4.9 KiB
Example Configuration for direct peer to peer
- Replace
<PEER_NAME>
with a self chosen name to identify this peer - Replace
<PROTO>
with eitherudp
orudp6
, depending if you reach your remote peer with ipv4 o ipv6 - Replace
<REMOTE_HOST>
with the public ip address of your peer - Replace
<REMOTE_PORT>
with the port number, where your peer's openvpn daemon listen for traffic - Replace
<LOCAL_HOST>
with your public ip - Replace
<INTERFACE_NAME>
with a self chosen name, this will be the name of your network interface (tun device) for this peering - Replace
<LOCAL_GATEWAY_IP>
with your own dn42 ip address - Replace
<REMOTE_GATEWAY_IP>
with dn42 ip address of your peer
#/etc/openvpn/<PEER_NAME>
daemon
proto <PROTO>
mode p2p
remote <REMOTE_HOST>
rport <REMOTE_PORT>
local <LOCAL_HOST>
lport <LOCAL_PORT>
dev-type tun
dev <INTERFACE_NAME>
comp-lzo
persist-key
persist-tun
ifconfig <LOCAL_GATEWAY_IP> <REMOTE_GATEWAY_IP>
secret /etc/openvpn/<PEER_NAME>.key
# The secret can also be included inline with the config by
# wrapping it in <secret></secret> tags.
# <secret>
# ... Key File contents go here ...
# </secret>
then create a new key and share it with your peer
$ openvpn --genkey --secret /etc/openvpn/<PEER_NAME>.key
Example Configuration if one peer has a floating ip
peer with fixed ip
daemon
proto <PROTO>
mode p2p
dev-type tun
comp-lzo
dev <INTERFACE_NAME>
persist-key
persist-tun
float
port <LOCAL_PORT>
ifconfig <LOCAL_GATEWAY_IP> <REMOTE_GATEWAY_IP>
secret /etc/openvpn/<PEER_NAME>.key
peer with floating ip
- Notice the local gateway ip of your peer is your remote gateway ip and his remote gateway is your local gateway
<REMOTE_HOST>
is the ip address of your peer<REMOTE_PORT>
is openvpn port, where your peer listen for traffic
daemon
proto <PROTO>
mode p2p
remote <REMOTE_HOST>
rport <REMOTE_PORT>
lport float
dev-type tun
dev <INTERFACE_NAME>
comp-lzo
persist-key
persist-tun
ifconfig <LOCAL_GATEWAY_IP> <REMOTE_GATEWAY_IP>
secret /etc/openvpn/<PEER_NAME>.key
Example configuration for connecting roaming clients to dn42
Clients connect using certificates, and simply get attributed dn42 IPs in the order they connect. This is useful for roaming clients, where you don't really care which IP you have. Note that once a client has connected for the first time, it will keep the same IP on subsequent connections (option ifconfig-pool-persist
).
Server configuration
Replace <PORT>
with the UDP port you want OpenVPN to listen to, and change the IP ranges (ifconfig
and route-gateway
options).
mode server
tls-server
dh dh2048.pem
ca keys/ca.crt
cert keys/roaming-dn42.crt
key keys/roaming-dn42.key
client-config-dir /etc/openvpn/roaming
dev tun-roaming
persist-tun
#link-mtu
tun-mtu 1500
fragment 1300
mssfix
log /var/log/openvpn-dn42-roaming.log
status /var/log/openvpn-dn42-roaming-status.log 60
# Should work for both IPv4 and IPv6
proto udp6
port <PORT>
# IPv6
###tun-ipv6
###push tun-ipv6
###ifconfig-ipv6 2001:db8:42:42::1 2001:db8:42:42::2
###ifconfig-ipv6-pool 2001:db8:42:42::3/64
topology subnet
push "topology subnet"
keepalive 10 60
# That's 172.22.X.144/28 (172.22.X.144 to 172.22.X.159)
ifconfig 172.22.X.145 255.255.255.240
ifconfig-pool 172.22.X.146 172.22.X.158 255.255.255.240
ifconfig-pool-persist pool-persist.txt
push "route-gateway 172.22.X.145"
push "route 172.22.0.0 255.254.0.0"
###push "route 172.31.0.0 255.255.0.0"
###push "route 10.0.0.0 255.0.0.0"
Client configuration
Change <SERVER>
and <PORT>
.
client
ca ca.crt
cert myclient.crt
key myclient.key
dev tun
proto udp6
remote <SERVER> <PORT>
tun-mtu 1500
fragment 1300
mssfix
route-delay 2
nobind
persist-key
persist-tun
verb 3
Certificate management
Use easy-rsa, it's easy to use. Below is a very short description, find a real tutorial if you don't know how it works.
Build the CA: . vars
, ./build-ca
, then generate the server key: ./build-key-server roaming-dn42
.
Then, for each client, generate a private key and a certificate: ./build-key myclient
. The Common Name is the only important information (it will be used to identify the client, for instance in the logs).