Setup of DMVPN on Alpine linux: Difference between revisions
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{{note|The certificate given with --cacert must be either a CA certificate or a certificate with the crlSign extended key usage (--flag crlSign).}} | {{note|The certificate given with --cacert must be either a CA certificate or a certificate with the crlSign extended key usage (--flag crlSign).}} | ||
Install certificates | |||
On each peer store the following certificates and keys in the /etc/ipsec.d/ subdirectory tree: | |||
{{cmd|/etc/ipsec.d/private/peerKey.der holds the private key of the given peer. | |||
/etc/ipsec.d/certs/peerCert.der holds the end entity certificate of the given peer. | |||
/etc/ipsec.d/cacerts/caCert.der holds the CA certificate which issued and signed all peer certificates.}} | |||
Never store the private key caKey.der of the Certification Authority (CA) on a host with constant direct access to the Internet (e.g. a VPN gateway), since a theft of this master signing key will completely compromise your PKI. | |||
Optionally, the CRL may be stored in the following directory (if the certificate contains an URL to a CRL, it will be fetched on demand): | |||
/etc/ipsec.d/crls/crl.der holds the CRL signed by the CA (or a certificate containing the crlSign EKU). |
Revision as of 14:39, 30 October 2015
Setting up mGRE tunnel
We start by adding mGRE tunnels to our network configuration.
Contents of /etc/networking/interfaces
Setting up IPSec VPN
To encrypt this tunnel, and the traffic in it, we will use ipsec. for ipsec we will use strongswan which has the vici plugin, see: The vici plugin provides VICI, the Versatile IKE Configuration Interface. As its name indicates, it provides an interface for external applications to not only configure, but also to control and monitor the IKE daemon charon. for this we also need a modified version of strongswan, provided by fabled.
apk add strongswan
Contents of /etc/swanctl/swanctl.conf
Generate PKI certificates
First, generate a private key, the default generates a 2048 bit RSA key
ipsec pki --gen > caKey.der
Now self-sign a CA certificate using the generated key:
ipsec pki --self --in caKey.der --dn "C=CH, O=strongSwan, CN=strongSwan CA" --ca > caCert.der
Adjust the distinguished name (DN) to your needs, it will be included in all issued certificates.
For each peer, i.e. for all VPN clients and VPN gateways in your network, generate an individual private key and issue a matching certificate using your new CA:
ipsec pki --gen > peerKey.der ipsec pki --pub --in peerKey.der
In case end entity certificates have to be revoked, Certificate Revocation Lists (CRLs) may be generated with the ipsec pki --signcrl command:
ipsec pki --signcrl --cacert caCert.der --cakey caKey.der --reason superseded --cert peerCert.der > crl.der
Install certificates On each peer store the following certificates and keys in the /etc/ipsec.d/ subdirectory tree:
/etc/ipsec.d/private/peerKey.der holds the private key of the given peer. /etc/ipsec.d/certs/peerCert.der holds the end entity certificate of the given peer. /etc/ipsec.d/cacerts/caCert.der holds the CA certificate which issued and signed all peer certificates.
Never store the private key caKey.der of the Certification Authority (CA) on a host with constant direct access to the Internet (e.g. a VPN gateway), since a theft of this master signing key will completely compromise your PKI.
Optionally, the CRL may be stored in the following directory (if the certificate contains an URL to a CRL, it will be fetched on demand):
/etc/ipsec.d/crls/crl.der holds the CRL signed by the CA (or a certificate containing the crlSign EKU).