From: Robin Krens Date: Fri, 27 May 2022 17:58:01 +0000 (+0200) Subject: convert to vimwiki X-Git-Url: https://robinkrens.nl/gitweb/?a=commitdiff_plain;ds=sidebyside;p=robinkrens.nl convert to vimwiki --- diff --git a/vimwiki/Bypassing firewalls.wiki b/vimwiki/Bypassing firewalls.wiki new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8e9d72c --- /dev/null +++ b/vimwiki/Bypassing firewalls.wiki @@ -0,0 +1,6 @@ += Bypassing firewalls = + +Here are some ways to bypass unreasonable goverment and coroporate firewalls + +* [[FastD]] +* [[Tinc]] diff --git a/vimwiki/CRUX packages.wiki b/vimwiki/CRUX packages.wiki new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d52042f --- /dev/null +++ b/vimwiki/CRUX packages.wiki @@ -0,0 +1,10 @@ += CRUX packages = +Various CRUX packages for the best distro out there! + +https://robinkrens.nl/crux-ports/ + + + +Note: I also wrote a small tutorial on how to port CRUX to sunxi / allwinner device, see: https://crux-arm.nu/SupportedDevices/Sunxi + + diff --git a/vimwiki/Cams.wiki b/vimwiki/Cams.wiki new file mode 100644 index 0000000..1bd005e --- /dev/null +++ b/vimwiki/Cams.wiki @@ -0,0 +1,10 @@ += Cams = + +Main room (rarely live though) + +{{https://robinkrens.nl/snapshots/rob-main.jpg}} + +Cat cam + +{{https://robinkrens.nl/snapshots/cat-snap.jpg}} + diff --git a/vimwiki/Contact.wiki b/vimwiki/Contact.wiki new file mode 100644 index 0000000..cd1c428 --- /dev/null +++ b/vimwiki/Contact.wiki @@ -0,0 +1,12 @@ += Contact = +Please scan the tag below, or just send an +email to robin at robinkrens dot nl
+Rob's public key: https://robinkrens.nl/files/rob.pub + +{{https://robinkrens.nl/files/contact.png|erweima}} + + +You can also find me at various locations on the web: +* https://github.com/robinkrens +* https://uhunt.onlinejudge.org/id/1213697 +* http://tilde.town/~mrwoggle/ diff --git a/vimwiki/FastD.wiki b/vimwiki/FastD.wiki new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a442207 --- /dev/null +++ b/vimwiki/FastD.wiki @@ -0,0 +1,240 @@ += FastD = + +== Redirecting traffic using FastD == + +FastD is a VPN daemon that has many features of OpenVPN and Tinc and is optimized for small code size and small number of dependencies. Fastd became popular on small devices like routers. In this tutorial we will configure a listening peer (alpha) and a connecting peer (anyremote). On a side note, with fastD you can setup mesh networks (n:n), as opposed to classical clients server networks (1:n). This configuration can be seen as a simple (1:1) setup between the listening alpha peer and our connecting client anyremote. All traffic from anyremote is redirected to alpha, making alpha the default gateway. This configuration has a lot of similarities with the tinc tutorial. Documentation and manual pages of fastd can be found here http://fastd.readthedocs.io + +=== Alpha peer === + +To run the daemon you only need one +configuration file. You can place it in +fastd's default directory /etc/fastd/fastd.conf. Here we show a standard configuration of fastd.conf with some minor changes: +{{{ +# Log warnings and errors to stderr +log level warn; +# Log everything to syslog +log to syslog level debug; +# tunnel mode (default is tap). +# We use tunneling mode, since we are dealing with routing +mode tun; +# Set the interface name +# you can use any name you like +# this is the name to configure your interface wit +interface "vpngateway"; +# encryption method to use +falls back to null if salsa is not chosen. +method "salsa2012+umac"; +method "null"; +# Bind to a fixed port, IPv4 only +# If your remote ip is 1.2.3.4, make sure 1.2.3.4:10000 is accesible +bind 0.0.0.0:10000; +# Secret key generated by `fastd --generate-key` +# --generate-key outputs a file with a secret and public key +# secret key goes in here. Public keys is distributed amongst other peers +# read about PKI infrastructures if you don't know about this. +secret "supersecretkey"; +# (see MTU selection documentation) +# base MTU is 1500 and you want to use TUN mode over IPv4 with any +# crypto method: Choose 1500 - 52 = 1448 bytes. +mtu 1448; +# on up: shell script to configure the tun interface on daemon start +on up "./interface-up"; +# on down: shell script when daemon is terminated +on down "./interface-down"; +# Include peers from the directory 'peers' +# anyremote is a peer trying to connect to alpha +include peer "peers/anyremote"; +}}} + +Keys can be generate by running --generate-key (written to stdout): + +{{{ +root@alpha:~$ fastd --generate-key > keys +root@alpha:~$ cat keys +2018-04-30 19:25:57 +0800 --- Info: Reading 32 bytes from /dev/random... +Secret: 5035de5b4ea448b74e9a373765207095057a9485fd9dca5fadb9c1b86347bd75 +Public: 8cb5e8d70d34f52716b6c4de518af2edfd6794e68ef1b3f0608cf05dd6a2ef42 +}}} + +The secret key needs to be added to the above fastd.conf file. The public needs to be spread amongst peers (as we explain later). on up "./interface-up" will run a simple shell script and configures our network interface vpngateway (make sure this script is executable). This is our interface.up script: We create a virtual IP: 172.16.16.1. + +{{{ +#!/bin/bash +ip link set $INTERFACE up +ip addr add 172.16.16.1/24 dev $INTERFACE +}}} + +If we terminate fastd, we run a similar script as defined in interface-down: + +{{{ +#!/bin/sh +ip addr del 172.16.16.1/24 dev $INTERFACE +ip link set $INTERFACE down +}}} + +Note: We will create the peer/anyremote file after we finished configuring anyremote and its public key + +=== Anyremote peer === +Similar to the alpha host, we create /etc/fastd/fastd.conf. Since we only need to connect to alpha we don't need to bind to a fixed port. + +{{{ +# log arnings and errors to stderr +log level warn; +# Log everything to syslog +log to syslog level debug; +# tunnel mode (default is tap) +mode tun; +# Set the interface name +interface "vpngateway"; +# Support salsa2012+umac and null methods, prefer salsa2012+umac +method "salsa2012+umac"; +method "null"; +# Secret key generated by `fastd --generate-key` +secret "supersecretkey"; +# (see MTU selection documentation) +mtu 1448; +# daemon start +on up "./interface-up"; +# daemon terminated +on down "./interface-down"; +# if a connection is established set up the gateway +on establish "./set-gateway"; +# if the connection is lost restore the default gateway +on disestablish "./restore-gateway"; +# Include peers from the directory 'peers' +include peer "peers/alpha"; +}}} + +For anyremote we also need to generate a key pair and replace the "supersecretkey" with the secret key value. The public key will be given to alpha (explained in a little while) + +{{{ +root@anyremote~ $ fastd --generate-keys > anyremote-keypair +root@anyremote~ $ cat anyremote-keypair +2018-05-01 19:48:49 +0800 --- Info: Reading 32 bytes from /dev/random... +Secret: c0a611e0d4f3075b45cf172d3221c8427008e2c6f541b5b6adda0368cb79f271 +Public: 2598c5d7e72f171731658ce35734ff7599e1840367422e1a9c5943c327ab5ea9 +}}} + +on up and on down are similar to alpha (except the ip address). interface-up: + +{{{ +#!/bin/bash +ip link set $INTERFACE up +ip addr add 172.16.16.2/24 dev $INTERFACE +}}} + +interface-down: + +{{{ +#!/bin/sh +ip addr del 172.16.16.1/24 dev $INTERFACE +ip link set $INTERFACE down +}}} + +We need to include some information about how to connect to alpha. We define in a file (/etc/fastd/peers/alpha): + +{{{ +root@anyremote:/etc/fastd/peers/ $ cat alpha +# alpha +key "8cb5e8d70d34f52716b6c4de518af2edfd6794e68ef1b3f0608cf05dd6a2ef42"; +remote 1.2.3.4:10000; +}}} +key here means the public key we just created with --generate-keys the alpha section. Here we add a remote ip to which anyremote tries to connect to. Make sure port numbers are the same. Don't forget to also add our our just created public key to our alpha server: + +{{{ +root@alpha:/etc/fastd/peers/ $ cat anyremote +# anyremote +key "2598c5d7e72f171731658ce35734ff7599e1840367422e1a9c5943c327ab5ea9"; +}}} + +This will allow alpha to accept connections from anyremote. Note: you don't need to specify a remote address, this will make it more dynamic and you can connect with anyremote from anywhere as long as you have the private key. + +After these steps you should be able to run both alpha and anyremote. You can run the daemon as follows: + +{{{ +root@alpha:~ $ fastd -c /etc/fastd/fastd.conf & +root@anyremote:~ $ fastd -c /etc/fastd/fastd.conf & +}}} + +The interface vpngateway should show up and you should be able to ping to both hosts us. + +Now, in our config file of anyremote we see two additionals values: on establish and on disestablish. Once the connection is (dis)established, fastd will execute these scripts. This brings us two the last step: setting the default gateway of anyremote to point to alpha + +=== Alpha as gateway for anyremote === + +Have a look at the tinc tutorial (gateway section) about the theory of routing and gateways. We add the following scripts in /etc/fastd of anyremote if a connection with alpha is established: (set-gateway) + +{{{ #!/bin/bash +#ip link set $INTERFACE up +#ip addr add 172.16.16.2/24 dev $INTERFACE +VPN_GATEWAY=172.16.16.1 +ORIGINAL_GATEWAY=`ip route show | grep ^default | cut -d ' ' -f 2-5` +REMOTEADDRESS=1.2.3.4 +ip route add $REMOTEADDRESS $ORIGINAL_GATEWAY +ip route add $VPN_GATEWAY dev $INTERFACE +ip route add 0.0.0.0/1 via $VPN_GATEWAY dev $INTERFACE +ip route add 128.0.0.0/1 via $VPN_GATEWAY dev $INTERFACE +}}} + +And, similar, if the connecting is lost: (restore-gateway): + +{{{ +#!/bin/sh +#ip addr del 172.16.16.2/24 dev $INTERFACE +#ip link set $INTERFACE down +ORIGINAL_GATEWAY=`ip route show | grep ^default | cut -d ' ' -f 2-5` +REMOTEADDRESS=45.76.159.1 +ip route del $REMOTEADDRESS $ORIGINAL_GATEWAY +ip route del $VPN_GATEWAY dev $INTERFACE +ip route del 0.0.0.0/1 dev $INTERFACE +ip route del 128.0.0.0/1 dev $INTERFACE +}}} + +=== Setup firewall === + +Make sure forwarding is enabled on alpha. Make sure you have masquerading or another form of routing set up on alpha. If you don't masquerade outgoing (forwarded anyremote) packets, the source address in in the TCP/UDP package will still remain 172.16.16.2. Please have a look here: http://www.tldp.org/LDP/nag2/x-087-2-ipmasq.html if you don't know about NAT and masquerading. + +{{{ +#!/bin/sh +# iptables config line to masquerade + +echo "Enabling IPv4 forwarding" +echo 1 >/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward + +echo "Appending Masquerade rule to iptables" +iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -s 172.16.16.0/255.255.255.0 -o eth0 -j MASQUERADE +}}} + +I use iptables to masquerade the (-s) source address on the (-o) interface eth0. + +=== Test the gateway === +Restart the daemon on alpha and anyremote. Use route -n to see check your routing tables. Ping both 172.16.16.1 and 1.2.3.4 (external address). In case of problems, trace the connections or analyze the data with tools like wireshark. + +=== Troubleshooting help === + +DNS request are not forwarded through the +gateway. Check your resolver config files +(/etc/resolv.conf). Debian-based systems +might have the following configuration: + +{{{ +root@anyremote:~$ cat /etc/resolv.conf +# resolv.conf file +nameserver 127.0.1.0 +}}} + +and in your routing table you might have the following entry. A local / caching DNS server might still send packages to your router. Use wireshark to see if there are any DNS queries, not going to the VPN gateway + +{{{ +IP ROUTING TABLE +link-local * 255.255.0.0 U 1000 0 0 wlp7s0 +}}} + +A simple fix would to change your resolv.conf and point it to nameserver 8.8.8.8 Fastd's log to /var/log/syslog You can define these locations in your fast.conf file. You can also change the log level, in case you need more information: + +{{{ +--log-level error|warn|info|verbose|debug|debug2 +}}} + +Sets the stderr log level; default is info if no alternative log +destination is configured. Use tcpdump or wireshark to analyze your network devices diff --git a/vimwiki/Git server.wiki b/vimwiki/Git server.wiki new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c29501b --- /dev/null +++ b/vimwiki/Git server.wiki @@ -0,0 +1,7 @@ += Git server = +Browse at https://robinkrens.nl/gitweb/ + +All repositories are cloneable with: +{{{ +git clone https://robinkrens.nl/repo/repo-name +}}} diff --git a/vimwiki/Gopher.wiki b/vimwiki/Gopher.wiki new file mode 100644 index 0000000..229d896 --- /dev/null +++ b/vimwiki/Gopher.wiki @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ += Gopher = +Checkout the real woggleweb at gopher://45.76.159.1 diff --git a/vimwiki/Let it snow!.wiki b/vimwiki/Let it snow!.wiki new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b03aa8b --- /dev/null +++ b/vimwiki/Let it snow!.wiki @@ -0,0 +1,21 @@ += Let it snow! = + +I always liked xsnow (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xsnow . I've made it more modern to run on KDE Plasma. +This is not a port! The implementation is kind of silly since it are all rotating borderless transparent windows. + +I actually have some incoming revenue from this app (mostly +during winter months) + +If you are using KDE Plasma, you can directly install this widget (Right click > Add Widget on Desktop). +You can also untar a release under +~/.local/share/plasma/plasmoid + +== Releases == +https://robinkrens.nl/releases/qt-letitsnow/ + +== Source == +{{{ +git clone https://robinkrens.nl/repo/qt-letitsnow +}}} + +More info at: https://store.kde.org/p/1450841/ diff --git a/vimwiki/Mail servers.wiki b/vimwiki/Mail servers.wiki new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d7afdb9 --- /dev/null +++ b/vimwiki/Mail servers.wiki @@ -0,0 +1,5 @@ += Mail servers = + +Some servers and web access locations: + +https://robinkrens.nl/squirrelmail diff --git a/vimwiki/Random.wiki b/vimwiki/Random.wiki new file mode 100644 index 0000000..73a5361 --- /dev/null +++ b/vimwiki/Random.wiki @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +Random tiny projects + +* [[Let it snow!]] diff --git a/vimwiki/Raw text tweets.wiki b/vimwiki/Raw text tweets.wiki new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ce46dda --- /dev/null +++ b/vimwiki/Raw text tweets.wiki @@ -0,0 +1,5 @@ += Raw text tweets = + +My twtxt feed: https://tilde.town/~mr_woggle/twtxt.txt + +More info on the project can be found at https://twtxt.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ diff --git a/vimwiki/Status.wiki b/vimwiki/Status.wiki new file mode 100644 index 0000000..bacd9bc --- /dev/null +++ b/vimwiki/Status.wiki @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ += Status = +I try to keep track of the various servers I run (in case I physically can't find the device anymore) + +https://robinkrens.nl/status/ diff --git a/vimwiki/TODO.wiki b/vimwiki/TODO.wiki new file mode 100644 index 0000000..807eb6d --- /dev/null +++ b/vimwiki/TODO.wiki @@ -0,0 +1 @@ += TODO = diff --git a/vimwiki/Tinc.wiki b/vimwiki/Tinc.wiki new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0675fd0 --- /dev/null +++ b/vimwiki/Tinc.wiki @@ -0,0 +1,346 @@ += Tinc = + +Tinc is a VPN daemon which tunnels IP packets and Ethernet frames over UDP. More on Tinc can be found on: http://tinc-vpn.org Here I will show a tinc setup with an alpha (as a listening peer) and a beta (a peer connecting to alpha). After setting up the VPN, alpha will be the gateway for beta. All traffic from beta will be routed through alpha and back. I will basically retell the man page documentation: https://tinc-vpn.org/documentation-1.1/tinc.conf.5 but in a more tutorial kind of way. + +== Alpha peer == +Create config files /etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/tinc.conf + +{{{ +Name: alpha +Device: /dev/net/tun +}}} + +The name will be used by other tinc daemons for identification. Device in here means the virtual network to bind to. Because we are going to use routing we use a tunneling device. For alpha we don't fill out a ConnectTo option, so alpha will passively listen for incoming connections. + +/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/tinc-up +{{{ +#!/bin/sh +ip link set $INTERFACE up +ip addr add 172.16.16.1/24 dev $INTERFACE +}}} + +This is a shell script executed right after the tinc daemon has been started and has connected to the virtual network device. It should be used to set up the corresponding network interface, but can also be used to start other things (as we show later for routing). $INTERFACE contains the name of our virtual network interface that the tinc daemon uses (in our case gatewayvpn). So later on, if you run tinc, it will show something like: + +{{{ +$ ifconfig gatewayvpn +gatewayvpn Link encap:UNSPEC HWaddr 00-00-00-00-00-00-00-00 +inet addr:172.16.16.1 P-t-P:172.16.16.1 Mask:255.255.255.0 +UP POINTOPOINT RUNNING NOARP MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1 +}}} + +We use an IP address in the private range: 172.16.16.0/24, but you can use any address that you like (i.e. 10.0.0.0). The /24 means the subnet in which the daemon is going to serve. Here, we assing 172.16.16.1 to alpha. + +/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/tinc-down + +{{{ +#!/bin/sh +ip addr del 172.16.16.1/24 dev $INTERFACE +ip link set $INTERFACE down +}}} + +Shell script that will be executed right before the tinc daemon is going to close its connection to the virtual network device. Similar to tinc-up, but in reverse. + +/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/hosts/alpha + +{{{ +Address = 1.2.3.4 +Port = 7999 +Subnet = 0.0.0.0/0 +}}} + +This file should be send to all the other peers (only beta in this example). We create this file here so we can automatically add a public key to this file. Since we want beta to connect to alpha we should assign the external IP and port number to it. Make sure this connection is accesible! We set the subnet to 0.0.0.0/0, you can read this as alpha serve on the whole internet (as opposed to a limiting it in a local range. If no Port option is specified, the socket will be bound to the standard port 655 of tinc. + +=== Create private keys === + +{{{ $ root@alpha tincd -n gatewayvpn --generate-keys +Generating 2048 bits keys: ........... +Done +Please enter a file to save private RSA key to [/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/rsa-key.priv]: +Please enter a file to save public RSA key to [/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/hosts/alpha]: +}}} + +Generate public/private RSA keypair. Private +key will be written to +/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/rsa-key.priv. Public key +will be written to all the files in +/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/hosts/. So after running +this command. +/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/hosts/alpha will look +like this: + +{{{ +Address = 1.2.3.4 +Port = 7999 +Subnet = 0.0.0.0/0 +-----BEGIN RSA PUBLIC KEY----- +Blabla +-----END RSA PUBLIC KEY----- +}}} + +=== Test your configuration === +Now alpha is setup. We can test our configuration as follows: + +{{{ +root@alpha:~$ tincd -n gatewayvpn --logfile /root/log +root@alpha:~$ +}}} + +The logfile should show the following output: + +{{{ +root@alpha:~# cat /root/log +2018-04-28 04:43:21 tinc.gatewayvpn[9589]: tincd 1.0.26 (Jul 5 2015 23:17:54) starting, debug level 0 +2018-04-28 04:43:21 tinc.gatewayvpn[9589]: /dev/net/tun is a Linux tun/tap device (tun mode) +2018-04-28 04:43:21 tinc.gatewayvpn[9589]: Ready +}}} + +You should also be able to ping to the tunneling device: + +{{{ +root@alpha:~$ ping 172.16.16.1 +PING 172.16.16.1 (172.16.16.1) 56(84) bytes of data. +64 bytes from 172.16.16.1: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=0.065 ms +64 bytes from 172.16.16.1: icmp_seq=2 ttl=64 time=0.060 ms +^C +--- 172.16.16.1 ping statistics --- +2 packets transmitted, 2 received, 0% packet loss, time 999ms +rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 0.060/0.062/0.065/0.008 ms +}}} + +The tinc daemon is listening on our configured port 7999: + +{{{ +root@alpha:~$ netstat -pnaut +tcp 0 0 0.0.0.0:7999 0.0.0.0: LISTEN 9828 tincd +udp 0 0 0.0.0.0:7999 0.0.0.0: 9828 tincd +}}} + +== Beta peer == + +Create config files /etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/tinc.conf + +{{{ +Name: beta +Device: /dev/net/tun +ConnectTo: alpha +}}} + +Beta will connect to alpha, for this connection beta will look in /etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/hosts/alpha and connect to this IP:PORT + +/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/tinc-up + +{{{ +#!/bin/sh +ip link set $INTERFACE up +ip addr add 172.16.16.2/24 dev $INTERFACE +}}} + +Beta will get assigned 172.16.16.2 + +/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/tinc-down + +{{{ +#!/bin/sh +ip addr del 172.16.16.2/24 dev $INTERFACE +ip link set $INTERFACE down +}}} + +/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/hosts/beta + +{{{ +Subnet = 172.16.16.2/32 +Port = 7999 +}}} + +We don't need to set a Address. No peer will actively connect to this peer. The subnet will be limited to just the the peer itself, since it is not serving in any local network. + +=== Create private keys === + +{{{ +tincd -n gatewayvpn --generate-keys +Generating 2048 bits keys: ........... +Done. +Please enter a file to save private RSA key to [/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/rsa_key.priv]: +Please enter a file to save public RSA key to [/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/hosts/beta]: +}}} + +So now you will also have created the private key file for beta. Public keys are written to files in the host directory. Note: don't forget to put /etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/hosts/beta on the alpha side and alpha on the beta side. + +{{{ +root@beta:/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/hosts$ sudo scp root@alpha:/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/hosts/alpha . +alpha 100% 481 0.5KB/s 00:00 +root@beta:/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/hosts$ sudo scp beta root@alpha:/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/hosts/ +beta 100% 463 0.5KB/s 00:00 +}}} + +=== Test your configuration === +See alpha. + +== Initial run == +Now let's see if the configuration is correct and both peers' connections are accepted. We, in a sense, have used a very verbose way to make a tunnel between two computers over the internet. + +First start alpha: + +{{{ +root@alpha:~$ +root@alpha:~$ tincd -n gatewayvpn --log-file /root/log +}}} + +Then start beta: + +{{{ +root@beta:~$ +root@beta:~$ tincd -n gatewayvpn --log-file /root/log +}}} + +Now test if you can ping! + +{{{ +root@alpha:~# ping 172.16.16.2 +PING 172.16.16.2 (172.16.16.2) 56(84) bytes of data. +64 bytes from 172.16.16.2: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=118 ms +64 bytes from 172.16.16.2: icmp_seq=2 ttl=64 time=118 ms +64 bytes from 172.16.16.2: icmp_seq=3 ttl=64 time=118 ms +root@beta:~# ping 172.16.16.1 +ping 172.16.16.1 +PING 172.16.16.1 (172.16.16.1) 56(84) bytes of data. +64 bytes from 172.16.16.1: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=118 ms +64 bytes from 172.16.16.1: icmp_seq=2 ttl=64 time=118 ms +64 bytes from 172.16.16.1: icmp_seq=3 ttl=64 time=117 ms +}}} + +== Routing gateway == +(Note: mostly copied from the tinc manual) It is possible to have one peer forward all of its network traffic to another peer on the VPN, effectively using this peer as the default gateway. This behaviour can configured in the tinc-up or tinc-down scripts. First, we explain some theory about redirecting, then the example scripts will follow. + +=== Theory === +Normally, there are two entries in the routing table. One is the route for the local network, which tells the kernel which IP addresses are directly reachable. The second is the "default gateway", which tells the kernel that in order to reach the rest of the Internet, traffic should be sent to the gateway of the local network. Usually the gateway is a router or firewall device, and its IPv4 address usually ends in .1. An example output of route -n on Linux: +{{{ +Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric Ref Use Iface +192.168.1.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U 0 0 0 eth0 +0.0.0.0 192.168.1.1 0.0.0.0 UG 0 0 0 eth0 +}}} + +Here, the LAN has the IPv4 address range 192.168.1.0/24, and the gateway is 192.168.1.1. Suppose we have a VPN with address range 172.16.16.0/24 (as in our case) on which a server (alpha in our setup) exists with address 172.16.16.1. If we have a VPN connection, and a peer wants to replace the standard default route with a default route pointing to 172.16.16.1, then there is a problem: the kernel does not know anymore how to send the encapsulated VPN packets to the server anymore. So we need to add an exception for traffic to the real (remote) IP address of the VPN server. Suppose its real address is 1.2.3.4, then the routing table should become: +{{{ +Kernel IP routing table +Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric Ref Use Iface +172.16.16.1 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.255 UH 0 0 0 gatewayvpn +1.2.3.4 192.168.1.1 255.255.255.255 UGH 0 0 0 eth0 +192.168.1.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U 0 0 0 eth0 +0.0.0.0 172.16.16.1 0.0.0.0 UG 0 0 0 gatewayvpn +}}} + +This will ensure the local LAN is reachable, that the VPN server's real IP address is reachable via the original gateway, that the VPN server's VPN IP address is reachable on the vpn interface, and that all other traffic goes via the server on the VPN. + +It is better not to remove the original default gateway route, since someone might kill the tincd process, such that it doesn't get a chance to restore the original. Instead, we use a trick where we add two /1 routes instead of one /0 route: + +{{{ +Kernel IP routing table +Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric Ref Use Iface +172.16.16.1 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.255 UH 0 0 0 gatewayvpn +1.2.3.4 192.168.1.1 255.255.255.255 UGH 0 0 0 eth0 +192.168.1.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U 0 0 0 eth0 +128.0.0.0 172.16.16.1 128.0.0.0 UG 0 0 0 gatewayvpn +0.0.0.0 172.16.16.1 128.0.0.0 UG 0 0 0 gatewayvpn +0.0.0.0 192.168.1.1 0.0.0.0 UG 0 0 0 eth0 +}}} + +Since both /1 cover all possible addresses, the real default route will never be used while the two /1 routes are present. +Scripts +To achieve this, two scripts are needed on beta. We can add the following code to the the already existing tinc-up and tinc-down files. + +/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/tinc-up + +{{{ +#!/bin/sh +VPN_GATEWAY=172.16.16.1 +REMOTEADDRESS=1.2.3.4 +ORIGINAL_GATEWAY=`ip route show | grep ^default | cut -d ' ' -f 2-5` +ip route add $REMOTEADDRESS $ORIGINAL_GATEWAY +ip route add $VPN_GATEWAY dev $INTERFACE +ip route add 0.0.0.0/1 via $VPN_GATEWAY dev $INTERFACE +ip route add 128.0.0.0/1 via $VPN_GATEWAY dev $INTERFACE +}}} + +/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/tinc-down + +{{{ +#!/bin/sh +ORIGINAL_GATEWAY=`ip route show | grep ^default | cut -d ' ' -f 2-5` +REMOTEADDRESS=1.2.3.4 +ip route del $REMOTEADDRESS $ORIGINAL_GATEWAY +ip route del $VPN_GATEWAY dev $INTERFACE +ip route del 0.0.0.0/1 dev $INTERFACE +ip route del 128.0.0.0/1 dev $INTERFACE +}}} + +These script use the iproute2 commands, because they are easier to work with. The VPNGATEWAY and REMOTEADDRESS variables have to be filled in by hand. The ORIGINALGATEWAY variable copies the relevant information from the original default route to create the exception route to the VPN server. + +== Setup firewall == +Make sure forwarding is enabled on alpha. Make sure you have masquerading or another form of routing set up on alpha. If you don't masquerade outgoing (forwarded beta) packets, the source address in in the TCP/UDP package will still remain 172.16.16.2. Please have a look here: http://www.tldp.org/LDP/nag2/x-087-2-ipmasq.html if you don't know about NAT and masquerading. +{{{ +#!/bin/sh +# iptables config line to masquerade + +echo "Enabling IPv4 forwarding" +echo 1 >/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward + +echo "Appending Masquerade rule to iptables" +iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -s 172.16.16.0/255.255.255.0 -o eth0 -j MASQUERADE +}}} + +Here I use iptables to masquerade the (-s) source address on the (-o) interface eth0. + +== Test the gateway == +Restart the daemon on alpha and beta. Use route -n to see check your routing table on beta. It should look similar to the one that is displayed above. Ping both the 172.16.16.1 and 1.2.3.4 (external address). In case of problems, trace the connections or analyze the data with tools like wireshark. + +== Troubleshooting help == +DNS request are not forwarded through the +gateway. Check your resolver config files +(/etc/resolv.conf). Debian-based systems +might have the following configuration: + +{{{ +root@beta:~$ cat /etc/resolv.conf +# resolv.conf file +nameserver 127.0.1.0 +}}} + +and in your routing table you might have the +following entry. A local / caching DNS server +might still send packages to your router. Use +wireshark to see if there are any DNS +queries, not going to the VPN gateway: + +{{{ +IP ROUTING TABLE +link-local * 255.255.0.0 U 1000 0 0 wlp7s0 +}}} + +A simple fix would to change your resolv.conf and point it to nameserver 8.8.8.8 Check your logfile while running tinc (i.e. you might forgot to create a key pair): + + +{{{ +2018-04-28 04:49:53 tinc.gatewayvpn[9684]: Error reading RSA private key file +`/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/rsa_key.priv': No such file or directory +}}} + +Overview of created files + +{{{ +root@alpha:~$ ls -R /etc/tinc/gatewayvpn +/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn: +hosts/ rsa-key.priv tinc.conf tinc-down tinc-up +/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/hosts: +alpha beta +}}} + +{{{ +root@beta:~$ ls -R /etc/tinc/gatewayvpn +/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn: +hosts/ rsa-key.priv tinc.conf tinc-down tinc-up +/etc/tinc/gatewayvpn/hosts: +alpha beta +}}} + +Use tcpdump or wireshark to analyze your network devices diff --git a/vimwiki/XMR transactions.wiki b/vimwiki/XMR transactions.wiki new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8c67e37 --- /dev/null +++ b/vimwiki/XMR transactions.wiki @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ += XMR transactions = +My webwallet: https://robinkrens.nl/xmr/webwallet.txt diff --git a/vimwiki/index.wiki b/vimwiki/index.wiki new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e5451fe --- /dev/null +++ b/vimwiki/index.wiki @@ -0,0 +1,28 @@ +%title robinkrens.nl +%date += Welcome = +Hi! I'm Rob(in), but some just know me as mr_woggle. I like simple things. Simple code and +simple servers. This website is mostly used for email, personal pages and programming +projects. +------- +== Servers and Playgrounds == +* [[Git server]] +* [[Gopher]] +* [[CRUX packages]] +* [[Status]] +* [[Mail servers]] +== Tutorials == +* [[Bypassing firewalls]] +== Projects == +* Embedded +* [[Random]] +== Personal Pages == +* [[Cams]] +* [[Raw text tweets]] +* [[TODO]] +* [[XMR transactions]] +* Hall of fame +* [[Contact]] +---- +© robinkrens.nl +