1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
|
.. _installation:
############
Installation
############
VyOS installation requires a downloaded VyOS .iso file. That file is
a live install image that lets you boot a live VyOS. From the live
system, you can proceed to a permanent installation on a hard drive or
any other type of storage.
.. table:: Comparison of VyOS image releases
+--------------+---------------------------------------------------+-------------------+---------------------------------------+-----------------------+------------------+
| Release Type | Description | Release Cycle | Intended Use | Access to Images | Access to Source |
+==============+===================================================+===================+=======================================+=======================+==================+
| **Nightly | Automatically built from the current branch. | Every night | Developing VyOS, testing new | Everyone | Everyone |
| (Current)** | Always up to date with cutting edge development | | features, experimenting. | | |
| | but guaranteed to contain bugs. | | | | |
+--------------+---------------------------------------------------+-------------------+---------------------------------------+-----------------------+------------------+
| **Nightly | Automatically built from the development branch | Every night | Developing and testing the latest | Everyone | Everyone |
| (Beta)** | and released alongside snapshots. Most likely | | major version under development. | | |
| | contains bugs. | | | | |
+--------------+---------------------------------------------------+-------------------+---------------------------------------+-----------------------+------------------+
| **Snapshot** | A particularly stable release frozen from nightly | Every month until | Home labs and simple networks that | Everyone | Everyone |
| | each month after manual testing. Still contains | RC comes out | call for new features. | | |
| | experimental code. | | | | |
+--------------+---------------------------------------------------+-------------------+---------------------------------------+-----------------------+------------------+
| **Release | Rather stable. All development focuses on testing | Irregularly until | Labs, small offices and non-critical | Everyone | Everyone |
| Candidate** | and hunting down remaining bugs following the | EPA comes out | production systems backed by a | | |
| | feature freeze. | | high-availability setup. | | |
+--------------+---------------------------------------------------+-------------------+---------------------------------------+-----------------------+------------------+
| **Early | Highly stable with no known bugs. Needs to be | Irregularly until | Non-critical production environments, | Everyone | Everyone |
| Production | tested repeatedly under different conditions | LTS comes out | preparing for the LTS release. | | |
| Access** | before it can become the final release. | | | | |
+--------------+---------------------------------------------------+-------------------+---------------------------------------+-----------------------+------------------+
| **Long-Term | Guaranteed to be stable and carefully maintained | Every major | Large-scale enterprise networks, | Subscribers, | Everyone |
| Support** | for several years after the release. No features | version | internet service providers, | contributors, | |
| | are introduced but security updates are released | | critical production environments | non-profits, | |
| | in a timely manner. | | that call for minimum downtime. | emergency services, | |
| | | | | academic institutions | |
+--------------+---------------------------------------------------+-------------------+---------------------------------------+-----------------------+------------------+
Hardware requirements
=====================
The minimum system requirements are 512 MiB RAM and 2 GiB storage.
Depending on your use, you might need additional RAM and CPU resources e.g.
when having multiple BGP full tables in your system.
Download
========
Registered Subscribers
----------------------
Registered subscribers can log into https://support.vyos.io/ to access a
variety of different downloads via the "Downloads" link. These downloads
include LTS (Long-Term Support), the associated hot-fix releases, early public
access releases, pre-built VM images, as well as device specific installation
ISOs.
.. figure:: /_static/images/vyos-downloads.png
Building from source
--------------------
Non-subscribers can always get the LTS release by building it from source.
Instructions can be found in the :ref:`build` section of this manual. VyOS
source code repository is available for everyone at
https://github.com/vyos/vyos-build.
Rolling Release
---------------
Everyone can download bleeding-edge VyOS rolling images from:
https://downloads.vyos.io/
.. note:: Rolling releases contain all the latest enhancements and fixes. This
means that there will be new bugs of course. If you think you hit a bug
please follow the guide at :ref:`bug_report`. We depend on your feedback
to improve vyOS!
The following link will always fetch the most recent VyOS build for AMD64
systems from the current branch:
https://downloads.vyos.io/rolling/current/amd64/vyos-rolling-latest.iso
Download Verification
---------------------
LTS images are signed by the VyOS lead package-maintainer private key. With
the official public key, the authenticity of the package can be
verified. :abbr:`GPG (GNU Privacy Guard)` is used for verification.
.. note:: This subsection only applies to LTS images, for
Rolling images please jump to :ref:`live_installation`.
Preparing for the verification
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
First, install GPG or another OpenPGP implementation. On most GNU+Linux
distributions it is installed by default as package managers use it to
verify package signatures. If not pre-installed, it will need to be
downloaded and installed.
The official VyOS public key can be retrieved in a number of ways. Skip
to :ref:`gpg-verification` if the key is already present.
It can be retrieved directly from a key server:
``gpg --recv-keys FD220285A0FE6D7E``
Or it can be accessed via a web browser:
https://pgp.mit.edu/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0xFD220285A0FE6D7E
Or from the following block:
.. code-block:: none
-----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
Version: GnuPG v1.4.12 (GNU/Linux)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=Ld8S
-----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
Store the key in a new text file and import it into GPG via: ``gpg --import
file_with_the_public_key``
The import can be verified with:
.. code-block:: none
$ gpg --list-keys
...
pub rsa4096 2015-08-12 [SC]
0694A9230F5139BF834BA458FD220285A0FE6D7E
uid [ unknown] VyOS Maintainers (VyOS Release) <maintainers@vyos.net>
sub rsa4096 2015-08-12 [E]
.. _gpg-verification:
GPG verification
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
With the public key imported, the signature for the desired image needs
to be downloaded.
.. note:: The signature can be downloaded by appending `.asc` to the URL of the
downloaded VyOS image. That small *.asc* file is the signature for the
associated image.
Finally, verify the authenticity of the downloaded image:
.. code-block:: none
$ gpg2 --verify vyos-1.2.1-amd64.iso.asc vyos-1.2.1-amd64.iso
gpg: Signature made So 14 Apr 12:58:07 2019 CEST
gpg: using RSA key FD220285A0FE6D7E
gpg: Good signature from "VyOS Maintainers (VyOS Release) <maintainers@vyos.net>" [unknown]
Primary key fingerprint: 0694 A923 0F51 39BF 834B A458 FD22 0285 A0FE 6D7E
.. _minisign-verification:
Minisign verification
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Currently we are using GPG for release signing (pretty much like everyone else).
Popularity of GPG for release signing comes from the fact that many people
already had it installed for email encryption/signing. Inside a VyOS image,
signature checking is the only reason to have it installed. However, it still
comes with all the features no one needs, such as support for multiple outdated
cipher suits and ability to embed a photo in the key file. More importantly,
web of trust, the basic premise of PGP, is never used in release signing
context. Once you have a knowingly authentic image, authenticity of upgrades is
checked using a key that comes in the image, and to get their first image people
never rely on keyservers either.
Another point is that we are using RSA now, which requires absurdly large keys
to be secure.
In 2015, OpenBSD introduced signify. An alternative implementation of the same
protocol is minisign, which is also available for Windows and macOS, and in most
GNU/Linux distros it's in the repositories now.
Its installed size (complete with libsodium) is less than that of GPG binary
alone (not including libgcrypt and some other libs, which I think we only use
for GPG). Since it uses elliptic curves, it gets away with much smaller keys,
and it doesn't include as much metadata to begin with.
Another issue of GPG is that it creates a /root/.gnupg directory just for
release checking. The dir is small so the fact that it's never used again is
an aesthetic problem, but we've had that process fail in the past. But, small
key size of the Ed25519 algorithm allows passing public keys in command line
arguments, so verification process can be completely stateless:
:vytask:`T2180` switched the validation system to prefer minisign over GPG keys.
To verify a VyOS image starting off with VyOS 1.3.0-rc6 you can run:
.. code-block:: none
$ minisign -V -P RWTR1ty93Oyontk6caB9WqmiQC4fgeyd/ejgRxCRGd2MQej7nqebHneP -m vyos-1.3.0-rc6-amd64.iso vyos-1.3.0-rc6-amd64.iso.minisig
Signature and comment signature verified
Trusted comment: timestamp:1629997936 file:vyos-1.3.0-rc6-amd64.iso
During an image upgrade VyOS performas the following command:
.. code-block:: none
$ minisign -V -p /usr/share/vyos/keys/vyos-release.minisign.pub -m vyos-1.3.0-rc6-amd64.iso vyos-1.3.0-rc6-amd64.iso.minisig
Signature and comment signature verified
Trusted comment: timestamp:1629997936 file:vyos-1.3.0-rc6-amd64.iso
.. _live_installation:
Live installation
=================
.. note:: A permanent VyOS installation always requires to go first
through a live installation.
VyOS, as other GNU+Linux distributions, can be tested without installing
it in your hard drive. **With your downloaded VyOS .iso file you can
create a bootable USB drive that will let you boot into a fully
functional VyOS system**. Once you have tested it, you can either decide
to begin a :ref:`permanent_installation` in your hard drive or power
your system off, remove the USB drive, and leave everything as it was.
If you have a GNU+Linux system, you can create your VyOS bootable USB
stick with with the ``dd`` command:
1. Open your terminal emulator.
2. Find out the device name of your USB drive (you can use the ``lsblk``
command)
3. Unmount the USB drive. Replace X in the example below with the
letter of your device and keep the asterisk (wildcard) to unmount
all partitions.
.. code-block:: none
$ umount /dev/sdX*
4. Write the image (your VyOS .iso file) to the USB drive.
Note that here you want to use the device name (e.g. /dev/sdb), not
the partition name (e.g. /dev/sdb1).
**Warning**: This will destroy all data on the USB drive!
.. code-block:: none
# dd if=/path/to/vyos.iso of=/dev/sdX bs=8M; sync
5. Wait until you get the outcome (bytes copied). Be patient, in some
computers it might take more than one minute.
6. Once ``dd`` has finished, pull the USB drive out and plug it into
the powered-off computer where you want to install (or test) VyOS.
7. Power the computer on, making sure it boots from the USB drive (you
might need to select booting device or change booting settings).
8. Once VyOS is completely loaded, enter the default credentials
(login: vyos, password: vyos).
If you find difficulties with this method, prefer to use a GUI program,
or have a different operating system, there are other programs you can
use to create a bootable USB drive, like balenaEtcher_ (for GNU/Linux,
macOS and Windows), Rufus_ (for Windows) and `many others`_. You can
follow their instructions to create a bootable USB drive from an .iso
file.
.. hint:: The default username and password for the live system is *vyos*.
.. _permanent_installation:
Permanent installation
======================
.. note:: Before a permanent installation, VyOS requires a
:ref:`live_installation`.
Unlike general purpose Linux distributions, VyOS uses "image installation" that
mimics the user experience of traditional hardware routers and allows keeping
multiple VyOS versions installed simultaneously. This makes it possible to
switch to a previous version if something breaks or miss-behaves after an image
upgrade.
Every version is contained in its own squashfs image that is mounted in a union
filesystem together with a directory for mutable data such as configurations,
keys, or custom scripts.
.. note:: Older versions (prior to VyOS 1.1) used to support non-image
installation (``install system`` command). Support for this has been removed
from VyOS 1.2 and newer releases. Older releases can still be upgraded via
the general ``add system image <image_path>`` upgrade command (consult
:ref:`image-mgmt` for further information).
In order to proceed with a permanent installation:
1. Log into the VyOS live system (use the default credentials: vyos,
vyos)
2. Run the ``install image`` command and follow the wizard:
.. code-block:: none
vyos@vyos:~$ install image
Welcome to the VyOS install program. This script
will walk you through the process of installing the
VyOS image to a local hard drive.
Would you like to continue? (Yes/No) [Yes]: Yes
Probing drives: OK
Looking for pre-existing RAID groups...none found.
The VyOS image will require a minimum 2000MB root.
Would you like me to try to partition a drive automatically
or would you rather partition it manually with parted? If
you have already setup your partitions, you may skip this step
Partition (Auto/Parted/Skip) [Auto]:
I found the following drives on your system:
sda 4294MB
Install the image on? [sda]:
This will destroy all data on /dev/sda.
Continue? (Yes/No) [No]: Yes
How big of a root partition should I create? (2000MB - 4294MB) [4294]MB:
Creating filesystem on /dev/sda1: OK
Done!
Mounting /dev/sda1...
What would you like to name this image? [1.2.0-rolling+201809210337]:
OK. This image will be named: 1.2.0-rolling+201809210337
Copying squashfs image...
Copying kernel and initrd images...
Done!
I found the following configuration files:
/opt/vyatta/etc/config.boot.default
Which one should I copy to sda? [/opt/vyatta/etc/config.boot.default]:
Copying /opt/vyatta/etc/config.boot.default to sda.
Enter password for administrator account
Enter password for user 'vyos':
Retype password for user 'vyos':
I need to install the GRUB boot loader.
I found the following drives on your system:
sda 4294MB
Which drive should GRUB modify the boot partition on? [sda]:
Setting up grub: OK
Done!
3. After the installation is completed, remove the live USB stick or
CD.
4. Reboot the system.
.. code-block:: none
vyos@vyos:~$ reboot
Proceed with reboot? (Yes/No) [No] Yes
You will boot now into a permanent VyOS system.
PXE Boot
========
VyOS can also be installed through PXE. This is a more complex
installation method that allows deploying VyOS through the network.
**Requirements**
* Clients (where VyOS is to be installed) with a PXE-enabled NIC
* :ref:`dhcp-server`
* :ref:`tftp-server`
* Webserver (HTTP) - optional, but we will use it to speed up installation
* VyOS ISO image to be installed (do not use images prior to VyOS 1.2.3)
* Files *pxelinux.0* and *ldlinux.c32* `from the Syslinux distribution
<https://kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/boot/syslinux/>`_
Configuration
-------------
Step 1: DHCP
^^^^^^^^^^^^
Configure a DHCP server to provide the client with:
* An IP address
* The TFTP server address (DHCP option 66). Sometimes referred as *boot server*
* The *bootfile name* (DHCP option 67), which is *pxelinux.0*
In this example we configured an existent VyOS as the DHCP server:
.. code-block:: none
vyos@vyos# show service dhcp-server
shared-network-name mydhcp {
subnet 192.168.1.0/24 {
bootfile-name pxelinux.0
bootfile-server 192.168.1.50
default-router 192.168.1.50
range 0 {
start 192.168.1.70
stop 192.168.1.100
}
}
}
.. _install_from_tftp:
Step 2: TFTP
^^^^^^^^^^^^
Configure a TFTP server so that it serves the following:
* The *pxelinux.0* file from the Syslinux distribution
* The *ldlinux.c32* file from the Syslinux distribution
* The kernel of the VyOS software you want to deploy. That is the
*vmlinuz* file inside the */live* directory of the extracted
contents from the ISO file.
* The initial ramdisk of the VyOS ISO you want to deploy. That is the
*initrd.img* file inside the */live* directory of the extracted
contents from the ISO file. Do not use an empty (0 bytes) initrd.img
file you might find, the correct file may have a longer name.
* A directory named pxelinux.cfg which must contain the configuration
file. We will use the configuration_ file shown below, which we named
default_.
In the example we configured our existent VyOS as the TFTP server too:
.. code-block:: none
vyos@vyos# show service tftp-server
directory /config/tftpboot
listen-address 192.168.1.50
Example of the contents of the TFTP server:
.. code-block:: none
vyos@vyos# ls -hal /config/tftpboot/
total 29M
drwxr-sr-x 3 tftp tftp 4.0K Oct 14 00:23 .
drwxrwsr-x 9 root vyattacfg 4.0K Oct 18 00:05 ..
-r--r--r-- 1 root vyattacfg 25M Oct 13 23:24 initrd.img-4.19.54-amd64-vyos
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root vyattacfg 120K Oct 13 23:44 ldlinux.c32
-rw-r--r-- 1 root vyattacfg 46K Oct 13 23:24 pxelinux.0
drwxr-xr-x 2 root vyattacfg 4.0K Oct 14 01:10 pxelinux.cfg
-r--r--r-- 1 root vyattacfg 3.7M Oct 13 23:24 vmlinuz
vyos@vyos# ls -hal /config/tftpboot/pxelinux.cfg
total 12K
drwxr-xr-x 2 root vyattacfg 4.0K Oct 14 01:10 .
drwxr-sr-x 3 tftp tftp 4.0K Oct 14 00:23 ..
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 191 Oct 14 01:10 default
Example of simple (no menu) configuration file:
.. code-block:: none
vyos@vyos# cat /config/tftpboot/pxelinux.cfg/default
DEFAULT VyOS123
LABEL VyOS123
KERNEL vmlinuz
APPEND initrd=initrd.img-4.19.54-amd64-vyos boot=live nopersistence noautologin nonetworking fetch=http://address:8000/filesystem.squashfs
Step 3: HTTP
^^^^^^^^^^^^
We also need to provide the *filesystem.squashfs* file. That is a heavy
file and TFTP is slow, so you could send it through HTTP to speed up the
transfer. That is how it is done in our example, you can find that in
the configuration file above.
**First** run a web server - you can use a simple one like
`Python's SimpleHTTPServer`_ and start serving the `filesystem.squashfs`
file. The file can be found inside the `/live` directory of the
extracted contents of the ISO file.
**Second**, edit the configuration file of the :ref:`install_from_tftp`
so that it shows the correct URL at
``fetch=http://<address_of_your_HTTP_server>/filesystem.squashfs``.
.. note:: Do not change the name of the *filesystem.squashfs* file. If
you are working with different versions, you can create different
directories instead.
And **third**, restart the TFTP service. If you are using VyOS as your
TFTP Server, you can restart the service with
``sudo service tftpd-hpa restart``.
.. note:: Make sure the available directories and files in both TFTP
and HTTP server have the right permissions to be accessed from the
booting clients.
Client Boot
-----------
Finally, turn on your PXE-enabled client or clients. They will
automatically get an IP address from the DHCP server and start booting
into VyOS live from the files automatically taken from the TFTP and HTTP
servers.
Once finished you will be able to proceed with the ``install image``
command as in a regular VyOS installation.
Known Issues
============
This is a list of known issues that can arise during installation.
Black screen on install
-----------------------
GRUB attempts to redirect all output to a serial port for ease of installation
on headless hosts. This appears to cause an hard lockup on some hardware that
lacks a serial port, with the result being a black screen after selecting the
`Live system` option from the installation image.
The workaround is to type `e` when the boot menu appears and edit the GRUB boot
options. Specifically, remove the:
`console=ttyS0,115200`
option, and type CTRL-X to boot.
Installation can then continue as outlined above.
.. stop_vyoslinter
.. _SYSLINUX: http://www.syslinux.org/
.. _balenaEtcher: https://www.balena.io/etcher/
.. _Rufus: https://rufus.ie/
.. _many others: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tools_to_create_Live_USB_systems
.. _configuration: https://wiki.syslinux.org/wiki/index.php?title=Config
.. _default: https://wiki.syslinux.org/wiki/index.php?title=PXELINUX#Configuration
.. _`Python's SimpleHTTPServer`: https://docs.python.org/2/library/simplehttpserver.html
.. start_vyoslinter
|