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author | Christian Poessinger <christian@poessinger.com> | 2019-12-21 18:25:46 +0100 |
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committer | Christian Poessinger <christian@poessinger.com> | 2019-12-21 18:25:46 +0100 |
commit | a8409f1eb630b85f18722dfc101605590516aed8 (patch) | |
tree | 97c6ccc7acba0600a0b22a1c616101491078cfd2 /docs | |
parent | 32652cce15d200363c0dbaf5d2c6c41621f51e73 (diff) | |
download | vyos-documentation-a8409f1eb630b85f18722dfc101605590516aed8.tar.gz vyos-documentation-a8409f1eb630b85f18722dfc101605590516aed8.zip |
quick-start: rewrite entire chapter
Diffstat (limited to 'docs')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/nat.rst | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/quick-start.rst | 151 |
2 files changed, 82 insertions, 71 deletions
diff --git a/docs/nat.rst b/docs/nat.rst index 714697d3..f2c89a71 100644 --- a/docs/nat.rst +++ b/docs/nat.rst @@ -3,6 +3,8 @@ NAT === +.. _source-nat: + Source NAT ---------- diff --git a/docs/quick-start.rst b/docs/quick-start.rst index ad0d896f..b1295790 100644 --- a/docs/quick-start.rst +++ b/docs/quick-start.rst @@ -4,17 +4,46 @@ Quick Start ########### -Below is a very basic configuration example that will provide a NAT gateway -for a device with two interfaces. +This chapter will guide you on how to get up to speed using your new VyOS +system. It will show you a very basic configuration example that will provide +a :ref:`nat` gateway for a device with two network interfaces (`eth0` and +`eth1`). -Enter configuration mode: +.. _quick-start-configuration-mode: + +Configuration Mode +################## .. code-block:: none vyos@vyos$ configure vyos@vyos# -Configure network interfaces: +Commit and Save +################ + +After every configuration change you need to apply the changes by using the + +.. code-block:: none + + commit + +Once your configuration works as expected you can save it permanently. + +.. code-block:: none + + save + +Network Interface Configuration +############################### + +* Your outside/WAN interface will be `eth0`, it receives it's interface address + be means of DHCP. +* Your internal/LAN interface is `eth1`. It uses a fixed IP address of + `192.168.0.1/24`. + +After switching to :ref:`quick-start-configuration-mode` issue the following +commands: .. code-block:: none @@ -23,14 +52,30 @@ Configure network interfaces: set interfaces ethernet eth1 address '192.168.0.1/24' set interfaces ethernet eth1 description 'INSIDE' -Enable SSH for remote management: +Enable Management via SSH +######################### + +After switching to :ref:`quick-start-configuration-mode` issue the following +commands, and your system will listen on every interface for incoming SSH +connections. You might want to check the :ref:`ssh` chapter on how to listen +on specific addresses only. .. code-block:: none set service ssh port '22' -Configure DHCP Server and DNS -^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Configure DHCP and DNS server +############################# + +* Provide DHCP service on your internal/LAN network where VyOS will act + as the default gateway and DNS server. +* Client IP addresses are assigned from the range ``192.168.0.9 - + 192.168.0.254`` +* DHCP leases will hold for one day (86400 seconds) +* VyOS will server as full DNS recursor - no need to bother the Google or + Cloudflare DNS servers (good for privacy) +* Only clients from your internal/LAN network can use the DNS resolver .. code-block:: none @@ -41,19 +86,14 @@ Configure DHCP Server and DNS set service dhcp-server shared-network-name LAN subnet 192.168.0.0/24 range 0 start 192.168.0.9 set service dhcp-server shared-network-name LAN subnet 192.168.0.0/24 range 0 stop '192.168.0.254' -And a DNS forwarder: - -.. code-block:: none - set service dns forwarding cache-size '0' set service dns forwarding listen-address '192.168.0.1' - set service dns forwarding name-server '203.0.113.1' - set service dns forwarding name-server '203.0.113.2' + set service dns forwarding allow-from '192.168.0.0/24' -NAT and Firewall -^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ +NAT +### -Configure Source NAT for our "Inside" network. +* Configure :ref:`source-nat` for our internal/LAN network .. code-block:: none @@ -61,9 +101,13 @@ Configure Source NAT for our "Inside" network. set nat source rule 100 source address '192.168.0.0/24' set nat source rule 100 translation address masquerade -Add a set of firewall policies for our "Outside" interface. +Firewall +######## -This configuration creates a proper stateful firewall that blocks all traffic: +Add a set of firewall policies for our outside/WAN interface. + +This configuration creates a proper stateful firewall that blocks all traffic +which was not initiated from the internal/LAN side first. .. code-block:: none @@ -71,6 +115,7 @@ This configuration creates a proper stateful firewall that blocks all traffic: set firewall name OUTSIDE-IN rule 10 action 'accept' set firewall name OUTSIDE-IN rule 10 state established 'enable' set firewall name OUTSIDE-IN rule 10 state related 'enable' + set firewall name OUTSIDE-LOCAL default-action 'drop' set firewall name OUTSIDE-LOCAL rule 10 action 'accept' set firewall name OUTSIDE-LOCAL rule 10 state established 'enable' @@ -80,8 +125,8 @@ This configuration creates a proper stateful firewall that blocks all traffic: set firewall name OUTSIDE-LOCAL rule 20 protocol 'icmp' set firewall name OUTSIDE-LOCAL rule 20 state new 'enable' -If you wanted to enable SSH access to your firewall from the Internet, you -could create some additional rules to allow the traffic. +If you wanted to enable SSH access to your firewall from the outside/WAN +interface, you could create some additional rules to allow that kind of traffic. These rules allow SSH traffic and rate limit it to 4 requests per minute. This blocks brute-forcing attempts: @@ -94,6 +139,7 @@ blocks brute-forcing attempts: set firewall name OUTSIDE-LOCAL rule 30 recent count '4' set firewall name OUTSIDE-LOCAL rule 30 recent time '60' set firewall name OUTSIDE-LOCAL rule 30 state new 'enable' + set firewall name OUTSIDE-LOCAL rule 31 action 'accept' set firewall name OUTSIDE-LOCAL rule 31 destination port '22' set firewall name OUTSIDE-LOCAL rule 31 protocol 'tcp' @@ -117,15 +163,13 @@ Commit changes, save the configuration, and exit configuration mode: vyos@vyos# exit vyos@vyos$ -Basic QoS -^^^^^^^^^ +QoS +### -The traffic policy subsystem provides an interface to Linux traffic control -(tc_). -One common use of traffic policy is to limit bandwidth for an interface. In -the example below we limit bandwidth for our LAN connection to 200 Mbit -download and out WAN connection to 50 Mbit upload: +One common use of :ref:`qos` is to limit bandwidth for an interface. In +the example below we limit bandwidth for our internal/LAN connection to 200 +Mbit/s download and our outside/WAN connection to 50 Mbit/s upload: .. code-block:: none @@ -133,35 +177,13 @@ download and out WAN connection to 50 Mbit upload: set traffic-policy shaper WAN-OUT default bandwidth '50%' set traffic-policy shaper WAN-OUT default ceiling '100%' set traffic-policy shaper WAN-OUT default queue-type 'fair-queue' + set traffic-policy shaper LAN-OUT bandwidth '200Mbit' set traffic-policy shaper LAN-OUT default bandwidth '50%' set traffic-policy shaper LAN-OUT default ceiling '100%' set traffic-policy shaper LAN-OUT default queue-type 'fair-queue' -Resulting in the following configuration: - -.. code-block:: none - - traffic-policy { - shaper WAN-OUT { - bandwidth 50Mbit - default { - bandwidth 50% - ceiling 100% - queue-type fair-queue - } - } - shaper LAN-OUT { - bandwidth 200Mbit - default { - bandwidth 50% - ceiling 100% - queue-type fair-queue - } - } - } - -Once defined, a traffic policy can be applied to each interface using the +Once defined, a traffic policy needs to be applied to each interface using the interface-level traffic-policy directive: .. code-block:: none @@ -169,46 +191,33 @@ interface-level traffic-policy directive: set interfaces ethernet eth0 traffic-policy out 'WAN-OUT' set interfaces ethernet eth1 traffic-policy out 'LAN-OUT' -.. note:: A traffic policy can also be defined to match specific traffic - flows using class statements. - -VyOS 1.2 (Crux) also supports HFSC (:code:`set traffic-policy shaper-hfsc`) - -See further information in the :ref:`qos` chapter. - Security Hardening -^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ +################## -Especially if you are allowing SSH access from the Internet, there are a few -additional configuration steps that should be taken. +Especially if you are allowing SSH remote access from the outside/WAN interface, +there are a few additional configuration steps that should be taken. -Create a user to replace the default `vyos` user: +Replace the default `vyos` system user: .. code-block:: none set system login user myvyosuser level admin set system login user myvyosuser authentication plaintext-password mysecurepassword -Set up SSH key based authentication. For example, on Linux you'd want to run -``ssh-keygen -t rsa``. Then the contents of ``id_rsa.pub`` would be used below: +Set up :ref:`ssh_key_based_authentication`: .. code-block:: none set system login user myvyosuser authentication public-keys myusername@mydesktop type ssh-rsa set system login user myvyosuser authentication public-keys myusername@mydesktop key contents_of_id_rsa.pub -Or you can use the ``loadkey`` command. Commit and save. - Finally, try and SSH into the VyOS install as your new user. Once you have -confirmed that your new user can access your server, without a password, delete +confirmed that your new user can access your router without a password, delete the original ``vyos`` user and probably disable password authentication for -SSH: +:ref:`ssh` at all: .. code-block:: none delete system login user vyos set service ssh disable-password-authentication -Commit and save. - -.. _tc: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tc_(Linux) |