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Revision as of 12:33, 9 March 2010
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Why to use OpenVPN ?
OpenVPN has been ported to various platforms, including Linux and Windows, and it's configuration is throughout likewise on each of these systems, so it makes it easier to support and maintain. Also, OpenVPN is one of the few VPN protocols that can make use of a proxy, which might be handy sometimes.
Download OpenVPN
Debian provides OpenVPN packages as part of the standard distribution, just install them by typing apt-get install openvpn.
For a server, you want additionally to install the openssl package.
For easy client access, you would want to install network-manager, network-manager-openvpn and network-manager-gnome or network-manager-kde. This is a nice gui for handling wired and wireless network connections, connections via openvpn and cisco vpn (vpnc) and ppp connections (like a regular or 3g modem for example).
RouterOS requires v3.x and you will need to install and enable the ppp package. There is one limitation to using OpenVPN on the RouterOS platform: currently only tcp is supported. udp will not work.
For Windows you probably also want the GUI, that allows you to choose and activate certain VPN configuration from a simple click in the systray. A complete package for installation of OpenVPN incl. OpenVPN GUI can be downloaded at http://www.openvpn.se/download.html .
Features
OpenVPN V2.1 Features of RouterOS V4.2
Supported
- TCP
- bridging (tap device)
- routing (tun device)
- certificates
- p2p mode (refer to OpenVPN V2.1 manual page)
Unsupported
- UDP
- LZO compression
Certificates
OpenVPN works with SSL certificates. You can either use http://cacert.org to issue these or use the easy-rsa scripts, that come with most OpenVPN distributions. On RouterOS, all you have to do is to upload them via ftp (ca certificate and router certificate and private key) and import them with /certificate import .
Creating Certificates with CAcert.org
Make sure you have created an account at CAcert.org. Login to your CAcert.org account and define your domain (Domains > Add). Note: You will need access to a root, postmaster, webmaster or other authoritive e-mail account to do this.
In RouterOS, open a New Terminal window and create a certificate request with the following command:
/certificate create-certificate-request
You will be asked a number of questions:
select name for certificate request file. it will be created after you finish entering all required information. certificate request file name: certificate-request.pem select name of private key file. if such file does not exist, it will be created later. file name: private-key.pem private key file already exists and will be overwritten if you continue. please enter passphrase that will be used to encrypt generated private key file. you must enter it twice to be sure you have not made any typing errors. passphrase: **** [IMPORTANT] verify passphrase: **** [IMPORTANT] enter number of bits for RSA key. longer keys take more time to generate. rsa key bits: 1024 [Default] now you will be asked to enter values that make up distnguished name of your certificate. you can leave some of them empty. CA may reject your certificate request if some of these values are incorrect or missing, so please check what are the requirements of your CA. enter two character coutry code. country name: [NOT IMPORTANT] enter full name of state or province. state or province name: [NOT IMPORTANT] enter locality (e.g. city) name locality name: [NOT IMPORTANT] enter name of the organization organization name: [NOT IMPORTANT] enter organizational unit name organization unit name: [NOT IMPORTANT] enter common name. for ssl web servers this must be the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of the server that will use this certificate (like www.someverysecuresitename.com) . this is checked by browsers. common name: ovpnserver.mydomain.com [IMPORTANT] enter email address email address: [NOT IMPORTANT] now you can enter challenge password. it's use depends on your CA. it may be used to revoke this certificate. challenge password: [NOT IMPORTANT] you can enter unstructured address, if your CA accepts or requires it. unstructured address: [NOT IMPORTANT] now private rsa key will be generated. no other certificate operations are possible while generating key. 4096 bit key takes about 30 seconds on Celeron 800 system to generate. you will receive log message when it is done. download by ftp from this router both private key and certificate request files. after you receive your certificate from CA, upload it and the private key that will be made now to a router and use "/certificate import" command to install it.
As you can see, the only important fields are the Passphrase and Common Name fields, everything else can be left empty or default. This howto assumes you used "server" as common name. If not, you will have to replace it also in the command for the vpn server! After a few seconds you will receive notification that the Certificate Request file was created:
echo: system,info,critical certificate request file certificate-request.pem and private key file private-key.pem created
Copy the certificate-request.pem file to your desktop and open it with Wordpad, Textpad, or any other text editor (except Notepad). Now go back to your CAcert.org account, and create a new Server Certificate (Server Certificates > New). Copy the entire contents of the certificate-request.pem file and Paste them into the "Paste Your CSR(Certificate Signing Request) below..." box on the CAcert.org site. Submit the form and if all goes well, you should be presented with a "Below is your Server Certificate" page with a bunch of text. Copy/Paste this text into a text file using Wordpad/Textpad (or anything except Notepad), and save it as certificate-response.pem. Upload this file to the router, and import it.
Now this is the tricky part... without this next part you will get the dreaded "Couldn't change OVPN Server - no certificate found (6)" error as soon as you choose the certificate in OVPN Server!
Once you have successfully imported the certificate-response.pem file and can see it listed in the Certificate list, you have to import the private-key.pem you generated earlier. Import the private key file in the same way and your certificate should get a "KR" written next to it (K: decrypted-private-key, R: RSA). Now you will be able to use this key for OVPN.
Creating Certificates with Easy-RSA
Easy-RSA is part of OpenVPN package at [[1]]. As of OpenVPN version 2.1 the usage is as follows:
Initialisation on Linux:
cd easy-rsa less README vi vars source vars ./clean-all
Create CA (Certificate Authority, required to sign client and server certificates)
./pkitool --initca
Create Server Certificate
./pkitool --pass --server RB450
Create Client Certificate
./pkitool --pass client1
Usage
Referring to easy-rsa example above upload following files via sftp to RouterBoard
RB450.crt RB450.key ca.crt
Do not upload your private ca.key !!! Now import the certificate and then its key:
/certificate import file=RB450.crt import file=RB450.key import file=ca.crt
To the clients upload
ca.crt client1.crt client1.key
Naming Linux/Windows vs. RouterOS
There are two interface types within OpenVPN, that are used.
- tun, RouterOS defines this as ip.
- tap, which is needed for bridge mode gateways. RouterOS defines this as ethernet.
A few comments
The configuation files here are fully layed out for Debian and Ubuntu. If you're using something else, you'll have to do your own research, what you need. Hope they'll give a guideline.
Server configuration
Seperate segment for VPN and destination network
RouterOS
The network configuration of your box:
/ip address add address=10.15.30.31/24 interface=ether1 comment=Lan /ip address add address=189.64.0.2/24 interface=ether2 comment=Internet /ip route add dst-address=10.0.0.0/8 gateway=10.15.30.5 comment=Wan /ip route add gateway=189.64.0.1 comment=Internet
Lan and Wan are the internal networks, Internet is obviously the Internet.
Altough it was explained here I still was confused since I didn't expect Internet on ether2.
If your router is already working and online, all you need is the first line ( /ip address add address=10.15.30.31/24 interface=ether1 comment=Lan ) and replace interface=ether1 with your Lan interface)
If NAT/masquerading is needed, this will do the job:
/ip firewall nat add chain=srcnat out-interface=ether2 action=masquerade
Define an IP pool:
/ip pool add name=ovpn-pool ranges=10.15.32.34-10.15.32.38
This pool is used for the OpenVPN clients.
Define a profile:
/ppp profile add change-tcp-mss=default comment="" local-address=10.15.32.33 \ name="your_profile" only-one=default remote-address=ovpn-pool \ use-compression=default use-encryption=required use-vj-compression=default
Add a vpn user:
/ppp secret add caller-id="" comment="" disabled=no limit-bytes-in=0 \ limit-bytes-out=0 name="username" password="password" \ routes="" service=any
Some might want to set service to ovpn to allow connection by this username only to openvpn server, not pppoe or pptp.
OpenVPN server configuration:
/interface ovpn-server server set auth=sha1,md5 certificate=router_cert \ cipher=blowfish128,aes128,aes192,aes256 default-profile=your_profile \ enabled=yes keepalive-timeout=disabled max-mtu=1500 mode=ip netmask=29 \ port=1194 require-client-certificate=no
Firewall
If you have a firewall defined, that denies access, you would want to allow access to OpenVPN:
/ip firewall filter add action=accept chain=input comment="OpenVPN" disabled=no dst-port=1194 protocol=tcp
Default Route
I haven't figured out, how to redistribute the default route from the OpenVPN server, so you'll have to add it yourself on the client by specifying the add-default-route option (if you have a RouterOS client).
If you have a Linux or a Windows client, you can use the route-up dyrective. Place it on your OpenVPN configuration (client) file with a command in append, and OpenVPN will execute it when the default route comes up.
For example, if you want to add a static route for 192.168.0.0 (obviously this net are on the remote side) through your OpenVPN gateway (IP 10.15.30.31), you have to add for Linux:
route-up "route add -net 192.168.0.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 10.15.30.31"
or, for Windows:
route-up "route add 192.168.0.0 mask 255.255.255.0 10.15.30.31"
Linux
/etc/network/interfaces:
iface eth0 inet static address 10.15.30.31 netmask 255.255.255.0 network 10.15.30.0 broadcast 10.15.30.255 up /sbin/route add -net 10.0.0.0 netmask 255.0.0.0 gw 10.15.30.5 # iface eth1 inet static address 189.64.15.2 netmask 255.255.255.0 gateway 189.64.15.1 up echo "1" > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
eth0 is the network, that we want to get access to. eth1 is our outside interface.
/etc/openvpn/gw.conf:
port 1194 proto tcp dev tun ca keys/ca.crt cert keys/vpngate.crt key keys/vpngate.key dh keys/dh1024.pem server 10.15.32.32 255.255.255.224 ifconfig-pool-persist ipp.txt keepalive 10 120 cipher none #comp-lzo user nobody group nogroup persist-key persist-tun status /var/log/openvpn/vpngate-status.log verb 3
If you want to push a route to the client, this can be added:
push "route 10.0.0.0 255.0.0.0 10.15.32.33"
For a default gw to the client, usually, this is added:
push "redirect-gateway"
With RouterOS, this has no effect, whatsover, so if you want to push the default route from the server, please add:
push "route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 10.15.32.33"
And to tell the client, what DNS servers to use, this will do the job:
push "dhcp-option DNS 10.15.15.10" push "dhcp-option DNS 10.15.30.10"
Bridge mode
RouterOS
Create the bridge
/interface bridge add name=vpn-bridge /interface bridge port add interface=ether1 bridge=vpn-bridge
The network configuration of your box:
/ip address add address=10.15.30.31/24 interface=vpn-bridge comment=Lan /ip address add address=189.64.0.2/24 interface=ether2 comment=Internet /ip route add dst-address=10.0.0.0/8 gateway=10.15.30.5 comment=Wan /ip route add gateway=189.64.0.1 comment=Internet
Lan and Wan are the internal networks, Internet is obviously the Internet.
If NAT/masquerading is needed, this will do the job:
/ip firewall nat add chain=srcnat out-interface=ether2 action=masquerade
Define an IP pool:
/ip pool add name=ovpn-pool ranges=10.15.30.32-10.15.30.40
This pool is used for the OpenVPN clients.
Define a profile:
/ppp profile add change-tcp-mss=default comment="" bridge=vpn-bridge \ name="your_profile" only-one=default remote-address=ovpn-pool \ use-compression=default use-encryption=required use-vj-compression=default
Add a vpn user:
/ppp secret add caller-id="" comment="" disabled=no limit-bytes-in=0 \ limit-bytes-out=0 name="username" password="password" \ routes="" service=any
OpenVPN server configuration:
/interface ovpn-server server set auth=sha1,md5 certificate=router_cert \ cipher=blowfish128,aes128,aes192,aes256 default-profile=your_profile \ enabled=yes keepalive-timeout=disabled max-mtu=1500 mode=ethernet netmask=24 \ port=1194 require-client-certificate=no
Before using require-client-certificate option, CA and correct server/client certificate must be imported to both OpenVpn server and client.
OpenVPN server Instance
At the moment, it looks like, that even though we've specified the vpn-bridge in the profile, RouterOS does not honour that fact. So we need to add a OpenVPN server Instance ourselfes for each user and add it to the bridge. (Not required after RC11).
/interface ovpn-server add name=ovpn-username user=username /interface bridge port add interface=ovpn-username bridge=vpn-bridge
This will result in, that the dynamically created openvpn server instance automatically get's assigned to this interface and thus the bridge.
Firewall
If you have a firewall defined, that denies access, you would want to allow access to OpenVPN:
/ip firewall filter add action=accept chain=input comment="OpenVPN" disabled=no dst-port=1194 protocol=tcp
Default Route
I haven't figured out, how to redistribute the default route from the OpenVPN server, so you'll have to add it yourself on the client by specifying the add-default-route option (if you have a RouterOS client).
If you have a Linux or a Windows client, you can use the route-up dyrective. Place it on your OpenVPN configuration (client) file with a command in append, and OpenVPN will execute it when the default route comes up.
For example, if you want to add a static route for 192.168.0.0 (obviously this net are on the remote side) through your OpenVPN gateway (IP 10.15.30.31), you have to add for Linux:
route-up "route add -net 192.168.0.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 10.15.30.31"
or, for Windows:
route-up "route add 192.168.0.0 mask 255.255.255.0 10.15.30.31"
Linux
Packages
These packages are needed: openvpn bridge-utils openssl
Configuration
The configuration bits here are needed to set up a bridged gateway.
/etc/network/interfaces:
auto eth0 eth1 br0
# WAN interface iface eth0 inet static address 10.15.30.31 netmask 255.255.255.0 network 10.15.30.0 broadcast 10.15.30.255 post-up route add -net 10.0.0.0/8 gw 10.15.30.5
# Internet interface iface eth1 inet static address 189.64.15.2 netmask 255.255.255.252 gateway 189.64.15.1 dns-nameservers 195.222.111.222 80.190.248.148 91.189.64.189 pre-up echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward up /sbin/iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o $IFACE -j MASQUERADE down /sbin/iptables -t nat -F post-down echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
# OpenVPN interface iface br0 inet manual up openvpn --mktun --dev tap0 up ifconfig eth0 0.0.0.0 promisc up up ifconfig tap0 0.0.0.0 promisc up up brctl addbr br0 up brctl setfd br0 0 up brctl stp br0 off up brctl addif br0 eth0 up brctl addif br0 tap0 up ifconfig br0 10.15.30.31 netmask 255.255.255.0 up up route add -net 10.0.0.0/8 gw 10.15.30.5 down ifconfig br0 down down brctl delif br0 tap0 down brctl delif br0 eth0 down brctl delbr br0 down openvpn --rmtun --dev tap0 down ifconfig eth0 10.15.30.31 netmask 255.255.255.0 broadcast 10.15.30.255 network 10.15.30.0 down route add -net 10.0.0.0/8 gw 10.15.30.5
/etc/openvpn/bridge-gw.conf
port 1194 proto udp dev tap0 ca keys/ca.crt cert keys/bridge-gw.crt key keys/bridge-gw.key dh keys/dh1024.pem ifconfig-pool-persist ipp.txt server-bridge 10.15.30.31 255.255.255.0 10.15.30.100 10.15.30.119 keepalive 10 120 user nobody group nogroup persist-key persist-tun status openvpn-status-gw.log verb 3
If you want to push a route to the client, this can be added:
push "route 10.0.0.0 255.0.0.0 10.15.30.5"
For a default gw to the client, usually, this is added:
push "redirect-gateway"
With RouterOS, this has no effect, whatsover, so if you want to push the default route from the server, please add:
push "route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 10.15.32.33"
And to tell the client, what DNS servers to use, this will do the job:
push "dhcp-option DNS 10.15.15.10" push "dhcp-option DNS 10.15.30.10"
Client configuration
RouterOS
client of a routed server (tun)
/interface ovpn-client \ add name="ovpn-out1" connect-to=189.64.0.1 port=1194 mode=ip user="username" password="password" profile=default \ certificate=vpngate-client cipher=aes256 add-default-route=no
client of a bridged server (tap)
/interface ovpn-client \ add name="ovpn-out1" connect-to=189.64.0.1 port=1194 mode=ethernet user="username" password="password" profile=default \ certificate=vpngate-client cipher=aes256 add-default-route=no
Linux
client of a routed server (tun)
dev tun proto tcp-client remote openvpn.example.com 1194 # Remote OpenVPN Servername or IP address ca keys/ca.crt cert keys/client.crt key keys/client.key tls-client port 1194 user nobody group nogroup #comp-lzo # Do not use compression. It doesn't work with RouterOS (at least up to RouterOS 3.0rc9) # More reliable detection when a system loses its connection. ping 15 ping-restart 45 ping-timer-rem persist-tun persist-key # Silence the output of replay warnings, which are a common false # alarm on WiFi networks. This option preserves the security of # the replay protection code without the verbosity associated with # warnings about duplicate packets. mute-replay-warnings # Verbosity level. # 0 = quiet, 1 = mostly quiet, 3 = medium output, 9 = verbose verb 3 cipher AES-256-CBC auth SHA1 pull auth-user-pass auth.cfg
The file auth.cfg holds your username/password combination. On the first line must be the username and on the second line your password.
username password
client of a bridged server (tap)
Please replace dev tun with dev tap. Otherwise the configuration on the bridged client is exactly the same as the routed client.
Windows
client of a bridged server (tap)
proto tcp-client remote openvpn.example.com 1194 # Remote OpenVPN Servername or IP address dev tap nobind persist-key tls-client ca ca.crt # Root certificate in the same directory as this configuration file. cert keys/client.crt key keys/client.key
ping 10 verb 3 cipher AES-256-CBC auth SHA1 pull auth-user-pass auth.cfg
The file auth.cfg holds your username/password combination. On the first line must be the username and on the second line your password.
username password
Alternatively, if you don't specify the filename the client will prompt for the details.
Additional tweaks
Disable encryption
If you just want to use OpenVPN for providing people with access to the internet through the WAN, encryption just adds overhead to the traffic. In this case it really isn't needed and would just affect the bandwidth available in the WAN.
Add this to your configuration:
cipher none
This should be done both on server and clients. It disables the encryption and leaves you with a plain, unencrypted ip tunnel.
For a RouterOS client, the syntax is:
/interface ovpn-client set <interface-name> auth=sha1 cipher=none
For a RouterOS server, the syntax is:
/interface ovpn-server server set <interface-name> auth=sha1 cipher=none
Note that this is currently not working (ROS 3.29 - 'none' is not a valid value for cipher!!)
Date & Time (certificate validity) - IMPORTANT
Don't forget to correctly set time and date on client and server. If possible, i suggest to use ntp to keep time in sync.
If time and date is not set correctly, certificates can be invalid. On RouterOS, openvpn will not connect, and you get just following lines in log, which are not very helpfull:
server (RouterOS)
... to be added ...
client (RouterOS)
... to be added ...