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.. _quick-start:

Quick Start Guide
=================

Below is a very basic configuration example that will provide a NAT gateway
for a device with two interfaces.

Enter configuration mode:

.. code-block:: sh

  vyos@vyos$ configure
  vyos@vyos#

Configure network interfaces:

.. code-block:: sh

  set interfaces ethernet eth0 address dhcp
  set interfaces ethernet eth0 description 'OUTSIDE'
  set interfaces ethernet eth1 address '192.168.0.1/24'
  set interfaces ethernet eth1 description 'INSIDE'

Enable SSH for remote management:

.. code-block:: sh

  set service ssh port '22'

Configure Source NAT for our "Inside" network.

.. code-block:: sh

  set nat source rule 100 outbound-interface 'eth0'
  set nat source rule 100 source address '192.168.0.0/24'
  set nat source rule 100 translation address masquerade

Configure a DHCP Server:

.. code-block:: sh

  set service dhcp-server shared-network-name LAN subnet 192.168.0.0/24 default-router '192.168.0.1'
  set service dhcp-server shared-network-name LAN subnet 192.168.0.0/24 dns-server '192.168.0.1'
  set service dhcp-server shared-network-name LAN subnet 192.168.0.0/24 domain-name 'internal-network'
  set service dhcp-server shared-network-name LAN subnet 192.168.0.0/24 lease '86400'
  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:

Please note that the `listen-on` statement is deprecated. Please use
`listen-address` instead!

.. code-block:: sh

  set service dns forwarding cache-size '0'
  set service dns forwarding listen-on 'eth1'
  set service dns forwarding name-server '8.8.8.8'
  set service dns forwarding name-server '8.8.4.4'

Add a set of firewall policies for our "Outside" interface:

.. code-block:: sh

  set firewall name OUTSIDE-IN default-action 'drop'
  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'
  set firewall name OUTSIDE-LOCAL rule 10 state related 'enable'
  set firewall name OUTSIDE-LOCAL rule 20 action 'accept'
  set firewall name OUTSIDE-LOCAL rule 20 icmp type-name 'echo-request'
  set firewall name OUTSIDE-LOCAL rule 20 protocol 'icmp'
  set firewall name OUTSIDE-LOCAL rule 20 state new 'enable'
  set firewall name OUTSIDE-LOCAL rule 30 action 'drop'
  set firewall name OUTSIDE-LOCAL rule 30 destination port '22'
  set firewall name OUTSIDE-LOCAL rule 30 protocol 'tcp'
  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'
  set firewall name OUTSIDE-LOCAL rule 31 state new 'enable'

Apply the firewall policies:

.. code-block:: sh

  set interfaces ethernet eth0 firewall in name 'OUTSIDE-IN'
  set interfaces ethernet eth0 firewall local name 'OUTSIDE-LOCAL'

Commit changes, save the configuration, and exit configuration mode:

.. code-block:: sh

  vyos@vyos# commit
  vyos@vyos# save
  Saving configuration to '/config/config.boot'...
  Done
  vyos@vyos# exit
  vyos@vyos$

Basic 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:

.. code-block:: sh

  set traffic-policy shaper WAN-OUT bandwidth '50Mbit'
  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:: sh

  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
interface-level traffic-policy directive:

.. code-block:: sh

  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.

.. _tc: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tc_(Linux)