 (subject to a timeout). We maintain one set of addresses for key
412 setup exchanges, and another for data traffic. Two communicating
413 peers must not each regard the other as mobile, or all the traffic
414 in each direction will be triplicated (strictly, transmitted
415 mobile-peers-max times) and anyway two peers whose public contact
416 address may suddenly change couldn't communicate reliably because
417 their contact addresses might both change at once. [false]
418 mobile-peers-max (integer): Maximum number of peer port/addr pairs we
419 remember and send to. Must be at least 1 and no more than 5.
420 [4 if any address is configured, otherwise 3]
421 static-peers-max (integer): Maximum number of peer port/addr pairs
422 we can try for a static site. Must be at least 1 and no more
423 than 5. [4 or 3, as above]
424 mobile-peer-expiry (integer): For "mobile" peers only, the length
425 of time (in seconds) for which we will keep sending to multiple
426 address/ports from which we have not seen incoming traffic. [120]
427 local-mobile (bool): if True then other peers have been told we are
428 "mobile". This should be True iff the peers' site configurations
429 for us have "mobile True" (and if we find a site configuration for
430 ourselves in the config, we insist on this). The effect is to
431 check that there are no links both ends of which are allegedly
432 mobile (which is not supported, so those links are ignored) and
433 to change some of the tuning parameter defaults. [false]
434 mtu-target (integer): Desired value of the inter-site MTU for this
435 peering. This value will be advertised to the peer (which ought
436 to affect incoming packets), and if the peer advertises an MTU its
437 value will be combined with this setting to compute the inter-site
438 MTU. (secnet will still accept packets which exceed the
439 (negotiated or assumed) inter-site MTU.) Setting a lower
440 inter-site MTU can be used to try to restrict the sizes of the
441 packets sent over the underlying public network (e.g. to work
442 around network braindamage). It is not normally useful to set a
443 larger value for mtu-target than the VPN's general MTU (which
444 should be reflected in the local private interface MTU, ie the mtu
445 parameter to netlink). If this parameter is not set, or is set
446 to 0, the default is to use the local private link mtu.
447 comm-info (dict): Information for the comm, used when this site
448 wants to transmit. If the comm does not support this, it is
449 ignored. (Currently nothing uses this.)
450
451 Links involving mobile peers have some different tuning parameter
452 default values, which are generally more aggressive about retrying key
453 setup but more relaxed about using old keys. These are noted with
454 "mobile:", above, and apply whether the mobile peer is local or
455 remote.
456
457 ** transform-eax
458
459 Defines:
460 eax-serpent (closure => transform closure)
461
462 ** transform-cbcmac
463
464 Defines:
465 serpent256-cbc (closure => transform closure)
466
467 ** netlink
468
469 Defines:
470 null-netlink (closure => closure or netlink closure)
471
472 null-netlink: dict argument
473 name (string): name for netlink device, used in log messages
474 networks (string list): networks on the host side of the netlink device
475 remote-networks (string list): networks that may be claimed
476 by the remote site using this netlink device
477 local-address (string): IP address of host's tunnel interface
478 secnet-address (string): IP address of this netlink device
479 ptp-address (string): IP address of the other end of a point-to-point link
480 mtu (integer): MTU of host's tunnel interface
481
482 Only one of secnet-address or ptp-address may be specified. If
483 point-to-point mode is in use then the "routes" option must also be
484 specified, and netlink returns a netlink closure that should be used
485 directly with the "link" option to the site closure. If
486 point-to-point mode is not in use then netlink returns a closure that
487 may be invoked using a dict argument with the following keys to yield
488 a netlink closure:
489 routes (string list): networks reachable down the tunnel attached to
490 this instance of netlink
491 options (string list):
492 allow-route: allow packets coming from this tunnel to be routed to
493 other tunnels as well as the host (used for mobile devices like laptops)
494 soft: remove these routes from the host's routing table when
495 the tunnel link quality is zero
496 mtu (integer): MTU of host's tunnel interface
497
498 Netlink will dump its current routing table to the system/log on
499 receipt of SIGUSR1.
500
501 ** slip
502
503 Defines:
504 userv-ipif (closure => netlink closure)
505
506 userv-ipif: dict argument
507 userv-path (string): optional, where to find userv ["userv"]
508 service-user (string): optional, username for userv-ipif service ["root"]
509 service-name (string): optional, name of userv-ipif service ["ipif"]
510 buffer (buffer closure): buffer for assembly of host->secnet packets
511 plus generic netlink options, as for 'null-netlink'
512
513 ** tun
514
515 Defines:
516 tun (closure => netlink closure) [only on linux-2.4]
517 tun-old (closure => netlink closure)
518
519 tun: dict argument
520 flavour (string): optional, type of TUN interface to use
521 ("guess","linux","bsd","streams")
522 device (string): optional, path of TUN/TAP device file ["/dev/net/tun"]
523 interface (string): optional, name of tunnel network interface
524 ifconfig-path (string): optional, path to ifconfig command
525 route-path (string): optional, path to route command
526 ifconfig-type (string): optional, how to perform ifconfig
527 route-type (string): optional, how to add and remove routes
528 types are: "guess", "ioctl", "bsd", "linux", "solaris-2.5"
529 buffer (buffer closure): buffer for host->secnet packets
530 plus generic netlink options, as for 'null-netlink'
531
532 I recommend you don't specify the 'interface' option unless you're
533 doing something that requires the interface name to be constant.
534
535 ** rsa
536
537 Defines:
538 rsa-private (closure => rsaprivkey closure)
539 rsa-public (closure => rsapubkey closure)
540
541 rsa-private: string[,bool]
542 arg1: filename of SSH private key file (version 1, no password)
543 arg2: whether to check that the key is usable [default True]
544
545 rsa-public: string,string
546 arg1: encryption key (decimal)
547 arg2: modulus (decimal)
548
549 ** dh
550
551 Defines:
552 diffie-hellman (closure => dh closure)
553
554 diffie-hellman: string,string[,bool]
555 arg1: modulus (hex)
556 arg2: generator (hex)
557 arg3: whether to check that the modulus is prime [default True]
558
559 ** md5
560
561 Defines:
562 md5 (hash closure)
563
564 ** sha1
565
566 Defines:
567 sha1 (hash closure)
568
569 ** conffile
570
571 Defines:
572 makelist (dictionary => list of definitions)
573 readfile (string => string)
574 map (closure,list => list)
575
576 makelist: dictionary
577 returns a list consisting of the definitions in the dictionary. The keys
578 are discarded.
579
580 readfile: string
581 reads the named file and returns its contents as a string
582
583 map:
584 applies the closure specified as arg1 to each of the elements in the list.
585 Returns a list made up of the outputs of the closure.