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diff --git a/doc/HowTo.html b/doc/HowTo.html deleted file mode 100644 index a6f92dda9..000000000 --- a/doc/HowTo.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,18733 +0,0 @@ -<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/loose.dtd"> -<HTML> -<HEAD> -<TITLE>Introduction to FreeS/WAN</TITLE> -<META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; CHARSET=iso-8859-1"> -<STYLE TYPE="text/css"><!-- -BODY { font-family: serif } -H1 { font-family: sans-serif } -H2 { font-family: sans-serif } -H3 { font-family: sans-serif } -H4 { font-family: sans-serif } -H5 { font-family: sans-serif } -H6 { font-family: sans-serif } -SUB { font-size: smaller } -SUP { font-size: smaller } -PRE { font-family: monospace } ---></STYLE> -</HEAD> -<BODY> -<CENTER><A HREF="#CONTENTS"><H1>Introduction to FreeS/WAN</H1></A><BR> -</CENTER> -<HR> -<H1 ALIGN="CENTER"><A NAME="CONTENTS">Table of Contents</A></H1> -<BR> -<BR><B><A HREF="#intro">Introduction</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#ipsec.intro">IPsec, Security for the Internet Protocol</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#intro.interop">Interoperating with other IPsec - implementations</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#advantages">Advantages of IPsec</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#applications">Applications of IPsec</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#makeVPN">Using secure tunnels to create a VPN</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#road.intro">Road Warriors</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#opp.intro">Opportunistic encryption</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#types">The need to authenticate gateways</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#project">The FreeS/WAN project</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#goals">Project goals</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#staff">Project team</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#products">Products containing FreeS/WAN</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#distwith">Full Linux distributions</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#kernel_dist">Linux kernel distributions</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#office_dist">Office server distributions</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#fw_dist">Firewall distributions</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#turnkey">Firewall and VPN products</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#docs">Information sources</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#docformats">This HowTo, in multiple formats</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#rtfm">RTFM (please Read The Fine Manuals)</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#text">Other documents in the distribution</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#assumptions">Background material</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#archives">Archives of the project mailing list</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#howto">User-written HowTo information</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#applied">Papers on FreeS/WAN</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#licensing">License and copyright information</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#sites">Distribution sites</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#1_5_1">Primary site</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#mirrors">Mirrors</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#munitions">The "munitions" archive of Linux crypto - software</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#1_6">Links to other sections</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#2">Upgrading to FreeS/WAN 2.x</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#2_1">New! Built in Opportunistic connections</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#2_1_1">Upgrading Opportunistic Encryption to 2.01 (or - later)</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#2_2">New! Policy Groups</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#2_3">New! Packetdefault Connection</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#2_4">FreeS/WAN now disables Reverse Path Filtering</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#2_5">Revised ipsec.conf</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#2_5_1">No promise of compatibility</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#2_5_2">Most ipsec.conf files will work fine</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#2_5_3">Backward compatibility patch</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#2_5_4">Details</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#2_5_5">Upgrading from 1.x RPMs to 2.x RPMs</A></LI> -</UL> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#quickstart">Quickstart Guide to Opportunistic Encryption</A> -</B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#opp.setup">Purpose</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#3_1_1">OE "flag day"</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#opp.dns">Requirements</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#easy.install">RPM install</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#3_3_1">Download RPMs</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#3_3_2">Check signatures</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#3_3_3">Install the RPMs</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#testinstall">Test</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#opp.setups.list">Our Opportunistic Setups</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#3_4_1">Full or partial opportunism?</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#opp.client">Initiate-only setup</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#3_5_1">Restrictions</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#forward.dns">Create and publish a forward DNS record</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#3_5_2_1">Find a domain you can use</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#3_5_2_2">Choose your ID</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#3_5_2_3">Create a forward TXT record</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#3_5_2_4">Publish the forward TXT record</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#3_5_3">Test that your key has been published</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#3_5_4">Configure, if necessary</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#3_5_5">Test</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#3_6">Full Opportunism</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#3_6_1">Put a TXT record in a Forward Domain</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#3_6_2">Put a TXT record in Reverse DNS</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#3_6_2_1">Create a Reverse DNS TXT record</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#3_6_2_2">Publish your TXT record</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#3_6_3">Test your DNS record</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#3_6_4">No Configuration Needed</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#3_6_5">Consider Firewalling</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#3_6_6">Test</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#3_6_7">Test</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#opp.test">Testing opportunistic connections</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#3_8">Now what?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#3_9">Notes</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#3_10">Troubleshooting OE</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#3_11">Known Issues</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#4">How to Configure Linux FreeS/WAN with Policy Groups</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#4_1">What are Policy Groups?</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#4_1_1">Built-In Security Options</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#4_2">Using Policy Groups</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#4_2_1">Example 1: Using a Base Policy Group</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#4_2_2">Example 2: Defining IPsec Security Policy with - Groups</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#4_2_3">Example 3: Creating a Simple IPsec VPN with the - private Group</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#4_2_4">Example 4: New Policy Groups to Protect a Subnet</A> -</LI> -<LI><A HREF="#4_2_5">Example 5: Adding a Subnet to the VPN</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#4_3">Appendix</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#4_3_1">Our Hidden Connections</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#4_3_2">Custom Policy Groups</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#4_3_3">Disabling Opportunistic Encryption</A></LI> -</UL> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#5">FreeS/WAN FAQ</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#questions">Index of FAQ questions</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#whatzit">What is FreeS/WAN?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#problems">How do I report a problem or seek help?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#generic">Can I get ...</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#lemme_out">Can I get an off-the-shelf system that includes - FreeS/WAN?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#consultant">Can I hire consultants or staff who know - FreeS/WAN?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#commercial">Can I get commercial support?</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#release">Release questions</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#rel.current">What is the current release?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#relwhen">When is the next release?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#rel.bugs">Are there known bugs in the current release?</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#mod_cons">Modifications and contributions</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#modify.faq">Can I modify FreeS/WAN to ...?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#contrib.faq">Can I contribute to the project?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#ddoc.faq">Is there detailed design documentation?</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#interact">Will FreeS/WAN work in my environment?</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#interop.faq">Can FreeS/WAN talk to ...?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#old_to_new">Can different FreeS/WAN versions talk to each - other?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#faq.bandwidth">Is there a limit on throughput?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#faq.number">Is there a limit on number of tunnels?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#faq.speed">Is a ... fast enough to handle FreeS/WAN with - my loads?</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#work_on">Will FreeS/WAN work on ... ?</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#versions">Will FreeS/WAN run on my version of Linux?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#nonIntel.faq">Will FreeS/WAN run on non-Intel CPUs?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#multi.faq">Will FreeS/WAN run on multiprocessors?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#k.old">Will FreeS/WAN work on an older kernel?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#k.versions">Will FreeS/WAN run on the latest kernel - version?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#interface.faq">Will FreeS/WAN work on unusual network - hardware?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#vlan">Will FreeS/WAN work on a VLAN (802.1q) network?</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#features.faq">Does FreeS/WAN support ...</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#VPN.faq">Does FreeS/WAN support site-to-site VPN (Virtual - Private Network) applications?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#warrior.faq">Does FreeS/WAN support remote users - connecting to a LAN?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#road.shared.possible">Does FreeS/WAN support remote users - using shared secret authentication?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#wireless.faq">Does FreeS/WAN support wireless networks?</A> -</LI> -<LI><A HREF="#PKIcert">Does FreeS/WAN support X.509 or other PKI - certificates?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#Radius">Does FreeS/WAN support user authentication - (Radius, SecureID, Smart Card...)?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#NATtraversal">Does FreeS/WAN support NAT traversal?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#virtID">Does FreeS/WAN support assigning a "virtual - identity" to a remote system?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#noDES.faq">Does FreeS/WAN support single DES encryption?</A> -</LI> -<LI><A HREF="#AES.faq">Does FreeS/WAN support AES encryption?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#other.cipher">Does FreeS/WAN support other encryption - algorithms?</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#canI">Can I ...</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#policy.preconfig">Can I use policy groups along with - explicitly configured connections?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#policy.off">Can I turn off policy groups?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#reload">Can I reload connection info without restarting?</A> -</LI> -<LI><A HREF="#masq.faq">Can I use several masqueraded subnets?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#dup_route">Can I use subnets masqueraded to the same - addresses?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#road.masq">Can I assign a road warrior an address on my - net (a virtual identity)?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#road.many">Can I support many road warriors with one - gateway?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#road.PSK">Can I have many road warriors using shared - secret authentication?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#QoS">Can I use Quality of Service routing with FreeS/WAN?</A> -</LI> -<LI><A HREF="#deadtunnel">Can I recognise dead tunnels and shut them - down?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#demanddial">Can I build IPsec tunnels over a demand-dialed - link?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#GRE">Can I build GRE, L2TP or PPTP tunnels over IPsec?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#NetBIOS">... use Network Neighborhood (Samba, NetBIOS) - over IPsec?</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#setup.faq">Life's little mysteries</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#cantping">I cannot ping ....</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#forever">It takes forever to ...</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#route">I send packets to the tunnel with route(8) but they - vanish</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#down_route">When a tunnel goes down, packets vanish</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#firewall_ate">The firewall ate my packets!</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#dropconn">Dropped connections</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#defaultroutegone">Disappearing %defaultroute</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#tcpdump.faq">TCPdump on the gateway shows strange things</A> -</LI> -<LI><A HREF="#no_trace">Traceroute does not show anything between the - gateways</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#man4debug">Testing in stages</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#nomanual">Manually keyed connections don't work</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#spi_error">One manual connection works, but second one - fails</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#man_no_auto">Manual connections work, but automatic keying - doesn't</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#nocomp">IPsec works, but connections using compression - fail</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#pmtu.broken">Small packets work, but large transfers fail</A> -</LI> -<LI><A HREF="#subsub">Subnet-to-subnet works, but tests from the - gateways don't</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#compile.faq">Compilation problems</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#gmp.h_missing">gmp.h: No such file or directory</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#noVM">... virtual memory exhausted</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#error">Interpreting error messages</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#route-client">route-client (or host) exited with status 7</A> -</LI> -<LI><A HREF="#unreachable">SIOCADDRT:Network is unreachable</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#modprobe">ipsec_setup: modprobe: Can't locate module ipsec</A> -</LI> -<LI><A HREF="#noKLIPS">ipsec_setup: Fatal error, kernel appears to lack - KLIPS</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#noDNS">ipsec_setup: ... failure to fetch key for ... from - DNS</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#dup_address">ipsec_setup: ... interfaces ... and ... share - address ...</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#kflags">ipsec_setup: Cannot adjust kernel flags</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#message_num">Message numbers (MI3, QR1, et cetera) in - Pluto messages</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#conn_name">Connection names in Pluto error messages</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#cantorient">Pluto: ... can't orient connection</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#no.interface">... we have no ipsecN interface for either - end of this connection</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#noconn">Pluto: ... no connection is known</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#nosuit">Pluto: ... no suitable connection ...</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#noconn.auth">Pluto: ... no connection has been authorized</A> -</LI> -<LI><A HREF="#noDESsupport">Pluto: ... OAKLEY_DES_CBC is not supported.</A> -</LI> -<LI><A HREF="#notransform">Pluto: ... no acceptable transform</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#rsasigkey">rsasigkey dumps core</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#sig4">!Pluto failure!: ... exited with ... signal 4</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#econnrefused">ECONNREFUSED error message</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#no_eroute">klips_debug: ... no eroute!</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#SAused">... trouble writing to /dev/ipsec ... SA already - in use</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#ignore">... ignoring ... payload</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#unknown_rightcert">unknown parameter name "rightcert"</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#spam">Why don't you restrict the mailing lists to reduce - spam?</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#manpages">FreeS/WAN manual pages</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#man.file">Files</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#man.command">Commands</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#man.lib">Library routines</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#firewall">FreeS/WAN and firewalls</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#filters">Filtering rules for IPsec packets</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#examplefw">Firewall configuration at boot</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#simple.rules">A simple set of rules</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#complex.rules">Other rules</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#7_2_2_1">Adding additional rules</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#7_2_2_2">Modifying existing rules</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#rules.pub">Published rule sets</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#Ranch.trinity">Scripts based on Ranch's work</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#seawall">The Seattle firewall</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#rcf">The RCF scripts</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#asgard">Asgard scripts</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#user.scripts">User scripts from the mailing list</A></LI> -</UL> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#updown">Calling firewall scripts, named in ipsec.conf(5)</A> -</LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#pre_post">Scripts called at IPsec start and stop</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#up_down">Scripts called at connection up and down</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#fw.default">The default script</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#userscript">User-written scripts</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#ipchains.script">Scripts for ipchains or iptables</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#NAT">A complication: IPsec vs. NAT</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#nat_ok">NAT on or behind the IPsec gateway works</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#nat_bad">NAT between gateways is problematic</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#NAT.ref">Other references on NAT and IPsec</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#complications">Other complications</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#through">IPsec through the gateway</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#ipsec_only">Preventing non-IPsec traffic</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#unknowngate">Filtering packets from unknown gateways</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#otherfilter">Other packet filters</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#ICMP">ICMP filtering</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#traceroute">UDP packets for traceroute</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#l2tp">UDP for L2TP</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#packets">How it all works: IPsec packet details</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#noport">ESP and AH do not have ports</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#header">Header layout</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#dhr">DHR on the updown script</A></LI> -</UL> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#trouble">Linux FreeS/WAN Troubleshooting Guide</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#overview">Overview</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#install">1. During Install</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#8_2_1">1.1 RPM install gotchas</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#8_2_2">1.2 Problems installing from source</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#install.check">1.3 Install checks</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#oe.trouble">1.3 Troubleshooting OE</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#negotiation">2. During Negotiation</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#state">2.1 Determine Connection State</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#8_3_1_1">Finding current state</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#8_3_1_2">What's this supposed to look like?</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#find.pluto.error">2.2 Finding error text</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#8_3_2_1">Verbose start for more information</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#8_3_2_2">Debug levels count</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#8_3_2_3">ipsec barf for lots of debugging information</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#8_3_2_4">Find the error</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#8_3_2_5">Play both sides</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#interpret.pluto.error">2.3 Interpreting a Negotiation - Error</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#ikepath">Connection stuck at STATE_MAIN_I1</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#8_3_3_2">Other errors</A></LI> -</UL> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#use">3. Using a Connection</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#8_4_1">3.1 Orienting yourself</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#8_4_1_1">How do I know if it works?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#8_4_1_2">ipsec barf is useful again</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#8_4_2">3.2 Those pesky configuration errors</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#route.firewall">3.3 Check Routing and Firewalling</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#8_4_3_1">Background:</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#ifconfig">View Interface and Firewall Statistics</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#sniff">3.4 When in doubt, sniff it out</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#8_4_4_1">Anticipate your packets' path</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#find.use.error">3.5 Check your logs</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#interpret.use.error">Interpreting log text</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#bigpacket">3.6 More testing for the truly thorough</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#8_4_6_1">Large Packets</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#8_4_6_2">Stress Tests</A></LI> -</UL> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#prob.report">4. Problem Reporting</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#8_5_1">4.1 How to ask for help</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#8_5_2">4.2 Where to ask</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#notes">5. Additional Notes on Troubleshooting</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#system.info">5.1 Information available on your system</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#logusage">Logs used</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#pages">man pages provided</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#statusinfo">Status information</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#testgates"> 5.2 Testing between security gateways</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#ifconfig1">5.3 ifconfig reports for KLIPS debugging</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#gdb"> 5.4 Using GDB on Pluto</A></LI> -</UL> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#compat">Linux FreeS/WAN Compatibility Guide</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#spec">Implemented parts of the IPsec Specification</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#in">In Linux FreeS/WAN</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#dropped">Deliberately omitted</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#not">Not (yet) in Linux FreeS/WAN</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#pfkey">Our PF-Key implementation</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#pfk.port">PF-Key portability</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#otherk">Kernels other than the latest 2.2.x and 2.4.y</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#kernel.2.0">2.0.x kernels</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#kernel.production">2.2 and 2.4 kernels</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#otherdist">Intel Linux distributions other than Redhat</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#rh7">Redhat 7.0</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#suse">SuSE Linux</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#9_4_2_1">SuSE Linux 5.3</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#slack">Slackware</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#deb">Debian</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#caldera">Caldera</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#CPUs">CPUs other than Intel</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="# strongarm">Corel Netwinder (StrongARM CPU)</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#yellowdog">Yellow Dog Linux on Power PC</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#mklinux">Mklinux</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#alpha">Alpha 64-bit processors</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#SPARC">Sun SPARC processors</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#mips">MIPS processors</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#crusoe">Transmeta Crusoe</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#coldfire">Motorola Coldfire</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#multiprocessor">Multiprocessor machines</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#hardware">Support for crypto hardware</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#ipv6">IP version 6 (IPng)</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#v6.back">IPv6 background</A></LI> -</UL> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#10">Interoperating with FreeS/WAN</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#10_1">Interop at a Glance</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#10_1_1">Key</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#10_2">Basic Interop Rules</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#10_3">Longer Stories</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#10_3_1">For More Compatible Implementations</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#freeswan">FreeS/WAN</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#isakmpd">isakmpd (OpenBSD)</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#kame">Kame</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#mcafee">PGPNet/McAfee</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#microsoft">Microsoft Windows 2000/XP</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#ssh">SSH Sentinel</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#safenet">Safenet SoftPK/SoftRemote</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#10_3_2">For Other Implementations</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#6wind">6Wind</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#alcatel">Alcatel Timestep</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#apple">Apple Macintosh System 10+</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#ashleylaurent">AshleyLaurent VPCom</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#borderware">Borderware</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#checkpoint">Check Point VPN-1 or FW-1</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#cisco">Cisco</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#equinux">Equinux VPN tracker (for Mac OS X)</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#fsecure">F-Secure</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#gauntlet">Gauntlet GVPN</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#aix">IBM AIX</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#as400">IBM AS/400</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#intel">Intel Shiva LANRover / Net Structure</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#lancom">LanCom (formerly ELSA)</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#linksys">Linksys</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#lucent">Lucent</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#netasq">Netasq</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#netcelo">Netcelo</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#netgear">Netgear fvs318</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#netscreen">Netscreen 100 or 5xp</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#nortel">Nortel Contivity</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#radguard">Radguard</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#raptor">Raptor (NT or Solaris)</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#redcreek">Redcreek Ravlin</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#sonicwall">SonicWall</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#sun">Sun Solaris</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#symantec">Symantec</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#watchguard">Watchguard Firebox</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#xedia">Xedia Access Point/QVPN</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#zyxel">Zyxel</A></LI> -</UL> -</UL> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#performance">Performance of FreeS/WAN</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#pub.bench">Published material</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#perf.estimate">Estimating CPU overheads</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#perf.more">Higher performance alternatives</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#11_2_2">Other considerations</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#biggate">Many tunnels from a single gateway</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#low-end">Low-end systems</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#klips.bench">Measuring KLIPS</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#speed.compress">Speed with compression</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#methods">Methods of measuring</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#test.freeswan">Testing FreeS/WAN</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#test.oe">Testing opportunistic connections</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#12_1_1">Basic OE Test</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#12_1_2">OE Gateway Test</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#12_1_3">Additional OE tests</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#test.uml">Testing with User Mode Linux</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#testnet">Configuration for a testbed network</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#testbed">Testbed network</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#tcpdump.test">Using packet sniffers in testing</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#verify.crypt">Verifying encryption</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#mail.test">Mailing list pointers</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#kernelconfig">Kernel configuration for FreeS/WAN</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#notall">Not everyone needs to worry about kernel - configuration</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#assume">Assumptions and notation</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#labels">Labels used</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#kernelopt">Kernel options for FreeS/WAN</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#adv_config">Other configuration possibilities</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#thumb">Some rules of thumb about configuration</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#cheap.tunnel">Tunnels are cheap</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#subnet.size">Subnet sizes</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#example.more">Other network layouts</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#internet.subnet">The Internet as a big subnet</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#wireless.config">Wireless</A></LI> -</UL> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#choose">Choosing connection types</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#man-auto">Manual vs. automatic keying</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#auto-auth">Authentication methods for auto-keying</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#adv-pk">Advantages of public key methods</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#prodsecrets">Using shared secrets in production</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#secrets">Putting secrets in ipsec.secrets(5)</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#securing.secrets">File security</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#notroadshared">Shared secrets for road warriors</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#prodman">Using manual keying in production</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#ranbits">Creating keys with ranbits</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#boot">Setting up connections at boot time</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#multitunnel">Multiple tunnels between the same two - gateways</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#advroute">One tunnel plus advanced routing</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#opp.gate">An Opportunistic Gateway</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#14_7_1">Start from full opportunism</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#14_7_2">Reverse DNS TXT records for each protected machine</A> -</LI> -<LI><A HREF="#14_7_3">Publish your records</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#14_7_4">...and test them</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#14_7_5">No Configuration Needed</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#extruded.config">Extruded Subnets</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#roadvirt">Road Warrior with virtual IP address</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#dynamic">Dynamic Network Interfaces</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#basicdyn">Basics</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#bootdyn">Boot Time</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#changedyn">Change Time</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#unencrypted">Unencrypted tunnels</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#install">Installing FreeS/WAN</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#15_1">Requirements</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#15_2">Choose your install method</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#15_3">FreeS/WAN ships with some Linuxes</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#15_3_1">FreeS/WAN may be altered...</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#15_3_2">You might need to create an authentication keypair</A> -</LI> -<LI><A HREF="#15_3_3">Start and test FreeS/WAN</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#15_4">RPM install</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#15_4_1">Download RPMs</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#15_4_2">For freeswan.org RPMs: check signatures</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#15_4_3">Install the RPMs</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#15_4_4">Start and Test FreeS/WAN</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#15_5">Install from Source</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#15_5_1">Decide what functionality you need</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#15_5_2">Download FreeS/WAN</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#15_5_3">For freeswan.org source: check its signature</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#15_5_4">Untar, unzip</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#15_5_5">Patch if desired</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#15_5_6">... and Make</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#15_5_6_1">Userland-only Install for 2.6 kernels</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#15_5_6_2">KLIPS install for 2.2, 2.4, or 2.6 kernels</A></LI> -</UL> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#15_6">Start FreeS/WAN and test your install</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#15_7">Test your install</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#15_8">Making FreeS/WAN play well with others</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#15_9">Configure for your needs</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#config">How to configure FreeS/WAN</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#16_1">Requirements</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#config.netnet">Net-to-Net connection</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#netnet.info.ex">Gather information</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#16_2_1_1">Get your leftrsasigkey</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#16_2_1_2">...and your rightrsasigkey</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#16_2_2">Edit /etc/ipsec.conf</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#16_2_3">Start your connection</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#16_2_4">Do not MASQ or NAT packets to be tunneled</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#16_2_5">Test your connection</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#16_2_6">Finishing touches</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#config.rw">Road Warrior Configuration</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#rw.info.ex">Gather information</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#16_3_1_1">Get your leftrsasigkey...</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#16_3_1_2">...and your rightrsasigkey</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#16_3_2">Customize /etc/ipsec.conf</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#16_3_3">Start your connection</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#16_3_4">Do not MASQ or NAT packets to be tunneled</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#16_3_5">Test your connection</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#16_3_6">Finishing touches</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#16_3_7">Multiple Road Warriors</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#16_4">What next?</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#background">Linux FreeS/WAN background</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#dns.background">Some DNS background</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#forward.reverse">Forward and reverse maps</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#17_1_2">Hierarchy and delegation</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#17_1_3">Syntax of DNS records</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#17_1_4">Cacheing, TTL and propagation delay</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#MTU.trouble">Problems with packet fragmentation</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#nat.background">Network address translation (NAT)</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#17_3_1">NAT to non-routable addresses</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#17_3_2">NAT to routable addresses</A></LI> -</UL> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#user.examples">FreeS/WAN script examples</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#poltorak">Poltorak's Firewall script</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#makecheck">How to configure to use "make check"</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#19_1">What is "make check"</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#19_2">Running "make check"</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#20">How to write a "make check" test</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#20_1">Structure of a test</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#20_2">The TESTLIST</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#20_3">Test kinds</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#20_4">Common parameters</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#20_5">KLIPStest paramaters</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#20_6">mkinsttest paramaters</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#20_7">rpm_build_install_test paramaters</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#20_8">libtest paramaters</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#20_9">umlplutotest paramaters</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#20_10">umlXhost parameters</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#20_11">kernel_patch_test paramaters</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#20_12">module_compile paramaters</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#21">Current pitfalls</A></B> -<BR> -<BR><B><A HREF="#umltesting">User-Mode-Linux Testing guide</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#22_1">Preliminary Notes on BIND</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#22_2">Steps to Install UML for FreeS/WAN</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#23">Debugging the kernel with GDB</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#23_1">Other notes about debugging</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#24">User-Mode-Linux mysteries</A></B> -<BR> -<BR><B><A HREF="#25">Getting more info from uml_netjig</A></B> -<BR> -<BR><B><A HREF="#politics">History and politics of cryptography</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#intro.politics">Introduction</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#26_1_1">History</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#26_1_1_1">World War II</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#postwar">Postwar and Cold War</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#recent">Recent history -- the crypto wars</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#intro.poli">Politics</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#26_1_3">Links</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#26_1_4">Outline of this section</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#leader">From our project leader</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#gilmore">Swan: Securing the Internet against Wiretapping</A> -</LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#26_2_1_1">Deployment of IPSEC</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#26_2_1_2">Current status</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#26_2_1_3">Why?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#26_2_1_4">What You Can Do</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#26_2_1_5">Related projects</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#policestate">Stopping wholesale monitoring</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#weak">Government promotion of weak crypto</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#escrow">Escrowed encryption</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#shortkeys">Limited key lengths</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#26_3_2_1">Some real trade-offs</A></LI> -</UL> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#exlaw">Cryptography Export Laws</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#USlaw">US Law</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#UScontrib">US contributions to FreeS/WAN</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#wrong">What's wrong with restrictions on cryptography</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#Wassenaar">The Wassenaar Arrangement</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#status">Export status of Linux FreeS/WAN</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#help">Help spread IPsec around</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#desnotsecure">DES is Not Secure</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#deshware">Dedicated hardware breaks DES in a few days</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#spooks">Spooks may break DES faster yet</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#desnet">Networks break DES in a few weeks</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#no_des">We disable DES</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#40joke">40-bits is laughably weak</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#altdes">Triple DES is almost certainly secure</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#aes.ipsec">AES in IPsec</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#press">Press coverage of Linux FreeS/WAN:</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#26_6_1">FreeS/WAN 1.0 press</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#release">Press release for version 1.0</A></LI> -</UL> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#ipsec.detail">The IPsec protocols</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#27_1">Protocols and phases</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#others">Applying IPsec</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#advantages">Advantages of IPsec</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#limitations">Limitations of IPsec</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#uses">IPsec is a general mechanism for securing IP</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#authonly">Using authentication without encryption</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#encnoauth">Encryption without authentication is dangerous</A> -</LI> -<LI><A HREF="#multilayer">Multiple layers of IPsec processing are - possible</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#traffic.resist">Resisting traffic analysis</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#extra">Using "unnecessary" encryption</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#multi-encrypt">Using multiple encryption</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#fewer">Using fewer tunnels</A></LI> -</UL> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#primitives">Cryptographic components</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#block.cipher">Block ciphers</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#hash.ipsec">Hash functions</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#hmac.ipsec">The HMAC construct</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#27_3_2_2">Choice of hash algorithm</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#DH.keying">Diffie-Hellman key agreement</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#RSA.auth">RSA authentication</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#structure">Structure of IPsec</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#IKE.ipsec">IKE (Internet Key Exchange)</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#phases">Phases of IKE</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#sequence">Sequence of messages in IKE</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#struct.exchange">Structure of IKE messages</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#services">IPsec Services, AH and ESP</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#AH.ipsec">The Authentication Header (AH)</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#keyed">Keyed MD5 and Keyed SHA</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#sequence">Sequence numbers</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#ESP.ipsec">Encapsulated Security Payload (ESP)</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#modes">IPsec modes</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#tunnel.ipsec">Tunnel mode</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#transport.ipsec">Transport mode</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#parts">FreeS/WAN parts</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#KLIPS.ipsec">KLIPS: Kernel IPsec Support</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#Pluto.ipsec">The Pluto daemon</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#command">The ipsec(8) command</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#ipsec.conf">Linux FreeS/WAN configuration file</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#key">Key management</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#current">Currently Implemented Methods</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#manual">Manual keying</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#auto">Automatic keying</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#notyet">Methods not yet implemented</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#noauth">Unauthenticated key exchange</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#DNS">Key exchange using DNS</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#PKI">Key exchange using a PKI</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#photuris">Photuris</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#skip">SKIP</A></LI> -</UL> -</UL> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#lists">Mailing lists and newsgroups</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#list.fs">Mailing lists about FreeS/WAN</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#projlist">The project mailing lists</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#which.list">Which list should I use?</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#policy.list">List policies</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#archive">Archives of the lists</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#indexes">Indexes of mailing lists</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#otherlists">Lists for related software and topics</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#28_3_1">Products that include FreeS/WAN</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#linux.lists">Linux mailing lists</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#ietf">Lists for IETF working groups</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#other">Other mailing lists</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#newsgroups">Usenet newsgroups</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#weblink">Web links</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#freeswan">The Linux FreeS/WAN Project</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#patch">Add-ons and patches for FreeS/WAN</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#29_1_1_1">Current patches</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#29_1_1_2">Older patches</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#VPN.masq">VPN masquerade patches</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#dist">Distributions including FreeS/WAN</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#used">Things FreeS/WAN uses or could use</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#alternatives">Other approaches to VPNs for Linux</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#ipsec.link">The IPsec Protocols</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#general">General IPsec or VPN information</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#overview">IPsec overview documents or slide sets</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#otherlang">IPsec information in languages other than - English</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#RFCs1">RFCs and other reference documents</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#analysis">Analysis and critiques of IPsec protocols</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#IP.background">Background information on IP</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#implement">IPsec Implementations</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#linuxprod">Linux products</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#router">IPsec in router products</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#fw.web">IPsec in firewall products</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#ipsecos">Operating systems with IPsec support</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#29_3_5">IPsec on network cards</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#opensource">Open source IPsec implementations</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#linuxipsec">Other Linux IPsec implementations</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#BSD">IPsec for BSD Unix</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#misc">IPsec for other systems</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#interop.web">Interoperability</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#result">Interoperability results</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#test1">Interoperability test sites</A></LI> -</UL> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#linux.link">Linux links</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#linux.basic">Basic and tutorial Linux information</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#general">General Linux sites</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#docs.ldp">Documentation</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#advroute.web">Advanced routing</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#linsec">Security for Linux</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#firewall.linux">Linux firewalls</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#linux.misc">Miscellaneous Linux information</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#crypto.link">Crypto and security links</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#security">Crypto and security resources</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#std.links">The standard link collections</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#FAQ">Frequently Asked Question (FAQ) documents</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#cryptover">Tutorials</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#standards">Crypto and security standards</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#quotes">Crypto quotes</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#policy">Cryptography law and policy</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#legal">Surveys of crypto law</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#oppose">Organisations opposing crypto restrictions</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#other.policy">Other information on crypto policy</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#crypto.tech">Cryptography technical information</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#cryptolinks">Collections of crypto links</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#papers">Lists of online cryptography papers</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#interesting">Particularly interesting papers</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#compsec">Computer and network security</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#seclink">Security links</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#firewall.web">Firewall links</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#vpn">VPN links</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#tools">Security tools</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#people">Links to home pages</A></LI> -</UL> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#ourgloss">Glossary for the Linux FreeS/WAN project</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#jump">Jump to a letter in the glossary</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#gloss">Other glossaries</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#definitions">Definitions</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#biblio">Bibliography for the Linux FreeS/WAN project</A></B> -<BR> -<BR><B><A HREF="#RFC">IPsec RFCs and related documents</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#RFCfile">The RFCs.tar.gz Distribution File</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#sources">Other sources for RFCs & Internet drafts</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#RFCdown">RFCs</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#drafts">Internet Drafts</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#FIPS1">FIPS standards</A></LI> -</UL> -<LI><A HREF="#RFCs.tar.gz">What's in the RFCs.tar.gz bundle?</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#rfc.ov">Overview RFCs</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#basic.prot">Basic protocols</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#key.ike">Key management</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#rfc.detail">Details of various things used</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#rfc.ref">Older RFCs which may be referenced</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#rfc.dns">RFCs for secure DNS service, which IPsec may use</A> -</LI> -<LI><A HREF="#rfc.exp">RFCs labelled "experimental"</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#rfc.rel">Related RFCs</A></LI> -</UL> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#roadmap">Distribution Roadmap: What's Where in Linux - FreeS/WAN</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#top">Top directory</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#doc">Documentation</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#klips.roadmap">KLIPS: kernel IP security</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#pluto.roadmap">Pluto key and connection management daemon</A> -</LI> -<LI><A HREF="#utils">Utils</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#lib">Libraries</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#fswanlib">FreeS/WAN Library</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#otherlib">Imported Libraries</A></LI> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#33_6_2_1">LibDES</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#33_6_2_2">GMP</A></LI> -</UL> -</UL> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#umltesting">User-Mode-Linux Testing guide</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#34_1">Preliminary Notes on BIND</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#34_2">Steps to Install UML for FreeS/WAN</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#35">Debugging the kernel with GDB</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#35_1">Other notes about debugging</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#36">User-Mode-Linux mysteries</A></B> -<BR> -<BR><B><A HREF="#37">Getting more info from uml_netjig</A></B> -<BR> -<BR><B><A HREF="#makecheck">How to configure to use "make check"</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#38_1">What is "make check"</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#38_2">Running "make check"</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#39">How to write a "make check" test</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#39_1">Structure of a test</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#39_2">The TESTLIST</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#39_3">Test kinds</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#39_4">Common parameters</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#39_5">KLIPStest paramaters</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#39_6">mkinsttest paramaters</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#39_7">rpm_build_install_test paramaters</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#39_8">libtest paramaters</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#39_9">umlplutotest paramaters</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#39_10">umlXhost parameters</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#39_11">kernel_patch_test paramaters</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#39_12">module_compile paramaters</A></LI> -</UL> -<B><A HREF="#40">Current pitfalls</A></B> -<BR> -<BR><B><A HREF="#nightly">Nightly regression testing</A></B> -<BR> -<BR><B><A HREF="#nightlyhowto">How to setup the nightly build</A></B> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#42_1"> Files you need to know about</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#42_2">Configuring freeswan-regress-env.sh</A></LI> -</UL> -<HR> -<H1><A name="intro">Introduction</A></H1> -<P>This section gives an overview of:</P> -<UL> -<LI>what IP Security (IPsec) does</LI> -<LI>how IPsec works</LI> -<LI>why we are implementing it for Linux</LI> -<LI>how this implementation works</LI> -</UL> -<P>This section is intended to cover only the essentials,<EM> things you - should know before trying to use FreeS/WAN.</EM></P> -<P>For more detailed background information, see the<A href="#politics"> - history and politics</A> and<A href="#ipsec.detail"> IPsec protocols</A> - sections.</P> -<H2><A name="ipsec.intro">IPsec, Security for the Internet Protocol</A></H2> -<P>FreeS/WAN is a Linux implementation of the IPsec (IP security) - protocols. IPsec provides<A href="#encryption"> encryption</A> and<A href="#authentication"> - authentication</A> services at the IP (Internet Protocol) level of the - network protocol stack.</P> -<P>Working at this level, IPsec can protect any traffic carried over IP, - unlike other encryption which generally protects only a particular - higher-level protocol --<A href="#PGP"> PGP</A> for mail,<A href="#ssh"> - SSH</A> for remote login,<A href="#SSL"> SSL</A> for web work, and so - on. This approach has both considerable advantages and some - limitations. For discussion, see our<A href="#others"> IPsec section</A> -</P> -<P>IPsec can be used on any machine which does IP networking. Dedicated - IPsec gateway machines can be installed wherever required to protect - traffic. IPsec can also run on routers, on firewall machines, on - various application servers, and on end-user desktop or laptop - machines.</P> -<P>Three protocols are used</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="#AH">AH</A> (Authentication Header) provides a packet-level - authentication service</LI> -<LI><A href="#ESP">ESP</A> (Encapsulating Security Payload) provides - encryption plus authentication</LI> -<LI><A href="#IKE">IKE</A> (Internet Key Exchange) negotiates connection - parameters, including keys, for the other two</LI> -</UL> -<P>Our implementation has three main parts:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="#KLIPS">KLIPS</A> (kernel IPsec) implements AH, ESP, and - packet handling within the kernel</LI> -<LI><A href="#Pluto">Pluto</A> (an IKE daemon) implements IKE, - negotiating connections with other systems</LI> -<LI>various scripts provide an adminstrator's interface to the machinery</LI> -</UL> -<P>IPsec is optional for the current (version 4) Internet Protocol. - FreeS/WAN adds IPsec to the Linux IPv4 network stack. Implementations - of<A href="#ipv6.gloss"> IP version 6</A> are required to include - IPsec. Work toward integrating FreeS/WAN into the Linux IPv6 stack has<A -href="#ipv6"> started</A>.</P> -<P>For more information on IPsec, see our<A href="#ipsec.detail"> IPsec - protocols</A> section, our collection of<A href="#ipsec.link"> IPsec - links</A> or the<A href="#RFC"> RFCs</A> which are the official - definitions of these protocols.</P> -<H3><A name="intro.interop">Interoperating with other IPsec - implementations</A></H3> -<P>IPsec is designed to let different implementations work together. We - provide:</P> -<UL> -<LI>a<A href="#implement"> list</A> of some other implementations</LI> -<LI>information on<A href="#interop"> using FreeS/WAN with other - implementations</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>The VPN Consortium fosters cooperation among implementers and - interoperability among implementations. Their<A href="http://www.vpnc.org/"> - web site</A> has much more information.</P> -<H3><A name="advantages">Advantages of IPsec</A></H3> -<P>IPsec has a number of security advantages. Here are some - independently written articles which discuss these:</P> -<P><A HREF="http://www.sans.org/rr/"> SANS institute papers</A>. See the - section on Encryption &VPNs. -<BR><A HREF="http://www.cisco.com/en/US/netsol/ns110/ns170/ns171/ns128/networking_solutions_white_papers_list.html"> - Cisco's white papers on "Networking Solutions"</A>. -<BR><A HREF="http://iscs.sourceforge.net/HowWhyBrief/HowWhyBrief.html"> - Advantages of ISCS (Linux Integrated Secure Communications System; - includes FreeS/WAN and other software)</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="applications">Applications of IPsec</A></H3> -<P>Because IPsec operates at the network layer, it is remarkably - flexible and can be used to secure nearly any type of Internet traffic. - Two applications, however, are extremely widespread:</P> -<UL> -<LI>a<A href="#VPN"> Virtual Private Network</A>, or VPN, allows - multiple sites to communicate securely over an insecure Internet by - encrypting all communication between the sites.</LI> -<LI>"Road Warriors" connect to the office from home, or perhaps from a - hotel somewhere</LI> -</UL> -<P>There is enough opportunity in these applications that vendors are - flocking to them. IPsec is being built into routers, into firewall - products, and into major operating systems, primarily to support these - applications. See our<A href="#implement"> list</A> of implementations - for details.</P> -<P>We support both of those applications, and various less common IPsec - applications as well, but we also add one of our own:</P> -<UL> -<LI>opportunistic encryption, the ability to set up FreeS/WAN gateways - so that any two of them can encrypt to each other, and will do so - whenever packets pass between them.</LI> -</UL> -<P>This is an extension we are adding to the protocols. FreeS/WAN is the - first prototype implementation, though we hope other IPsec - implementations will adopt the technique once we demonstrate it. See<A href="#goals"> - project goals</A> below for why we think this is important.</P> -<P>A somewhat more detailed description of each of these applications is - below. Our<A href="#quick_guide"> quickstart</A> section will show you - how to build each of them.</P> -<H4><A name="makeVPN">Using secure tunnels to create a VPN</A></H4> -<P>A VPN, or<STRONG> V</STRONG>irtual<STRONG> P</STRONG>rivate<STRONG> N</STRONG> -etwork lets two networks communicate securely when the only connection - between them is over a third network which they do not trust.</P> -<P>The method is to put a security gateway machine between each of the - communicating networks and the untrusted network. The gateway machines - encrypt packets entering the untrusted net and decrypt packets leaving - it, creating a secure tunnel through it.</P> -<P>If the cryptography is strong, the implementation is careful, and the - administration of the gateways is competent, then one can reasonably - trust the security of the tunnel. The two networks then behave like a - single large private network, some of whose links are encrypted tunnels - through untrusted nets.</P> -<P>Actual VPNs are often more complex. One organisation may have fifty - branch offices, plus some suppliers and clients, with whom it needs to - communicate securely. Another might have 5,000 stores, or 50,000 - point-of-sale devices. The untrusted network need not be the Internet. - All the same issues arise on a corporate or institutional network - whenever two departments want to communicate privately with each other.</P> -<P>Administratively, the nice thing about many VPN setups is that large - parts of them are static. You know the IP addresses of most of the - machines involved. More important, you know they will not change on - you. This simplifies some of the admin work. For cases where the - addresses do change, see the next section.</P> -<H4><A name="road.intro">Road Warriors</A></H4> -<P>The prototypical "Road Warrior" is a traveller connecting to home - base from a laptop machine. Administratively, most of the same problems - arise for a telecommuter connecting from home to the office, especially - if the telecommuter does not have a static IP address.</P> -<P>For purposes of this document:</P> -<UL> -<LI>anyone with a dynamic IP address is a "Road Warrior".</LI> -<LI>any machine doing IPsec processing is a "gateway". Think of the - single-user road warrior machine as a gateway with a degenerate subnet - (one machine, itself) behind it.</LI> -</UL> -<P>These require somewhat different setup than VPN gateways with static - addresses and with client systems behind them, but are basically not - problematic.</P> -<P>There are some difficulties which appear for some road warrior - connections:</P> -<UL> -<LI>Road Wariors who get their addresses via DHCP may have a problem. - FreeS/WAN can quite happily build and use a tunnel to such an address, - but when the DHCP lease expires, FreeS/WAN does not know that. The - tunnel fails, and the only recovery method is to tear it down and - re-build it.</LI> -<LI>If<A href="#NAT.gloss"> Network Address Translation</A> (NAT) is - applied between the two IPsec Gateways, this breaks IPsec. IPsec - authenticates packets on an end-to-end basis, to ensure they are not - altered en route. NAT rewrites packets as they go by. See our<A href="#NAT"> - firewalls</A> document for details.</LI> -</UL> -<P>In most situations, however, FreeS/WAN supports road warrior - connections just fine.</P> -<H4><A name="opp.intro">Opportunistic encryption</A></H4> -<P>One of the reasons we are working on FreeS/WAN is that it gives us - the opportunity to add what we call opportuntistic encryption. This - means that any two FreeS/WAN gateways will be able to encrypt their - traffic, even if the two gateway administrators have had no prior - contact and neither system has any preset information about the other.</P> -<P>Both systems pick up the authentication information they need from - the<A href="#DNS"> DNS</A> (domain name service), the service they - already use to look up IP addresses. Of course the administrators must - put that information in the DNS, and must set up their gateways with - opportunistic encryption enabled. Once that is done, everything is - automatic. The gateways look for opportunities to encrypt, and encrypt - whatever they can. Whether they also accept unencrypted communication - is a policy decision the administrator can make.</P> -<P>This technique can give two large payoffs:</P> -<UL> -<LI>It reduces the administrative overhead for IPsec enormously. You - configure your gateway and thereafter everything is automatic. The need - to configure the system on a per-tunnel basis disappears. Of course, - FreeS/WAN allows specifically configured tunnels to co-exist with - opportunistic encryption, but we hope to make them unnecessary in most - cases.</LI> -<LI>It moves us toward a more secure Internet, allowing users to create - an environment where message privacy is the default. All messages can - be encrypted, provided the other end is willing to co-operate. See our<A -href="#politics"> history and politics of cryptography</A> section for - discussion of why we think this is needed.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Opportunistic encryption is not (yet?) a standard part of the IPsec - protocols, but an extension we are proposing and demonstrating. For - details of our design, see<A href="#applied"> links</A> below.</P> -<P>Only one current product we know of implements a form of - opportunistic encryption.<A href="#ssmail"> Secure sendmail</A> will - automatically encrypt server-to-server mail transfers whenever - possible.</P> -<H3><A name="types">The need to authenticate gateways</A></H3> -<P>A complication, which applies to any type of connection -- VPN, Road - Warrior or opportunistic -- is that a secure connection cannot be - created magically.<EM> There must be some mechanism which enables the - gateways to reliably identify each other.</EM> Without this, they - cannot sensibly trust each other and cannot create a genuinely secure - link.</P> -<P>Any link they do create without some form of<A href="#authentication"> - authentication</A> will be vulnerable to a<A href="#middle"> - man-in-the-middle attack</A>. If<A href="#alicebob"> Alice and Bob</A> - are the people creating the connection, a villian who can re-route or - intercept the packets can pose as Alice while talking to Bob and pose - as Bob while talking to Alice. Alice and Bob then both talk to the man - in the middle, thinking they are talking to each other, and the villain - gets everything sent on the bogus "secure" connection.</P> -<P>There are two ways to build links securely, both of which exclude the - man-in-the middle:</P> -<UL> -<LI>with<STRONG> manual keying</STRONG>, Alice and Bob share a secret - key (which must be transmitted securely, perhaps in a note or via PGP - or SSH) to encrypt their messages. For FreeS/WAN, such keys are stored - in the<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> ipsec.conf(5)</A> file. Of - course, if an enemy gets the key, all is lost.</LI> -<LI>with<STRONG> automatic keying</STRONG>, the two systems authenticate - each other and negotiate their own secret keys. The keys are - automatically changed periodically.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Automatic keying is much more secure, since if an enemy gets one key - only messages between the previous re-keying and the next are exposed. - It is therefore the usual mode of operation for most IPsec deployment, - and the mode we use in our setup examples. FreeS/WAN does support - manual keying for special circumstanes. See this<A href="#prodman"> - section</A>.</P> -<P>For automatic keying, the two systems must authenticate each other - during the negotiations. There is a choice of methods for this:</P> -<UL> -<LI>a<STRONG> shared secret</STRONG> provides authentication. If Alice - and Bob are the only ones who know a secret and Alice recives a message - which could not have been created without that secret, then Alice can - safely believe the message came from Bob.</LI> -<LI>a<A href="#public"> public key</A> can also provide authentication. - If Alice receives a message signed with Bob's private key (which of - course only he should know) and she has a trustworthy copy of his - public key (so that she can verify the signature), then she can safely - believe the message came from Bob.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Public key techniques are much preferable, for reasons discussed<A href="#choose"> - later</A>, and will be used in all our setup examples. FreeS/WAN does - also support auto-keying with shared secret authentication. See this<A href="#prodsecrets"> - section</A>.</P> -<H2><A name="project">The FreeS/WAN project</A></H2> -<P>For complete information on the project, see our web site,<A href="http://liberty.freeswan.org"> - freeswan.org</A>.</P> -<P>In summary, we are implementing the<A href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A> - protocols for Linux and extending them to do<A href="#carpediem"> - opportunistic encryption</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="goals">Project goals</A></H3> -<P>Our overall goal in FreeS/WAN is to make the Internet more secure and - more private.</P> -<P>Our IPsec implementation supports VPNs and Road Warriors of course. - Those are important applications. Many users will want FreeS/WAN to - build corporate VPNs or to provide secure remote access.</P> -<P>However, our goals in building it go beyond that. We are trying to - help<STRONG> build security into the fabric of the Internet</STRONG> so - that anyone who choses to communicate securely can do so, as easily as - they can do anything else on the net.</P> -<P>More detailed objectives are:</P> -<UL> -<LI>extend IPsec to do<A href="#carpediem"> opportunistic encryption</A> - so that -<UL> -<LI>any two systems can secure their communications without a - pre-arranged connection</LI> -<LI><STRONG>secure connections can be the default</STRONG>, falling back - to unencrypted connections only if: -<UL> -<LI><EM>both</EM> the partner is not set up to co-operate on securing - the connection</LI> -<LI><EM>and</EM> your policy allows insecure connections</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>a significant fraction of all Internet traffic is encrypted</LI> -<LI>wholesale monitoring of the net (<A href="#intro.poli">examples</A>) - becomes difficult or impossible</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>help make IPsec widespread by providing an implementation with no - restrictions: -<UL> -<LI>freely available in source code under the<A href="#GPL"> GNU General - Public License</A></LI> -<LI>running on a range of readily available hardware</LI> -<LI>not subject to US or other nations'<A href="#exlaw"> export - restrictions</A>. -<BR> Note that in order to avoid<EM> even the appearance</EM> of being - subject to those laws, the project cannot accept software contributions - --<EM> not even one-line bug fixes</EM> -- from US residents or - citizens.</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>provide a high-quality IPsec implementation for Linux -<UL> -<LI>portable to all CPUs Linux supports:<A href="#CPUs"> (current list)</A> -</LI> -<LI>interoperable with other IPsec implementations:<A href="#interop"> - (current list)</A></LI> -</UL> -</LI> -</UL> -<P>If we can get opportunistic encryption implemented and widely - deployed, then it becomes impossible for even huge well-funded agencies - to monitor the net.</P> -<P>See also our section on<A href="#politics"> history and politics</A> - of cryptography, which includes our project leader's<A href="#gilmore"> - rationale</A> for starting the project.</P> -<H3><A name="staff">Project team</A></H3> -<P>Two of the team are from the US and can therefore contribute no code:</P> -<UL> -<LI>John Gilmore: founder and policy-maker (<A href="http://www.toad.com/gnu/"> -home page</A>)</LI> -<LI>Hugh Daniel: project manager, Most Demented Tester, and occasionally - Pointy-Haired Boss</LI> -</UL> -<P>The rest of the team are Canadians, working in Canada. (<A href="#status"> -Why Canada?</A>)</P> -<UL> -<LI>Hugh Redelmeier:<A href="#Pluto"> Pluto daemon</A> programmer</LI> -<LI>Richard Guy Briggs:<A href="#KLIPS"> KLIPS</A> programmer</LI> -<LI>Michael Richardson: hacker without portfolio</LI> -<LI>Claudia Schmeing: documentation</LI> -<LI>Sam Sgro: technical support via the<A href="#lists"> mailing lists</A> -</LI> -</UL> -<P>The project is funded by civil libertarians who consider our goals - worthwhile. Most of the team are paid for this work.</P> -<P>People outside this core team have made substantial contributions. - See</P> -<UL> -<LI>our<A href="../CREDITS"> CREDITS</A> file</LI> -<LI>the<A href="#patch"> patches and add-ons</A> section of our web - references file</LI> -<LI>lists below of user-written<A href="#howto"> HowTos</A> and<A href="#applied"> - other papers</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>Additional contributions are welcome. See the<A href="#contrib.faq"> - FAQ</A> for details.</P> -<H2><A name="products">Products containing FreeS/WAN</A></H2> -<P>Unfortunately the<A href="#exlaw"> export laws</A> of some countries - restrict the distribution of strong cryptography. FreeS/WAN is - therefore not in the standard Linux kernel and not in all CD or web - distributions.</P> -<P>FreeS/WAN is, however, quite widely used. Products we know of that - use it are listed below. We would appreciate hearing, via the<A href="#lists"> - mailing lists</A>, of any we don't know of.</P> -<H3><A name="distwith">Full Linux distributions</A></H3> -<P>FreeS/WAN is included in various general-purpose Linux distributions, - mostly from countries (shown in brackets) with more sensible laws:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.suse.com/">SuSE Linux</A> (Germany)</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.conectiva.com">Conectiva</A> (Brazil)</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.linux-mandrake.com/en/">Mandrake</A> (France)</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.debian.org">Debian</A></LI> -<LI>the<A href="http://www.pld.org.pl/"> Polish(ed) Linux Distribution</A> - (Poland)</LI> -<LI><A>Best Linux</A> (Finland)</LI> -</UL> -<P>For distributions which do not include FreeS/WAN and are not Redhat - (which we develop and test on), there is additional information in our<A -href="#otherdist"> compatibility</A> section.</P> -<P>The server edition of<A href="http://www.corel.com"> Corel</A> Linux - (Canada) also had FreeS/WAN, but Corel have dropped that product line.</P> -<H3><A name="kernel_dist">Linux kernel distributions</A></H3> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/wolk/">Working Overloaded - Linux Kernel (WOLK)</A></LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="office_dist">Office server distributions</A></H3> -<P>FreeS/WAN is also included in several distributions aimed at the - market for turnkey business servers:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.e-smith.com/">e-Smith</A> (Canada), which has - recently been acquired and become the Network Server Solutions group of<A -href="http://www.mitel.com/"> Mitel Networks</A> (Canada)</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.clarkconnect.org/">ClarkConnect</A> from Point - Clark Networks (Canada)</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.trustix.net/">Trustix Secure Linux</A> (Norway)</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="fw_dist">Firewall distributions</A></H3> -<P>Several distributions intended for firewall and router applications - include FreeS/WAN:</P> -<UL> -<LI>The<A href="http://www.linuxrouter.org/"> Linux Router Project</A> - produces a Linux distribution that will boot from a single floppy. The<A -href="http://leaf.sourceforge.net"> LEAF</A> firewall project provides - several different LRP-based firewall packages. At least one of them, - Charles Steinkuehler's Dachstein, includes FreeS/WAN with X.509 - patches.</LI> -<LI>there are several distributions bootable directly from CD-ROM, - usable on a machine without hard disk. -<UL> -<LI>Dachstein (see above) can be used this way</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.gibraltar.at/">Gibraltar</A> is based on Debian - GNU/Linux.</LI> -<LI>at time of writing,<A href="www.xiloo.com"> Xiloo</A> is available - only in Chinese. An English version is expected.</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.astaro.com/products/index.html">Astaro Security - Linux</A> includes FreeS/WAN. It has some web-based tools for managing - the firewall that include FreeS/WAN configuration management.</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.linuxwall.de">Linuxwall</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.smoothwall.org/">Smoothwall</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.devil-linux.org/">Devil Linux</A></LI> -<LI>Coyote Linux has a<A href="http://embedded.coyotelinux.com/wolverine/index.php"> - Wolverine</A> firewall/VPN server</LI> -</UL> -<P>There are also several sets of scripts available for managing a - firewall which is also acting as a FreeS/WAN IPsec gateway. See this<A href="#rules.pub"> - list</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="turnkey">Firewall and VPN products</A></H3> -<P>Several vendors use FreeS/WAN as the IPsec component of a turnkey - firewall or VPN product.</P> -<P>Software-only products:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.linuxmagic.com/vpn/index.html">Linux Magic</A> - offer a VPN/Firewall product using FreeS/WAN</LI> -<LI>The Software Group's<A href="http://www.wanware.com/sentinet/"> - Sentinet</A> product uses FreeS/WAN</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.merilus.com">Merilus</A> use FreeS/WAN in their - Gateway Guardian firewall product</LI> -</UL> -<P>Products that include the hardware:</P> -<UL> -<LI>The<A href="http://www.lasat.com"> LASAT SafePipe[tm]</A> series. is - an IPsec box based on an embedded MIPS running Linux with FreeS/WAN and - a web-config front end. This company also host our freeswan.org web - site.</LI> -<LI>Merilus<A href="http://www.merilus.com/products/fc/index.shtml"> - Firecard</A> is a Linux firewall on a PCI card.</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.kyzo.com/">Kyzo</A> have a "pizza box" product - line with various types of server, all running from flash. One of them - is an IPsec/PPTP VPN server</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.pfn.com">PFN</A> use FreeS/WAN in some of their - products</LI> -</UL> -<P><A href="www.rebel.com">Rebel.com</A>, makers of the Netwinder Linux - machines (ARM or Crusoe based), had a product that used FreeS/WAN. The - company is in receivership so the future of the Netwinder is at best - unclear.<A href="#patch"> PKIX patches</A> for FreeS/WAN developed at - Rebel are listed in our web links document.</P> -<H2><A name="docs">Information sources</A></H2> -<H3><A name="docformats">This HowTo, in multiple formats</A></H3> -<P>FreeS/WAN documentation up to version 1.5 was available only in HTML. - Now we ship two formats:</P> -<UL> -<LI>as HTML, one file for each doc section plus a global<A href="toc.html"> - Table of Contents</A></LI> -<LI><A href="HowTo.html">one big HTML file</A> for easy searching</LI> -</UL> -<P>and provide a Makefile to generate other formats if required:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="HowTo.pdf">PDF</A></LI> -<LI><A href="HowTo.ps">Postscript</A></LI> -<LI><A href="HowTo.txt">ASCII text</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>The Makefile assumes the htmldoc tool is available. You can download - it from<A href="http://www.easysw.com"> Easy Software</A>.</P> -<P>All formats should be available at the following websites:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.freeswan.org/doc.html">FreeS/WAN project</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.linuxdoc.org">Linux Documentation Project</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>The distribution tarball has only the two HTML formats.</P> -<P><STRONG>Note:</STRONG> If you need the latest doc version, for - example to see if anyone has managed to set up interoperation between - FreeS/WAN and whatever, then you should download the current snapshot. - What is on the web is documentation as of the last release. Snapshots - have all changes I've checked in to date.</P> -<H3><A name="rtfm">RTFM (please Read The Fine Manuals)</A></H3> -<P>As with most things on any Unix-like system, most parts of Linux - FreeS/WAN are documented in online manual pages. We provide a list of<A href="/mnt/floppy/manpages.html"> - FreeS/WAN man pages</A>, with links to HTML versions of them.</P> -<P>The man pages describing configuration files are:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="/mnt/floppy/manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html">ipsec.conf(5)</A></LI> -<LI><A href="/mnt/floppy/manpage.d/ipsec.secrets.5.html"> -ipsec.secrets(5)</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>Man pages for common commands include:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="/mnt/floppy/manpage.d/ipsec.8.html">ipsec(8)</A></LI> -<LI><A href="/mnt/floppy/manpage.d/ipsec_pluto.8.html">ipsec_pluto(8)</A> -</LI> -<LI><A href="/mnt/floppy/manpage.d/ipsec_newhostkey.8.html"> -ipsec_newhostkey(8)</A></LI> -<LI><A href="/mnt/floppy/manpage.d/ipsec_auto.8.html">ipsec_auto(8)</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>You can read these either in HTML using the links above or with the<VAR> - man(1)</VAR> command.</P> -<P>In the event of disagreement between this HTML documentation and the - man pages, the man pages are more likely correct since they are written - by the implementers. Please report any such inconsistency on the<A href="#lists"> - mailing list</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="text">Other documents in the distribution</A></H3> -<P>Text files in the main distribution directory are README, INSTALL, - CREDITS, CHANGES, BUGS and COPYING.</P> -<P>The Libdes encryption library we use has its own documentation. You - can find it in the library directory..</P> -<H3><A name="assumptions">Background material</A></H3> -<P>Throughout this documentation, I write as if the reader had at least - a general familiarity with Linux, with Internet Protocol networking, - and with the basic ideas of system and network security. Of course that - will certainly not be true for all readers, and quite likely not even - for a majority.</P> -<P>However, I must limit amount of detail on these topics in the main - text. For one thing, I don't understand all the details of those topics - myself. Even if I did, trying to explain everything here would produce - extremely long and almost completely unreadable documentation.</P> -<P>If one or more of those areas is unknown territory for you, there are - plenty of other resources you could look at:</P> -<DL> -<DT>Linux</DT> -<DD>the<A href="http://www.linuxdoc.org"> Linux Documentation Project</A> - or a local<A href="http://www.linux.org/groups/"> Linux User Group</A> - and these<A href="#linux.link"> links</A></DD> -<DT>IP networks</DT> -<DD>Rusty Russell's<A href="http://netfilter.samba.org/unreliable-guides/networking-concepts-HOWTO/index.html"> - Networking Concepts HowTo</A> and these<A href="#IP.background"> links</A> -</DD> -<DT>Security</DT> -<DD>Schneier's book<A href="#secrets"> Secrets and Lies</A> and these<A href="#crypto.link"> - links</A></DD> -</DL> -<P>Also, I do make an effort to provide some background material in - these documents. All the basic ideas behind IPsec and FreeS/WAN are - explained here. Explanations that do not fit in the main text, or that - not everyone will need, are often in the<A href="#ourgloss"> glossary</A> -, which is the largest single file in this document set. There is also a<A -href="#background"> background</A> file containing various explanations - too long to fit in glossary definitions. All files are heavily - sprinkled with links to each other and to the glossary.<STRONG> If some - passage makes no sense to you, try the links</STRONG>.</P> -<P>For other reference material, see the<A href="#biblio"> bibliography</A> - and our collection of<A href="web.html#weblinks"> web links</A>.</P> -<P>Of course, no doubt I get this (and other things) wrong sometimes. - Feedback via the<A href="#lists"> mailing lists</A> is welcome.</P> -<H3><A name="archives">Archives of the project mailing list</A></H3> -<P>Until quite recently, there was only one FreeS/WAN mailing list, and - archives of it were:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec">Canada</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.nexial.com">Holland</A></LI> -</UL> - The two archives use completely different search engines. You might - want to try both. -<P>More recently we have expanded to five lists, each with its own - archive.</P> -<P><A href="#lists">More information</A> on mailing lists.</P> -<H3><A name="howto">User-written HowTo information</A></H3> -<P>Various user-written HowTo documents are available. The ones covering - FreeS/WAN-to-FreeS/WAN connections are:</P> -<UL> -<LI>Jean-Francois Nadeau's<A href="http://jixen.tripod.com/"> practical - configurations</A> document</LI> -<LI>Jens Zerbst's HowTo on<A href="http://dynipsec.tripod.com/"> Using - FreeS/WAN with dynamic IP addresses</A>.</LI> -<LI>an entry in Kurt Seifried's<A href="http://www.securityportal.com/lskb/kben00000013.html"> - Linux Security Knowledge Base</A>.</LI> -<LI>a section of David Ranch's<A href="http://www.ecst.csuchico.edu/~dranch/LINUX/index-linux.html#trinityos"> - Trinity OS Guide</A></LI> -<LI>a section in David Bander's book<A href="#bander"> Linux Security - Toolkit</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>User-wriiten HowTo material may be<STRONG> especially helpful if you - need to interoperate with another IPsec implementation</STRONG>. We - have neither the equipment nor the manpower to test such - configurations. Users seem to be doing an admirable job of filling the - gaps.</P> -<UL> -<LI>list of user-written<A href="interop.html#otherpub"> interoperation - HowTos</A> in our interop document</LI> -</UL> -<P>Check what version of FreeS/WAN user-written documents cover. The - software is under active development and the current version may be - significantly different from what an older document describes.</P> -<H3><A name="applied">Papers on FreeS/WAN</A></H3> -<P>Two design documents show team thinking on new developments:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="opportunism.spec">Opportunistic Encryption</A> by technical - lead Henry Spencer and Pluto programmer Hugh Redelemeier</LI> -<LI>discussion of<A href="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/SSW/freeswan/klips2req/"> - KLIPS redesign</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>Both documents are works in progress and are frequently revised. For - the latest version, see the<A href="#lists"> design mailing list</A>. - Comments should go to that list.</P> -<P>There is now an<A href="http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-richardson-ipsec-opportunistic-06.txt"> - Internet Draft on Opportunistic Encryption</A> by Michael Richardson, - Hugh Redelmeier and Henry Spencer. This is a first step toward getting - the protocol standardised so there can be multiple implementations of - it. Discussion of it takes place on the<A href="http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/ipsec-charter.html"> - IETF IPsec Working Group</A> mailing list.</P> -<P>A number of papers giving further background on FreeS/WAN, or - exploring its future or its applications, are also available:</P> -<UL> -<LI>Both Henry and Richard gave talks on FreeS/WAN at the 2000<A href="http://www.linuxsymposium.org"> - Ottawa Linux Symposium</A>. -<UL> -<LI>Richard's<A href="http://www.conscoop.ottawa.on.ca/rgb/freeswan/ols2k/"> - slides</A></LI> -<LI>Henry's paper</LI> -<LI>MP3 audio of their talks is available from the<A href="http://www.linuxsymposium.org/"> - conference page</A></LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI><CITE>Moat: A Virtual Private Network Appliances and Services - Platform</CITE> is a paper about large-scale (a few 100 links) use of - FreeS/WAN in a production application at AT&T Research. It is available - in Postscript or PDF from co-author Steve Bellovin's<A href="http://www.research.att.com/~smb/papers/index.html"> - papers list page</A>.</LI> -<LI>One of the Moat co-authors, John Denker, has also written -<UL> -<LI>a<A href="http://www.av8n.com/vpn/ipsec+routing.htm"> proposal</A> - for how future versions of FreeS/WAN might interact with routing - protocols</LI> -<LI>a<A href="http://www.av8n.com/vpn/wishlist.htm"> wishlist</A> of - possible new features</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>Bart Trojanowski's web page has a draft design for<A href="http://www.jukie.net/~bart/linux-ipsec/"> - hardware acceleration</A> of FreeS/WAN</LI> -</UL> -<P>Several of these provoked interesting discussions on the mailing - lists, worth searching for in the<A href="#archive"> archives</A>.</P> -<P>There are also several papers in languages other than English, see - our<A href="#otherlang"> web links</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="licensing">License and copyright information</A></H3> -<P>All code and documentation written for this project is distributed - under either the GNU General Public License (<A href="#GPL">GPL</A>) or - the GNU Library General Public License. For details see the COPYING - file in the distribution.</P> -<P>Not all code in the distribution is ours, however. See the CREDITS - file for details. In particular, note that the<A href="#LIBDES"> Libdes</A> - library and the version of<A href="#MD5"> MD5</A> that we use each have - their own license.</P> -<H2><A name="sites">Distribution sites</A></H2> -<P>FreeS/WAN is available from a number of sites.</P> -<H3><A NAME="1_5_1">Primary site</A></H3> -<P>Our primary site, is at xs4all (Thanks, folks!) in Holland:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.xs4all.nl/~freeswan">HTTP</A></LI> -<LI><A href="ftp://ftp.xs4all.nl/pub/crypto/freeswan">FTP</A></LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="mirrors">Mirrors</A></H3> -<P>There are also mirror sites all over the world:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.flora.org/freeswan">Eastern Canada</A> (limited - resouces)</LI> -<LI><A href="ftp://ludwig.doculink.com/pub/freeswan/">Eastern Canada</A> - (has older versions too)</LI> -<LI><A href="ftp://ntsc.notBSD.org/pub/crypto/freeswan/">Eastern Canada</A> - (has older versions too)</LI> -<LI><A href="ftp://ftp.kame.net/pub/freeswan/">Japan</A></LI> -<LI><A href="ftp://ftp.futuredynamics.com/freecrypto/FreeSWAN/">Hong - Kong</A></LI> -<LI><A href="ftp://ipsec.dk/pub/freeswan/">Denmark</A></LI> -<LI><A href="ftp://ftp.net.lut.ac.uk/freeswan">the UK</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://storm.alert.sk/comp/mirrors/freeswan/">Slovak - Republic</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://the.wiretapped.net/security/vpn-tunnelling/freeswan/"> -Australia</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://freeswan.technolust.cx/">technolust</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://freeswan.devguide.de/">Germany</A></LI> -<LI>Ivan Moore's<A href="http://snowcrash.tdyc.com/freeswan/"> site</A></LI> -<LI>the<A href="http://www.cryptoarchive.net/"> Crypto Archive</A> on - the<A href="http://www.securityportal.com/"> Security Portal</A> site</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.wiretapped.net/">Wiretapped.net</A> in Australia</LI> -</UL> -<P>Thanks to those folks as well.</P> -<H3><A name="munitions">The "munitions" archive of Linux crypto software</A> -</H3> -<P>There is also an archive of Linux crypto software called "munitions", - with its own mirrors in a number of countries. It includes FreeS/WAN, - though not always the latest version. Some of its sites are:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://munitions.vipul.net/">Germany</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://munitions.iglu.cjb.net/">Italy</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://munitions2.xs4all.nl/">Netherlands</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>Any of those will have a list of other "munitions" mirrors. There is - also a CD available.</P> -<H2><A NAME="1_6">Links to other sections</A></H2> -<P>For more detailed background information, see:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="#politics">history and politics</A> of cryptography</LI> -<LI><A href="#ipsec.detail">IPsec protocols</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>To begin working with FreeS/WAN, go to our<A href="quickstart.html#quick.guide"> - quickstart</A> guide.</P> -<HR> -<A NAME="upgrading"></A> -<H1><A NAME="2">Upgrading to FreeS/WAN 2.x</A></H1> -<H2><A NAME="2_1">New! Built in Opportunistic connections</A></H2> -<P>Out of the box, FreeS/WAN 2.x will attempt to encrypt all your IP - traffic. It will try to establish IPsec connections for:</P> -<UL> -<LI> IP traffic from the Linux box on which you have installed - FreeS/WAN, and</LI> -<LI> outbound IP traffic routed through that Linux box (eg. from a - protected subnet).</LI> -</UL> -<P>FreeS/WAN 2.x uses<STRONG> hidden, automatically enabled<VAR> - ipsec.conf</VAR> connections</STRONG> to do this.</P> -<P>This behaviour is part of our campaign to get Opportunistic - Encryption (OE) widespread in the Linux world, so that any two Linux - boxes can encrypt to one another without prearrangement. There's one - catch, however: you must<A HREF="#quickstart"> set up a few DNS records</A> - to distribute RSA public keys and (if applicable) IPsec gateway - information.</P> -<P>If you start FreeS/WAN before you have set up these DNS records, your - connectivity will be slow, and messages relating to the built in - connections will clutter your logs. If you are unable to set up DNS for - OE, you will wish to<A HREF="#disable_policygroups"> disable the hidden - connections</A>.</P> -<A NAME="upgrading.flagday"></A> -<H3><A NAME="2_1_1">Upgrading Opportunistic Encryption to 2.01 (or - later)</A></H3> -<P>As of FreeS/WAN 2.01, Opportunistic Encryption (OE) uses DNS TXT - resource records (RRs) only (rather than TXT with KEY). This change - causes a "flag day". Users of FreeS/WAN 2.00 (or earlier) OE who are - upgrading may need to post additional resource records.</P> -<P>If you are running<A HREF="#initiate-only"> initiate-only OE</A>, you<EM> - must</EM> put up a TXT record in any forward domain as per our<A HREF="#opp.client"> - quickstart instructions</A>. This replaces your old forward KEY.</P> -<P> If you are running full OE, you require no updates. You already have - the needed TXT record in the reverse domain. However, to facilitate - future features, you may also wish to publish that TXT record in a - forward domain as instructed<A HREF="#opp.incoming"> here</A>.</P> -<P>If you are running OE on a gateway (and encrypting on behalf of - subnetted boxes) you require no updates. You already have the required - TXT record in your gateway's reverse map, and the TXT records for any - subnetted boxes require no updating. However, to facilitate future - features, you may wish to publish your gateway's TXT record in a - forward domain as shown<A HREF="#opp.incoming"> here</A>.</P> -<P> During the transition, you may wish to leave any old KEY records up - for some time. They will provide limited backward compatibility. -<!-- -For more -detail on that compatibility, see <A HREF="oe.known-issues">Known Issues with -OE</A>. ---> -</P> -<H2><A NAME="2_2">New! Policy Groups</A></H2> -<P>We want to make it easy for you to declare security policy as it - applies to IPsec connections.</P> -<P>Policy Groups make it simple to say:</P> -<UL> -<LI>These are the folks I want to talk to in the clear.</LI> -<LI>These spammers' domains -- I don't want to talk to them at all.</LI> -<LI>To talk to the finance department, I must use IPsec.</LI> -<LI>For any other communication, try to encrypt, but it's okay if we - can't.</LI> -</UL> -<P>FreeS/WAN then implements these policies, creating OE connections if - and when needed. You can use Policy Groups along with connections you - explicitly define in ipsec.conf.</P> -<P>For more information, see our<A HREF="policygroups.html"> Policy - Group HOWTO</A>.</P> -<H2><A NAME="2_3">New! Packetdefault Connection</A></H2> -<P>Free/SWAN 2.x ships with the<STRONG> automatically enabled, hidden - connection</STRONG><VAR> packetdefault</VAR>. This configures a - FreeS/WAN box as an OE gateway for any hosts located behind it. As - mentioned above, you must configure some<A HREF="quickstart.html"> DNS - records</A> for OE to work.</P> -<P>As the name implies, this connection functions as a default. If you - have more specific connections, such as policy groups which configure - your FreeS/WAN box as an OE gateway for a local subnet, these will - apply before<VAR> packetdefault</VAR>. You can view<VAR> packetdefault</VAR> -'s specifics in<A HREF="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> man ipsec.conf</A> -.</P> -<H2><A NAME="2_4">FreeS/WAN now disables Reverse Path Filtering</A></H2> -<P>FreeS/WAN often doesn't work with reverse path filtering. At start - time, FreeS/WAN now turns rp_filter off, and logs a warning.</P> -<P>FreeS/WAN does not turn it back on again. You can do this yourself - with a command like:</P> -<PRE> echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/eth0/rp_filter</PRE> -<P>For eth0, substitute the interface which FreeS/WAN was affecting.</P> -<A NAME="ipsec.conf_v2"></A> -<H2><A NAME="2_5">Revised<VAR> ipsec.conf</VAR></A></H2> -<H3><A NAME="2_5_1">No promise of compatibility</A></H3> -<P>The FreeS/WAN team promised config-file compatibility throughout the - 1.x series. That means a 1.5 config file can be directly imported into - a fresh 1.99 install with no problems.</P> -<P>With FreeS/WAN 2.x, we've given ourselves permission to make the - config file easier to use. The cost: some FreeS/WAN 1.x configurations - will not work properly. Many of the new features are, however, backward - compatible.</P> -<H3><A NAME="2_5_2">Most<VAR> ipsec.conf</VAR> files will work fine</A></H3> -<P>... so long as you paste this line,<STRONG> with no preceding - whitespace</STRONG>, at the top of your config file:</P> -<PRE> version 2</PRE> -<H3><A NAME="2_5_3">Backward compatibility patch</A></H3> -<P>If the new defaults bite you, use<A HREF="ipsec.conf.2_to_1"> this<VAR> - ipsec.conf</VAR> fragment</A> to simulate the old default values.</P> -<H3><A NAME="2_5_4">Details</A></H3> -<P> We've obsoleted various directives which almost no one was using:</P> -<PRE> dump - plutobackgroundload - no_eroute_pass - lifetime - rekeystart - rekeytries</PRE> -<P>For most of these, there is some other way to elicit the desired - behaviour. See<A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/design/2002-August/003243.html"> - this post</A>.</P> -<P> We've made some settings, which almost everyone was using, defaults. - For example:</P> -<PRE> interfaces=%defaultroute - plutoload=%search - plutostart=%search - uniqueids=yes</PRE> -<P>We've also changed some default values to help with OE and Policy - Groups:</P> -<PRE> authby=rsasig ## not secret!!! - leftrsasigkey=%dnsondemand ## looks up missing keys in DNS when needed. - rightrsasigkey=%dnsondemand</PRE> -<P> Of course, you can still override any defaults by explictly - declaring something else in your connection.</P> -<P><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/design/2002-August/003243.html"> - A post with a list of many ipsec.conf changes.</A> -<BR><A HREF="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> Current ipsec.conf manual.</A> -</P> -<A NAME="upgrading.rpms"></A> -<H3><A NAME="2_5_5">Upgrading from 1.x RPMs to 2.x RPMs</A></H3> -<P>Note: When upgrading from 1-series to 2-series RPMs,<VAR> rpm -U</VAR> - will not work.</P> -<P>You must instead erase the 1.x RPMs, then install the 2.x set:</P> -<PRE> rpm -e freeswan</PRE> -<PRE> rpm -e freeswan-module</PRE> -<P>On erasing, your old<VAR> ipsec.conf</VAR> should be moved to<VAR> - ipsec.conf.rpmsave</VAR>. Keep this. You will probably want to copy - your existing connections to the end of your new 2.x file.</P> -<P>Install the RPMs suitable for your kernel version, such as:</P> -<PRE> rpm -ivh freeswan-module-2.04_2.4.20_20.9-0.i386.rpm</PRE> -<PRE> rpm -ivh freeswan-userland-2.04_2.4.20_20.9-0.i386.rpm</PRE> -<P>Or, to splice the files:</P> -<PRE> cat /etc/ipsec.conf /etc/ipsec.conf.rpmsave > /etc/ipsec.conf.tmp - mv /etc/ipsec.conf.tmp /etc/ipsec.conf</PRE> -<P>Then, remove the redundant<VAR> conn %default</VAR> and<VAR> config - setup</VAR> sections. Unless you have done any special configuring - here, you'll likely want to remove the 1.x versions. Remove<VAR> conn - OEself</VAR>, if present.</P> -<HR> -<H1><A name="quickstart">Quickstart Guide to Opportunistic Encryption</A> -</H1> -<A name="quick_guide"></A> -<H2><A name="opp.setup">Purpose</A></H2> -<P>This page will get you started using Linux FreeS/WAN with - opportunistic encryption (OE). OE enables you to set up IPsec tunnels - without co-ordinating with another site administrator, and without hand - configuring each tunnel. If enough sites support OE, a "FAX effect" - occurs, and many of us can communicate without eavesdroppers.</P> -<H3><A NAME="3_1_1">OE "flag day"</A></H3> -<P>As of FreeS/WAN 2.01, OE uses DNS TXT resource records (RRs) only - (rather than TXT with KEY). This change causes a<A href="http://jargon.watson-net.com/jargon.asp?w=flag+day"> - "flag day"</A>. Users of FreeS/WAN 2.00 (or earlier) OE who are - upgrading may require additional resource records, as detailed in our<A href="#upgrading.flagday"> - upgrading document</A>. OE setup instructions here are for 2.02 or - later.</P> -<H2><A name="opp.dns">Requirements</A></H2> -<P>To set up opportunistic encryption, you will need:</P> -<UL> -<LI>a Linux box. For OE to the public Internet, this box must NOT be - behind<A HREF="#NAT.gloss"> Network Address Translation</A> (NAT).</LI> -<LI>to install Linux FreeS/WAN 2.02 or later</LI> -<LI>either control over your reverse DNS (for full opportunism) or the - ability to write to some forward domain (for initiator-only).<A HREF="http://www.fdns.net"> - This free DNS service</A> explicitly supports forward TXT records for - FreeS/WAN use.</LI> -<LI>(for full opportunism) a static IP</LI> -</UL> -<P>Note: Currently, only Linux FreeS/WAN supports opportunistic - encryption.</P> -<H2><A name="easy.install">RPM install</A></H2> -<P>Our instructions are for a recent Red Hat with a 2.4-series stock or - Red Hat updated kernel. For other ways to install, see our<A href="#install"> - install document</A>.</P> -<H3><A NAME="3_3_1">Download RPMs</A></H3> -<P>If we have prebuilt RPMs for your Red Hat system, this command will - get them:</P> -<PRE> ncftpget ftp://ftp.xs4all.nl/pub/crypto/freeswan/binaries/RedHat-RPMs/`uname -r | tr -d 'a-wy-z'`/\*</PRE> -<P>If that fails, you will need to try<A HREF="install.html"> another - install method</A>. Our kernel modules<B> will only work on the Red Hat - kernel they were built for</B>, since they are very sensitive to small - changes in the kernel.</P> -<P>If it succeeds, you will have userland tools, a kernel module, and an - RPM signing key:</P> -<PRE> freeswan-module-2.04_2.4.20_20.9-0.i386.rpm - freeswan-userland-2.04_2.4.20_20.9-0.i386.rpm - freeswan-rpmsign.asc</PRE> -<H3><A NAME="3_3_2">Check signatures</A></H3> -<P>If you're running RedHat 8.x or later, import the RPM signing key - into the RPM database:</P> -<PRE> rpm --import freeswan-rpmsign.asc</PRE> -<P>For RedHat 7.x systems, you'll need to add it to your<A HREF="#PGP"> - PGP</A> keyring:</P> -<PRE> pgp -ka freeswan-rpmsign.asc</PRE> -<P>Check the digital signatures on both RPMs using:</P> -<PRE> rpm --checksig freeswan*.rpm </PRE> -<P>You should see that these signatures are good:</P> -<PRE> freeswan-module-2.04_2.4.20_20.9-0.i386.rpm: pgp md5 OK - freeswan-userland-2.04_2.4.20_20.9-0.i386.rpm: pgp md5 OK</PRE> -<H3><A NAME="3_3_3">Install the RPMs</A></H3> -<P>Become root:</P> -<PRE> su</PRE> -<P>Install your RPMs with:</P> -<P></P> -<PRE> rpm -ivh freeswan*.rpm</PRE> -<P>If you're upgrading from FreeS/WAN 1.x RPMs, and have problems with - that command, see<A HREF="#upgrading.rpms"> this note</A>.</P> -<P>Then, start FreeS/WAN:</P> -<PRE> service ipsec start</PRE> -<H3><A name="testinstall">Test</A></H3> -<P>To check that you have a successful install, run:</P> -<PRE> ipsec verify</PRE> -<P>You should see as part of the<VAR> verify</VAR> output:</P> -<PRE> - Checking your system to see if IPsec got installed and started correctly - Version check and ipsec on-path [OK] - Checking for KLIPS support in kernel [OK] - Checking for RSA private key (/etc/ipsec.secrets) [OK] - Checking that pluto is running [OK] - ...</PRE> -<P>If any of these first four checks fails, see our<A href="#install.check"> - troubleshooting guide</A>.</P> -<H2><A name="opp.setups.list">Our Opportunistic Setups</A></H2> -<H3><A NAME="3_4_1">Full or partial opportunism?</A></H3> -<P>Determine the best form of opportunism your system can support.</P> -<UL> -<LI>For<A HREF="#opp.incoming"> full opportunism</A>, you'll need a - static IP and and either control over your reverse DNS or an ISP that - can add the required TXT record for you.</LI> -<LI>If you have a dynamic IP, and/or write access to forward DNS only, - you can do<A HREF="#opp.client"> initiate-only opportunism</A></LI> -<LI>To protect traffic bound for real IPs behind your gateway, use<A HREF="#opp.gate"> - this form of full opportunism</A>.</LI> -</UL> -<H2><A name="opp.client">Initiate-only setup</A></H2> -<H3><A NAME="3_5_1">Restrictions</A></H3> -<P>When you set up initiate-only Opportunistic Encryption (iOE):</P> -<UL> -<LI>there will be<STRONG> no incoming connection requests</STRONG>; you - can initiate all the IPsec connections you need.</LI> -<LI><STRONG>only one machine is visible</STRONG> on your end of the - connection.</LI> -<LI>iOE also protects traffic on behalf of<A HREF="#NAT.gloss"> NATted</A> - hosts behind the iOE box.</LI> -</UL> -<P>You cannot network a group of initiator-only machines if none of - these is capable of responding to OE. If one is capable of responding, - you may be able to create a hub topology using routing.</P> -<H3><A name="forward.dns">Create and publish a forward DNS record</A></H3> -<H4><A NAME="3_5_2_1">Find a domain you can use</A></H4> -<P>Find a DNS forward domain (e.g. example.com) where you can publish - your key. You'll need access to the DNS zone files for that domain. - This is common for a domain you own. Some free DNS providers, such as<A HREF="http://www.fdns.net"> - this one</A>, also provide this service.</P> -<P>Dynamic IP users take note: the domain where you place your key need - not be associated with the IP address for your system, or even with - your system's usual hostname.</P> -<H4><A NAME="3_5_2_2">Choose your ID</A></H4> -<P>Choose a name within that domain which you will use to identify your - machine. It's convenient if this can be the same as your hostname:</P> -<PRE> [root@xy root]# hostname --fqdn - xy.example.com</PRE> -<P>This name in FQDN (fully-qualified domain name) format will be your - ID, for DNS key lookup and IPsec negotiation.</P> -<H4><A NAME="3_5_2_3">Create a forward TXT record</A></H4> -<P>Generate a forward TXT record containing your system's public key - with a command like:</P> -<PRE> ipsec showhostkey --txt @xy.example.com</PRE> -<P>using your chosen ID in place of xy.example.com. This command takes - the contents of /etc/ipsec.secrets and reformats it into something - usable by ISC's BIND. The result should look like this (with the key - data trimmed down for clarity):</P> -<PRE> - ; RSA 2192 bits xy.example.com Thu Jan 2 12:41:44 2003 - IN TXT "X-IPsec-Server(10)=@xy.example.com" - "AQOF8tZ2... ...+buFuFn/" -</PRE> -<H4><A NAME="3_5_2_4">Publish the forward TXT record</A></H4> -<P>Insert the record into DNS, or have a system adminstrator do it for - you. It may take up to 48 hours for the record to propagate, but it's - usually much quicker.</P> -<H3><A NAME="3_5_3">Test that your key has been published</A></H3> -<P>Check your DNS work</P> -<PRE> ipsec verify --host xy.example.com</PRE> -<P>As part of the<VAR> verify</VAR> output, you ought to see something - like:</P> -<PRE> ... - Looking for TXT in forward map: xy.example.com [OK] - ...</PRE> -<P>For this type of opportunism, only the forward test is relevant; you - can ignore the tests designed to find reverse records.</P> -<H3><A NAME="3_5_4">Configure, if necessary</A></H3> -<P> If your ID is the same as your hostname, you're ready to go. - FreeS/WAN will use its<A HREF="policygroups.html"> built-in connections</A> - to create your iOE functionality.</P> -<P>If you have chosen a different ID, you must tell FreeS/WAN about it - via<A HREF="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"><VAR> ipsec.conf</VAR></A>:</P> -<PRE> config setup - myid=@myname.freedns.example.com</PRE> -<P>and restart FreeS/WAN:</P> -<PRE> service ipsec restart</PRE> -<P>The new ID will be applied to the built-in connections.</P> -<P>Note: you can create more complex iOE configurations as explained in - our<A HREF="#policygroups"> policy groups document</A>, or disable OE - using<A HREF="#disable_policygroups"> these instructions</A>.</P> -<H3><A NAME="3_5_5">Test</A></H3> -<P>That's it!<A HREF="#opp.test"> Test your connections</A>.</P> -<A name="opp.incoming"></A> -<H2><A NAME="3_6">Full Opportunism</A></H2> -<P>Full opportunism allows you to initiate and receive opportunistic - connections on your machine.</P> -<A name="incoming.opp.dns"></A> -<H3><A NAME="3_6_1">Put a TXT record in a Forward Domain</A></H3> -<P>To set up full opportunism, first<A HREF="#forward.dns"> set up a - forward TXT record</A> as for<A HREF="#opp.client"> initiator-only OE</A> -, using an ID (for example, your hostname) that resolves to your IP. Do - not configure<VAR> /etc/ipsec.conf</VAR>, but continue with the - instructions for full opportunism, below.</P> -<P>Note that this forward record is not currently necessary for full OE, - but will facilitate future features.</P> -<A name="incoming.opp.dns"></A> -<H3><A NAME="3_6_2">Put a TXT record in Reverse DNS</A></H3> -<P>You must be able to publish your DNS RR directly in the reverse - domain. FreeS/WAN will not follow a PTR which appears in the reverse, - since a second lookup at connection start time is too costly.</P> -<H4><A NAME="3_6_2_1">Create a Reverse DNS TXT record</A></H4> -<P>This record serves to publicize your FreeS/WAN public key. In - addition, it lets others know that this machine can receive - opportunistic connections, and asserts that the machine is authorized - to encrypt on its own behalf.</P> -<P>Use the command:</P> -<PRE> ipsec showhostkey --txt 192.0.2.11</PRE> -<P>where you replace 192.0.2.11 with your public IP.</P> -<P>The record (with key shortened) looks like:</P> -<PRE> ; RSA 2048 bits xy.example.com Sat Apr 15 13:53:22 2000 - IN TXT "X-IPsec-Server(10)=192.0.2.11" " AQOF8tZ2...+buFuFn/"</PRE> -<H4><A NAME="3_6_2_2">Publish your TXT record</A></H4> -<P>Send these records to your ISP, to be published in your IP's reverse - map. It may take up to 48 hours for these to propagate, but usually - takes much less time.</P> -<H3><A NAME="3_6_3">Test your DNS record</A></H3> -<P>Check your DNS work with</P> -<PRE> ipsec verify --host xy.example.com</PRE> -<P>As part of the<VAR> verify</VAR> output, you ought to see something - like:</P> -<PRE> ... - Looking for TXT in reverse map: 11.2.0.192.in-addr.arpa [OK] - ...</PRE> -<P>which indicates that you've passed the reverse-map test.</P> -<H3><A NAME="3_6_4">No Configuration Needed</A></H3> -<P>FreeS/WAN 2.x ships with full OE enabled, so you don't need to - configure anything. To enable OE out of the box, FreeS/WAN 2.x uses the - policy group<VAR> private-or-clear</VAR>, which creates IPsec - connections if possible (using OE if needed), and allows traffic in the - clear otherwise. You can create more complex OE configurations as - described in our<A HREF="#policygroups"> policy groups document</A>, or - disable OE using<A HREF="#disable_policygroups"> these instructions</A> -.</P> -<P>If you've previously configured for initiator-only opportunism, - remove<VAR> myid=</VAR> from<VAR> config setup</VAR>, so that peer - FreeS/WANs will look up your key by IP. Restart FreeS/WAN so that your - change will take effect, with</P> -<PRE> service ipsec restart</PRE> -<H3><A NAME="3_6_5">Consider Firewalling</A></H3> -<P>If you are running a default install of RedHat 8.x, take note: you - will need to alter your iptables rule setup to allow IPSec traffic - through your firewall. See<A HREF="#simple.rules"> our firewall - document</A> for sample<VAR> iptables</VAR> rules.</P> -<H3><A NAME="3_6_6">Test</A></H3> -<P>That's it. Now,<A HREF="#opp.test"> test your connection</A>.</P> -<H3><A NAME="3_6_7">Test</A></H3> -<P>Instructions are in the next section.</P> -<H2><A NAME="opp.test">Testing opportunistic connections</A></H2> -<P>Be sure IPsec is running. You can see whether it is with:</P> -<PRE> ipsec setup status</PRE> -<P>If need be, you can restart it with:</P> -<PRE> service ipsec restart</PRE> -<P>Load a FreeS/WAN test website from the host on which you're running - FreeS/WAN. Note: the feds may be watching these sites. Type one of:</P> -<P></P> -<PRE> links oetest.freeswan.org</PRE> -<PRE> links oetest.freeswan.nl</PRE> - -<!--<PRE> links oetest.freeswan.ca</PRE>--> -<P>A positive result looks like this:</P> -<PRE> - You seem to be connecting from: 192.0.2.11 which DNS says is: - gateway.example.com - _________________________________________________________________ - - Status E-route - OE enabled 16 192.139.46.73/32 -> 192.0.2.11/32 => - tun0x2097@192.0.2.11 - OE enabled 176 192.139.46.77/32 -> 192.0.2.11/32 => - tun0x208a@192.0.2.11 -</PRE> -<P>If you see this, congratulations! Your OE host or gateway will now - encrypt its own traffic whenever it can. For more OE tests, please see - our<A HREF="#test.oe"> testing document</A>. If you have difficulty, - see our<A HREF="#oe.trouble"> OE troubleshooting tips</A>.</P> -<H2><A NAME="3_8">Now what?</A></H2> -<P>Please see our<A HREF="policygroups.html"> policy groups document</A> - for more ways to set up Opportunistic Encryption.</P> -<P>You may also wish to make some<A HREF="config.html"> pre-configured - connections</A>.</P> -<H2><A NAME="3_9">Notes</A></H2> -<UL> -<LI>We assume some facts about your system in order to make - Opportunistic Encryption easier to configure. For example, we assume - that you wish to have FreeS/WAN secure your default interface.</LI> -<LI>You may change this, and other settings, by altering the<VAR> config - setup</VAR> section in<VAR> /etc/ipsec.conf</VAR>.</LI> -<LI>Note that the built-in connections used to build policy groups do - not inherit from<VAR> conn default</VAR>.</LI> - -<!-- -<LI>If you do not define your local identity -(eg. <VAR>leftid</VAR>), this will be the IP address of your default -FreeS/WAN interface. ---> -<LI> If you fail to define your local identity and do not fill in your - reverse DNS entry, you will not be able to use OE.</LI> -</UL> -<A NAME="oe.trouble"></A> -<H2><A NAME="3_10">Troubleshooting OE</A></H2> -<P>See the OE troubleshooting hints in our<A HREF="#oe.trouble"> - troubleshooting guide</A>.</P> -<A NAME="oe.known-issues"></A> -<H2><A NAME="3_11">Known Issues</A></H2> -<P>Please see<A HREF="opportunism.known-issues"> this list</A> of known - issues with Opportunistic Encryption.</P> -<HR> -<H1><A NAME="4">How to Configure Linux FreeS/WAN with Policy Groups</A></H1> -<A NAME="policygroups"></A> -<H2><A NAME="4_1">What are Policy Groups?</A></H2> -<P><STRONG>Policy Groups</STRONG> are an elegant general mechanism to - configure FreeS/WAN. They are useful for many FreeS/WAN users.</P> -<P>In previous FreeS/WAN versions, you needed to configure each IPsec - connection explicitly, on both local and remote hosts. This could - become complex.</P> -<P>By contrast, Policy Groups allow you to set local IPsec policy for - lists of remote hosts and networks, simply by listing the hosts and - networks which you wish to have special treatment in one of several - Policy Group files. FreeS/WAN then internally creates the connections - needed to implement each policy.</P> -<P>In the next section we describe our five Base Policy Groups, which - you can use to configure IPsec in many useful ways. Later, we will show - you how to create an IPsec VPN using one line of configuration for each - remote host or network.</P> -<A NAME="builtin_policygroups"></A> -<H3><A NAME="4_1_1">Built-In Security Options</A></H3> -<P>FreeS/WAN offers these Base Policy Groups:</P> -<DL> -<DT>private</DT> -<DD> FreeS/WAN only communicates privately with the listed<A HREF="#CIDR"> - CIDR</A> blocks. If needed, FreeS/WAN attempts to create a connection - opportunistically. If this fails, FreeS/WAN blocks communication. - Inbound blocking is assumed to be done by the firewall. FreeS/WAN - offers firewall hooks but no modern firewall rules to help with inbound - blocking.</DD> -<DT>private-or-clear</DT> -<DD> FreeS/WAN prefers private communication with the listed CIDR - blocks. If needed, FreeS/WAN attempts to create a connection - opportunistically. If this fails, FreeS/WAN allows traffic in the - clear.</DD> -<DT>clear-or-private</DT> -<DD> FreeS/WAN communicates cleartext with the listed CIDR blocks, but - also accepts inbound OE connection requests from them. Also known as<A HREF="#passive.OE"> - passive OE (pOE)</A>, this policy may be used to create an<A HREF="#responder"> - opportunistic responder</A>.</DD> -<DT>clear</DT> -<DD> FreeS/WAN only communicates cleartext with the listed CIDR blocks.</DD> -<DT>block</DT> -<DD>FreeS/WAN blocks traffic to and from and the listed CIDR blocks. - Inbound blocking is assumed to be done by the firewall. FreeS/WAN - offers firewall hooks but no modern firewall rules to help with inbound - blocking. -<!-- also called "blockdrop".--> -</DD> -</DL> -<A NAME="policy.group.notes"></A> -<P>Notes:</P> -<UL> -<LI>Base Policy Groups apply to communication with this host only.</LI> -<LI>The most specific rule (whether policy or pre-configured connection) - applies. This has several practical applications: -<UL> -<LI>If CIDR blocks overlap, FreeS/WAN chooses the most specific - applicable block.</LI> -<LI>This decision also takes into account any pre-configured connections - you may have.</LI> -<LI>If the most specific connection is a pre-configured connection, the - following procedure applies. If that connection is up, it will be used. - If it is routed, it will be brought up. If it is added, no action will - be taken.</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>Base Policy Groups are created using built-in connections. Details - in<A HREF="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> man ipsec.conf</A>.</LI> -<LI>All Policy Groups are bidirectional.<A HREF="src/policy-groups-table.html"> - This chart</A> shows some technical details. FreeS/WAN does not support - one-way encryption, since it can give users a false sense of security.</LI> -</UL> -<H2><A NAME="4_2">Using Policy Groups</A></H2> -<P>The Base Policy Groups which build IPsec connections rely on - Opportunistic Encryption. To use the following examples, you must first - become OE-capable, as described in our<A HREF="#quickstart"> quickstart - guide</A>.<A NAME="example1"></A></P> -<H3><A NAME="4_2_1">Example 1: Using a Base Policy Group</A></H3> -<P>Simply place CIDR blocks (<A HREF="#dnswarning">names</A>, IPs or IP - ranges) in /etc/ipsec.d/policies/<VAR>[groupname]</VAR>, and reread the - policy group files.</P> -<P>For example, the<VAR> private-or-clear</VAR> policy tells FreeS/WAN - to prefer encrypted communication to the listed CIDR blocks. Failing - that, it allows talk in the clear.</P> -<P>To make this your default policy, place<A HREF="#fullnet"> fullnet</A> - in the<VAR> private-or-clear</VAR> policy group file:</P> -<PRE> [root@xy root]# cat /etc/ipsec.d/policies/private-or-clear - # This file defines the set of CIDRs (network/mask-length) to which - # communication should be private, if possible, but in the clear otherwise. - .... - 0.0.0.0/0</PRE> -<P>and reload your policies with</P> -<PRE> ipsec auto --rereadgroups</PRE> -<P>Use<A HREF="#opp.test"> this test</A> to verify opportunistic - connections.</P> -<A NAME="example2"></A> -<H3><A NAME="4_2_2">Example 2: Defining IPsec Security Policy with - Groups</A></H3> -<P>Defining IPsec security policy with Base Policy Groups is like - creating a shopping list: just put CIDR blocks in the appropriate group - files. For example:</P> -<PRE> [root@xy root]# cd /etc/ipsec.d/policies - [root@xy policies]# cat private - 192.0.2.96/27 # The finance department - 192.0.2.192/29 # HR - 192.0.2.12 # HR gateway - irc.private.example.com # Private IRC server - - [root@xy policies]# cat private-or-clear - 0.0.0.0/0 # My default policy: try to encrypt. - - [root@xy policies]# cat clear - 192.0.2.18/32 # My POP3 server - 192.0.2.19/32 # My Web proxy - - [root@xy policies]# cat block - spamsource.example.com</PRE> -<P>To make these settings take effect, type:</P> -<PRE> ipsec auto --rereadgroups</PRE> -<P>Notes:</P> -<UL> -<LI>For opportunistic connection attempts to succeed, all participating - FreeS/WAN hosts and gateways must be configured for OE.</LI> -<LI>Examples 3 through 5 show how to implement a detailed<VAR> private</VAR> - policy.</LI> -<LI><A NAME="dnswarning"></A><FONT COLOR="RED"> Warning:</FONT> Using - DNS names in policy files and ipsec.conf can be tricky. If the name - does not resolve, the policy will not be implemented for that name. It - is therefore safer either to use IPs, or to put any critical names in - /etc/hosts. We plan to implement periodic DNS retry to help with this. -<BR> Names are resolved at FreeS/WAN startup, or when the policies are - reloaded. Unfortunately, name lookup can hold up the startup process. - If you have fast DNS servers, the problem may be less severe.</LI> -</UL> -<A HREF="example3"></A> -<H3><A NAME="4_2_3">Example 3: Creating a Simple IPsec VPN with the<VAR> - private</VAR> Group</A></H3> -<P>You can create an IPsec VPN between several hosts, with only one line - of configuration per host, using the<VAR> private</VAR> policy group.</P> -<P>First, use our<A HREF="quickstart.html"> quickstart guide</A> to set - up each participating host with a FreeS/WAN install and OE.</P> -<P>In one host's<VAR> /etc/ipsec.d/policies/private</VAR>, list the - peers to which you wish to protect traffic. For example:</P> -<PRE> [root@xy root]# cd /etc/ipsec.d/policies - [root@xy policies]# cat private - 192.0.2.9 # several hosts at example.com - 192.0.2.11 - 192.0.2.12 - irc.private.example.com -</PRE> -<P>Copy the<VAR> private</VAR> file to each host. Remove the local host, - and add the initial host.</P> -<PRE> scp2 /etc/ipsec.d/policies/private root@192.0.2.12:/etc/ipsec.d/policies/private</PRE> -<P>On each host, reread the policy groups with</P> -<PRE> ipsec auto --rereadgroups</PRE> -<P>That's it! You're configured.</P> -<P>Test by pinging between two hosts. After a second or two, traffic - should flow, and</P> -<PRE> ipsec eroute</PRE> -<P>should yield something like</P> -<PRE> 192.0.2.11/32 -> 192.0.2.8/32 => tun0x149f@192.0.2.8</PRE> -<P>where your host IPs are substituted for 192.0.2.11 and 192.0.2.8.</P> -<P>If traffic does not flow, there may be an error in your OE setup. - Revisit our<A HREF="quickstart.html"> quickstart guide</A>.</P> -<P>Our next two examples show you how to add subnets to this IPsec VPN.</P> -<A NAME="example4"></A> -<H3><A NAME="4_2_4">Example 4: New Policy Groups to Protect a Subnet</A></H3> -<P>To protect traffic to a subnet behind your FreeS/WAN gateway, you'll - need additional DNS records, and new policy groups. To set up the DNS, - see our<A HREF="#opp.gate"> quickstart guide</A>. To create five new - policy groups for your subnet, copy these connections to<VAR> - /etc/ipsec.conf</VAR>. Substitute your subnet's IPs for 192.0.2.128/29.</P> -<PRE> -conn private-net - also=private # inherits settings (eg. auto=start) from built in conn - leftsubnet=192.0.2.128/29 # your subnet's IPs here - -conn private-or-clear-net - also=private-or-clear - leftsubnet=192.0.2.128/29 - -conn clear-or-private-net - also=clear-or-private - leftsubnet=192.0.2.128/29 - -conn clear-net - also=clear - leftsubnet=192.0.2.128/29 - -conn block-net - also=block - leftsubnet=192.0.2.128/29 -</PRE> -<P>Copy the gateway's files to serve as the initial policy group files - for the new groups:</P> -<PRE> - cp -p /etc/ipsec.d/policies/private /etc/ipsec.d/policies/private-net - cp -p /etc/ipsec.d/policies/private-or-clear /etc/ipsec.d/policies/private-or-clear-net - cp -p /etc/ipsec.d/policies/clear-or-private /etc/ipsec.d/policies/clear-or-private-net - cp -p /etc/ipsec.d/policies/clear /etc/ipsec.d/policies/clear-net - cp -p /etc/ipsec.d/policies/block /etc/ipsec.d/policies/block -</PRE> -<P><STRONG>Tip: Since a missing policy group file is equivalent to a - file with no entries, you need only create files for the connections - you'll use.</STRONG></P> -<P>To test one of your new groups, place the fullnet 0.0.0.0/0 in<VAR> - private-or-clear-net</VAR>. Perform the subnet test in<A HREF="#opp.test"> - our quickstart guide</A>. You should see a connection, and</P> -<PRE> ipsec eroute</PRE> -<P>should include an entry which mentions the subnet node's IP and the - OE test site IP, like this:</P> -<PRE> 192.0.2.131/32 -> 192.139.46.77/32 => tun0x149f@192.0.2.11</PRE> -<A HREF="example5"></A> -<H3><A NAME="4_2_5">Example 5: Adding a Subnet to the VPN</A></H3> -<P>Suppose you wish to secure traffic to a subnet 192.0.2.192/29 behind - a FreeS/WAN box 192.0.2.12.</P> -<P>First, add DNS entries to configure 192.0.2.12 as an opportunistic - gateway for that subnet. Instructions are in our<A HREF="#opp.gate"> - quickstart guide</A>. Next, create a<VAR> private-net</VAR> group on - 192.0.2.12 as described in<A HREF="#example4"> Example 4</A>.</P> -<P>On each other host, add the subnet 192.0.2.192/29 to<VAR> private</VAR> -, yielding for example</P> -<PRE> [root@xy root]# cd /etc/ipsec.d/policies - [root@xy policies]# cat private - 192.0.2.9 # several hosts at example.com - 192.0.2.11 - 192.0.2.12 # HR department gateway - 192.0.2.192/29 # HR subnet - irc.private.example.com -</PRE> -<P>and reread policy groups with</P> -<PRE> ipsec auto --rereadgroups</PRE> -<P>That's all the configuration you need.</P> -<P>Test your VPN by pinging from a machine on 192.0.2.192/29 to any - other host:</P> -<PRE> [root@192.0.2.194]# ping 192.0.2.11</PRE> -<P>After a second or two, traffic should flow, and</P> -<PRE> ipsec eroute</PRE> -<P>should yield something like</P> -<PRE> 192.0.2.11/32 -> 192.0.2.194/32 => tun0x149f@192.0.2.12 -</PRE> -<P>Key:</P> -<TABLE> -<TR><TD>1.</TD><TD>192.0.2.11/32</TD><TD>Local start point of the - protected traffic.</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>2.</TD><TD>192.0.2.194/32</TD><TD>Remote end point of the - protected traffic.</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>3.</TD><TD>192.0.2.12</TD><TD>Remote FreeS/WAN node (gateway or - host). May be the same as (2).</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>4.</TD><TD>[not shown]</TD><TD>Local FreeS/WAN node (gateway or - host), where you've produced the output. May be the same as (1).</TD></TR> -</TABLE> -<P>For additional assurance, you can verify with a packet sniffer that - the traffic is being encrypted.</P> -<P>Note</P> -<UL> -<LI>Because strangers may also connect via OE, this type of VPN may - require a stricter firewalling policy than a conventional VPN.</LI> -</UL> -<H2><A NAME="4_3">Appendix</A></H2> -<A NAME="hiddenconn"></A> -<H3><A NAME="4_3_1">Our Hidden Connections</A></H3> -<P>Our Base Policy Groups are created using hidden connections. These - are spelled out in<A HREF="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> man ipsec.conf</A> - and defined in<VAR> /usr/local/lib/ipsec/_confread</VAR>.</P> -<A NAME="custom_policygroups"></A> -<H3><A NAME="4_3_2">Custom Policy Groups</A></H3> -<P>A policy group is built using a special connection description in<VAR> - ipsec.conf</VAR>, which:</P> -<UL> -<LI>is<STRONG> generic</STRONG>. It uses<VAR> - right=[%group|%opportunisticgroup]</VAR> rather than specific IPs. The - connection is cloned for every name or IP range listed in its Policy - Group file.</LI> -<LI>often has a<STRONG> failure rule</STRONG>. This rule, written<VAR> - failureshunt=[passthrough|drop|reject|none]</VAR>, tells FreeS/WAN what - to do with packets for these CIDRs if it fails to establish the - connection. Default is<VAR> none</VAR>.</LI> -</UL> -<P>To create a new group:</P> -<OL> -<LI>Create its connection definition in<VAR> ipsec.conf</VAR>.</LI> -<LI>Create a Policy Group file in<VAR> /etc/ipsec.d/policies</VAR> with - the same name as your connection.</LI> -<LI>Put a CIDR block in that file.</LI> -<LI>Reread groups with<VAR> ipsec auto --rereadgroups</VAR>.</LI> -<LI>Test:<VAR> ping</VAR> to activate any OE connection, and view - results with<VAR> ipsec eroute</VAR>.</LI> -</OL> -<A NAME="disable_oe"></A><A NAME="disable_policygroups"></A> -<H3><A NAME="4_3_3">Disabling Opportunistic Encryption</A></H3> -<P>To disable OE (eg. policy groups and packetdefault), cut and paste - the following lines to<VAR> /etc/ipsec.conf</VAR>:</P> -<PRE>conn block - auto=ignore - -conn private - auto=ignore - -conn private-or-clear - auto=ignore - -conn clear-or-private - auto=ignore - -conn clear - auto=ignore - -conn packetdefault - auto=ignore</PRE> -<P>Restart FreeS/WAN so that the changes take effect:</P> -<PRE> ipsec setup restart</PRE> -<HR> -<H1><A NAME="5">FreeS/WAN FAQ</A></H1> -<P>This is a collection of questions and answers, mostly taken from the - FreeS/WAN<A href="mail.html"> mailing list</A>. See the project<A href="http://www.freeswan.org/"> - web site</A> for more information. All the FreeS/WAN documentation is - online there.</P> -<P>Contributions to the FAQ are welcome. Please send them to the project<A -href="mail.html"> mailing list</A>.</P> -<HR> -<H2><A name="questions">Index of FAQ questions</A></H2> -<UL> -<LI><A href="#whatzit">What is FreeS/WAN?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#problems">How do I report a problem or seek help?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#generic">Can I get ...</A> -<UL> -<LI><A href="#lemme_out">... an off-the-shelf system that includes - FreeS/WAN?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#contractor">... contractors or staff who know FreeS/WAN?</A> -</LI> -<LI><A href="#commercial">... commercial support?</A></LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI><A href="#release">Release questions</A> -<UL> -<LI><A href="#rel.current">What is the current release?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#relwhen">When is the next release?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#rel.bugs">Are there known bugs in the current release?</A></LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI><A href="mod_cons">Modifications and contributions</A> -<UL> -<LI><A href="#modify.faq">Can I modify FreeS/WAN to ...?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#contrib.faq">Can I contribute to the project?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#ddoc.faq">Is there detailed design documentation?</A></LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI><A href="#interact">Will FreeS/WAN work in my environment?</A> -<UL> -<LI><A href="#interop.faq">Can FreeS/WAN talk to ... ?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#old_to_new">Can different FreeS/WAN versions talk to each - other?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#faq.bandwidth">Is there a limit on throughput?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#faq.number">Is there a limit on number of connections?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#faq.speed">Is a ... fast enough to handle FreeS/WAN with - my loads?</A></LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI><A href="#work_on">Will FreeS/WAN work on ...</A> -<UL> -<LI><A href="#versions">... my version of Linux?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#nonIntel.faq">... non-Intel CPUs?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#multi.faq">... multiprocessors?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#k.old">... an older kernel?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#k.versions">... the latest kernel version?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#interface.faq">... unusual network hardware?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#vlan">... a VLAN (802.1q) network?</A></LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI><A href="#features.faq">Does FreeS/WAN support ...</A> -<UL> -<LI><A href="#VPN.faq">... site-to-site VPN applications</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#warrior.faq">... remote users connecting to a LAN</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#road.shared.possible">... remote users using shared secret - authentication?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#wireless.faq">... wireless networks</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#PKIcert">... X.509 or other PKI certificates?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#Radius">... user authentication (Radius, SecureID, Smart - Card ...)?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#NATtraversal">... NAT traversal</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#virtID">... assigning a "virtual identity" to a remote - system?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#noDES.faq">... single DES encryption?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#AES.faq">... AES encryption?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#other.cipher">... other encryption algorithms?</A></LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI><A href="#canI">Can I ...</A> -<UL> -<LI><A href="#policy.preconfig">...use policy groups along with - explicitly configured connections?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#policy.off">...turn off policy groups?</A></LI> - -<!-- - <li><a href="#policy.otherinterface">...use policy groups - on an interface other than <VAR>%defaultroute</VAR>?</a></li> ---> -<LI><A href="#reload">... reload connection info without restarting?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#masq.faq">... use several masqueraded subnets?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#dup_route">... use subnets masqueraded to the same - addresses?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#road.masq">... assign a road warrior an address on my net - (a virtual identity)?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#road.many">... support many road warriors with one - gateway?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#road.PSK">... have many road warriors using shared secret - authentication?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#QoS">... use Quality of Service routing with FreeS/WAN?</A> -</LI> -<LI><A href="#deadtunnel">... recognise dead tunnels and shut them down?</A> -</LI> -<LI><A href="#demanddial">... build IPsec tunnels over a demand-dialed - link?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#GRE">... build GRE, L2TP or PPTP tunnels over IPsec?</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#NetBIOS">... use Network Neighborhood (Samba, NetBIOS) - over IPsec?</A></LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI><A href="#setup.faq">Life's little mysteries</A> -<UL> -<LI><A href="#cantping">I cannot ping ....</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#forever">It takes forever to ...</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#route">I send packets to the tunnel with route(8) but they - vanish</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#down_route">When a tunnel goes down, packets vanish</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#firewall_ate">The firewall ate my packets!</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#dropconn">Dropped connections</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#defaultroutegone">Disappearing %defaultroute</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#tcpdump.faq">TCPdump on the gateway shows strange things</A> -</LI> -<LI><A href="#no_trace">Traceroute does not show anything between the - gateways</A></LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI><A href="#man4debug">Testing in stages (or .... works but ... - doesn't)</A> -<UL> -<LI><A href="#nomanual">Manually keyed connections don't work</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#spi_error">One manual connection works, but second one - fails</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#man_no_auto">Manual connections work, but automatic keying - doesn't</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#nocomp">IPsec works, but connections using compression - fail</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#pmtu.broken">Small packets work, but large transfers fail</A> -</LI> -<LI><A href="#subsub">Subnet-to-subnet works, but tests from the - gateways don't</A></LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI><A href="#compile.faq">Compilation problems</A> -<UL> -<LI><A href="#gmp.h_missing">gmp.h: No such file or directory</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#noVM">... virtual memory exhausted</A></LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI><A href="#error">Interpreting error messages</A> -<UL> -<LI><A href="#route-client">route-client (or host) exited with status 7</A> -</LI> -<LI><A href="#unreachable">SIOCADDRT:Network is unreachable</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#modprobe">ipsec_setup: modprobe: Can't locate moduleipsec</A> -</LI> -<LI><A href="#noKLIPS">ipsec_setup: Fatal error, kernel appears to lack - KLIPS</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#noDNS">ipsec_setup: ... failure to fetch key for ... from - DNS</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#dup_address">ipsec_setup: ... interfaces ... and ... share - address ...</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#kflags">ipsec_setup: Cannot adjust kernel flags</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#message_num">Message numbers (MI3, QR1, et cetera) in - Pluto messages</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#conn_name">Connection names in Pluto error messages</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#cantorient">Pluto: ... can't orient connection</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#no.interface">... we have no ipsecN interface for either - end of this connection</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#noconn">Pluto: ... no connection is known</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#nosuit">Pluto: ... no suitable connection ...</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#noconn.auth">Pluto: ... no connection has been authorized</A> -</LI> -<LI><A href="#noDESsupport">Pluto: ... OAKLEY_DES_CBC is not supported.</A> -</LI> -<LI><A href="#notransform">Pluto: ... no acceptable transform</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#rsasigkey">rsasigkey dumps core</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#sig4">!Pluto failure!: ... exited with ... signal 4</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#econnrefused">ECONNREFUSED error message</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#no_eroute">klips_debug: ... no eroute!</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#SAused">... trouble writing to /dev/ipsec ... SA already - in use</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#ignore">... ignoring ... payload</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#unknown_rightcert">unknown parameter name "rightcert"</A></LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI><A href="#spam">Why don't you restrict the mailing lists to reduce - spam?</A></LI> -</UL> -<HR> -<H2><A name="whatzit">What is FreeS/WAN?</A></H2> -<P>FreeS/WAN is a Linux implementation of the<A href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A> - protocols, providing security services at the IP (Internet Protocol) - level of the network.</P> -<P>For more detail, see our<A href="intro.html"> introduction</A> - document or the FreeS/WAN project<A href="http://www.freeswan.org/"> - web site</A>.</P> -<P>To start setting it up, go to our<A href="quickstart.html"> - quickstart guide</A>.</P> -<P>Our<A href="web.html"> web links</A> document has information on<A href="#implement"> - IPsec for other systems</A>.</P> -<H2><A name="problems">How do I report a problem or seek help?</A></H2> -<DL> -<DT>Read our<A href="trouble.html"> troubleshooting</A> document.</DT> -<DD> -<P>It may guide you to a solution. If not, see its<A href="#prob.report"> - problem reporting</A> section.</P> -<P>Basically, what it says is<STRONG> give us the output from<VAR> ipsec - barf</VAR> from both gateways</STRONG>. Without full information, we - cannot diagnose a problem. However,<VAR> ipsec barf</VAR> produces a - lot of output. If at all possible,<STRONG> please make barfs accessible - via the web or FTP</STRONG> rather than sending enormous mail messages.</P> -</DD> -<DT><STRONG>Use the<A href="mail.html"> users mailing list</A> for - problem reports</STRONG>, rather than mailing developers directly.</DT> -<DD> -<UL> -<LI>This gives you access to more expertise, including users who may - have encountered and solved the same problems.</LI> -<LI>It is more likely to get a quick response. Developers may get behind - on email, or even ignore it entirely for a while, but a list message - (given a reasonable Subject: line) is certain to be read by a fair - number of people within hours.</LI> -<LI>It may also be important because of<A href="#exlaw"> cryptography - export laws</A>. A US citizen who provides technical assistance to - foreign cryptographic work might be charged under the arms export - regulations. Such a charge would be easier to defend if the discussion - took place on a public mailing list than if it were done in private - mail.</LI> -</UL> -</DD> -<DT>Try irc.freenode.net#freeswan.</DT> -<DD> -<P>FreeS/WAN developers, volunteers and users can often be found there. - Be patient and be prepared to provide lots of information to support - your question.</P> -<P>If your question was really interesting, and you found an answer, - please share that with the class by posting to the<A href="mail.html"> - users mailing list</A>. That way others with the same problem can find - your answer in the archives.</P> -</DD> -<DT>Premium support is also available.</DT> -<DD> -<P>See the next several questions.</P> -</DD> -</DL> -<H2><A name="generic">Can I get ...</A></H2> -<H3><A name="lemme_out">Can I get an off-the-shelf system that includes - FreeS/WAN?</A></H3> -<P>There are a number of Linux distributions or firewall products which - include FreeS/WAN. See this<A href="#products"> list</A>. Using one of - these, chosen to match your requirements and budget, may save you - considerable time and effort.</P> -<P>If you don't know your requirements, start by reading Schneier's<A href="#secrets"> - Secrets and Lies</A>. That gives the best overview of security issues I - have seen. Then consider hiring a consultant (see next question) to - help define your requirements.</P> -<H3><A name="consultant">Can I hire consultants or staff who know - FreeS/WAN?</A></H3> -<P>If you want the help of a contractor, or to hire staff with FreeS/WAN - expertise, you could:</P> -<UL> -<LI>check availability in your area through your local Linux User Group - (<A href="http://lugww.counter.li.org/">LUG Index</A>)</LI> -<LI>try asking on our<A href="mail.html"> mailing list</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>For companies offerring support, see the next question.</P> -<H3><A name="commercial">Can I get commercial support?</A></H3> -<P>Many of the distributions or firewall products which include - FreeS/WAN (see this<A href="#products"> list</A>) come with commercial - support or have it available as an option.</P> -<P>Various companies specialize in commercial support of open source - software. Our project leader was a founder of the first such company, - Cygnus Support. It has since been bought by<A href="http://www.redhat.com"> - Redhat</A>. Another such firm is<A href="http://www.linuxcare.com"> - Linuxcare</A>.</P> -<H2><A name="release">Release questions</A></H2> -<H3><A name="rel.current">What is the current release?</A></H3> -<P>The current release is the highest-numbered tarball on our<A href="ftp://ftp.xs4all.nl/pub/crypto/freeswan"> - distribution site</A>. Almost always, any of<A href="#mirrors"> the - mirrors</A> will have the same file, though perhaps not for a day or so - after a release.</P> -<P>Unfortunately, the web site is not always updated as quickly as it - should be.</P> -<H3><A name="relwhen">When is the next release?</A></H3> -<P>We try to do a release approximately every six to eight weeks.</P> -<P>If pre-release tests fail and the fix appears complex, or more - generally if the code does not appear stable when a release is - scheduled, we will just skip that release.</P> -<P>For serious bugs, we may bring out an extra bug-fix release. These - get numbers in the normal release series. For example, there was a bug - found in FreeS/WAN 1.6, so we did another release less than two weeks - later. The bug-fix release was called 1.7.</P> -<H3><A name="rel.bugs">Are there known bugs in the current release?</A></H3> -<P>Any problems we are aware of at the time of a release are documented - in the<A href="../BUGS"> BUGS</A> file for that release. You should - also look at the<A href="../CHANGES"> CHANGES</A> file.</P> -<P>Bugs discovered after a release are discussed on the<A href="mail.html"> - mailing lists</A>. The easiest way to check for any problems in the - current code would be to peruse the<A href="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/briefs"> - List In Brief</A>.</P> -<H2><A name="mod_cons">Modifications and contributions</A></H2> -<H3><A name="modify.faq">Can I modify FreeS/WAN to ...?</A></H3> -<P>You are free to modify FreeS/WAN in any way. See the discussion of<A href="#licensing"> - licensing</A> in our introduction document.</P> -<P>Before investing much energy in any such project, we suggest that you</P> -<UL> -<LI>check the list of<A href="#patch"> existing patches</A></LI> -<LI>post something about your project to the<A href="mail.html"> design - mailing list</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>This may prevent duplicated effort, or lead to interesting - collaborations.</P> -<H3><A name="contrib.faq">Can I contribute to the project?</A></H3> - In general, we welcome contributions from the community. Various - contributed patches, either to fix bugs or to add features, have been - incorporated into our distribution. Other patches, not yet included in - the distribution, are listed in our<A href="#patch"> web links</A> - section. -<P>Users have also contributed heavily to documentation, both by - creating their own<A href="#howto"> HowTos</A> and by posting things on - the<A href="mail.html"> mailing lists</A> which I have quoted in these - HTML docs.</P> -<P>There are, however, some caveats.</P> -<P>FreeS/WAN is being implemented in Canada, by Canadians, largely to - ensure that is it is entirely free of export restrictions. See this<A href="#status"> - discussion</A>. We<STRONG> cannot accept code contributions from US - residents or citizens</STRONG>, not even one-line bugs fixes. The - reasons for this were recently discussed extensively on the mailing - list, in a thread starting<A href="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2001/01/msg00111.html"> - here</A>.</P> -<P>Not all contributions are of interest to us. The project has a set of - fairly ambitious and quite specific goals, described in our<A href="#goals"> - introduction</A>. Contributions that lead toward these goals are likely - to be welcomed enthusiastically. Other contributions may be seen as - lower priority, or even as a distraction.</P> -<P>Discussion of possible contributions takes place on the<A href="mail.html"> - design mailing list</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="ddoc.faq">Is there detailed design documentation?</A></H3> - There are: -<UL> -<LI><A href="rfc.html">RFCs</A> specifying the protocols we implement</LI> -<LI><A href="manpages.html">man pages</A> for our utilities, library - functions and file formats</LI> -<LI>comments in the source code</LI> -<LI><A href="index.html">HTML documentation</A> written primarily for - users</LI> -<LI>archived discussions from the<A href="mail.html"> mailing lists</A></LI> -<LI>other papers mentioned in our<A href="#applied"> introduction</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>The only formal design documents are a few papers in the last - category above. All the other categories, however, have things to say - about design as well.</P> -<H2><A name="interact">Will FreeS/WAN work in my environment?</A></H2> -<H3><A name="interop.faq">Can FreeS/WAN talk to ...?</A></H3> -<P>The IPsec protocols are designed to support interoperation. In - theory, any two IPsec implementations should be able to talk to each - other. In practice, it is considerably more complex. We have a whole<A href="interop.html"> - interoperation document</A> devoted to this problem.</P> -<P>An important part of that document is links to the many<A href="interop.html#otherpub"> - user-written HowTos</A> on interoperation between FreeS/WAN and various - other implementations. Often the users know more than the developers - about these issues (and almost always more than me :-), so these - documents may be your best resource.</P> -<H3><A name="old_to_new">Can different FreeS/WAN versions talk to each - other?</A></H3> -<P>Linux FreeS/WAN can interoperate with many IPsec implementations, - including earlier versions of Linux FreeS/WAN itself.</P> -<P>In a few cases, there are some complications. See our<A href="interop.html#oldswan"> - interoperation</A> document for details.</P> -<H3><A name="faq.bandwidth">Is there a limit on throughput?</A></H3> -<P>There is no hard limit, but see below.</P> -<H3><A name="faq.number">Is there a limit on number of tunnels?</A></H3> -<P>There is no hard limit, but see next question.</P> -<H3><A name="faq.speed">Is a ... fast enough to handle FreeS/WAN with my - loads?</A></H3> -<P>A quick summary:</P> -<DL> -<DT>Even a limited machine can be useful</DT> -<DD>A 486 can handle a T1, ADSL or cable link, though the machine may be - breathing hard.</DD> -<DT>A mid-range PC (say 800 MHz with good network cards) can do a lot of - IPsec</DT> -<DD>With up to roughly 50 tunnels and aggregate bandwidth of 20 Megabits - per second, it willl have cycles left over for other tasks.</DD> -<DT>There are limits</DT> -<DD>Even a high end CPU will not come close to handling a fully loaded - 100 Mbit/second Ethernet link. -<P>Beyond about 50 tunnels it needs careful management.</P> -</DD> -</DL> -<P>See our<A href="performance.html"> FreeS/WAN performance</A> document - for details.</P> -<H2><A name="work_on">Will FreeS/WAN work on ... ?</A></H2> -<H3><A name="versions">Will FreeS/WAN run on my version of Linux?</A></H3> -<P>We build and test on Redhat distributions, but FreeS/WAN runs just - fine on several other distributions, sometimes with minor fiddles to - adapt to the local environment. Details are in our<A href="#otherdist"> - compatibility</A> document. Also, some distributions or products come - with<A href="#products"> FreeS/WAN included</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="nonIntel.faq">Will FreeS/WAN run on non-Intel CPUs?</A></H3> -<P>FreeS/WAN is<STRONG> intended to run on all CPUs Linux supports</STRONG> -. We know of it being used in production on x86, ARM, Alpha and MIPS. It - has also had successful tests on PPC and SPARC, though we don't know of - actual use there. Details are in our<A href="#CPUs"> compatibility</A> - document.</P> -<H3><A name="multi.faq">Will FreeS/WAN run on multiprocessors?</A></H3> -<P>FreeS/WAN is designed to work on any SMP architecture Linux supports, - and has been tested successfully on at least dual processor Intel - architecture machines. Details are in our<A href="#multiprocessor"> - compatibility</A> document.</P> -<H3><A name="k.old">Will FreeS/WAN work on an older kernel?</A></H3> -<P>It might, but we strongly recommend using a recent 2.2 or 2.4 series - kernel. Sometimes the newer versions include security fixes which can - be quite important on a gateway.</P> -<P>Also, we use recent kernels for development and testing, so those are - better tested and, if you do encounter a problem, more easily - supported. If something breaks applying recent FreeS/WAN patches to an - older kernel, then "update your kernel" is almost certain to be the - first thing we suggest. It may be the only suggestion we have.</P> -<P>The precise kernel versions supported by a particular FreeS/WAN - release are given in the<A href="XX"> README</A> file of that release.</P> -<P>See the following question for more on kernels.</P> -<H3><A name="k.versions">Will FreeS/WAN run on the latest kernel - version?</A></H3> -<P>Sometimes yes, but quite often, no.</P> -<P>Kernel versions supported are given in the<A href="../README"> README</A> - file of each FreeS/WAN release. Typically, they are whatever production - kernels were current at the time of our release (or shortly before; we - might release for kernel<VAR> n</VAR> just as Linus releases<VAR> n+1</VAR> -). Often FreeS/WAN will work on slightly later kernels as well, but of - course this cannot be guaranteed.</P> -<P>For example, FreeS/WAN 1.91 was released for kernels 2.2.19 or 2.4.5, - the current kernels at the time. It also worked on 2.4.6, 2.4.7 and - 2.4.8, but 2.4.9 had changes that caused compilation errors if it was - patched with FreeS/WAN 1.91.</P> -<P>When such changes appear, we put a fix in the FreeS/WAN snapshots, - and distribute it with our next release. However, this is not a high - priority for us, and it may take anything from a few days to several - weeks for such a problem to find its way to the top of our kernel - programmer's To-Do list. In the meanwhile, you have two choices:</P> -<UL> -<LI>either stick with a slightly older kernel, even if it is not the - latest and greatest. This is recommended for production systems; new - versions may have new bugs.</LI> -<LI>or fix the problem yourself and send us a patch, via the<A href="mail.html"> - Users mailing list</A>.</LI> -</UL> -<P>We don't even try to keep up with kernel changes outside the main 2.2 - and 2.4 branches, such as the 2.4.x-ac patched versions from Alan Cox - or the 2.5 series of development kernels. We'd rather work on - developing the FreeS/WAN code than on chasing these moving targets. We - are, however, happy to get patches for problems discovered there.</P> -<P>See also the<A href="install.html#choosek"> Choosing a kernel</A> - section of our installation document.</P> -<H3><A name="interface.faq">Will FreeS/WAN work on unusual network - hardware?</A></H3> -<P>IPsec is designed to work over any network that IP works over, and - FreeS/WAN is intended to work over any network interface hardware that - Linux supports.</P> -<P>If you have working IP on some unusual interface -- perhaps Arcnet, - Token Ring, ATM or Gigabit Ethernet -- then IPsec should "just work".</P> -<P>That said, practice is sometimes less tractable than theory. Our - testing is done almost entirely on:</P> -<UL> -<LI>10 or 100 Mbit Ethernet</LI> -<LI>ADSL or cable connections, with and without PPPoE</LI> -<LI>IEEE 802.11 wireless LANs (see<A href="#wireless.faq"> below</A>)</LI> -</UL> -<P>If you have some other interface, especially an uncommon one, it is - entirely possible you will get bitten either by a FreeS/WAN bug which - our testing did not turn up, or by a bug in the driver that shows up - only with our loads.</P> -<P>If IP works on your interface and FreeS/WAN doesn't, seek help on the<A -href="mail.html"> mailing lists</A>.</P> -<P>Another FAQ section describes<A href="#pmtu.broken"> MTU problems</A> -. These are a possibility for some interfaces.</P> -<H3><A name="vlan">Will FreeS/WAN work on a VLAN (802.1q) network?</A></H3> -<P> Yes, FreeSwan works fine, though some network drivers have problems - with jumbo sized ethernet frames. If you used interfaces=%defaultroute - you do not need to change anything, but if you specified an interface - (eg eth0) then remember you must change that to reflect the VLAN - interface (eg eth0.2 for VLAN ID 2).</P> -<P> The "eepro100" module is known to be broken, use the e100 driver for - those cards instead (included in 2.4 as 'alternative driver' for the - Intel EtherExpressPro/100.</P> -<P> You do not need to change any MTU setting (those are workarounds - that are only needed for buggy drivers)</P> -<P><EM>This FAQ contributed by Paul Wouters.</EM></P> -<H2><A name="features.faq">Does FreeS/WAN support ...</A></H2> -<P>For a discussion of which parts of the IPsec specifications FreeS/WAN - does and does not implement, see our<A href="#spec"> compatibility</A> - document.</P> -<P>For information on some often-requested features, see below.</P> -<H3><A name="VPN.faq"></A>Does FreeS/WAN support site-to-site VPN (<A HREF="#VPN"> -Virtual Private Network</A>) applications?</H3> -<P>Absolutely. See this FreeS/WAN-FreeS/WAN<A HREF="config.html"> - configuration example</A>. If only one site is using FreeS/WAN, there - may be a relevant HOWTO on our<A HREF="interop.html"> interop page</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="warrior.faq">Does FreeS/WAN support remote users connecting - to a LAN?</A></H3> -<P>Yes. We call the remote users "Road Warriors". Check out our - FreeS/WAN-FreeS/WAN<A HREF="#config.rw"> Road Warrior Configuration - Example</A>.</P> -<P>If your Road Warrior is a Windows or Mac PC, you may need to install - an IPsec implementation on that machine. Our<A HREF="interop.html"> - interop</A> page lists many available brands, and features links to - several HOWTOs.</P> -<H3><A name="road.shared.possible">Does FreeS/WAN support remote users - using shared secret authentication?</A></H3> -<P><STRONG>Yes, but</STRONG> there are severe restrictions, so<STRONG> - we strongly recommend using</STRONG><A href="#RSA"><STRONG> RSA</STRONG> -</A><STRONG> keys for</STRONG><A href="#authentication"><STRONG> - authentication</STRONG></A><STRONG> instead</STRONG>.</P> -<P>See this<A href="#road.PSK"> FAQ question</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="wireless.faq">Does FreeS/WAN support wireless networks?</A></H3> -<P>Yes, it is a common practice to use IPsec over wireless networks - because their built-in encryption,<A href="#WEP"> WEP</A>, is insecure.</P> -<P>There is some<A href="#wireless.config"> discussion</A> in our - advanced configuration document. See also the<A HREF="http://www.wavesec.org"> - WaveSEC site</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="PKIcert">Does FreeS/WAN support X.509 or other PKI - certificates?</A></H3> -<P>Vanilla FreeS/WAN does not support X.509, but Andreas Steffen and - others have provided a popular, well-supported X.509 patch.</P> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="http://www.strongsec.com/freeswan">patch</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="http://www.freeswan.ca">Super FreeS/WAN</A> incorporates - this and other user-contributed patches.</LI> -<LI> Kai Martius'<A HREF="http://www.strongsec.com/freeswan/install.htm"> - X.509 Installation and Configuration Guide</A></LI> -</UL> -<P> Linux FreeS/WAN features<A HREF="quickstart.html"> Opportunistic - Encryption</A>, an alternative Public Key Infrastructure based on - Secure DNS.</P> -<H3><A name="Radius">Does FreeS/WAN support user authentication (Radius, - SecureID, Smart Card...)?</A></H3> -<P>Andreas Steffen's<A HREF="http://www.strongsec.com/freeswan"> X.509 - patch</A> (v. 1.42+) supports Smart Cards. The patch does not ship with - vanilla FreeS/WAN, but will be incorporated into<A HREF="http://www.freeswan.ca/"> - Super FreeS/WAN 2.01+</A>. The patch implements the PCKS#15 - Cryptographic Token Information Format Standard, using the OpenSC - smartcard library functions.</P> -<P>Older news:</P> -<P>A user-supported patch to FreeS/WAN 1.3, for smart card style - authentication, is available on<A HREF="http://alcatraz.webcriminals.com/~bastiaan/ipsec"> - Bastiaan's site</A>. It supports skeyid and ibutton. This patch is not - part of Super FreeS/WAN.</P> -<P>For a while progress on this front was impeded by a lack of standard. - The IETF<A href="http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/ipsra-charter.html"> - working group</A> has now nearly completed its recommended solution to - the problem; meanwhile several vendors have implemented various things.</P> - -<!-- -<p>The <a href="web.html#patch">patches</a> section of our web links document -has links to some user work on this.</p> ---> -<P>Of course, there are various ways to avoid any requirement for user - authentication in IPsec. Consider the situation where road warriors - build IPsec tunnels to your office net and you are considering - requiring user authentication during tunnel negotiation. Alternatives - include:</P> -<UL> -<LI>If you can trust the road warrior machines, then set them up so that - only authorised users can create tunnels. If your road warriors use - laptops, consider the possibility of theft.</LI> -<LI>If the tunnel only provides access to particular servers and you can - trust those servers, then set the servers up to require user - authentication.</LI> -</UL> -<P>If either of those is trustworthy, it is not clear that you need user - authentication in IPsec.</P> -<H3><A name="NATtraversal">Does FreeS/WAN support NAT traversal?</A></H3> -<P>Vanilla FreeS/WAN does not, but thanks to Mathieu Lafon and Arkoon - Network Security, there's a patch to support this.</P> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="http://open-source.arkoon.net">patch and documentation</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="http://www.freeswan.ca">Super FreeS/WAN</A> incorporates - this and other user-contributed patches.</LI> -</UL> -<P>The NAT traversal patch has some issues with PSKs, so you may wish to - authenticate with RSA keys, or X.509 (requires a patch which is also - included in Super FreeS/WAN). Doing the latter also has advantages when - dealing with large numbers of clients who may be behind NAT; instead of - having to make an individual Roadwarrior connection for each virtual - IP, you can use the "rightsubnetwithin" parameter to specify a range. - See<A HREF="http://www.strongsec.com/freeswan/install.htm#section_4.4"> - these<VAR> rightsubnetwithin</VAR> instructions</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="virtID">Does FreeS/WAN support assigning a "virtual - identity" to a remote system?</A></H3> -<P>Some IPsec implementations allow you to make the source address on - packets sent by a Road Warrior machine be something other than the - address of its interface to the Internet. This is sometimes described - as assigning a virtual identity to that machine.</P> -<P>FreeS/WAN does not directly support this, but it can be done. See - this<A href="#road.masq"> FAQ question</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="noDES.faq">Does FreeS/WAN support single DES encryption?</A> -</H3> -<P><STRONG>No</STRONG>, single DES is not used either at the<A href="#IKE"> - IKE</A> level for negotiating connections or at the<A href="#IPSEC"> - IPsec</A> level for actually building them.</P> -<P>Single DES is<A href="#desnotsecure"> insecure</A>. As we see it, it - is more important to deliver real security than to comply with a - standard which has been subverted into allowing use of inadequate - methods. See this<A href="#weak"> discussion</A>.</P> -<P>If you want to interoperate with an IPsec implementation which offers - only DES, see our<A href="interop.html#noDES"> interoperation</A> - document.</P> -<H3><A name="AES.faq">Does FreeS/WAN support AES encryption?</A></H3> -<P><A href="#AES">AES</A> is a new US government<A href="#block"> block - cipher</A> standard to replace the obsolete<A href="#DES"> DES</A>.</P> -<P>At time of writing (March 2002), the FreeS/WAN distribution does not - yet support AES but user-written<A href="#patch"> patches</A> are - available to add it. Our kernel programmer is working on integrating - those patches into the distribution, and there is active discussion of - this on the design mailimg list.</P> -<H3><A name="other.cipher">Does FreeS/WAN support other encryption - algorithms?</A></H3> -<P>Currently<A href="#3DES"> triple DES</A> is the only cipher - supported. AES will almost certainly be added (see previous question), - and it is likely that in the process we will also add the other two AES - finalists with open licensing, Twofish and Serpent.</P> -<P>We are extremely reluctant to add other ciphers. This would make both - use and maintenance of FreeS/WAN more complex without providing any - clear benefit. Complexity is emphatically not desirable in a security - product.</P> -<P>Various users have written patches to add other ciphers. We provide<A href="#patch"> - links</A> to these.</P> -<H2><A name="canI">Can I ...</A></H2> -<H3><A name="policy.preconfig">Can I use policy groups along with - explicitly configured connections?</A></H3> -<P>Yes, you can, so long as you pay attention to the selection rule, - which can be summarized "the most specific connection wins". We - describe the rule in our<A HREF="#policy.group.notes"> policy groups</A> - document, and provide a more technical explanation in<A HREF="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> - man ipsec.conf</A>.</P> -<P>A good guideline: If you have a regular connection defined in<VAR> - ipsec.conf</VAR>, ensure that a subset of that connection is not listed - in a less restrictive policy group. Otherwise, FreeS/WAN will use the - subset, with its more specific source/destination pair.</P> -<P>Here's an example. Suppose you are the system administrator at - 192.0.2.2. You have this connection in ipsec.conf:<VAR> ipsec.conf</VAR> -:</P> -<PRE>conn net-to-net - left=192.0.2.2 # you are here - right=192.0.2.8 - rightsubnet=192.0.2.96/27 - .... -</PRE> -<P>If you then place a host or net within<VAR> rightsubnet</VAR>, (let's - say 192.0.2.98) in<VAR> private-or-clear</VAR>, you may find that - 192.0.2.2 at times communicates in the clear with 192.0.2.98. That's - consistent with the rule, but may be contrary to your expectations.</P> -<P>On the other hand, it's safe to put a larger subnet in a less - restrictive policy group file. If<VAR> private-or-clear</VAR> contains - 192.0.2.0/24, then the more specific<VAR> net-to-net</VAR> connection - is used for any communication to 192.0.2.96/27. The more general policy - applies only to communication with hosts or subnets in 192.0.2.0/24 - without a more specific policy or connection.</P> -<H3><A name="policy.off">Can I turn off policy groups?</A></H3> -<P>Yes. Use<A HREF="#disable_policygroups"> these instructions</A>.</P> - -<!-- -<h3><a name="policy.otherinterface">Can I use policy groups - on an interface other than <VAR>%defaultroute</VAR>?</a></h3> - -<p>??<p> ---> -<H3><A name="reload">Can I reload connection info without restarting?</A> -</H3> -<P>Yes, you can do this. Here are the details, in a mailing list message - from Pluto programmer Hugh Redelmeier:</P> -<PRE>| How can I reload config's without restarting all of pluto and klips? I am using -| FreeSWAN -> PGPNet in a medium sized production environment, and would like to be -| able to add new connections ( i am using include config/* ) without dropping current -| SA's. -| -| Can this be done? -| -| If not, are there plans to add this kind of feature? - - ipsec auto --add whatever -This will look in the usual place (/etc/ipsec.conf) for a conn named -whatever and add it. - -If you added new secrets, you need to do - ipsec auto --rereadsecrets -before Pluto needs to know those secrets. - -| I have looked (perhaps not thoroughly enough tho) to see how to do this: - -There may be more bits to look for, depending on what you are trying -to do.</PRE> -<P>Another useful command here is<VAR> ipsec auto --replace <conn_name></VAR> - which re-reads data for a named connection.</P> -<H3><A name="masq.faq">Can I use several masqueraded subnets?</A></H3> -<P>Yes. This is done all the time. See the discussion in our<A href="config.html#route_or_not"> - setup</A> document. The only restriction is that the subnets on the two - ends must not overlap. See the next question.</P> -<P>Here is a mailing list message on the topic. The user incorrectly - thinks you need a 2.4 kernel for this -- actually various people have - been doing it on 2.0 and 2.2 for quite some time -- but he has it right - for 2.4.</P> -<PRE>Subject: Double NAT and freeswan working :) - Date: Sun, 11 Mar 2001 - From: Paul Wouters <paul@xtdnet.nl> - -Just to share my pleasure, and make an entry for people who are searching -the net on how to do this. Here's the very simple solution to have a double -NAT'ed network working with freeswan. (Not sure if this is old news, but I'm -not on the list (too much spam) and I didn't read this in any HOWTO/FAQ/doc -on the freeswan site yet (Sandy, put it in! :) - -10.0.0.0/24 --- 10.0.0.1 a.b.c.d ---- a.b.c.e {internet} ----+ - | -10.0.1.0/24 --- 10.0.1.1 f.g.h.i ---- f.g.h.j {internet} ----+ - -the goal is to have the first network do a VPN to the second one, yet also -have NAT in place for connections not destinated for the other side of the -NAT. Here the two Linux security gateways have one real IP number (cable -modem, dialup, whatever. - -The problem with NAT is you don't want packets from 10.*.*.* to 10.*.*.* -to be NAT'ed. While with Linux 2.2, you can't, with Linux 2.4 you can. - -(This has been tested and works for 2.4.2 with Freeswan snapshot2001mar8b) - -relevant parts of /etc/ipsec.conf: - - left=f.g.h.i - leftsubnet=10.0.1.0/24 - leftnexthop=f.g.h.j - leftfirewall=yes - leftid=@firewall.netone.nl - leftrsasigkey=0x0........ - right=a.b.c.d - rightsubnet=10.0.0.0/24 - rightnexthop=a.b.c.e - rightfirewall=yes - rightid=@firewall.nettwo.nl - rightrsasigkey=0x0...... - # To authorize this connection, but not actually start it, at startup, - # uncomment this. - auto=add - -and now the real trick. Setup the NAT correctly on both sites: - -iptables -t nat -F -iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o eth0 -d \! 10.0.0.0/8 -j MASQUERADE - -This tells the NAT code to only do NAT for packets with destination other then -10.* networks. note the backslash to mask the exclamation mark to protect it -against the shell. - -Happy painting :) - -Paul</PRE> -<H3><A name="dup_route">Can I use subnets masqueraded to the same - addresses?</A></H3> -<P><STRONG>No.</STRONG> The notion that IP addresses are unique is one - of the fundamental principles of the IP protocol. Messing with it is - exceedingly perilous.</P> -<P>Fairly often a situation comes up where a company has several - branches, all using the same<A href="#non-routable"> non-routable - addresses</A>, perhaps 192.168.0.0/24. This works fine as long as those - nets are kept distinct. The<A href="#masq"> IP masquerading</A> on - their firewalls ensures that packets reaching the Internet carry the - firewall address, not the private address.</P> -<P>This can break down when IPsec enters the picture. FreeS/WAN builds a - tunnel that pokes through both masquerades and delivers packets from<VAR> - leftsubnet</VAR> to<VAR> rightsubnet</VAR> and vice versa. For this to - work, the two subnets<EM> must</EM> be distinct.</P> -<P>There are several solutions to this problem.</P> -<P>Usually, you<STRONG> re-number the subnets</STRONG>. Perhaps the - Vancouver office becomes 192.168.101.0/24, Calgary 192.168.102.0/24 and - so on. FreeS/WAN can happily handle this. With, for example<VAR> - leftsubnet=192.168.101.0/24</VAR> and<VAR> rightsubnet=192.168.102.0/24</VAR> - in a connection description, any machine in Calgary can talk to any - machine in Vancouver. If you want to be more restrictive and use - something like<VAR> leftsubnet=192.168.101.128/25</VAR> and<VAR> - rightsubnet=192.168.102.240/28</VAR> so only certain machines on each - end have access to the tunnel, that's fine too.</P> -<P>You could also<STRONG> split the subnet</STRONG> into smaller ones, - for example using<VAR> 192.168.1.0/25</VAR> in Vancouver and<VAR> - rightsubnet=192.168.0.128/25</VAR> in Calgary.</P> -<P>Alternately, you can just<STRONG> give up routing</STRONG> directly - to machines on the subnets. Omit the<VAR> leftsubnet</VAR> and<VAR> - rightsubnet</VAR> parameters from your connection descriptions. Your - IPsec tunnels will then run between the public interfaces of the two - firewalls. Packets will be masqueraded both before they are put into - tunnels and after they emerge. Your Vancouver client machines will see - only one Calgary machine, the firewall.</P> -<H3><A name="road.masq">Can I assign a road warrior an address on my net - (a virtual identity)?</A></H3> -<P>Often it would be convenient to be able to give a Road Warrior an IP - address which appears to be on the local network. Some IPsec - implementations have support for this, sometimes calling the feature - "virtual identity".</P> -<P>Currently (Sept 2002) FreeS/WAN does not support this, and we have no - definite plans to add it. The difficulty is that is not yet a standard - mechanism for it. There is an Internet Draft for a method of doing it - using<A href="#DHCP"> DHCP</A> which looks promising. FreeS/WAN may - support that in a future release.</P> -<P>In the meanwhile, you can do it yourself using the Linux iproute2(8) - facilities. Details are in<A href="http://www.av8n.com/vpn/iproute2.htm"> - this paper</A>.</P> -<P>Another method has also been discussed on the mailing list.:</P> -<UL> -<LI>You can use a variant of the<A href="#extruded.config"> extruded - subnet</A> procedure.</LI> -<LI>You have to avoid having the road warrior's assigned address within - the range you actually use at home base. See previous question.</LI> -<LI>On the other hand, you want the roadwarrior's address to be within - the range that<EM> seems</EM> to be on your network.</LI> -</UL> -<P>For example, you might have:</P> -<DL> -<DT>leftsubnet=a.b.c.0/25</DT> -<DD>head office network</DD> -<DT>rightsubnet=a.b.c.129/32</DT> -<DD>extruded to a road warrior. Note that this is not in a.b.c.0/25</DD> -<DT>a.b.c.0/24</DT> -<DD>whole network, including both the above</DD> -</DL> -<P>You then set up routing so that the office machines use the IPsec - gateway as their route to a.b.c.128/25. The leftsubnet parameter tells - the road warriors to use tunnels to reach a.b.c.0/25, so you should - have two-way communication. Depending or your network and applications, - there may be some additional work to do on DNS or Windows configuration</P> -<H3><A name="road.many">Can I support many road warriors with one - gateway?</A></H3> -<P>Yes. This is easily done, using</P> -<DL> -<DT>either RSA authentication</DT> -<DD>standard in the FreeS/WAN distribution</DD> -<DT>or X.509 certificates</DT> -<DD>requires<A href="#PKIcert"> Super FreeS/WAN or a patch</A>.</DD> -</DL> -<P>In either case, each Road Warrior must have a different key or - certificate.</P> -<P>It is also possible using pre-shared key authentication, though we - don't recommend this; see the<A href="#road.PSK"> next question</A> for - details.</P> -<P>If you expect to have more than a few dozen Road Warriors connecting - simultaneously, you may need a fairly powerful gateway machine. See our - document on<A href="performance.html"> FreeS/WAN performance</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="road.PSK">Can I have many road warriors using shared secret - authentication?</A></H3> -<P><STRONG>Yes, but avoid it if possible</STRONG>.</P> -<P>You can have multiple Road Warriors using shared secret - authentication<STRONG> only if they all use the same secret</STRONG>. - You must also set:</P> -<P></P> -<PRE> uniqueids=no </PRE> -<P>in the connection definition.</P> -<P>Why it's less secure:</P> -<UL> -<LI>If you have many users, it becomes almost certain the secret will - leak</LI> -<LI>The secret becomes quite valuable to an attacker</LI> -<LI>All users authenticate the same way, so the gateway cannot tell them - apart for logging or access control purposes</LI> -<LI>Changing the secret is difficult. You have to securely notify all - users.</LI> -<LI>If you find out the secret has been compromised, you can change it, - but then what? None of your users can connect without the new secret. - How will you notify them all, quickly and securely, without using the - VPN?</LI> -</UL> -<P>This is a designed-in limitation of the<A href="#IKE"> IKE</A> key - negotiation protocol, not a problem with our implementation.</P> -<P><STRONG>We very strongly recommend that you avoid using shared secret - authentication for multiple Road Warriors.</STRONG> Use RSA - authentication instead.</P> -<P>The longer story: When using shared secrets, the protocol requires - that the responding gateway be able to determine which secret to use at - a time when all it knows about the initiator is an IP address. This - works fine if you know the initiator's address in advance and can use - it to look up the appropiriate secret. However, it fails for Road - Warriors since the gateway cannot know their IP addresses in advance.</P> -<P>With RSA signatures (or certificates) the protocol is slightly - different. The initiator provides an identifier early in the exchange - and the responder can use that identifier to look up the correct key or - certificate. See<A href="#road.many"> above</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="QoS">Can I use Quality of Service routing with FreeS/WAN?</A> -</H3> -<P>From project technical lead Henry Spencer:</P> -<PRE>> Do QoS add to FreeS/WAN? -> For example integrating DiffServ and FreeS/WAN? - -With a current version of FreeS/WAN, you will have to add hidetos=no to -the config-setup section of your configuration file. By default, the TOS -field of tunnel packets is zeroed; with hidetos=no, it is copied from the -packet inside. (This is a modest security hole, which is why it is no -longer the default.) - -DiffServ does not interact well with tunneling in general. Ways of -improving this are being studied.</PRE> -<P>Copying the<A href="#TOS"> TOS</A> (type of service) information from - the encapsulated packet to the outer header reveals the TOS information - to an eavesdropper. This does not tell him much, but it might be of use - in<A href="#traffic"> traffic analysis</A>. Since we do not have to - give it to him, our default is not to.</P> -<P>Even with the TOS hidden, you can still:</P> -<UL> -<LI>apply QOS rules to the tunneled (ESP) packets; for example, by - giving ESP packets a certain priority.</LI> -<LI>apply QOS rules to the packets as they enter or exit the tunnel via - an IPsec virtual interface (eg.<VAR> ipsec0</VAR>).</LI> -</UL> -<P>See<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> ipsec.conf(5)</A> for more - on the<VAR> hidetos=</VAR> parameter.</P> -<H3><A name="deadtunnel">Can I recognise dead tunnels and shut them - down?</A></H3> -<P>There is no general mechanism to do this is in the IPsec protocols.</P> -<P>From time to time, there is discussion on the IETF Working Group<A href="#ietf"> - mailing list</A> of adding a "keep-alive" mechanism (which some say - should be called "make-dead"), but it is a fairly complex problem and - no consensus has been reached on whether or how it should be done.</P> -<P>The protocol does have optional<A href="#ignore"> delete-SA</A> - messages which one side can send when it closes a connection in hopes - this will cause the other side to do the same. FreeS/WAN does not - currently support these. In any case, they would not solve the problem - since:</P> -<UL> -<LI>a gateway that crashes or hangs would not send the messages</LI> -<LI>the sender is not required to send them</LI> -<LI>they are not authenticated, so any receiver that trusts them leaves - itself open to a<A href="#DOS"> denial of service</A> attack</LI> -<LI>the receiver is not required to do anything about them</LI> -<LI>the receiver cannot acknowledge them; the protocol provides no - mechanism for that</LI> -<LI>since they are not acknowledged, the sender cannot rely on them</LI> -</UL> -<P>However, connections do have limited lifetimes and you can control - how many attempts your gateway makes to rekey before giving up. For - example, you can set:</P> -<PRE>conn default - keyingtries=3 - keylife=30m</PRE> -<P>With these settings old connections will be cleaned up. Within 30 - minutes of the other end dying, rekeying will be attempted. If it - succeeds, the new connection replaces the old one. If it fails, no new - connection is created. Either way, the old connection is taken down - when its lifetime expires.</P> -<P>Here is a mailing list message on the topic from FreeS/WAN tech - support person Claudia Schmeing:</P> -<PRE>You ask how to determine whether a tunnel is redundant: - -> Can anybody explain the best way to determine this. Esp when a RW has -> disconnected? I thought 'ipsec auto --status' might be one way. - -If a tunnel goes down from one end, Linux FreeS/WAN on the -other end has no way of knowing this until it attempts to rekey. -Once it tries to rekey and fails, it will 'know' that the tunnel is -down. - -Because it doesn't have a way of knowing the state until this point, -it will also not be able to tell you the state via ipsec auto --status. - -> However, comparing output from a working tunnel with that of one that -> was closed -> did not show clearly show tunnel status. - -If your tunnel is down but not 'unrouted' (see man ipsec_auto), you -should not be able to ping the opposite side of the tunnel. You can -use this as an indicator of tunnel status. - -On a related note, you may be interested to know that as of 1.7, -redundant tunnels caused by RW disconnections are likely to be -less of a pain. From doc/CHANGES: - - There is a new configuration parameter, uniqueids, to control a new Pluto - option: when a new connection is negotiated with the same ID as an old - one, the old one is deleted immediately. This should help eliminate - dangling Road Warrior connections when the same Road Warrior reconnects. - It thus requires that IDs not be shared by hosts (a previously legal but - probably useless capability). NOTE WELL: the sample ipsec.conf now has - uniqueids=yes in its config-setup section. - - -Cheers, - -Claudia</PRE> -<H3><A name="demanddial">Can I build IPsec tunnels over a demand-dialed - link?</A></H3> -<P>This is possible, but not easy. FreeS/WAN technical lead Henry - Spencer wrote:</P> -<PRE>> 5. If the ISDN link goes down in between and is reestablished, the SAs -> are still up but the eroute are deleted and the IPsec interface shows -> garbage (with ifconfig) -> 6. Only restarting IPsec will bring the VPN back online. - -This one is awkward to solve. If the real interface that the IPsec -interface is mounted on goes down, it takes most of the IPsec machinery -down with it, and a restart is the only good way to recover. - -The only really clean fix, right now, is to split the machines in two: - -1. A minimal machine serves as the network router, and only it is aware -that the link goes up and down. - -2. The IPsec is done on a separate gateway machine, which thinks it has -a permanent network connection, via the router. - -This is clumsy but it does work. Trying to do both functions within a -single machine is tricky. There is a software package (diald) which will -give the illusion of a permanent connection for demand-dialed modem -connections; I don't know whether it's usable for ISDN, or whether it can -be made to cooperate properly with FreeS/WAN. - -Doing a restart each time the interface comes up *does* work, although it -is a bit painful. I did that with PPP when I was running on a modem link; -it wasn't hard to arrange the PPP scripts to bring IPsec up and down at -the right times. (I'd meant to investigate diald but never found time.) - -In principle you don't need to do a complete restart on reconnect, but you -do have to rebuild some things, and we have no nice clean way of doing -only the necessary parts.</PRE> -<P>In the same thread, one user commented:</P> -<PRE>Subject: Re: linux-ipsec: IPsec and Dial Up Connections - Date: Wed, 22 Nov 2000 - From: Andy Bradford <andyb@calderasystems.com> - -On Wed, 22 Nov 2000 19:47:11 +0100, Philip Reetz wrote: - -> Are there any ideas what might be the cause of the problem and any way -> to work around it. -> Any help is highly appreciated. - -On my laptop, when using ppp there is a ip-up script in /etc/ppp that -will be executed each time that the ppp interface is brought up. -Likewise there is an ip-down script that is called when it is taken -down. You might consider custimzing those to stop and start FreeS/WAN -with each connection. I believe that ISDN uses the same files, though -I could be wrong---there should be something similar though.</PRE> -<H3><A name="GRE">Can I build GRE, L2TP or PPTP tunnels over IPsec?</A></H3> -<P>Yes. Normally this is not necessary, but it is useful in a few - special cases. For example, if you must route non-IP packets such as - IPX, you will need to use a tunneling protocol that can route these - packets. IPsec can be layered around it for extra security. Another - example: you can provide failover protection for high availability (HA) - environments by combining IPsec with other tools. Ken Bantoft describes - one such setup in<A HREF="http://www.freeswan.ca/docs/HA"> Using - FreeS/WAN with Linux-HA, GRE, OSPF and BGP for enterprise grade VPN - solutions</A>.</P> -<P>GRE over IPsec is covered as part of<A HREF="http://www.freeswan.ca/docs/HA"> - that document</A>.<A href="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/07/msg00209.html"> - Here are links</A> to other GRE resources. Jacco de Leuw has created<A HREF="http://www.jacco2.dds.nl/networking/"> - this page on L2TP over IPsec</A> with instructions for FreeS/WAN and - several other brands of IPsec software.</P> -<P>Please let us know of other useful links via the<A HREF="mail.html"> - mailing lists</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="NetBIOS">... use Network Neighborhood (Samba, NetBIOS) over - IPsec?</A></H3> -<P>Your local PC needs to know how to translate NetBIOS names to IP - addresses. It may do this either via a local LMHOSTS file, or using a - local or remote WINS server. The WINS server is preferable since it - provides a centralized source of the information to the entire network. - To use a WINS server over the<A HREF="#VPN"> VPN</A> (or any IP-based - network), you must enable "NetBIOS over TCP".</P> -<P><A HREF="http://www.samba.org">Samba</A> can emulate a WINS server on - Linux.</P> -<P> See also several discussions in our<A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-September/thread.html"> - September 2002 Users archives</A></P> -<H2><A name="setup.faq">Life's little mysteries</A></H2> -<P>FreeS/WAN is a fairly complex product. (Neither the networks it runs - on nor the protocols it uses are simple, so it could hardly be - otherwise.) It therefore sometimes exhibits behaviour which can be - somewhat confusing, or has problems which are not easy to diagnose. - This section tries to explain those problems.</P> -<P>Setup and configuration of FreeS/WAN are covered in other - documentation sections:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="quickstart.html">basic setup and configuration</A></LI> -<LI><A href="adv_config.html">advanced configuration</A></LI> -<LI><A href="trouble.html">Troubleshooting</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>However, we also list some of the commonest problems here.</P> -<H3><A name="cantping">I cannot ping ....</A></H3> -<P>This question is dealt with in the advanced configuration section - under the heading<A href="#multitunnel"> multiple tunnels</A>.</P> -<P>The standard subnet-to-subnet tunnel protects traffic<STRONG> only - between the subnets</STRONG>. To test it, you must use pings that go - from one subnet to the other.</P> -<P>For example, suppose you have:</P> -<PRE> subnet a.b.c.0/24 - | - eth1 = a.b.c.1 - gate1 - eth0 = 192.0.2.8 - | - - ~ internet ~ - - | - eth0 = 192.0.2.11 - gate2 - eth1 = x.y.z.1 - | - subnet x.y.z.0/24</PRE> -<P>and the connection description:</P> -<PRE>conn abc-xyz - left=192.0.2.8 - leftsubnet=a.b.c.0/24 - right=192.0.2.11 - rightsubnet=x.y.z.0/24</PRE> -<P>You can test this connection description only by sending a ping that - will actually go through the tunnel. Assuming you have machines at - addresses a.b.c.2 and x.y.z.2, pings you might consider trying are:</P> -<DL> -<DT>ping from x.y.z.2 to a.b.c.2 or vice versa</DT> -<DD>Succeeds if tunnel is working. This is the<STRONG> only valid test - of the tunnel</STRONG>.</DD> -<DT>ping from gate2 to a.b.c.2 or vice versa</DT> -<DD><STRONG>Does not use tunnel</STRONG>. gate2 is not on protected - subnet.</DD> -<DT>ping from gate1 to x.y.z.2 or vice versa</DT> -<DD><STRONG>Does not use tunnel</STRONG>. gate1 is not on protected - subnet.</DD> -<DT>ping from gate1 to gate2 or vice versa</DT> -<DD><STRONG>Does not use tunnel</STRONG>. Neither gate is on a protected - subnet.</DD> -</DL> -<P>Only the first of these is a useful test of this tunnel. The others - do not use the tunnel. Depending on other details of your setup and - routing, they:</P> -<UL> -<LI>either fail, telling you nothing about the tunnel</LI> -<LI>or succeed, telling you nothing about the tunnel since these packets - use some other route</LI> -</UL> -<P>In some cases, you may be able to get around this. For the example - network above, you could use:</P> -<PRE> ping -I a.b.c.1 x.y.z.1</PRE> -<P>Both the adresses given are within protected subnets, so this should - go through the tunnel.</P> -<P>If required, you can build additional tunnels so that all the - machines involved can talk to all the others. See<A href="#multitunnel"> - multiple tunnels</A> in the advanced configuration document for - details.</P> -<H3><A name="forever">It takes forever to ...</A></H3> -<P>Users fairly often report various problems involving long delays, - sometimes on tunnel setup and sometimes on operations done through the - tunnel, occasionally on simple things like ping or more often on more - complex operations like doing NFS or Samba through the tunnel.</P> -<P>Almost always, these turn out to involve failure of a DNS lookup. The - timeouts waiting for DNS are typically set long so that you won't time - out when a query involves multiple lookups or long paths. Genuine - failures therefore produce long delays before they are detected.</P> -<P>A mailing list message from project technical lead Henry Spencer:</P> -<PRE>> ... when i run /etc/rc.d/init.d/ipsec start, i get: -> ipsec_setup: Starting FreeS/WAN IPsec 1.5... -> and it just sits there, doesn't give back my bash prompt. - -Almost certainly, the problem is that you're using DNS names in your -ipsec.conf, but DNS lookups are not working for some reason. You will -get your prompt back... eventually. But the DNS timeouts are long. -Doing something about this is on our list, but it is not easy.</PRE> -<P>In the meanwhile, we recommend that connection descriptions in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> - ipsec.conf(5)</A> use numeric IP addresses rather than names which will - require a DNS lookup.</P> -<P>Names that do not require a lookup are fine. For example:</P> -<UL> -<LI>a road warrior might use the identity<VAR> - rightid=@lancelot.example.org</VAR></LI> -<LI>the gateway might use<VAR> leftid=@camelot.example.org</VAR></LI> -</UL> -<P>These are fine. The @ sign prevents any DNS lookup. However, do not - attempt to give the gateway address as<VAR> left=camelot.example.org</VAR> -. That requires a lookup.</P> -<P>A post from one user after solving a problem with long delays:</P> -<PRE>Subject: Final Answer to Delay!!! - Date: Mon, 19 Feb 2001 - From: "Felippe Solutions" <felippe@solutionstecnologia.com.br> - -Sorry people, but seems like the Delay problem had nothing to do with -freeswan. - -The problem was DNS as some people sad from the beginning, but not the way -they thought it was happening. Samba, ssh, telnet and other apps try to -reverse lookup addresses when you use IP numbers (Stupid that ahh). - -I could ping very fast because I always ping with "-n" option, but I don't -know the option on the other apps to stop reverse addressing so I don't use -it.</PRE> -<P>This post is fairly typical. These problems are often tricky and - frustrating to diagnose, and most turn out to be DNS-related.</P> -<P>One suggestion for diagnosis: test with both names and addresses if - possible. For example, try all of:</P> -<UL> -<LI>ping<VAR> address</VAR></LI> -<LI>ping -n<VAR> address</VAR></LI> -<LI>ping<VAR> name</VAR></LI> -</UL> -<P>If these behave differently, the problem must be DNS-related since - the three commands do exactly the same thing except for DNS lookups.</P> -<H3><A name="route">I send packets to the tunnel with route(8) but they - vanish</A></H3> -<P>IPsec connections are designed to carry only packets travelling - between pre-defined connection endpoints. As project technical lead - Henry Spencer put it:</P> -<BLOCKQUOTE> IPsec tunnels are not just virtual wires; they are virtual - wires with built-in access controls. Negotiation of an IPsec tunnel - includes negotiation of access rights for it, which don't include - packets to/from other IP addresses. (The protocols themselves are quite - inflexible about this, so there are limits to what we can do about it.)</BLOCKQUOTE> -<P>For fairly obvious security reasons, and to comply with the IPsec - RFCs,<A href="#KLIPS"> KLIPS</A> drops any packets it receives that are - not allowed on the tunnels currently defined. So if you send it packets - with<VAR> route(8)</VAR>, and suitable tunnels are not defined, the - packets vanish. Whether this is reported in the logs depends on the - setting of<VAR> klipsdebug</VAR> in your<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> - ipsec.conf(5)</A> file.</P> -<P>To rescue vanishing packets, you must ensure that suitable tunnels - for them exist, by editing the connection descriptions in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> - ipsec.conf(5)</A>. For example, supposing you have a simple setup:</P> -<PRE> leftsubnet -- leftgateway === internet === roadwarrior</PRE> -<P>If you want to give the roadwarrior access to some resource that is - located behind the left gateway but is not in the currently defined - left subnet, then the usual procedure is to define an additional tunnel - for those packets by creating a new connection description.</P> -<P>In some cases, it may be easier to alter an existing connection - description, enlarging the definition of<VAR> leftsubnet</VAR>. For - example, instead of two connection descriptions with 192.168.8.0/24 and - 192.168.9.0/24 as their<VAR> leftsubnet</VAR> parameters, you can use a - single description with 192.168.8.0/23.</P> -<P>If you have multiple endpoints on each side, you need to ensure that - there is a route for each pair of endpoints. See this<A href="#multitunnel"> - example</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="down_route">When a tunnel goes down, packets vanish</A></H3> -<P>This is a special case of the vanishing packet problem described in - the previous question. Whenever KLIPS sees packets for which it does - not have a tunnel, it drops them.</P> -<P>When a tunnel goes away, either because negotiations with the other - gateway failed or because you gave an<VAR> ipsec auto --down</VAR> - command, the route to its other end is left pointing into KLIPS, and - KLIPS will drop packets it has no tunnel for.</P> -<P>This is a documented design decision, not a bug. FreeS/WAN must not - automatically adjust things to send packets via another route. The - other route might be insecure.</P> -<P>Of course, re-routing may be necessary in many cases. In those cases, - you have to do it manually or via scripts. We provide the<VAR> ipsec - auto --unroute</VAR> command for these cases.</P> -<P>From<A href="manpage.d/ipsec_auto.8.html"> ipsec_auto(8)</A>:</P> -<BLOCKQUOTE> Normally, pluto establishes a route to the destination - specified for a connection as part of the --up operation. However, the - route and only the route can be established with the --route operation. - Until and unless an actual connection is established, this discards any - packets sent there, which may be preferable to having them sent - elsewhere based on a more general route (e.g., a default route).</BLOCKQUOTE><BLOCKQUOTE> - Normally, pluto's route to a destination remains in place when a --down - operation is used to take the connection down (or if connection setup, - or later automatic rekeying, fails). This permits establishing a new - connection (perhaps using a different specification; the route is - altered as necessary) without having a ``window'' in which packets - might go elsewhere based on a more general route. Such a route can be - removed using the --unroute operation (and is implicitly removed by - --delete).</BLOCKQUOTE> -<P>See also this mailing list<A href="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/11/msg00523.html"> - message</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="firewall_ate">The firewall ate my packets!</A></H3> -<P>If firewalls filter out:</P> -<UL> -<LI>either the UDP port 500 packets used in IKE negotiations</LI> -<LI>or the ESP and AH (protocols 50 and 51) packets used to implement - the IPsec tunnel</LI> -</UL> -<P>then IPsec cannot work. The first thing to check if packets seem to - be vanishing is the firewall rules on the two gateway machines and any - other machines along the path that you have access to.</P> -<P>For details, see our document on<A href="firewall.html"> firewalls</A> -.</P> -<P>Some advice from technical lead Henry Spencer on diagnosing such - problems:</P> -<PRE>> > Packets vanishing between the hardware interface and the ipsecN interface -> > is usually the result of firewalls not being configured to let them in... -> -> Thanks for the suggestion. If only it were that simple! My ipchains startup -> script does take care of that, but just in case I manually inserted rules -> accepting everything from london on dublin. No difference. - -The other thing to check is whether the "RX packets dropped" count on the -ipsecN interface (run "ifconfig ipsecN", for N=1 or whatever, to see the -counts) is rising. If so, then there's some sort of configuration mismatch -between the two ends, and IPsec itself is rejecting them. If none of the -ipsecN counts is rising, then the packets are never reaching the IPsec -machinery, and the problem is almost certainly in firewalls etc.</PRE> -<H3><A name="dropconn">Dropped connections</A></H3> -<P>Networks being what they are, IPsec connections can be broken for any - number of reasons, ranging from hardware failures to various software - problems such as the path MTU problems discussed<A href="#pmtu.broken"> - elsewhere in the FAQ</A>. Fortunately, various diagnostic tools exist - that help you sort out many of the possible problems.</P> -<P>There is one situation, however, where FreeS/WAN (using default - settings) may destroy a connection for no readily apparent reason. This - occurs when things are<STRONG> misconfigured</STRONG> so that<STRONG> - two tunnels</STRONG> from the same gateway expect<STRONG> the same - subnet on the far end</STRONG>.</P> -<P>In this situation, the first tunnel comes up fine and works until the - second is established. At that point, because of the way we track - connections internally, the first tunnel ceases to exist as far as this - gateway is concerned. Of course the far end does not know that, and a - storm of error messages appears on both systems as it tries to use the - tunnel.</P> -<P>If the far end gives up, goes back to square one and negotiates a new - tunnel, then that wipes out the second tunnel and ...</P> -<P>The solution is simple.<STRONG> Do not build multiple conn - descriptions with the same remote subnet</STRONG>.</P> -<P>This is actually intended to be a feature, rather than a bug. - Consider the situation where a single remote system goes down, then - comes back up and reconnects to the gateway. It is useful to have the - gateway tear down the old tunnel and recover resources when the - reconnection is made. It recognises that situation by checking the - remote subnet for each tunnel it builds and discarding duplicates. This - works fine as long as you don't configure multiple tunnels with the - same remote subnet.</P> -<P>If this behaviour is inconvenient for you, you can disable it by - setting<VAR> uniqueids=no</VAR> in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> - ipsec.conf(5)</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="defaultroutegone">Disappearing %defaultroute</A></H3> -<P>When an underlying connection (eg. ppp) goes down, FreeS/WAN will not - recover properly without a little help. Here are the symptoms that - FreeS/WAN user Michael Carmody noticed:</P> -<PRE> -> After about 24 hours the freeswan connection takes over the default route. -> -> i.e instead of deafult gateway pointing to the router via eth0, it becomes a -> pointer to the router via ipsec0. - -> All internet access is then lost as all replies (and not just the link I -> wanted) are routed out ipsec0 and the router doesn't respond to the ipsec -> traffic. -</PRE> -<P>If you're using a FreeS/WAN 2.x/KLIPS system, simply re-attach the - IPsec virtual interface with<EM> ipsec tnconfig</EM> command such as:</P> -<PRE> ipsec tnconfig --attach --virtual ipsec0 --physical ppp0</PRE> -<P>In your command, name the physical and virtual interfaces as they - appear paired on your system during regular uptime. For a system with - several physical/virtual interface pairs on flaky links, you'll need - more than one such command. If you're using FreeS/WAN 1.x, you must - restart FreeS/WAN, which is more time consuming.</P> -<P><A href="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/design/2002-July/003070.html"> - Here</A> is a script which can help to automate the process of - FreeS/WAN restart at need. It could easily be adapted to use tnconfig - instead.</P> -<H3><A name="tcpdump.faq">TCPdump on the gateway shows strange things</A> -</H3> - As another user pointed out, keeping the connect -<P>Attempting to look at IPsec packets by running monitoring tools on - the IPsec gateway machine can produce silly results. That machine is - mangling the packets for IPsec, and possibly for firewall or NAT - purposes as well. If the internals of the machine's IP stack are not - what the monitoring tool expects, then the tool can misinterpret them - and produce nonsense output.</P> -<P>See our<A href="#tcpdump.test"> testing</A> document for more detail.</P> -<H3><A name="no_trace">Traceroute does not show anything between the - gateways</A></H3> -<P>As far as traceroute can see, the two gateways are one hop apart; the - data packet goes directly from one to the other through the tunnel. Of - course the outer packets that implement the tunnel pass through - whatever lies between the gateways, but those packets are built and - dismantled by the gateways. Traceroute does not see them and cannot - report anything about their path.</P> -<P>Here is a mailing list message with more detail.</P> -<PRE>Date: Mon, 14 May 2001 -To: linux-ipsec@freeswan.org -From: "John S. Denker" <jsd@research.att.com< -Subject: Re: traceroute: one virtual hop - -At 02:20 PM 5/14/01 -0400, Claudia Schmeing wrote: -> ->> > A bonus question: traceroute in subnet to subnet enviroment looks like: ->> > ->> > traceroute to andris.dmz (172.20.24.10), 30 hops max, 38 byte packets ->> > 1 drama (172.20.1.1) 0.716 ms 0.942 ms 0.434 ms ->> > 2 * * * ->> > 3 andris.dmz (172.20.24.10) 73.576 ms 78.858 ms 79.434 ms ->> > ->> > Why aren't there the other hosts which take part in the delivery during -> * * * ? -> ->If there is an ipsec tunnel between GateA and Gate B, this tunnel forms a ->'virtual wire'. When it is tunneled, the original packet becomes an inner ->packet, and new ESP and/or AH headers are added to create an outer packet ->around it. You can see an example of how this is done for AH at ->doc/ipsec.html#AH . For ESP it is similar. -> ->Think about the packet's path from the inner packet's perspective. ->It leaves the subnet, goes into the tunnel, and re-emerges in the second ->subnet. This perspective is also the only one available to the ->'traceroute' command when the IPSec tunnel is up. - -Claudia got this exactly right. Let me just expand on a couple of points: - -*) GateB is exactly one (virtual) hop away from GateA. This is how it -would be if there were a physically private wire from A to B. The -virtually private connection should work the same, and it does. - -*) While the information is in transit from GateA to GateB, the hop count -of the outer header (the "envelope") is being decremented. The hop count -of the inner header (the "contents" of the envelope) is not decremented and -should not be decremented. The hop count of the outer header is not -derived from and should not be derived from the hop count of the inner header. - -Indeed, even if the packets did time out in transit along the tunnel, there -would be no way for traceroute to find out what happened. Just as -information cannot leak _out_ of the tunnel to the outside, information -cannot leak _into_ the tunnel from outside, and this includes ICMP messages -from routers along the path. - -There are some cases where one might wish for information about what is -happening at the IP layer (below the tunnel layer) -- but the protocol -makes no provision for this. This raises all sorts of conceptual issues. -AFAIK nobody has ever cared enough to really figure out what _should_ -happen, let alone implement it and standardize it. - -*) I consider the "* * *" to be a slight bug. One might wish for it to be -replaced by "GateB GateB GateB". It has to do with treating host-to-subnet -traffic different from subnet-to-subnet traffic (and other gory details). -I fervently hope KLIPS2 will make this problem go away. - -*) If you want to ask questions about the link from GateA to GateB at the -IP level (below the tunnel level), you have to ssh to GateA and launch a -traceroute from there.</PRE> -<H2><A name="man4debug">Testing in stages</A></H2> -<P>It is often useful in debugging to test things one at a time:</P> -<UL> -<LI>disable IPsec entirely, for example by turning it off with - chkconfig(8), and make sure routing works</LI> -<LI>Once that works, try a manually keyed connection. This does not - require key negotiation between Pluto and the key daemon on the other - end.</LI> -<LI>Once that works, try automatically keyed connections</LI> -<LI>Once IPsec works, add packet compression</LI> -<LI>Once everything seems to work, try stress tests with large - transfers, many connections, frequent re-keying, ...</LI> -</UL> -<P>FreeS/WAN releases are tested for all of these, so you can be - reasonably certain they<EM> can</EM> do them all. Of course, that does - not mean they<EM> will</EM> on the first try, especially if you have - some unusual configuration.</P> -<P>The rest of this section gives information on diagnosing the problem - when each of the above steps fails.</P> -<H3><A name="nomanual">Manually keyed connections don't work</A></H3> -<P>Suspect one of:</P> -<UL> -<LI>mis-configuration of IPsec system in the /etc/ipsec.conf file -<BR> common errors are incorrect interface or next hop information</LI> -<LI>mis-configuration of manual connection in the /etc/ipsec.conf file</LI> -<LI>routing problems causing IPsec packets to be lost</LI> -<LI>bugs in KLIPS</LI> -<LI>mismatch between the transforms we support and those another IPsec - implementation offers.</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="spi_error">One manual connection works, but second one - fails</A></H3> -<P>This is a fairly common problem when attempting to configure multiple - manually keyed connections from a single gateway.</P> -<P>Each connection must be identified by a unique<A href="#SPI"> SPI</A> - value. For automatic connections, these values are assigned - automatically. For manual connections, you must set them with<VAR> spi=</VAR> - statements in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> ipsec.conf(5)</A>.</P> -<P>Each manual connection must have a unique SPI value in the range - 0x100 to 0x999. Two or more with the same value will fail. For details, - see our doc section<A href="#prodman"> Using manual keying in - production</A> and the man page<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> - ipsec.conf(5)</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="man_no_auto">Manual connections work, but automatic keying - doesn't</A></H3> -<P>The most common reason for this behaviour is a firewall dropping the - UDP port 500 packets used in key negotiation.</P> -<P>Other possibilities:</P> -<UL> -<LI>mis-configuration of auto connection in the /etc/ipsec.conf file. -<P>One common configuration error is forgetting that you need<VAR> - auto=add</VAR> to load the connection description on the receiving end - so it recognises the connection when the other end asks for it.</P> -</LI> -<LI>error in shared secret in /etc/ipsec.secrets</LI> -<LI>one gateway lacks a route to the other so Pluto's UDP packets are - lost</LI> -<LI>bugs in Pluto</LI> -<LI>incompatibilities between Pluto's<A href="#IKE"> IKE</A> - implementation and the IKE at the other end of the tunnel. -<P>Some possibile problems are discussed in out<A href="interop.html#interop.problem"> - interoperation</A> document.</P> -</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="nocomp">IPsec works, but connections using compression fail</A> -</H3> -<P>When we first added compression, we saw some problems:</P> -<UL> -<LI>compatibility issues with other implementations. We followed the - RFCs and omitted some extra material that many compression libraries - add by default. Some other implementations left the extras in</LI> -<LI>bugs in assembler compression routines on non-Intel CPUs. The - workaround is to use C code instead of possibly problematic assembler.</LI> -</UL> -<P>We have not seen either problem in some time (at least six months as - I write in March 2002), but if you have some unusual configuration then - you may see them.</P> -<H3><A name="pmtu.broken">Small packets work, but large transfers fail</A> -</H3> -<P>If tests with ping(1) and a small packet size succeed, but tests or - transfers with larger packet sizes fail, suspect problems with packet - fragmentation and perhaps<A href="#pathMTU"> path MTU discovery</A>.</P> -<P>Our<A href="#bigpacket"> troubleshooting document</A> covers these - problems. Information on the underlying mechanism is in our<A href="#MTU.trouble"> - background</A> document.</P> -<H3><A name="subsub">Subnet-to-subnet works, but tests from the gateways - don't</A></H3> -<P>This is described under<A href="#cantping"> I cannot ping...</A> - above.</P> -<H2><A name="compile.faq">Compilation problems</A></H2> -<H3><A name="gmp.h_missing">gmp.h: No such file or directory</A></H3> -<P>Pluto needs the GMP (<STRONG>G</STRONG>NU</P> -<P><STRONG>M</STRONG>ulti-<STRONG>P</STRONG>recision) library for the - large integer calculations it uses in<A href="#public"> public key</A> - cryptography. This error message indicates a failure to find the - library. You must install it before Pluto will compile.</P> -<P>The GMP library is included in most Linux distributions. Typically, - there are two RPMs, libgmp and libgmp-devel, You need to<EM> install - both</EM>, either from your distribution CDs or from your vendor's web - site.</P> -<P>On Debian, a mailing list message reports that the command to give is<VAR> - apt-get install gmp2</VAR>.</P> -<P>For more information and the latest version, see the<A href="http://www.swox.com/gmp/"> - GMP home page</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="noVM">... virtual memory exhausted</A></H3> -<P>We have had several reports of this message appearing, all on SPARC - Linux. Here is a mailing message on a solution:</P> -<PRE>> ipsec_sha1.c: In function `SHA1Transform': -> ipsec_sha1.c:95: virtual memory exhausted - -I'm seeing exactly the same problem on an Ultra with 256MB ram and 500 -MB swap. Except I am compiling version 1.5 and its Red Hat 6.2. - -I can get around this by using -O instead of -O2 for the optimization -level. So it is probably a bug in the optimizer on the sparc complier. -I'll try and chase this down on the sparc lists.</PRE> -<H2><A name="error">Interpreting error messages</A></H2> -<H3><A name="route-client">route-client (or host) exited with status 7</A> -</H3> -<P>Here is a discussion of this error from FreeS/WAN "listress" (mailing - list tech support person) Claudia Schmeing. The "FAQ on the network - unreachable error" which she refers to is the next question below.</P> -<PRE>> I reached the point where the two boxes (both on dial-up connections, but -> treated as static IPs by getting the IP and editing ipsec.conf after the -> connection is established) to the point where they exchange some info, but I -> get an error like "route-client command exited with status 7 \n internal -> error". -> Where can I find a description of this error? - -In general, if the FAQ doesn't cover it, you can search the mailing list -archives - I like to use -http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/ -but you can see doc/mail.html for different archive formats. - - -Your error comes from the _updown script, which performs some -routing and firewall functions to help Linux FreeS/WAN. More info -is available at doc/firewall.html and man ipsec.conf. Its routing -is integral to the health of Linux FreeS/WAN; it also provides facility -to insert custom firewall rules to be executed when you create or destroy -a connection. - -Yours is, of course, a routing error. You can be fairly sure the routing -machinery is saying "network is unreachable". There's a FAQ on the -"network is unreachable" error, but more information is available now; read on. - -If your _updown script is recent (for example if it shipped with -Linux FreeS/WAN 1.91), you will see another debugging line in your logs -that looks something like this: - -> output: /usr/local/lib/ipsec/_updown: `route add -net 128.174.253.83 -> netmask 255.255.255.255 dev ipsec0 gw 66.92.93.161' failed - -This is, of course, the system route command that exited with status 7, -(ie. failed). Man route for details. Seeing the command typed out yields -more information. If your _updown script is older, you may wish to update -it to show the command explicitly. - -Three parameters fed to the route command: net, netmask and gw [gateway] -are derived from things you've put in ipsec.conf. - -Net and netmask are derived from the peer's IP and mask. In more detail: - -You may see a routing error when routing to a client (ie. subnet), or -to a host (IPSec gateway or freestanding host; a box that does IPSec for -itself). In _updown, the "route-client" section is responsible to set up -the route for IPSec'd (usually, read 'tunneled') packets headed to a -peer subnet. Similarly, route-host routes IPSec'd packets to a peer host -or IPSec gateway. - -When routing to a 'client', net and netmask are ipsec.conf's left- or -rightsubnet (whichever is not local). Similarly, when routing to a -'host' the net is left or right. Host netmask is always /32, indicating a -single machine. - -Gw is nexthop's value. Again, the value in question is left- or rightnexthop, -whichever is local. Where left/right or left-/rightnexthop has the special -value %defaultroute (described in man ipsec.conf), gw will automagically get -the value of the next hop on the default route. - -Q: "What's a nexthop and why do I need one?" - -A: 'nexthop' is a routing kluge; its value is the next hop away - from the machine that's doing IPSec, and toward your IPSec peer. - You need it to get the processed packets out of the local system and - onto the wire. While we often route other packets through the machine - that's now doing IPSec, and are done with it, this does not suffice here. - After packets are processed with IPSec, this machine needs to know where - they go next. Of course using the 'IPSec gateway' as their routing gateway - would cause an infinite loop! [To visualize this, see the packet flow - diagram at doc/firewall.html.] To avoid this, we route packets through - the next hop down their projected path. - -Now that you know the background, consider: -1. Did you test routing between the gateways in the absence of Linux - FreeS/WAN, as recommended? You need to ensure the two machines that - will be running Linux FreeS/WAN can route to one another before trying to - make a secure connection. -2. Is there anything obviously wrong with the sense of your route command? - -Normally, this problem is caused by an incorrect local nexthop parameter. -Check out the use of %defaultroute, described in man ipsec.conf. This is -a simple way to set nexthop for most people. To figure nexthop out by hand, -traceroute in-the-clear to your IPSec peer. Nexthop is the traceroute's -first hop after your IPSec gateway.</PRE> -<H3><A name="unreachable">SIOCADDRT:Network is unreachable</A></H3> -<P>This message is not from FreeS/WAN, but from the Linux IP stack - itself. That stack is seeing packets it has no route for, either - because your routing was broken before FreeS/WAN started or because - FreeS/WAN's changes broke it.</P> -<P>Here is a message from Claudia suggesting ways to diagnose and fix - such problems:</P> -<PRE>You write, -> I have correctly installed freeswan-1.8 on RH7.0 kernel 2.2.17, but when -> I setup a VPN connection with the other machine(RH5.2 Kernel 2.0.36 -> freeswan-1.0, it works well.) it told me that -> "SIOCADDRT:Network is unreachable"! But the network connection is no -> problem. - -Often this error is the result of a misconfiguration. - -Be sure that you can route successfully in the absence of Linux -FreeS/WAN. (You say this is no problem, so proceed to the next step.) - -Use a custom copy of the default updownscript. Do not change the route -commands, but add a diagnostic message revealing the exact text of the -route command. Is there a problem with the sense of the route command -that you can see? If so, then re-examine those ipsec.conf settings -that are being sent to the route command. - -You may wish to use the ipsec auto --route and --unroute commands to -troubleshoot the problem. See man ipsec_auto for details.</PRE> -<P>Since the above message was written, we have modified the updown - script to provide a better diagnostic for this problem. Check<VAR> - /var/log/messages</VAR>.</P> -<P>See also the FAQ question<A href="#route-client"> route-client (or - host) exited with status 7</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="modprobe">ipsec_setup: modprobe: Can't locate module ipsec</A> -</H3> -<H3><A name="noKLIPS">ipsec_setup: Fatal error, kernel appears to lack - KLIPS</A></H3> -<P>These messages indicate an installation failure. The kernel you are - running does not contain the<A href="#KLIPS"> KLIPS (kernel IPsec)</A> - code.</P> -<P>Note that the "modprobe: Can't locate module ipsec" message appears - even if you are not using modules. If there is no KLIPS in your kernel, - FreeS/WAN tries to load it as a module. If that fails, you get this - message.</P> -<P>Commands you can quickly try are:</P> -<DL> -<DT><VAR>uname -a</VAR></DT> -<DD>to get details, including compilation date and time, of the - currently running kernel</DD> -<DT><VAR>ls /</VAR></DT> -<DT><VAR>ls /boot</VAR></DT> -<DD>to ensure a new kernel is where it should be. If kernel compilation - puts it in<VAR> /</VAR> but<VAR> lilo</VAR> wants it in<VAR> /boot</VAR> -, then you should uncomment the<VAR> INSTALL_PATH=/boot</VAR> line in - the kernel<VAR> Makefile</VAR>.</DD> -<DT><VAR>more /etc/lilo.conf</VAR></DT> -<DD>to see that<VAR> lilo</VAR> has correct information</DD> -<DT><VAR>lilo</VAR></DT> -<DD>to ensure that information in<VAR> /etc/lilo.conf</VAR> has been - transferred to the boot sector</DD> -</DL> -<P>If those don't find the problem, you have to go back and check - through the<A href="install.html"> install</A> procedure to see what - was missed.</P> -<P>Here is one of Claudia's messages on the topic:</P> -<PRE>> I tried to install freeswan 1.8 on my mandrake 7.2 test box. ... - -> It does show version and some output for whack. - -Yes, because the Pluto (daemon) part of ipsec is installed correctly, but -as we see below the kernel portion is not. - -> However, I get the following from /var/log/messages: -> -> Mar 11 22:11:55 pavillion ipsec_setup: Starting FreeS/WAN IPsec 1.8... -> Mar 11 22:12:02 pavillion ipsec_setup: modprobe: Can't locate module ipsec -> Mar 11 22:12:02 pavillion ipsec_setup: Fatal error, kernel appears to lack -> KLIPS. - -This is your problem. You have not successfully installed a kernel with -IPSec machinery in it. - -Did you build Linux FreeS/WAN as a module? If so, you need to ensure that -your new module has been installed in the directory where your kernel -loader normally finds your modules. If not, you need to ensure -that the new IPSec-enabled kernel is being loaded correctly. - -See also doc/install.html, and INSTALL in the distro.</PRE> -<H3><A name="noDNS">ipsec_setup: ... failure to fetch key for ... from - DNS</A></H3> -<P>Quoting Henry:</P> -<PRE>Note that by default, FreeS/WAN is now set up to - (a) authenticate with RSA keys, and - (b) fetch the public key of the far end from DNS. -Explicit attention to ipsec.conf will be needed if you want -to do something different.</PRE> -<P>and Claudia, responding to the same user:</P> -<PRE>You write, - -> My current setup in ipsec.conf is leftrsasigkey=%dns I have -> commented this and authby=rsasig out. I am able to get ipsec running, -> but what I find is that the documentation only specifies for %dns are -> there any other values that can be placed in this variable other than -> %dns and the key? I am also assuming that this is where I would place -> my public key for the left and right side as well is this correct? - -Valid values for authby= are rsasig and secret, which entail authentication -by RSA signature or by shared secret, respectively. Because you have -commented authby=rsasig out, you are using the default value of authby=secret. - -When using RSA signatures, there are two ways to get the public key for the -IPSec peer: either copy it directly into *rsasigkey= in ipsec.conf, or -fetch it from dns. The magic value %dns for *rsasigkey parameters says to -try to fetch the peer's key from dns. - -For any parameters, you may find their significance and special values in -man ipsec.conf. If you are setting up keys or secrets, be sure also to -reference man ipsec.secrets.</PRE> -<H3><A name="dup_address">ipsec_setup: ... interfaces ... and ... share - address ...</A></H3> -<P>This is a fatal error. FreeS/WAN cannot cope with two or more - interfaces using the same IP address. You must re-configure to avoid - this.</P> -<P>A mailing list message on the topic from Pluto developer Hugh - Redelmeier:</P> -<PRE>| I'm trying to get freeswan working between two machine where one has a ppp -| interface. -| I've already suceeded with two machines with ethernet ports but the ppp -| interface is causing me problems. -| basically when I run ipsec start i get -| ipsec_setup: Starting FreeS/WAN IPsec 1.7... -| ipsec_setup: 003 IP interfaces ppp1 and ppp0 share address 192.168.0.10! -| ipsec_setup: 003 IP interfaces ppp1 and ppp2 share address 192.168.0.10! -| ipsec_setup: 003 IP interfaces ppp0 and ppp2 share address 192.168.0.10! -| ipsec_setup: 003 no public interfaces found -| -| followed by lots of cannot work out interface for connection messages -| -| now I can specify the interface in ipsec.conf to be ppp0 , but this does -| not affect the above behaviour. A quick look in server.c indicates that the -| interfaces value is not used but some sort of raw detect happens. -| -| I guess I could prevent the formation of the extra ppp interfaces or -| allocate them different ip but I'd rather not. if at all possible. Any -| suggestions please. - -Pluto won't touch an interface that shares an IP address with another. -This will eventually change, but it probably won't happen soon. - -For now, you will have to give the ppp1 and ppp2 different addresses.</PRE> -<H3><A name="kflags">ipsec_setup: Cannot adjust kernel flags</A></H3> -<P>A mailing list message form technical lead Henry Spencer:</P> -<PRE>> When FreeS/WAN IPsec 1.7 is starting on my 2.0.38 Linux kernel the following -> error message is generated: -> ipsec_setup: Cannot adjust kernel flags, no /proc/sys/net/ipsec directory! -> What is supposed to create this directory and how can I fix this problem? - -I think that directory is a 2.2ism, although I'm not certain (I don't have -a 2.0.xx system handy any more for testing). Without it, some of the -ipsec.conf config-setup flags won't work, but otherwise things should -function. </PRE> -<P>You also need to enable the<VAR> /proc</VAR> filesystem in your - kernel configuration for these operations to work.</P> -<H3><A name="message_num">Message numbers (MI3, QR1, et cetera) in Pluto - messages</A></H3> -<P>Pluto messages often indicate where Pluto is in the IKE protocols. - The letters indicate<STRONG> M</STRONG>ain mode or<STRONG> Q</STRONG> -uick mode and<STRONG> I</STRONG>nitiator or<STRONG> R</STRONG>esponder. - The numerals are message sequence numbers. For more detail, see our<A href="#sequence"> - IPsec section</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="conn_name">Connection names in Pluto error messages</A></H3> -<P>From Pluto programmer Hugh Redelmeier:</P> -<PRE>| Jan 17 16:21:10 remus Pluto[13631]: "jumble" #1: responding to Main Mode from Road Warrior 130.205.82.46 -| Jan 17 16:21:11 remus Pluto[13631]: "jumble" #1: no suitable connection for peer @banshee.wittsend.com -| -| The connection "jumble" has nothing to do with the incoming -| connection requests, which were meant for the connection "banshee". - -You are right. The message tells you which Connection Pluto is -currently using, which need not be the right one. It need not be the -right one now for the negotiation to eventually succeed! This is -described in ipsec_pluto(8) in the section "Road Warrior Support". - -There are two times when Pluto will consider switching Connections for -a state object. Both are in response to receiving ID payloads (one in -Phase 1 / Main Mode and one in Phase 2 / Quick Mode). The second is -not unique to Road Warriors. In fact, neither is the first any more -(two connections for the same pair of hosts could differ in Phase 1 ID -payload; probably nobody else has tried this).</PRE> -<H3><A name="cantorient">Pluto: ... can't orient connection</A></H3> -<P>Older versions of FreeS/WAN used this message. The same error now - gives the "we have no ipsecN ..." error described just below.</P> -<H3><A name="no.interface">... we have no ipsecN interface for either - end of this connection</A></H3> -<P>Your tunnel has no IP address which matches the IP address of any of - the available IPsec interfaces. Either you've misconfigured the - connection, or you need to define an appropriate IPsec interface - connection.<VAR> interfaces=%defaultroute</VAR> works in many cases.</P> -<P>A longer story: Pluto needs to know whether it is running on the - machine which the connection description calls<VAR> left</VAR> or on<VAR> - right</VAR>. It figures that out by:</P> -<UL> -<LI>looking at the interfaces given in<VAR> interfaces=</VAR> lines in - the<VAR> config setup</VAR> section</LI> -<LI>discovering the IP addresses for those interfaces</LI> -<LI>searching for a match between those addresses and the ones given in<VAR> - left=</VAR> or<VAR> right=</VAR> lines.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Normally a match is found. Then Pluto knows where it is and can set - up other things (for example, if it is<VAR> left</VAR>) using - parameters such as<VAR> leftsubnet</VAR> and<VAR> leftnexthop</VAR>, - and sending its outgoing packets to<VAR> right</VAR>.</P> -<P>If no match is found, it emits the above error message.</P> -<H3><A name="noconn">Pluto: ... no connection is known</A></H3> -<P>This error message occurs when a remote system attempts to negotiate - a connection and Pluto does not have a connection description that - matches what the remote system has requested. The most common cause is - a configuration error on one end or the other.</P> -<P>Parameters involved in this match are<VAR> left</VAR>,<VAR> right</VAR> -,<VAR> leftsubnet</VAR> and<VAR> rightsubnet</VAR>.</P> -<P><STRONG>The match must be exact</STRONG>. For example, if your left - subnet is a.b.c.0/24 then neither a single machine in that net nor a - smaller subnet such as a.b.c.64/26 will be considered a match.</P> -<P>The message can also occur when an appropriate description exists but - Pluto has not loaded it. Use an<VAR> auto=add</VAR> statement in the - connection description, or an<VAR> ipsec auto --add <conn_name></VAR> - command, to correct this.</P> -<P>An explanation from the Pluto developer:</P> -<PRE>| Jul 12 15:00:22 sohar58 Pluto[574]: "corp_road" #2: cannot respond to IPsec -| SA request because no connection is known for -| 216.112.83.112/32===216.112.83.112...216.67.25.118 - -This is the first message from the Pluto log showing a problem. It -means that PGPnet is trying to negotiate a set of SAs with this -topology: - -216.112.83.112/32===216.112.83.112...216.67.25.118 -^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ -client on our side our host PGPnet host, no client - -None of the conns you showed look like this. - -Use - ipsec auto --status -to see a snapshot of what connections are in pluto, what -negotiations are going on, and what SAs are established. - -The leftsubnet= (client) in your conn is 216.112.83.64/26. It must -exactly match what pluto is looking for, and it does not.</PRE> -<H3><A name="nosuit">Pluto: ... no suitable connection ...</A></H3> -<P>This is similar to the<A href="#noconn"> no connection known</A> - error, but occurs at a different point in Pluto processing.</P> -<P>Here is one of Claudia's messages explaining the problem:</P> -<PRE>You write, - -> What could be the reason of the following error? -> "no suitable connection for peer '@xforce'" - -When a connection is initiated by the peer, Pluto must choose which entry in -the conf file best matches the incoming connection. A preliminary choice is -made on the basis of source and destination IPs, since that information is -available at that time. - -A payload containing an ID arrives later in the negotiation. Based on this -id and the *id= parameters, Pluto refines its conn selection. ... - -The message "no suitable connection" indicates that in this refining step, -Pluto does not find a connection that matches that ID. - -Please see "Selecting a connection when responding" in man ipsec_pluto for -more details.</PRE> -<P>See also<A href="#conn_name"> Connection names in Pluto error - messages</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="noconn.auth">Pluto: ... no connection has been authorized</A> -</H3> -<P>Here is one of Claudia's messages discussing this problem:</P> -<PRE>You write, - -> May 22 10:46:31 debian Pluto[25834]: packet from x.y.z.p:10014: -> initial Main Mode message from x.y.z.p:10014 - but no connection has been authorized - -This error occurs early in the connection negotiation process, -at the first step of IKE negotiation (Main Mode), which is itself the -first of two negotiation phases involved in creating an IPSec connection. - -Here, Linux FreeS/WAN receives a packet from a potential peer, which -requests that they begin discussing a connection. - -The "no connection has been authorized" means that there is no connection -description in Linux FreeS/WAN's internal database that can be used to -link your ipsec interface with that peer. - -"But of course I configured that connection!" - -It may be that the appropriate connection description exists in ipsec.conf -but has not been added to the database with ipsec auto --add myconn or the -auto=add method. Or, the connection description may be misconfigured. - -The only parameters that are relevant in this decision are left= and right= . -Local and remote ports are also taken into account -- we see that the port -is printed in the message above -- but there is no way to control these -in ipsec.conf. - - -Failure at "no connection has been authorized" is similar to the -"no connection is known for..." error in the FAQ, and the "no suitable -connection" error described in the snapshot's FAQ. In all three cases, -Linux FreeS/WAN is trying to match parameters received in the -negotiation with the connection description in the local config file. - -As it receives more information, its matches take more parameters into -account, and become more precise: first the pair of potential peers, -then the peer IDs, then the endpoints (including any subnets). - -The "no suitable connection for peer *" occurs toward the end of IKE -(Main Mode) negotiation, when the IDs are matched. - -"no connection is known for a/b===c...d" is seen at the beginning of IPSec -(Quick Mode, phase 2) negotiation, when the connections are matched using -left, right, and any information about the subnets.</PRE> -<H3><A name="noDESsupport">Pluto: ... OAKLEY_DES_CBC is not supported.</A> -</H3> -<P>This message occurs when the other system attempts to negotiate a - connection using<A href="#DES"> single DES</A>, which we do not support - because it is<A href="#desnotsecure"> insecure</A>.</P> -<P>Our interoperation document has suggestions for<A href="interop.html#noDES"> - how to deal with</A> systems that attempt to use single DES.</P> -<H3><A name="notransform">Pluto: ... no acceptable transform</A></H3> -<P>This message means that the other gateway has made a proposal for - connection parameters, but nothing they proposed is acceptable to - Pluto. Possible causes include:</P> -<UL> -<LI>misconfiguration on either end</LI> -<LI>policy incompatibilities, for example we require encrypted - connections but they are trying to create one with just authentication</LI> -<LI>interoperation problems, for example they offer only single DES and - FreeS/WAN does not support that. See<A href="interop.html#interop.problem"> - discussion</A> in our interoperation document.</LI> -</UL> -<P>A more detailed explanation, from Pluto programmer Hugh Redelmeier:</P> -<PRE>Background: - -When one IKE system (for example, Pluto) is negotiating with another -to create an SA, the Initiator proposes a bunch of choices and the -Responder replies with one that it has selected. - -The structure of the choices is fairly complicated. An SA payload -contains a list of lists of "Proposals". The outer list is a set of -choices: the selection must be from one element of this list. - -Each of these elements is a list of Proposals. A selection must be -made from each of the elements of the inner list. In other words, -*all* of them apply (that is how, for example, both AH and ESP can -apply at once). - -Within each of these Proposals is a list of Transforms. For each -Proposal selected, one Transform must be selected (in other words, -each Proposal provides a choice of Transforms). - -Each Transform is made up of a list of Attributes describing, well, -attributes. Such as lifetime of the SA. Such as algorithm to be -used. All the Attributes apply to a Transform. - -You will have noticed a pattern here: layers alternate between being -disjunctions ("or") and conjunctions ("and"). - -For Phase 1 / Main Mode (negotiating an ISAKMP SA), this structure is -cut back. There must be exactly one Proposal. So this degenerates to -a list of Transforms, one of which must be chosen. - -In your case, no proposal was considered acceptable to Pluto (the -Responder). So negotiation ceased. Pluto logs the reason it rejects -each Transform. So look back in the log to see what is going wrong.</PRE> -<H3><A name="rsasigkey">rsasigkey dumps core</A></H3> - A comment on this error from Henry: -<PRE>On Fri, 29 Jun 2001, Rodrigo Gruppelli wrote: -> ...Well, it seem that there's -> another problem with it. When I try to generate a pair of RSA keys, -> rsasigkey cores dump... - -*That* is a neon sign flashing "GMP LIBRARY IS BROKEN". Rsasigkey calls -GMP a lot, and our own library a little bit, and that's very nearly all it -does. Barring bugs in its code or our library -- which have happened, but -not very often -- a problem in rsasigkey is a problem in GMP.</PRE> -<P>See the next question for how to deal with GMP errors.</P> -<H3><A name="sig4">!Pluto failure!: ... exited with ... signal 4</A></H3> -<P>Pluto has died. Signal 4 is SIGILL, illegal instruction.</P> -<P>The most likely cause is that your<A href="#GMP"> GMP</A> (GNU - multi-precision) library is compiled for a different processor than - what you are running on. Pluto uses that library for its public key - calculations.</P> -<P>Try getting the GMP sources and recompile for your processor type. - Most Linux distributions will include this source, or you can download - it from the<A href="http://www.swox.com/gmp/"> GMP home page</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="econnrefused">ECONNREFUSED error message</A></H3> -<P>From John Denker, on the mailing list:</P> -<PRE>1) The log message - some IKE message we sent has been rejected with - ECONNREFUSED (kernel supplied no details) -is much more suitable than the previous version. Thanks. - -2) Minor suggestion for further improvement: it might be worth mentioning -that the command - tcpdump -i eth1 icmp[0] != 8 and icmp[0] != 0 -is useful for tracking down the details in question. We shouldn't expect -all IPsec users to figure that out on their own. The log message might -even provide a hint as to where to look in the docs.</PRE> -<P>Reply From Pluto developer Hugh Redelmeier</P> -<PRE>Good idea. - -I've added a bit pluto(8)'s BUGS section along these lines. -I didn't have the heart to lengthen this message.</PRE> -<H3><A name="no_eroute">klips_debug: ... no eroute!</A></H3> -<P>This message means<A href="#KLIPS"> KLIPS</A> has received a packet - for which no IPsec tunnel has been defined.</P> -<P>Here is a more detailed duscussion from the team's tech support - person Claudia Schmeing, responding to a query on the mailing list:</P> -<PRE>> Why ipsec reports no eroute! ???? IP Masq... is disabled. - -In general, more information is required so that people on the list may -give you informed input. See doc/prob.report.</PRE> -<P>The document she refers to has since been replaced by a<A href="#prob.report"> - section</A> of the troubleshooting document.</P> -<PRE>However, I can make some general comments on this type of error. - -This error usually looks something like this (clipped from an archived -message): - -> ttl:64 proto:1 chk:45459 saddr:192.168.1.2 daddr:192.168.100.1 -> ... klips_debug:ipsec_findroute: 192.168.1.2->192.168.100.1 -> ... klips_debug:rj_match: * See if we match exactly as a host destination -> ... klips_debug:rj_match: ** try to match a leaf, t=0xc1a260b0 -> ... klips_debug:rj_match: *** start searching up the tree, t=0xc1a260b0 -> ... klips_debug:rj_match: **** t=0xc1a260c8 -> ... klips_debug:rj_match: **** t=0xc1fe5960 -> ... klips_debug:rj_match: ***** not found. -> ... klips_debug:ipsec_tunnel_start_xmit: Original head/tailroom: 2, 28 -> ... klips_debug:ipsec_tunnel_start_xmit: no eroute!: ts=47.3030, dropping. - - -What does this mean? -- -------------------- - -"eroute" stands for "extended route", and is a special type of route -internal to Linux FreeS/WAN. For more information about this type of route, -see the section of man ipsec_auto on ipsec auto --route. - -"no eroute!" here means, roughly, that Linux FreeS/WAN cannot find an -appropriate tunnel that should have delivered this packet. Linux -FreeS/WAN therefore drops the packet, with the message "no eroute! ... -dropping", on the assumption that this packet is not a legitimate -transmission through a properly constructed tunnel. - - -How does this situation come about? -- ----------------------------------- - -Linux FreeS/WAN has a number of connection descriptions defined in -ipsec.conf. These must be successfully brought "up" to form actual tunnels. -(see doc/setup.html's step 15, man ipsec.conf and man ipsec_auto -for details). - -Such connections are often specific to the endpoints' IPs. However, in -some cases they may be more general, for example in the case of -Road Warriors where left or right is the special value %any. - -When Linux FreeS/WAN receives a packet, it verifies that the packet has -come through a legitimate channel, by checking that there is an -appropriate tunnel through which this packet might legitimately have -arrived. This is the process we see above. - -First, it checks for an eroute that exactly matches the packet. In the -example above, we see it checking for a route that begins at 192.168.1.2 -and ends at 192.168.100.1. This search favours the most specific match that -would apply to the route between these IPs. So, if there is a connection -description exactly matching these IPs, the search will end there. If not, -the code will search for a more general description matching the IPs. -If there is no match, either specific or general, the packet will be -dropped, as we see, above. - -Unless you are working with Road Warriors, only the first, specific part -of the matching process is likely to be relevant to you. - - -"But I defined the tunnel, and it came up, why do I have this error?" -- --------------------------------------------------------------------- - -One of the most common causes of this error is failure to specify enough -connection descriptions to cover all needed tunnels between any two -gateways and their respective subnets. As you have noticed, troubleshooting -this error may be complicated by the use of IP Masq. However, this error is -not limited to cases where IP Masq is used. - -See doc/configuration.html#multitunnel for a detailed example of the -solution to this type of problem.</PRE> -<P>The documentation section she refers to is now<A href="#multitunnel"> - here</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="SAused">... trouble writing to /dev/ipsec ... SA already in - use</A></H3> -<P>This error message occurs when two manual connections are set up with - the same SPI value.</P> -<P>See the FAQ for<A href="#spi_error"> One manual connection works, but - second one fails</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="ignore">... ignoring ... payload</A></H3> -<P>This message is harmless. The IKE protocol provides for a number of - optional messages types:</P> -<UL> -<LI>delete SA</LI> -<LI>initial contact</LI> -<LI>vendor ID</LI> -<LI>...</LI> -</UL> -<P>An implementation is never required to send these, but they are - allowed to. The receiver is not required to do anything with them. - FreeS/WAN ignores them, but notifies you via the logs.</P> -<P>For the "ignoring delete SA Payload" message, see also our discussion - of cleaning up<A href="#deadtunnel"> dead tunnels</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="unknown_rightcert">unknown parameter name "rightcert"</A></H3> -<P>This message can appear when you've upgraded an X.509-enabled Linux - FreeS/WAN with a vanilla Linux FreeS/WAN. To use your X.509 configs you - will need to overwrite the new install with<A HREF="http://www.freeswan.ca"> - Super FreeS/WAN</A>, or add the<A HREF="http://www.strongsec.ca/freeswan"> - X.509 patch</A> by hand.</P> -<H2><A name="spam">Why don't you restrict the mailing lists to reduce - spam?</A></H2> -<P>As a matter of policy, some of our<A href="mail.html"> mailing lists</A> - need to be open to non-subscribers. Project management feel strongly - that maintaining this openness is more important than blocking spam.</P> -<UL> -<LI>Users should be able to get help or report bugs without subscribing.</LI> -<LI>Even a user who is subscribed may not have access to his or her - subscribed account when he or she needs help, miles from home base in - the middle of setting up a client's gateway.</LI> -<LI>There is arguably a legal requirement for this policy. A US resident - or citizen could be charged under munitions export laws for providing - technical assistance to a foreign cryptographic project. Such a charge - would be more easily defended if the discussion takes place in public, - on an open list.</LI> -</UL> -<P>This has been discussed several times at some length on the list. See - the<A href="#archive"> list archives</A>. Bringing the topic up again - is unlikely to be useful. Please don't. Or at the very least, please - don't without reading the archives and being certain that whatever you - are about to suggest has not yet been discussed.</P> -<P>Project technical lead Henry Spencer summarised one discussion:</P> -<BLOCKQUOTE> For the third and last time: this list *will* *not* do - address-based filtering. This is a policy decision, not an - implementation problem. The decision is final, and is not open to - discussion. This needs to be communicated better to people, and steps - are being taken to do that.</BLOCKQUOTE> -<P>Adding this FAQ section is one of the steps he refers to.</P> -<P>You have various options other than just putting up with the spam, - filtering it yourself, or unsubscribing:</P> -<UL> -<LI>subscribe only to one or both of our lists with restricted posting - rules: -<UL> -<LI><A href="mailto:briefs@lists.freeswan.org?body=subscribe">briefs</A> -, weekly list summaries</LI> -<LI><A href="mailto:announce@lists.freeswan.org?body=subscribe">announce</A> -, project-related announcements</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>read the other lists via the<A href="#archive"> archives</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>A number of tools are available to filter mail.</P> -<UL> -<LI>Many mail readers include some filtering capability.</LI> -<LI>Many Linux distributions include<A href="http://www.procmail.org/"> - procmail(8)</A> for server-side filtering.</LI> -<LI>The<A href="http://www.spambouncer.org/"> Spam Bouncer</A> is a set - of procmail(8) filters designed to combat spam.</LI> -<LI>Roaring Penguin have a<A href="http://www.roaringpenguin.com/mimedefang/"> - MIME defanger</A> that removes potentially dangerous attachments.</LI> -</UL> -<P>If you use your ISP's mail server rather than running your own, - consider suggesting to the ISP that they tag suspected spam as<A href="http://www.msen.com/1997/spam.html#SUSPECTED"> - this ISP</A> does. They could just refuse mail from dubious sources, - but that is tricky and runs some risk of losing valuable mail or - senselessly annoying senders and their admins. However, they can safely - tag and deliver dubious mail. The tags can greatly assist your - filtering.</P> -<P>For information on tracking down spammers, see these<A href="http://www.rahul.net/falk/#howtos"> - HowTos</A>, or the<A href="http://www.sputum.com/index2.html"> Sputum</A> - site. Sputum have a Linux anti-spam screensaver available for download.</P> -<P>Here is a more detailed message from Henry:</P> -<PRE>On Mon, 15 Jan 2001, Jay Vaughan wrote: -> I know I'm flogging a dead horse here, but I'm curious as to the reasons for -> an aversion for a subscriber-only mailing list? - -Once again: for legal reasons, it is important that discussions of these -things be held in a public place -- the list -- and we do not want to -force people to subscribe to the list just to ask one question, because -that may be more than merely inconvenient for them. There are also real -difficulties with people who are temporarily forced to use alternate -addresses; that is precisely the time when they may be most in need of -help, yet a subscribers-only policy shuts them out. - -These issues do not apply to most mailing lists, but for a list that is -(necessarily) the primary user support route for a crypto package, they -are very important. This is *not* an ordinary mailing list; it has to -function under awkward constraints that make various simplistic solutions -inapplicable or undesirable. - -> We're *ALL* sick of hearing about list management problems, not just you -> old-timers, so why don't you DO SOMETHING EFFECTIVE ABOUT IT... - -Because it's a lot harder than it looks, and many existing "solutions" -have problems when examined closely. - -> A suggestion for you, based on 10 years of experience with management of my -> own mailing lists would be to use mailman, which includes pretty much every -> feature under the sun that you guys need and want, plus some. The URL for -> mailman... - -I assure you, we're aware of mailman. Along with a whole bunch of others, -including some you almost certainly have never heard of (I hadn't!). - -> As for the argument that the list shouldn't be configured to enforce -> subscription - I contend that it *SHOULD* AT LEAST require manual address -> verification in order for posts to be redirected. - -You do realize, I hope, that interposing such a manual step might cause -your government to decide that this is not truly a public forum, and thus -you could go to jail if you don't get approval from them before mailing to -it? If you think this sounds irrational, your government is noted for -making irrational decisions in this area; we can't assume that they will -suddenly start being sensible. See above about awkward constraints. You -may be willing to take the risk, but we can't, in good conscience, insist -that all users with problems do so. - - Henry Spencer - henry@spsystems.net</PRE> -<P>and a message on the topic from project leader John Gilmore:</P> -<PRE>Subject: Re: The linux-ipsec list's topic - Date: Sat, 30 Dec 2000 - From: John Gilmore <gnu@toad.com> - -I'll post this single message, once only, in this discussion, and then -not burden the list with any further off-topic messages. I encourage -everyone on the list to restrain themself from posting ANY off-topic -messages to the linux-ipsec list. - -The topic of the linux-ipsec mailing list is the FreeS/WAN software. - -I frequently see "discussions about spam on a list" overwhelm the -volume of "actual spam" on a list. BOTH kinds of messages are -off-topic messages. Twenty anti-spam messages take just as long to -detect and discard as twenty spam messages. - -The Linux-ipsec list encourages on-topic messages from people who have -not joined the list itself. We will not censor messages to the list -based on where they originate, or what return address they contain. -In other words, non-subscribers ARE allowed to post, and this will not -change. My own valid contributions have been rejected out-of-hand by -too many other mailing lists for me to want to impose that censorship -on anybody else's contributions. And every day I see the damage that -anti-spam zeal is causing in many other ways; that zeal is far more -damaging to the culture of the Internet than the nuisance of spam. - -In general, it is the responsibility of recipients to filter, -prioritize, or otherwise manage the handling of email that comes to -them. It is not the responsibility of the rest of the Internet -community to refrain from sending messages to recipients that they -might not want to see. If your software infrastructure for managing -your incoming email is insufficient, then improve it. If you think -the signal-to-noise ratio on linux-ipsec is too poor, then please -unsubscribe. But don't further increase the noise by posting to the -linux-ipsec list about those topics. - - John Gilmore - founder & sponsor, FreeS/WAN project</PRE> -<HR> -<H1><A name="manpages">FreeS/WAN manual pages</A></H1> -<P>The various components of Linux FreeS/WAN are of course documented in - standard Unix manual pages, accessible via the man(1) command.</P> -<P>Links here take you to an HTML version of the man pages.</P> -<H2><A name="man.file">Files</A></H2> -<DL> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html">ipsec.conf(5)</A></DT> -<DD>IPsec configuration and connections</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec.secrets.5.html">ipsec.secrets(5)</A></DT> -<DD>secrets for IKE authentication, either pre-shared keys or RSA - private keys</DD> -</DL> -<P>These files are also discussed in the<A href="config.html"> - configuration</A> section.</P> -<H2><A name="man.command">Commands</A></H2> -<P>Many users will never give most of the FreeS/WAN commands directly. - Configure the files listed above correctly and everything should be - automatic.</P> -<P>The exceptions are commands for mainpulating the<A href="#RSA"> RSA</A> - keys used in Pluto authentication:</P> -<DL> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_rsasigkey.8.html">ipsec_rsasigkey(8)</A></DT> -<DD>generate keys</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_newhostkey.8.html">ipsec_newhostkey(8)</A></DT> -<DD>generate keys in a convenient format</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_showhostkey.8.html">ipsec_showhostkey(8)</A> -</DT> -<DD>extract<A href="#RSA"> RSA</A> keys from<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.secrets.5.html"> - ipsec.secrets(5)</A> (or optionally, another file) and format them for - insertion in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> ipsec.conf(5)</A> or - in DNS records</DD> -</DL> -<P>Note that:</P> -<UL> -<LI>These keys are for<STRONG> authentication only</STRONG>. They are<STRONG> - not secure for encryption</STRONG>.</LI> -<LI>The utility uses random(4) as a source of<A href="#random"> random - numbers</A>. This may block for some time if there is not enough - activity on the machine to provide the required entropy. You may want - to give it some bogus activity such as random mouse movements or some - command such as<NOBR> <TT>du /usr > /dev/null &</TT>.</LI> -</UL> -<P>The following commands are fairly likely to be used, if only for - testing and status checks:</P> -<DL> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec.8.html">ipsec(8)</A></DT> -<DD>invoke IPsec utilities</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_setup.8.html">ipsec_setup(8)</A></DT> -<DD>control IPsec subsystem</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_auto.8.html">ipsec_auto(8)</A></DT> -<DD>control automatically-keyed IPsec connections</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_manual.8.html">ipsec_manual(8)</A></DT> -<DD>take manually-keyed IPsec connections up and down</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_ranbits.8.html">ipsec_ranbits(8)</A></DT> -<DD>generate random bits in ASCII form</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_look.8.html">ipsec_look(8)</A></DT> -<DD>show minimal debugging information</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_barf.8.html">ipsec_barf(8)</A></DT> -<DD>spew out collected IPsec debugging information</DD> -</DL> -<P>The lower-level utilities listed below are normally invoked via - scripts listed above, but they can also be used directly when required.</P> -<DL> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_eroute.8.html">ipsec_eroute(8)</A></DT> -<DD>manipulate IPsec extended routing tables</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_klipsdebug.8.html">ipsec_klipsdebug(8)</A></DT> -<DD>set Klips (kernel IPsec support) debug features and level</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_pluto.8.html">ipsec_pluto(8)</A></DT> -<DD>IPsec IKE keying daemon</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_spi.8.html">ipsec_spi(8)</A></DT> -<DD>manage IPsec Security Associations</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_spigrp.8.html">ipsec_spigrp(8)</A></DT> -<DD>group/ungroup IPsec Security Associations</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_tncfg.8.html">ipsec_tncfg(8)</A></DT> -<DD>associate IPsec virtual interface with real interface</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_whack.8.html">ipsec_whack(8)</A></DT> -<DD>control interface for IPsec keying daemon</DD> -</DL> -<H2><A name="man.lib">Library routines</A></H2> -<DL> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_atoaddr.3.html">ipsec_atoaddr(3)</A></DT> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_addrtoa.3.html">ipsec_addrtoa(3)</A></DT> -<DD>convert Internet addresses to and from ASCII</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_atosubnet.3.html">ipsec_atosubnet(3)</A></DT> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_subnettoa.3.html">ipsec_subnettoa(3)</A></DT> -<DD>convert subnet/mask ASCII form to and from addresses</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_atoasr.3.html">ipsec_atoasr(3)</A></DT> -<DD>convert ASCII to Internet address, subnet, or range</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_rangetoa.3.html">ipsec_rangetoa(3)</A></DT> -<DD>convert Internet address range to ASCII</DD> -<DT>ipsec_atodata(3)</DT> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_datatoa.3.html">ipsec_datatoa(3)</A></DT> -<DD>convert binary data from and to ASCII formats</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_atosa.3.html">ipsec_atosa(3)</A></DT> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_satoa.3.html">ipsec_satoa(3)</A></DT> -<DD>convert IPsec Security Association IDs to and from ASCII</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_atoul.3.html">ipsec_atoul(3)</A></DT> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_ultoa.3.html">ipsec_ultoa(3)</A></DT> -<DD>convert unsigned-long numbers to and from ASCII</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_goodmask.3.html">ipsec_goodmask(3)</A></DT> -<DD>is this Internet subnet mask a valid one?</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_masktobits.3.html">ipsec_masktobits(3)</A></DT> -<DD>convert Internet subnet mask to bit count</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_bitstomask.3.html">ipsec_bitstomask(3)</A></DT> -<DD>convert bit count to Internet subnet mask</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_optionsfrom.3.html">ipsec_optionsfrom(3)</A> -</DT> -<DD>read additional ``command-line'' options from file</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_subnetof.3.html">ipsec_subnetof(3)</A></DT> -<DD>given Internet address and subnet mask, return subnet number</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_hostof.3.html">ipsec_hostof(3)</A></DT> -<DD>given Internet address and subnet mask, return host part</DD> -<DT><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_broadcastof.3.html">ipsec_broadcastof(3)</A> -</DT> -<DD>given Internet address and subnet mask, return broadcast address</DD> -</DL> -<HR> -<H1><A name="firewall">FreeS/WAN and firewalls</A></H1> -<P>FreeS/WAN, or other IPsec implementations, frequently run on gateway - machines, the same machines running firewall or packet filtering code. - This document discusses the relation between the two.</P> -<P>The firewall code in 2.4 and later kernels is called Netfilter. The - user-space utility to manage a firewall is iptables(8). See the<A href="http://netfilter.samba.org"> - netfilter/iptables web site</A> for details.</P> -<H2><A name="filters">Filtering rules for IPsec packets</A></H2> -<P>The basic constraint is that<STRONG> an IPsec gateway must have - packet filters that allow IPsec packets</STRONG>, at least when talking - to other IPsec gateways:</P> -<UL> -<LI>UDP port 500 for<A href="#IKE"> IKE</A> negotiations</LI> -<LI>protocol 50 if you use<A href="#ESP"> ESP</A> encryption and/or - authentication (the typical case)</LI> -<LI>protocol 51 if you use<A href="#AH"> AH</A> packet-level - authentication</LI> -</UL> -<P>Your gateway and the other IPsec gateways it communicates with must - be able to exchange these packets for IPsec to work. Firewall rules - must allow UDP 500 and at least one of<A href="#AH"> AH</A> or<A href="#ESP"> - ESP</A> on the interface that communicates with the other gateway.</P> -<P>For nearly all FreeS/WAN applications, you must allow UDP port 500 - and the ESP protocol.</P> -<P>There are two ways to set this up:</P> -<DL> -<DT>easier but less flexible</DT> -<DD>Just set up your firewall scripts at boot time to allow IPsec - packets to and from your gateway. Let FreeS/WAN reject any bogus - packets.</DD> -<DT>more work, giving you more precise control</DT> -<DD>Have the<A href="manpage.d/ipsec_pluto.8.html"> ipsec_pluto(8)</A> - daemon call scripts to adjust firewall rules dynamically as required. - This is done by naming the scripts in the<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> - ipsec.conf(5)</A> variables<VAR> prepluto=</VAR>,<VAR> postpluto=</VAR> -,<VAR> leftupdown=</VAR> and<VAR> rightupdown=</VAR>.</DD> -</DL> -<P>Both methods are described in more detail below.</P> -<H2><A name="examplefw">Firewall configuration at boot</A></H2> -<P>It is possible to set up both firewalling and IPsec with appropriate - scripts at boot and then not use<VAR> leftupdown=</VAR> and<VAR> - rightupdown=</VAR>, or use them only for simple up and down operations.</P> -<P>Basically, the technique is</P> -<UL> -<LI>allow IPsec packets (typically, IKE on UDP port 500 plus ESP, - protocol 50) -<UL> -<LI>incoming, if the destination address is your gateway (and - optionally, only from known senders)</LI> -<LI>outgoing, with the from address of your gateway (and optionally, - only to known receivers)</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>let<A href="#Pluto"> Pluto</A> deal with IKE</LI> -<LI>let<A href="#KLIPS"> KLIPS</A> deal with ESP</LI> -</UL> -<P>Since Pluto authenticates its partners during the negotiation, and - KLIPS drops packets for which no tunnel has been negotiated, this may - be all you need.</P> -<H3><A name="simple.rules">A simple set of rules</A></H3> -<P>In simple cases, you need only a few rules, as in this example:</P> -<PRE># allow IPsec -# -# IKE negotiations -iptables -I INPUT -p udp --sport 500 --dport 500 -j ACCEPT -iptables -I OUTPUT -p udp --sport 500 --dport 500 -j ACCEPT -# ESP encryption and authentication -iptables -I INPUT -p 50 -j ACCEPT -iptables -I OUTPUT -p 50 -j ACCEPT -</PRE> -<P>This should be all you need to allow IPsec through<VAR> lokkit</VAR>, - which ships with Red Hat 9, on its medium security setting. Once you've - tweaked to your satisfaction, save your active rule set with:</P> -<PRE>service iptables save</PRE> -<H3><A name="complex.rules">Other rules</A></H3> - You can add additional rules, or modify existing ones, to work with - IPsec and with your network and policies. We give a some examples in - this section. -<P>However, while it is certainly possible to create an elaborate set of - rules yourself (please let us know via the<A href="mail.html"> mailing - list</A> if you do), it may be both easier and more secure to use a set - which has already been published and tested.</P> -<P>The published rule sets we know of are described in the<A href="#rules.pub"> - next section</A>.</P> -<H4><A NAME="7_2_2_1">Adding additional rules</A></H4> - If necessary, you can add additional rules to: -<DL> -<DT>reject IPsec packets that are not to or from known gateways</DT> -<DD>This possibility is discussed in more detail<A href="#unknowngate"> - later</A></DD> -<DT>allow systems behind your gateway to build IPsec tunnels that pass - through the gateway</DT> -<DD>This possibility is discussed in more detail<A href="#through"> - later</A></DD> -<DT>filter incoming packets emerging from KLIPS.</DT> -<DD>Firewall rules can recognise packets emerging from IPsec. They are - marked as arriving on an interface such as<VAR> ipsec0</VAR>, rather - than<VAR> eth0</VAR>,<VAR> ppp0</VAR> or whatever.</DD> -</DL> -<P>It is therefore reasonably straightforward to filter these packets in - whatever way suits your situation.</P> -<H4><A NAME="7_2_2_2">Modifying existing rules</A></H4> -<P>In some cases rules that work fine before you add IPsec may require - modification to work with IPsec.</P> -<P>This is especially likely for rules that deal with interfaces on the - Internet side of your system. IPsec adds a new interface; often the - rules must change to take account of that.</P> -<P>For example, consider the rules given in<A href="http://www.netfilter.org/documentation/HOWTO//packet-filtering-HOWTO-5.html"> - this section</A> of the Netfilter documentation:</P> -<PRE>Most people just have a single PPP connection to the Internet, and don't -want anyone coming back into their network, or the firewall: - - ## Insert connection-tracking modules (not needed if built into kernel). - # insmod ip_conntrack - # insmod ip_conntrack_ftp - - ## Create chain which blocks new connections, except if coming from inside. - # iptables -N block - # iptables -A block -m state --state ESTABLISHED,RELATED -j ACCEPT - # iptables -A block -m state --state NEW -i ! ppp0 -j ACCEPT - # iptables -A block -j DROP - - ## Jump to that chain from INPUT and FORWARD chains. - # iptables -A INPUT -j block - # iptables -A FORWARD -j block</PRE> -<P>On an IPsec gateway, those rules may need to be modified. The above - allows new connections from<EM> anywhere except ppp0</EM>. That means - new connections from ipsec0 are allowed.</P> -<P>Do you want to allow anyone who can establish an IPsec connection to - your gateway to initiate TCP connections to any service on your - network? Almost certainly not if you are using opportunistic - encryption. Quite possibly not even if you have only explicitly - configured connections.</P> -<P>To disallow incoming connections from ipsec0, change the middle - section above to:</P> -<PRE> ## Create chain which blocks new connections, except if coming from inside. - # iptables -N block - # iptables -A block -m state --state ESTABLISHED,RELATED -j ACCEPT - # iptables -A block -m state --state NEW -i ppp+ -j DROP - # iptables -A block -m state --state NEW -i ipsec+ -j DROP - # iptables -A block -m state --state NEW -i -j ACCEPT - # iptables -A block -j DROP</PRE> -<P>The original rules accepted NEW connections from anywhere except - ppp0. This version drops NEW connections from any PPP interface (ppp+) - and from any ipsec interface (ipsec+), then accepts the survivors.</P> -<P>Of course, these are only examples. You will need to adapt them to - your own situation.</P> -<H3><A name="rules.pub">Published rule sets</A></H3> -<P>Several sets of firewall rules that work with FreeS/WAN are - available.</P> -<H4><A name="Ranch.trinity">Scripts based on Ranch's work</A></H4> -<P>One user, Rob Hutton, posted his boot time scripts to the mailing - list, and we included them in previous versions of this documentation. - They are still available from our<A href="http://www.freeswan.org/freeswan_trees/freeswan-1.5/doc/firewall.html#examplefw"> - web site</A>. However, they were for an earlier FreeS/WAN version so we - no longer recommend them. Also, they had some bugs. See this<A href="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/04/msg00316.html"> - message</A>.</P> -<P>Those scripts were based on David Ranch's scripts for his "Trinity - OS" for setting up a secure Linux. Check his<A href="http://www.ecst.csuchico.edu/~dranch/LINUX/index-linux.html"> - home page</A> for the latest version and for information on his<A href="#ranch"> - book</A> on securing Linux. If you are going to base your firewalling - on Ranch's scripts, we recommend using his latest version, and sending - him any IPsec modifications you make for incorporation into later - versions.</P> -<H4><A name="seawall">The Seattle firewall</A></H4> -<P>We have had several mailing lists reports of good results using - FreeS/WAN with Seawall (the Seattle Firewall). See that project's<A href="http://seawall.sourceforge.net/"> - home page</A> on Sourceforge.</P> -<H4><A name="rcf">The RCF scripts</A></H4> -<P>Another set of firewall scripts with IPsec support are the RCF or - rc.firewall scripts. See their<A href="http://jsmoriss.mvlan.net/linux/rcf.html"> - home page</A>.</P> -<H4><A name="asgard">Asgard scripts</A></H4> -<P><A href="http://heimdall.asgardsrealm.net/linux/firewall/">Asgard's - Realm</A> has set of firewall scripts with FreeS/WAN support, for 2.4 - kernels and iptables.</P> -<H4><A name="user.scripts">User scripts from the mailing list</A></H4> -<P>One user gave considerable detail on his scripts, including - supporting<A href="#IPX"> IPX</A> through the tunnel. His message was - too long to conveniently be quoted here, so I've put it in a<A href="user_examples.html"> - separate file</A>.</P> -<H2><A name="updown">Calling firewall scripts, named in ipsec.conf(5)</A> -</H2> -<P>The<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> ipsec.conf(5)</A> - configuration file has three pairs of parameters used to specify an - interface between FreeS/WAN and firewalling code.</P> -<P>Note that using these is not required if you have a static firewall - setup. In that case, you just set your firewall up at boot time (in a - way that permits the IPsec connections you want) and do not change it - thereafter. Omit all the FreeS/WAN firewall parameters and FreeS/WAN - will not attempt to adjust firewall rules at all. See<A href="#examplefw"> - above</A> for some information on appropriate scripts.</P> -<P>However, if you want your firewall rules to change when IPsec - connections change, then you need to use these parameters.</P> -<H3><A name="pre_post">Scripts called at IPsec start and stop</A></H3> -<P>One pair of parmeters are set in the<VAR> config setup</VAR> section - of the<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> ipsec.conf(5)</A> file and - affect all connections:</P> -<DL> -<DT>prepluto=</DT> -<DD>script to be called before<A href="manpage.d/ipsec_pluto.8.html"> - pluto(8)</A> IKE daemon is started.</DD> -<DT>postpluto=</DT> -<DD>script to be called after<A href="manpage.d/ipsec_pluto.8.html"> - pluto(8)</A> IKE daemon is stopped.</DD> -</DL> - These parameters allow you to change firewall parameters whenever IPsec - is started or stopped. -<P>They can also be used in other ways. For example, you might have<VAR> - prepluto</VAR> add a module to your kernel for the secure network - interface or make a dialup connection, and then have<VAR> postpluto</VAR> - remove the module or take the connection down.</P> -<H3><A name="up_down">Scripts called at connection up and down</A></H3> -<P>The other parameters are set in connection descriptions. They can be - set in individual connection descriptions, and could even call - different scripts for each connection for maximum flexibility. In most - applications, however, it makes sense to use only one script and to - call it from<VAR> conn %default</VAR> section so that it applies to all - connections.</P> -<P>You can:</P> -<DL> -<DT><STRONG>either</STRONG></DT> -<DD>set<VAR> leftfirewall=yes</VAR> or<VAR> rightfirewall=yes</VAR> to - use our supplied default script</DD> -<DT><STRONG>or</STRONG></DT> -<DD>assign a name in a<VAR> leftupdown=</VAR> or<VAR> rightupdown=</VAR> - line to use your own script</DD> -</DL> -<P>Note that<STRONG> only one of these should be used</STRONG>. You - cannot sensibly use both. Since<STRONG> our default script is obsolete</STRONG> - (designed for firewalls using<VAR> ipfwadm(8)</VAR> on 2.0 kernels), - most users who need this service will<STRONG> need to write a custom - script</STRONG>.</P> -<H4><A name="fw.default">The default script</A></H4> -<P>We supply a default script named<VAR> _updown</VAR>.</P> -<DL> -<DT>leftfirewall=</DT> -<DD></DD> -<DT>rightfirewall=</DT> -<DD>indicates that the gateway is doing firewalling and that<A href="manpage.d/ipsec_pluto.8.html"> - pluto(8)</A> should poke holes in the firewall as required.</DD> -</DL> -<P>Set these to<VAR> yes</VAR> and Pluto will call our default script<VAR> - _updown</VAR> with appropriate arguments whenever it:</P> -<UL> -<LI>starts or stops IPsec services</LI> -<LI>brings a connection up or down</LI> -</UL> -<P>The supplied default<VAR> _updown</VAR> script is appropriate for - simple cases using the<VAR> ipfwadm(8)</VAR> firewalling package.</P> -<H4><A name="userscript">User-written scripts</A></H4> -<P>You can also write your own script and have Pluto call it. Just put - the script's name in one of these<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> - ipsec.conf(5)</A> lines:</P> -<DL> -<DT>leftupdown=</DT> -<DD></DD> -<DT>rightupdown=</DT> -<DD>specifies a script to call instead of our default script<VAR> - _updown</VAR>.</DD> -</DL> -<P>Your script should take the same arguments and use the same - environment variables as<VAR> _updown</VAR>. See the "updown command" - section of the<A href="manpage.d/ipsec_pluto.8.html"> ipsec_pluto(8)</A> - man page for details.</P> -<P>Note that<STRONG> you should not modify our _updown script in place</STRONG> -. If you did that, then upgraded FreeS/WAN, the upgrade would install a - new default script, overwriting your changes.</P> -<H3><A name="ipchains.script">Scripts for ipchains or iptables</A></H3> -<P>Our<VAR> _updown</VAR> is for firewalls using<VAR> ipfwadm(8)</VAR>, - the firewall code for the 2.0 series of Linux kernels. If you are using - the more recent packages<VAR> ipchains(8)</VAR> (for 2.2 kernels) or<VAR> - iptables(8)</VAR> (2.4 kernels), then you must do one of:</P> -<UL> -<LI>use static firewall rules which are set up at boot time as described<A -href="#examplefw"> above</A> and do not need to be changed by Pluto</LI> -<LI>limit yourself to ipchains(8)'s ipfwadm(8) emulation mode in order - to use our script</LI> -<LI>write your own script and call it with<VAR> leftupdown</VAR> and<VAR> - rightupdown</VAR>.</LI> -</UL> -<P>You can write a script to do whatever you need with firewalling. - Specify its name in a<VAR> [left|right]updown=</VAR> parameter in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> - ipsec.conf(5)</A> and Pluto will automatically call it for you.</P> -<P>The arguments Pluto passes such a script are the same ones it passes - to our default _updown script, so the best way to build yours is to - copy ours and modify the copy.</P> -<P>Note, however, that<STRONG> you should not modify our _updown script - in place</STRONG>. If you did that, then upgraded FreeS/WAN, the - upgrade would install a new default script, overwriting your changes.</P> -<H2><A name="NAT">A complication: IPsec vs. NAT</A></H2> -<P><A href="#NAT.gloss">Network Address Translation</A>, also known as - IP masquerading, is a method of allocating IP addresses dynamically, - typically in circumstances where the total number of machines which - need to access the Internet exceeds the supply of IP addresses.</P> -<P>Any attempt to perform NAT operations on IPsec packets<EM> between - the IPsec gateways</EM> creates a basic conflict:</P> -<UL> -<LI>IPsec wants to authenticate packets and ensure they are unaltered on - a gateway-to-gateway basis</LI> -<LI>NAT rewrites packet headers as they go by</LI> -<LI>IPsec authentication fails if packets are rewritten anywhere between - the IPsec gateways</LI> -</UL> -<P>For<A href="#AH"> AH</A>, which authenticates parts of the packet - header including source and destination IP addresses, this is fatal. If - NAT changes those fields, AH authentication fails.</P> -<P>For<A href="#IKE"> IKE</A> and<A href="#ESP"> ESP</A> it is not - necessarily fatal, but is certainly an unwelcome complication.</P> -<H3><A name="nat_ok">NAT on or behind the IPsec gateway works</A></H3> -<P>This problem can be avoided by having the masquerading take place<EM> - on or behind</EM> the IPsec gateway.</P> -<P>This can be done physically with two machines, one physically behind - the other. A picture, using SG to indicate IPsec<STRONG> S</STRONG> -ecurity<STRONG> G</STRONG>ateways, is:</P> -<PRE> clients --- NAT ----- SG ---------- SG - two machines</PRE> -<P>In this configuration, the actual client addresses need not be given - in the<VAR> leftsubnet=</VAR> parameter of the FreeS/WAN connection - description. The security gateway just delivers packets to the NAT box; - it needs only that machine's address. What that machine does with them - does not affect FreeS/WAN.</P> -<P>A more common setup has one machine performing both functions:</P> -<PRE> clients ----- NAT/SG ---------------SG - one machine</PRE> -<P>Here you have a choice of techniques depending on whether you want to - make your client subnet visible to clients on the other end:</P> -<UL> -<LI>If you want the single gateway to behave like the two shown above, - with your clients hidden behind the NAT, then omit the<VAR> leftsubnet=</VAR> - parameter. It then defaults to the gateway address. Clients on the - other end then talk via the tunnel only to your gateway. The gateway - takes packets emerging from the tunnel, applies normal masquerading, - and forwards them to clients.</LI> -<LI>If you want to make your client machines visible, then give the - client subnet addresses as the<VAR> leftsubnet=</VAR> parameter in the - connection description and -<DL> -<DT>either</DT> -<DD>set<VAR> leftfirewall=yes</VAR> to use the default<VAR> updown</VAR> - script</DD> -<DT>or</DT> -<DD>use your own script by giving its name in a<VAR> leftupdown=</VAR> - parameter</DD> -</DL> - These scripts are described in their own<A href="#updown"> section</A>. -<P>In this case, no masquerading is done. Packets to or from the client - subnet are encrypted or decrypted without any change to their client - subnet addresses, although of course the encapsulating packets use - gateway addresses in their headers. Clients behind the right security - gateway see a route via that gateway to the left subnet.</P> -</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="nat_bad">NAT between gateways is problematic</A></H3> -<P>We recommend not trying to build IPsec connections which pass through - a NAT machine. This setup poses problems:</P> -<PRE> clients --- SG --- NAT ---------- SG</PRE> -<P>If you must try it, some references are:</P> -<UL> -<LI>Jean_Francois Nadeau's document on doing<A href="http://jixen.tripod.com/#NATed gateways"> - IPsec behind NAT</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#VPN.masq">VPN masquerade patches</A> to make a Linux NAT - box handle IPsec packets correctly</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="NAT.ref">Other references on NAT and IPsec</A></H3> -<P>Other documents which may be relevant include:</P> -<UL> -<LI>an Internet Draft on<A href="http://search.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-aboba-nat-ipsec-04.txt"> - IPsec and NAT</A> which may eventually evolve into a standard solution - for this problem.</LI> -<LI>an informational<A href="http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/rfc/rfc2709.txt"> - RFC</A>,<CITE> Security Model with Tunnel-mode IPsec for NAT Domains</CITE> -.</LI> -<LI>an<A href="http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/759/ipj_3-4/ipj_3-4_nat.html"> - article</A> in Cisco's<CITE> Internet Protocol Journal</CITE></LI> -</UL> -<H2><A name="complications">Other complications</A></H2> -<P>Of course simply allowing UDP 500 and ESP packets is not the whole - story. Various other issues arise in making IPsec and packet filters - co-exist and even co-operate. Some of them are summarised below.</P> -<H3><A name="through">IPsec<EM> through</EM></A> the gateway</H3> -<P>Basic IPsec packet filtering rules deal only with packets addressed - to or sent from your IPsec gateway.</P> -<P>It is a separate policy decision whether to permit such packets to - pass through the gateway so that client machines can build end-to-end - IPsec tunnels of their own. This may not be practical if you are using<A -href="#NAT"> NAT (IP masquerade)</A> on your gateway, and may conflict - with some corporate security policies.</P> -<P>Where possible, allowing this is almost certainly a good idea. Using - IPsec on an end-to-end basis is more secure than gateway-to-gateway.</P> -<P>Doing it is quite simple. You just need firewall rules that allow UDP - port 500 and protocols 50 and 51 to pass through your gateway. If you - wish, you can of course restrict this to certain hosts.</P> -<H3><A name="ipsec_only">Preventing non-IPsec traffic</A></H3> - You can also filter<EM> everything but</EM> UDP port 500 and ESP or AH - to restrict traffic to IPsec only, either for anyone communicating with - your host or just for specific partners. -<P>One application of this is for the telecommuter who might have:</P> -<PRE> Sunset==========West------------------East ================= firewall --- the Internet - home network untrusted net corporate network</PRE> -<P>The subnet on the right is 0.0.0.0/0, the whole Internet. The West - gateway is set up so that it allows only IPsec packets to East in or - out.</P> -<P>This configuration is used in AT&T Research's network. For details, - see the<A href="#applied"> papers</A> links in our introduction.</P> -<P>Another application would be to set up firewall rules so that an - internal machine, such as an employees-only web server, could not talk - to the outside world except via specific IPsec tunnels.</P> -<H3><A name="unknowngate">Filtering packets from unknown gateways</A></H3> -<P>It is possible to use firewall rules to restrict UDP 500, ESP and AH - packets so that these packets are accepted only from known gateways. - This is not strictly necessary since FreeS/WAN will discard packets - from unknown gateways. You might, however, want to do it for any of a - number of reasons. For example:</P> -<UL> -<LI>Arguably, "belt and suspenders" is the sensible approach to - security. If you can block a potential attack in two ways, use both. - The only question is whether to look for a third way after implementing - the first two.</LI> -<LI>Some admins may prefer to use the firewall code this way because - they prefer firewall logging to FreeS/WAN's logging.</LI> -<LI>You may need it to implement your security policy. Consider an - employee working at home, and a policy that says traffic from the home - system to the Internet at large must go first via IPsec to the - corporate LAN and then out to the Internet via the corporate firewall. - One way to do that is to make<VAR> ipsec0</VAR> the default route on - the home gateway and provide exceptions only for UDP 500 and ESP to the - corporate gateway. Everything else is then routed via the tunnel to the - corporate gateway.</LI> -</UL> -<P>It is not possible to use only static firewall rules for this - filtering if you do not know the other gateways' IP addresses in - advance, for example if you have "road warriors" who may connect from a - different address each time or if want to do<A href="#carpediem"> - opportunistic encryption</A> to arbitrary gateways. In these cases, you - can accept UDP 500 IKE packets from anywhere, then use the<A href="#updown"> - updown</A> script feature of<A href="manpage.d/ipsec_pluto.8.html"> - pluto(8)</A> to dynamically adjust firewalling for each negotiated - tunnel.</P> -<P>Firewall packet filtering does not much reduce the risk of a<A href="#DOS"> - denial of service attack</A> on FreeS/WAN. The firewall can drop - packets from unknown gateways, but KLIPS does that quite efficiently - anyway, so you gain little. The firewall cannot drop otherwise - legitmate packets that fail KLIPS authentication, so it cannot protect - against an attack designed to exhaust resources by making FreeS/WAN - perform many expensive authentication operations.</P> -<P>In summary, firewall filtering of IPsec packets from unknown gateways - is possible but not strictly necessary.</P> -<H2><A name="otherfilter">Other packet filters</A></H2> -<P>When the IPsec gateway is also acting as your firewall, other packet - filtering rules will be in play. In general, those are outside the - scope of this document. See our<A href="#firewall.linux"> Linux - firewall links</A> for information. There are a few types of packet, - however, which can affect the operation of FreeS/WAN or of diagnostic - tools commonly used with it. These are discussed below.</P> -<H3><A name="ICMP">ICMP filtering</A></H3> -<P><A href="#ICMP.gloss">ICMP</A> is the<STRONG> I</STRONG>nternet<STRONG> - C</STRONG>ontrol<STRONG> M</STRONG>essage<STRONG> P</STRONG>rotocol. It - is used for messages between IP implementations themselves, whereas IP - used is used between the clients of those implementations. ICMP is, - unsurprisingly, used for control messages. For example, it is used to - notify a sender that a desination is not reachable, or to tell a router - to reroute certain packets elsewhere.</P> -<P>ICMP handling is tricky for firewalls.</P> -<UL> -<LI>You definitely want some ICMP messages to get through; things won't - work without them. For example, your clients need to know if some - destination they ask for is unreachable.</LI> -<LI>On the other hand, you do equally definitely do not want untrusted - folk sending arbitrary control messages to your machines. Imagine what - someone moderately clever and moderately malicious could do to you, - given control of your network's routing.</LI> -</UL> -<P>ICMP does not use ports. Messages are distinguished by a "message - type" field and, for some types, by an additional "code" field. The - definitive list of types and codes is on the<A href="http://www.iana.org"> - IANA</A> site.</P> -<P>One expert uses this definition for ICMP message types to be dropped - at the firewall.</P> -<PRE># ICMP types which lack socially redeeming value. -# 5 Redirect -# 9 Router Advertisement -# 10 Router Selection -# 15 Information Request -# 16 Information Reply -# 17 Address Mask Request -# 18 Address Mask Reply - -badicmp='5 9 10 15 16 17 18'</PRE> -<P>A more conservative approach would be to make a list of allowed types - and drop everything else.</P> -<P>Whichever way you do it, your ICMP filtering rules on a FreeS/WAN - gateway should allow at least the following ICMP packet types:</P> -<DL> -<DT>echo (type 8)</DT> -<DD></DD> -<DT>echo reply (type 0)</DT> -<DD>These are used by ping(1). We recommend allowing both types through - the tunnel and to or from your gateway's external interface, since - ping(1) is an essential testing tool. -<P>It is fairly common for firewalls to drop ICMP echo packets addressed - to machines behind the firewall. If that is your policy, please create - an exception for such packets arriving via an IPsec tunnel, at least - during intial testing of those tunnels.</P> -</DD> -<DT>destination unreachable (type 3)</DT> -<DD>This is used, with code 4 (Fragmentation Needed and Don't Fragment - was Set) in the code field, to control<A href="#pathMTU"> path MTU - discovery</A>. Since IPsec processing adds headers, enlarges packets - and may cause fragmentation, an IPsec gateway should be able to send - and receive these ICMP messages<STRONG> on both inside and outside - interfaces</STRONG>.</DD> -</DL> -<H3><A name="traceroute">UDP packets for traceroute</A></H3> -<P>The traceroute(1) utility uses UDP port numbers from 33434 to - approximately 33633. Generally, these should be allowed through for - troubleshooting.</P> -<P>Some firewalls drop these packets to prevent outsiders exploring the - protected network with traceroute(1). If that is your policy, consider - creating an exception for such packets arriving via an IPsec tunnel, at - least during intial testing of those tunnels.</P> -<H3><A name="l2tp">UDP for L2TP</A></H3> -<P> Windows 2000 does, and products designed for compatibility with it - may, build<A href="#l2tp"> L2TP</A> tunnels over IPsec connections.</P> -<P>For this to work, you must allow UDP protocol 1701 packets coming out - of your tunnels to continue to their destination. You can, and probably - should, block such packets to or from your external interfaces, but - allow them from<VAR> ipsec0</VAR>.</P> -<P>See also our Windows 2000<A href="interop.html#win2k"> interoperation - discussion</A>.</P> -<H2><A name="packets">How it all works: IPsec packet details</A></H2> -<P>IPsec uses three main types of packet:</P> -<DL> -<DT><A href="#IKE">IKE</A> uses<STRONG> the UDP protocol and port 500</STRONG> -.</DT> -<DD>Unless you are using only (less secure, not recommended) manual - keying, you need IKE to negotiate connection parameters, acceptable - algorithms, key sizes and key setup. IKE handles everything required to - set up, rekey, repair or tear down IPsec connections.</DD> -<DT><A href="#ESP">ESP</A> is<STRONG> protocol number 50</STRONG></DT> -<DD>This is required for encrypted connections.</DD> -<DT><A href="#AH">AH</A> is<STRONG> protocol number 51</STRONG></DT> -<DD>This can be used where only authentication, not encryption, is - required.</DD> -</DL> -<P>All of those packets should have appropriate IPsec gateway addresses - in both the to and from IP header fields. Firewall rules can check this - if you wish, though it is not strictly necessary. This is discussed in - more detail<A href="#unknowngate"> later</A>.</P> -<P>IPsec processing of incoming packets authenticates them then removes - the ESP or AH header and decrypts if necessary. Successful processing - exposes an inner packet which is then delivered back to the firewall - machinery, marked as having arrived on an<VAR> ipsec[0-3]</VAR> - interface. Firewall rules can use that interface label to distinguish - these packets from unencrypted packets which are labelled with the - physical interface they arrived on (or perhaps with a non-IPsec virtual - interface such as<VAR> ppp0</VAR>).</P> -<P>One of our users sent a mailing list message with a<A href="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/12/msg00006.html"> - diagram</A> of the packet flow.</P> -<H3><A name="noport">ESP and AH do not have ports</A></H3> -<P>Some protocols, such as TCP and UDP, have the notion of ports. Others - protocols, including ESP and AH, do not. Quite a few IPsec newcomers - have become confused on this point. There are no ports<EM> in</EM> the - ESP or AH protocols, and no ports used<EM> for</EM> them. For these - protocols,<EM> the idea of ports is completely irrelevant</EM>.</P> -<H3><A name="header">Header layout</A></H3> -<P>The protocol numbers for ESP or AH are used in the 'next header' - field of the IP header. On most non-IPsec packets, that field would - have one of:</P> -<UL> -<LI>1 for ICMP</LI> -<LI>4 for IP-in-IP encapsulation</LI> -<LI>6 for TCP</LI> -<LI>17 for UDP</LI> -<LI>... or one of about 100 other possibilities listed by<A href="http://www.iana.org"> - IANA</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>Each header in the sequence tells what the next header will be. IPsec - adds headers for ESP or AH near the beginning of the sequence. The - original headers are kept and the 'next header' fields adjusted so that - all headers can be correctly interpreted.</P> -<P>For example, using<STRONG> [</STRONG><STRONG> ]</STRONG> to indicate - data protected by ESP and unintelligible to an eavesdropper between the - gateways:</P> -<UL> -<LI>a simple packet might have only IP and TCP headers with: -<UL> -<LI>IP header says next header --> TCP</LI> -<LI>TCP header port number --> which process to send data to</LI> -<LI>data</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>with ESP<A href="#transport"> transport mode</A> encapsulation, that - packet would have: -<UL> -<LI>IP header says next header --> ESP</LI> -<LI>ESP header<STRONG> [</STRONG> says next --> TCP</LI> -<LI>TCP header port number --> which process to send data to</LI> -<LI>data<STRONG> ]</STRONG></LI> -</UL> - Note that the IP header is outside ESP protection, visible to an - attacker, and that the final destination must be the gateway.</LI> -<LI>with ESP in<A href="#tunnel"> tunnel mode</A>, we might have: -<UL> -<LI>IP header says next header --> ESP</LI> -<LI>ESP header<STRONG> [</STRONG> says next --> IP</LI> -<LI>IP header says next header --> TCP</LI> -<LI>TCP header port number --> which process to send data to</LI> -<LI>data<STRONG> ]</STRONG></LI> -</UL> - Here the inner IP header is protected by ESP, unreadable by an - attacker. Also, the inner header can have a different IP address than - the outer IP header, so the decrypted packet can be routed from the - IPsec gateway to a final destination which may be another machine.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Part of the ESP header itself is encrypted, which is why the<STRONG> - [</STRONG> indicating protected data appears in the middle of some - lines above. The next header field of the ESP header is protected. This - makes<A href="#traffic"> traffic analysis</A> more difficult. The next - header field would tell an eavesdropper whether your packet was UDP to - the gateway, TCP to the gateway, or encapsulated IP. It is better not - to give this information away. A clever attacker may deduce some of it - from the pattern of packet sizes and timings, but we need not make it - easy.</P> -<P>IPsec allows various combinations of these to match local policies, - including combinations that use both AH and ESP headers or that nest - multiple copies of these headers.</P> -<P>For example, suppose my employer has an IPsec VPN running between two - offices so all packets travelling between the gateways for those - offices are encrypted. If gateway policies allow it (The admins could - block UDP 500 and protocols 50 and 51 to disallow it), I can build an - IPsec tunnel from my desktop to a machine in some remote office. Those - packets will have one ESP header throughout their life, for my - end-to-end tunnel. For part of the route, however, they will also have - another ESP layer for the corporate VPN's encapsulation. The whole - header scheme for a packet on the Internet might be:</P> -<UL> -<LI>IP header (with gateway address) says next header --> ESP</LI> -<LI>ESP header<STRONG> [</STRONG> says next --> IP</LI> -<LI>IP header (with receiving machine address) says next header --> ESP</LI> -<LI>ESP header<STRONG> [</STRONG> says next --> TCP</LI> -<LI>TCP header port number --> which process to send data to</LI> -<LI>data<STRONG> ]]</STRONG></LI> -</UL> -<P>The first ESP (outermost) header is for the corporate VPN. The inner - ESP header is for the secure machine-to-machine link.</P> -<H3><A name="dhr">DHR on the updown script</A></H3> -<P>Here are some mailing list comments from<A href="manpage.d/ipsec_pluto.8.html"> - pluto(8)</A> developer Hugh Redelmeier on an earlier draft of this - document:</P> -<PRE>There are many important things left out - -- firewalling is important but must reflect (implement) policy. Since - policy isn't the same for all our customers, and we're not experts, - we should concentrate on FW and MASQ interactions with FreeS/WAN. - -- we need a diagram to show packet flow WITHIN ONE MACHINE, assuming - IKE, IPsec, FW, and MASQ are all done on that machine. The flow is - obvious if the components are run on different machines (trace the - cables). - - IKE input: - + packet appears on public IF, as UDP port 500 - + input firewalling rules are applied (may discard) - + Pluto sees the packet. - - IKE output: - + Pluto generates the packet & writes to public IF, UDP port 500 - + output firewalling rules are applied (may discard) - + packet sent out public IF - - IPsec input, with encapsulated packet, outer destination of this host: - + packet appears on public IF, protocol 50 or 51. If this - packet is the result of decapsulation, it will appear - instead on the paired ipsec IF. - + input firewalling rules are applied (but packet is opaque) - + KLIPS decapsulates it, writes result to paired ipsec IF - + input firewalling rules are applied to resulting packet - as input on ipsec IF - + if the destination of the packet is this machine, the - packet is passed on to the appropriate protocol handler. - If the original packet was encapsulated more than once - and the new outer destination is this machine, that - handler will be KLIPS. - + otherwise: - * routing is done for the resulting packet. This may well - direct it into KLIPS for encoding or encrypting. What - happens then is described elsewhere. - * forwarding firewalling rules are applied - * output firewalling rules are applied - * the packet is sent where routing specified - - IPsec input, with encapsulated packet, outer destination of another host: - + packet appears on some IF, protocol 50 or 51 - + input firewalling rules are applied (but packet is opaque) - + routing selects where to send the packet - + forwarding firewalling rules are applied (but packet is opaque) - + packet forwarded, still encapsulated - - IPsec output, from this host or from a client: - + if from a client, input firewalling rules are applied as the - packet arrives on the private IF - + routing directs the packet to an ipsec IF (this is how the - system decides KLIPS processing is required) - + if from a client, forwarding firewalling rules are applied - + KLIPS eroute mechanism matches the source and destination - to registered eroutes, yielding a SPI group. This dictates - processing, and where the resulting packet is to be sent - (the destinations SG and the nexthop). - + output firewalling is not applied to the resulting - encapsulated packet - -- Until quite recently, KLIPS would double encapsulate packets that - didn't strictly need to be. Firewalling should be prepared for - those packets showing up as ESP and AH protocol input packets on - an ipsec IF. - -- MASQ processing seems to be done as if it were part of the - forwarding firewall processing (this should be verified). - -- If a firewall is being used, it is likely the case that it needs to - be adjusted whenever IPsec SAs are added or removed. Pluto invokes - a script to do this (and to adjust routing) at suitable times. The - default script is only suitable for ipfwadm-managed firewalls. Under - LINUX 2.2.x kernels, ipchains can be managed by ipfwadm (emulation), - but ipchains more powerful if manipulated using the ipchains command. - In this case, a custom updown script must be used. - - We think that the flexibility of ipchains precludes us supplying an - updown script that would be widely appropriate.</PRE> -<HR> -<H1><A NAME="trouble"></A>Linux FreeS/WAN Troubleshooting Guide</H1> -<H2><A NAME="overview"></A>Overview</H2> -<P> This document covers several general places where you might have a - problem:</P> -<OL> -<LI><A HREF="#install">During install</A>.</LI> -<LI><A HREF="#negotiation">During the negotiation process</A>.</LI> -<LI><A HREF="#use">Using an established connection</A>.</LI> -</OL> -<P>This document also contains<A HREF="#notes"> notes</A> which expand - on points made in these sections, and tips for<A HREF="#prob.report"> - problem reporting</A>. If the other end of your connection is not - FreeS/WAN, you'll also want to read our<A HREF="interop.html#interop.problem"> - interoperation</A> document.</P> -<H2><A NAME="install"></A>1. During Install</H2> -<H3><A NAME="8_2_1">1.1 RPM install gotchas</A></H3> -<P>With the RPM method:</P> -<UL> -<LI>Be sure you have installed both the userland tools and the kernel - components. One will not work without the other. For example, when - using FreeS/WAN-produced RPMs for our 2.04 release, you need both: -<PRE> freeswan-userland-2.04_2.4.20_20.9-0.i386.rpm - freeswan-module-2.04_2.4.20_20.9-0.i386.rpm -</PRE> -</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A NAME="8_2_2">1.2 Problems installing from source</A></H3> -<P>When installing from source, you may find these problems:</P> -<UL> -<LI>Missing library. See<A HREF="#gmp.h_missing"> this</A> FAQ.</LI> -<LI>Missing utilities required for compile. See this<A HREF="install.html#tool.lib"> - checklist</A>.</LI> -<LI>Kernel version incompatibility. See<A HREF="#k.versions"> this</A> - FAQ.</LI> -<LI>Another compile problem. Find information in the out.* files, ie. - out.kpatch, out.kbuild, created at compile time in the top-level Linux - FreeS/WAN directory. Error messages generated by KLIPS during the boot - sequence are accessible with the<VAR> dmesg</VAR> command. -<BR> Check the list archives and the List in Brief to see if this is a - known issue. If it is not, report it to the bugs list as described in - our<A HREF="#prob.report"> problem reporting</A> section. In some - cases, you may be asked to provide debugging information using gdb; - details<A HREF="#gdb"> below</A>.</LI> -<LI>If your kernel compiles but you fail to install your new - FreeS/WAN-enabled kernel, review the sections on<A HREF="install.html#newk"> - installing the patched kernel</A>, and<A HREF="#testinstall"> testing</A> - to see if install succeeded.</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A NAME="install.check"></A>1.3 Install checks</H3> -<P><VAR>ipsec verify</VAR> checks a number of FreeS/WAN essentials. Here - are some hints on what do to when your system doesn't check out:</P> -<P></P> -<TABLE border="1"> -<TR><TD><STRONG>Problem</STRONG></TD><TD><STRONG>Status</STRONG></TD><TD> -<STRONG>Action</STRONG></TD></TR> -<TR><TD><VAR>ipsec</VAR> not on-path</TD><TD> </TD><TD> -<P>Add<VAR> /usr/local/sbin</VAR> to your PATH.</P> -</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>Missing KLIPS support</TD><TD><FONT COLOR="#FF0000">critical</FONT> -</TD><TD>See<A HREF="#noKLIPS"> this FAQ.</A></TD></TR> -<TR><TD>No RSA private key</TD><TD> </TD><TD> -<P>Follow<A HREF="install.html#genrsakey"> these instructions</A> to - create an RSA key pair for your host. RSA keys are:</P> -<UL> -<LI>required for opportunistic encryption, and</LI> -<LI>our preferred method to authenticate pre-configured connections.</LI> -</UL> -</TD></TR> -<TR><TD><VAR>pluto</VAR> not running</TD><TD><FONT COLOR="#FF0000"> -critical</FONT></TD><TD> -<PRE>service ipsec start</PRE> -</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>No port 500 hole</TD><TD><FONT COLOR="#FF0000">critical</FONT></TD><TD> -Open port 500 for IKE negotiation.</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>Port 500 check N/A</TD><TD> </TD><TD>Check that port 500 is open - for IKE negotiation.</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>Failed DNS checks</TD><TD> </TD><TD>Opportunistic encryption - requires information from DNS. To set this up, see<A HREF="#opp.setup"> - our instructions</A>.</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>No public IP address</TD><TD> </TD><TD>Check that the interface - which you want to protect with IPSec is up and running.</TD></TR> -</TABLE> -<H3><A NAME="oe.trouble"></A>1.3 Troubleshooting OE</H3> -<P>OE should work with no local configuration, if you have posted DNS - TXT records according to the instructions in our<A HREF="quickstart.html"> - quickstart guide</A>. If you encounter trouble, try these hints. We - welcome additional hints via the<A HREF="mail.html"> users' mailing - list</A>.</P> -<TABLE border="1"> -<TR><TD><STRONG>Symptom</STRONG></TD><TD><STRONG>Problem</STRONG></TD><TD> -<STRONG>Action</STRONG></TD></TR> -<TR><TD> You're running FreeS/WAN 2.01 (or later), and initiating a - connection to FreeS/WAN 2.00 (or earlier). In your logs, you see a - message like: -<PRE>no RSA public key known for '192.0.2.13'; -DNS search for KEY failed (no KEY record -for 13.2.0.192.in-addr.arpa.)</PRE> - The older FreeS/WAN logs no error.</TD><TD><A NAME="oe.trouble.flagday"> -</A> A protocol level incompatibility between 2.01 (or later) and 2.00 - (or earlier) causes this error. It occurs when a FreeS/WAN 2.01 (or - later) box for which no KEY record is posted attempts to initiate an OE - connection to older FreeS/WAN versions (2.00 and earlier). Note that - older versions can initiate to newer versions without this error.</TD><TD> -If you control the peer host, upgrade its FreeS/WAN to 2.01 (or later), - and post new style TXT records for it. If not, but if you know its - sysadmin, perhaps a quick note is in order. If neither option is - possible, you can ease the transition by posting an old style KEY - record (created with a command like "ipsec showhostkey --key") to the - reverse map for the FreeS/WAN 2.01 (or later) box.</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>OE host is very slow to contact other hosts.</TD><TD>Slow DNS - service while running OE.</TD><TD>It's a good idea to run a caching DNS - server on your OE host, as outlined in<A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/design/2003-January/004205.html"> - this mailing list message</A>. If your DNS servers are elsewhere, put - their IPs in the<VAR> clear</VAR> policy group, and re-read groups with -<PRE>ipsec auto --rereadgroups</PRE> -</TD></TR> -<TR><TD> -<PRE>Can't Opportunistically initiate for -192.0.2.2 to 192.0.2.3: no TXT record -for 13.2.0.192.in-addr.arpa.</PRE> -</TD><TD>Peer is not set up for OE.</TD><TD> -<P>None. Plenty of hosts on the Internet do not run OE. If, however, you - have set OE up on that peer, this may indicate that you need to wait up - to 48 hours for its DNS records to propagate.</P> -</TD></TR> -<TR><TD><VAR>ipsec verify</VAR> does not find DNS records: -<PRE>... -Looking for TXT in forward map: - xy.example.com...[FAILED] -Looking for TXT in reverse map...[FAILED] -...</PRE> - You also experience authentication failure: -<BR> -<PRE>Possible authentication failure: -no acceptable response to our -first encrypted message</PRE> -</TD><TD>DNS records are not posted or have not propagated.</TD><TD>Did - you post the DNS records necessary for OE? If not, do so using the - instructions in our<A HREF="#quickstart"> quickstart guide</A>. If so, - wait up to 48 hours for the DNS records to propagate.</TD></TR> -<TR><TD><VAR>ipsec verify</VAR> does not find DNS records, and you - experience authentication failure.</TD><TD>For iOE, your ID does not - match location of forward DNS record.</TD><TD>In<VAR> config setup</VAR> -, change<VAR> myid=</VAR> to match the forward DNS where you posted the - record. Restart FreeS/WAN. For reference, see our<A HREF="#opp.client"> - iOE instructions</A>.</TD></TR> -<TR><TD><VAR>ipsec verify</VAR> finds DNS records, yet there is still - authentication failure. ( ? )</TD><TD>DNS records are malformed.</TD><TD> -Re-create the records and send new copies to your DNS administrator.</TD> -</TR> -<TR><TD><VAR>ipsec verify</VAR> finds DNS records, yet there is still - authentication failure. ( ? )</TD><TD>DNS records show different keys - for a gateway vs. its subnet hosts.</TD><TD>All TXT records for boxes - protected by an OE gateway must contain the gateway's public key. - Re-create and re-post any incorrect records using<A HREF="#opp.incoming"> - these instructions</A>.</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>OE gateway loses connectivity to its subnet. The gateway's - routing table shows routes to the subnet through IPsec interfaces.</TD><TD> -The subnet is part of the<VAR> private</VAR> or<VAR> block</VAR> policy - group on the gateway.</TD><TD>Remove the subnet from the group, and - reread groups with -<PRE>ipsec auto --rereadgroups</PRE> -</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>OE does not work to hosts on the local LAN.</TD><TD>This is a - known issue.</TD><TD>See<A HREF="opportunism.known-issues"> this list</A> - of known issues with OE.</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>FreeS/WAN does not seem to be executing your default policy. In - your logs, you see a message like: -<PRE>/etc/ipsec.d/policies/iprivate-or-clear" -line 14: subnet "0.0.0.0/0", -source 192.0.2.13/32, -already "private-or-clear"</PRE> -</TD><TD><A HREF="#fullnet">Fullnet</A> in a policy group file defines - your default policy. Fullnet should normally be present in only one - policy group file. The fine print: you can have two default policies - defined so long as they protect different local endpoints (e.g. the - FreeS/WAN gateway and a subnet).</TD><TD> Find all policies which - contain fullnet with: -<BR> -<PRE>grep -F 0.0.0.0/0 /etc/ipsec.d/policies/*</PRE> - then remove the unwanted occurrence(s).</TD></TR> -</TABLE> -<H2><A NAME="negotiation"></A>2. During Negotiation</H2> -<P>When you fail to bring up a tunnel, you'll need to find out:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#state">what your connection state is,</A> and often</LI> -<LI><A HREF="#find.pluto.error">an error message</A>.</LI> -</UL> -<P>before you can<A HREF="#interpret.pluto.error"> diagnose your problem</A> -.</P> -<H3><A NAME="state"></A>2.1 Determine Connection State</H3> -<H4><A NAME="8_3_1_1">Finding current state</A></H4> -<P>You can see connection states (STATE_MAIN_I1 and so on) when you - bring up a connection on the command line. If you have missed this, or - brought up your connection automatically, use:</P> -<PRE>ipsec auto --status</PRE> -<P>The most relevant state is the last one reached.</P> -<H4><A NAME="8_3_1_2"><VAR>What's this supposed to look like?</VAR></A></H4> -<P>Negotiations should proceed though various states, in the processes - of:</P> -<OL> -<LI>IKE negotiations (aka Phase 1, Main Mode, STATE_MAIN_*)</LI> -<LI>IPSEC negotiations (aka Phase 2, Quick Mode, STATE_QUICK_*)</LI> -</OL> -<P>These are done and a connection is established when you see messages - like:</P> -<PRE> 000 #21: "myconn" STATE_MAIN_I4 (ISAKMP SA established)... - 000 #2: "myconn" STATE_QUICK_I2 (sent QI2, IPsec SA established)...</PRE> -<P> Look for the key phrases are "ISAKMP SA established" and "IPSec SA - established", with the relevant connection name. Often, this happens at - STATE_MAIN_I4 and STATE_QUICK_I2, respectively.</P> -<P><VAR>ipsec auto --status</VAR> will tell you what states<STRONG> have - been achieved</STRONG>, rather than the current state. Since - determining the current state is rather more difficult to do, current - state information is not available from Linux FreeS/WAN. If you are - actively bringing a connection up, the status report's last states for - that connection likely reflect its current state. Beware, though, of - the case where a connection was correctly brought up but is now downed: - Linux FreeS/WAN will not notice this until it attempts to rekey. - Meanwhile, the last known state indicates that the connection has been - established.</P> -<P>If your connection is stuck at STATE_MAIN_I1, skip straight to<A HREF="#ikepath"> - here</A>.</P> -<H3><A NAME="find.pluto.error"></A>2.2 Finding error text</H3> -<P>Solving most errors will require you to find verbose error text, - either on the command line or in the logs.</P> -<H4><A NAME="8_3_2_1">Verbose start for more information</A></H4> -<P> Note that you can get more detail from<VAR> ipsec auto</VAR> using - the --verbose flag:</P> -<PRE STYLE="margin-bottom: 0.2in"> ipsec auto --verbose --up west-east</PRE> -<P> More complete information can be gleaned from the<A HREF="#logusage"> - log files</A>.</P> -<H4><A NAME="8_3_2_2">Debug levels count</A></H4> -<P>The amount of description you'll get here depends on ipsec.conf debug - settings,<VAR> klipsdebug</VAR>= and<VAR> plutodebug</VAR>=. When - troubleshooting, set at least one of these to<VAR> all</VAR>, and when - done, reset it to<VAR> none</VAR> so your logs don't fill up. Note that - you must have enabled the<VAR> klipsdebug</VAR><A HREF="install.html#allbut"> - compile-time option</A> for the<VAR> klipsdebug</VAR> configuration - switch to work.</P> -<P>For negotiation problems<VAR> plutodebug</VAR> is most relevant.<VAR> - klipsdebug</VAR> applies mainly to attempts to use an - already-established connection. See also<A HREF="#parts"> this</A> - description of the division of duties within Linux FreeS/WAN.</P> -<P>After raising your debug levels, restart Linux FreeS/WAN to ensure - that ipsec.conf is reread, then recreate the error to generate verbose - logs.</P> -<H4><A NAME="8_3_2_3"><VAR>ipsec barf</VAR> for lots of debugging - information</A></H4> -<P><A HREF="manpage.d/ipsec_barf.8.html"><VAR> ipsec barf (8)</VAR></A> - collects a bunch of useful debugging information, including these logs - Use the command</P> -<PRE> - ipsec barf > barf.west -</PRE> -<P>to generate one.</P> -<H4><A NAME="8_3_2_4">Find the error</A></H4> -<P>Search out the failure point in your logs. Are there a handful of - lines which succinctly describe how things are going wrong or contrary - to your expectation? Sometimes the failure point is not immediately - obvious: Linux FreeS/WAN's errors are usually not marked "Error". Have - a look in the<A HREF="faq.html"> FAQ</A> for what some common failures - look like.</P> -<P>Tip: problems snowball. Focus your efforts on the first problem, - which is likely to be the cause of later errors.</P> -<H4><A NAME="8_3_2_5">Play both sides</A></H4> -<P>Also find error text on the peer IPSec box. This gives you two - perspectives on the same failure.</P> -<P>At times you will require information which only one side has. The - peer can merely indicate the presence of an error, and its approximate - point in the negotiations. If one side keeps retrying, it may be - because there is a show stopper on the other side. Have a look at the - other side and figure out what it doesn't like.</P> -<P>If the other end is not Linux FreeS/WAN, the principle is the same: - replicate the error with its most verbose logging on, and capture the - output to a file.</P> -<H3><A NAME="interpret.pluto.error"></A>2.3 Interpreting a Negotiation - Error</H3> -<H4><A NAME="ikepath"></A>Connection stuck at STATE_MAIN_I1</H4> -<P>This error commonly happens because IKE (port 500) packets, needed to - negotiate an IPSec connection, cannot travel freely between your IPSec - gateways. See<A HREF="#packets"> our firewall document</A> for details.</P> -<H4><A NAME="8_3_3_2">Other errors</A></H4> -<P>Other errors require a bit more digging. Use the following resources:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="faq.html">the FAQ</A> . Since this document is constantly - updated, the snapshot's FAQ may have a new entry relevant to your - problem.</LI> -<LI>our<A HREF="background.html"> background document</A> . Special - considerations which, while not central to Linux FreeS/WAN, are often - tripped over. Includes problems with<A href="#MTU.trouble"> packet - fragmentation</A>, and considerations for testing opportunism.</LI> -<LI>the<A HREF="#lists"> list archives</A>. Each of the searchable - archives works differently, so it's worth checking each. Use a search - term which is generic, but identifies your error, for example "No - connection is known for". -<BR> Often, you will find that your question has been answered in the - past. Finding an archived answer is quicker than asking the list. You - may, however, find similar questions without answers. If you do, send - their URLs to the list with your trouble report. The additional - examples may help the list tech support person find your answer.</LI> -<LI>Look into the code where the error is being generated. The pluto - code is nicely documented with comments and meaningful variable names.</LI> -</UL> -<P>If you have failed to solve your problem with the help of these - resources, send a detailed problem report to the users list, following - these<A HREF="#prob.report"> guidelines</A>.</P> -<H2><A NAME="use"></A>3. Using a Connection</H2> -<H3><A NAME="8_4_1">3.1 Orienting yourself</A></H3> -<H4><A NAME="8_4_1_1"><VAR>How do I know if it works?</VAR></A></H4> -<P>Test your connection by sending packets through it. The simplest way - to do this is with ping, but the ping needs to<STRONG> test the correct - tunnel.</STRONG> See<A HREF="#testgates"> this example scenario</A> if - you don't understand this.</P> -<P></P> -<P>If your ping returns, test any other connections you've brought u all - check out, great. You may wish to<A HREF="#bigpacket"> test with large - packets</A> for MTU problems.</P> -<H4><A NAME="8_4_1_2"><VAR>ipsec barf</VAR> is useful again</A></H4> -<P>If your ping fails to return, generate an ipsec barf debugging report - on each IPSec gateway. On a non-Linux FreeS/WAN implementation, gather - equivalent information. Use this, and the tips in the next sections, to - troubleshoot. Are you sure that both endpoints are capable of hearing - and responding to ping?</P> -<H3><A NAME="8_4_2">3.2 Those pesky configuration errors</A></H3> -<P>IPSec may be dropping your ping packets since they do not belong in - the tunnels you have constructed:</P> -<UL> -<LI>Your ping may not test the tunnel you intend to test. For details, - see our<A HREF="#cantping"> "I can't ping"</A> FAQ.</LI> -<LI> Alternately, you may have a configuration error. For example, you - may have configured one of the four possible tunnels between two - gateways, but not the one required to secure the important traffic - you're now testing. In this case, add and start the tunnel, and try - again.</LI> -</UL> -<P>In either case, you will often see a message like:</P> -<PRE>klipsdebug... no eroute</PRE> -<P>which we discuss in<A HREF="#no_eroute"> this FAQ</A>.</P> -<P>Note:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#NAT.gloss">Network Address Translation (NAT)</A> and<A HREF="#masq"> - IP masquerade</A> may have an effect on which tunnels you need to - configure.</LI> -<LI>When testing a tunnel that protects a multi-node subnet, try several - subnet nodes as ping targets, in case one node is routing incorrectly.</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A NAME="route.firewall"></A>3.3 Check Routing and Firewalling</H3> -<P>If you've confirmed your configuration assumptions, the problem is - almost certainly with routing or firewalling. Isolate the problem using - interface statistics, firewall statistics, or a packet sniffer.</P> -<H4><A NAME="8_4_3_1">Background:</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI>Linux FreeS/WAN supplies all the special routing it needs; you need - only route packets out through your IPSec gateway. Verify that on the<VAR> - subnetted</VAR> machines you are using for your ping-test, your routing - is as expected. I have seen a tunnel "fail" because the subnet machine - sending packets out an alternate gateway (not our IPSec gateway) on - their return path.</LI> -<LI>Linux FreeS/WAN requires particular<A HREF="firewall.html"> - firewalling considerations</A>. Check the firewall rules on your IPSec - gateways and ensure that they allow IPSec traffic through. Be sure that - no other machine - for example a router between the gateways - is - blocking your IPSec packets.</LI> -</UL> -<H4><A NAME="ifconfig"></A>View Interface and Firewall Statistics</H4> -<P>Interface reports and firewall statistics can help you track down - lost packets at a glance. Check any firewall statistics you may be - keeping on your IPSec gateways, for dropped packets.</P> -<P><STRONG>Tip</STRONG>: You can take a snapshot of the packets - processed by your firewall with:</P> -<PRE> iptables -L -n -v</PRE> -<P>You can get creative with "diff" to find out what happens to a - particular packet during transmission.</P> -<P>Both<VAR> cat /proc/net/dev</VAR> and<VAR> ifconfig</VAR> display - interface statistics, and both are included in<VAR> ipsec barf</VAR>. - Use either to check if any interface has dropped packets. If you find - that one has, test whether this is related to your ping. While you ping - continuously, print that interface's statistics several times. Does its - drop count increase in proportion to the ping? If so, check why the - packets are dropped there.</P> -<P>To do this, look at the firewall rules that apply to that interface. - If the interface is an IPSec interface, more information may be - available in the log. Grep for the word "drop" in a log which was - created with<VAR> klipsdebug=all</VAR> as the error happened.</P> -<P>See also this<A HREF="#ifconfig1"> discussion</A> on interpreting<VAR> - ifconfig</VAR> statistics.</P> -<H3><A NAME="sniff"></A>3.4 When in doubt, sniff it out</H3> -<P>If you have checked configuration assumptions, routing, and firewall - rules, and your interface statistics yield no clue, it remains for you - to investigate the mystery of the lost packet by the most thorough - method: with a packet sniffer (providing, of course, that this is legal - where you are working).</P> -<P>In order to detect packets on the ipsec virtual interfaces, you will - need an up-to-date sniffer (tcpdump, ethereal, ksnuffle) on your IPSec - gateway machines. You may also find it useful to sniff the ping - endpoints.</P> -<H4><A NAME="8_4_4_1">Anticipate your packets' path</A></H4> -<P>Ping, and examine each interface along the projected path, checking - for your ping's arrival. If it doesn't get to the the next stop, you - have narrowed down where to look for it. In this way, you can isolate a - problem area, and narrow your troubleshooting focus.</P> -<P>Within a machine running Linux FreeS/WAN, this<A HREF="#packets"> - packet flow diagram</A> will help you anticipate a packet's path.</P> -<P>Note that:</P> -<UL> -<LI> from the perspective of the tunneled packet, the entire tunnel is - one hop. That's explained in<A HREF="#no_trace"> this</A> FAQ.</LI> -<LI> an encapsulated IPSec packet will look different, when sniffed, - from the plaintext packet which generated it. You can see plaintext - packets entering an IPSec interface and the resulting cyphertext - packets as they emerge from the corresponding physical interface.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Once you isolate where the packet is lost, take a closer look at - firewall rules, routing and configuration assumptions as they affect - that specific area. If the packet is lost on an IPSec gateway, comb - through<VAR> klipsdebug</VAR> output for anomalies.</P> -<P>If the packet goes through both gateways successfully and reaches the - ping target, but does not return, suspect routing. Check that the ping - target routes packets back to the IPSec gateway.</P> -<H3><A NAME="find.use.error"></A>3.5 Check your logs</H3> -<P>Here, too, log information can be useful. Start with the<A HREF="#find.pluto.error"> - guidelines above</A>.</P> -<P>For connection use problems, set<VAR> klipsdebug=all</VAR>. Note that - you must have enabled the<VAR> klipsdebug</VAR><A HREF="install.html#allbut"> - compile-time option</A> to do this. Restart Linux FreeS/WAN so that it - rereads<VAR> ipsec.conf</VAR>, then recreate the error condition. When - searching through<VAR> klipsdebug</VAR> data, look especially for the - keywords "drop" (as in dropped packets) and "error".</P> -<P>Often the problem with connection use is not software error, but - rather that the software is behaving contrary to expectation.</P> -<H4><A NAME="interpret.use.error"></A>Interpreting log text</H4> -<P>To interpret the Linux FreeS/WAN log text you've found, use the same - resources as indicated for troubleshooting connection negotiation:<A HREF="faq.html"> - the FAQ</A> , our<A HREF="background.html"> background document</A>, - and the<A HREF="#lists"> list archives</A>. Looking in the KLIPS code - is only for the very brave.</P> -<P>If you are still stuck, send a<A HREF="#prob.report"> detailed - problem report</A> to the users' list.</P> -<H3><A NAME="bigpacket"></A>3.6 More testing for the truly thorough</H3> -<H4><A NAME="8_4_6_1">Large Packets</A></H4> -<P>If each of your connections passed the ping test, you may wish to - test by pinging with large packets (2000 bytes or larger). If it does - not return, suspect MTU issues, and see this<A HREF="#MTU.trouble"> - discussion</A>.</P> -<H4><A NAME="8_4_6_2">Stress Tests</A></H4> -<P>In most users' view, a simple ping test, and perhaps a large-packet - ping test suffice to indicate a working IPSec connection.</P> -<P>Some people might like to do additional stress tests prior to - production use. They may be interested in this<A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/12/msg00224.html"> - testing protocol</A> we use at interoperation conferences, aka - "bakeoffs". We also have a<VAR> testing</VAR> directory that ships with - the release.</P> -<H2><A NAME="prob.report"></A>4. Problem Reporting</H2> -<H3><A NAME="8_5_1">4.1 How to ask for help</A></H3> -<P>Ask for troubleshooting help on the users' mailing list,<A HREF="mailto:users@lists.freeswan.org"> - users@lists.freeswan.org</A>. While sometimes an initial query with a - quick description of your intent and error will twig someone's memory - of a similar problem, it's often necessary to send a second mail with a - complete problem report.</P> -<P>When reporting problems to the mailing list(s), please include:</P> -<UL> -<LI>a brief description of the problem</LI> -<LI>if it's a compile problem, the actual output from make, showing the - problem. Try to edit it down to only the relevant part, but when in - doubt, be as complete as you can. If it's a kernel compile problem, any - relevant out.* files</LI> -<LI>if it's a run-time problem, pointers to where we can find the - complete output from "ipsec barf" from BOTH ENDS (not just one of - them). Remember that it's common outside the US and Canada to pay for - download volume, so if you can't post barfs on the web and send the URL - to the mailing list, at least compress them with tar or gzip. -<BR> If you can, try to simplify the case that is causing the problem. - In particular, if you clear your logs, start FreeS/WAN with no other - connections running, cause the problem to happen, and then do<VAR> - ipsec barf</VAR> on both ends immediately, that gives the smallest and - least cluttered output.</LI> -<LI>any other error messages, complaints, etc. that you saw. Please send - the complete text of the messages, not just a summary.</LI> -<LI>what your network setup is. Include subnets, gateway addresses, etc. - A schematic diagram is a good format for this information.</LI> -<LI>exactly what you were trying to do with Linux FreeS/WAN, and exactly - what went wrong</LI> -<LI>a fix, if you have one. But remember, you are sending mail to people - all over the world; US residents and US citizens in particular, please - read doc/exportlaws.html before sending code -- even small bug fixes -- - to the list or to us.</LI> -<LI>When in doubt about whether to include some seemingly-trivial item - of information, include it. It is rare for problem reports to have too - much information, and common for them to have too little.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Here are some good general guidelines on bug reporting:<A href="http://tuxedo.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html"> - How To Ask Questions The Smart Way</A> and<A href="http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/bugs.html"> - How to Report Bugs Effectively</A>.</P> -<H3><A NAME="8_5_2">4.2 Where to ask</A></H3> -<P>To report a problem, send mail about it to the users' list. If you - are certain that you have found a bug, report it to the bugs list. If - you encounter a problem while doing your own coding on the Linux - FreeS/WAN codebase and think it is of interest to the design team, - notify the design list. When in doubt, default to the users' list. More - information about the mailing lists is found<A HREF="#lists"> here</A>.</P> -<P>For a number of reasons -- including export-control regulations - affecting almost any<STRONG> private</STRONG> discussion of encryption - software -- we prefer that problem reports and discussions go to the - lists, not directly to the team. Beware that the list goes worldwide; - US citizens, read this important information about your<A HREF="#exlaw"> - export laws</A>. If you're using this software, you really should be on - the lists. To get onto them, visit<A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/"> - lists.freeswan.org</A>.</P> -<P>If you do send private mail to our coders or want a private reply - from them, please make sure that the return address on your mail (From - or Reply-To header) is a valid one. They have more important things to - do than to unravel addresses that have been mangled in an attempt to - confuse spammers.</P> -<H2><A NAME="notes"></A>5. Additional Notes on Troubleshooting</H2> -<P>The following sections supplement the Guide:<A HREF="#system.info"> - information available on your system</A>;<A HREF="#testgates"> testing - between security gateways</A>;<A HREF="#ifconfig1"> ifconfig reports - for KLIPS debugging</A>;<A HREF="#gdb"> using GDB on Pluto</A>.</P> -<H3><A NAME="system.info"></A>5.1 Information available on your system</H3> -<H4><A NAME="logusage"></A>Logs used</H4> -<P>Linux FreeS/WAN logs to:</P> -<UL> -<LI>/var/log/secure (or, on Debian, /var/log/auth.log)</LI> -<LI>/var/log/messages</LI> -</UL> -<P>Check both places to get full information. If you find nothing, check - your<VAR> syslogd.conf(5)</VAR> to see where your /etc/syslog.conf or - equivalent is directing<VAR> authpriv</VAR> messages.</P> -<H4><A NAME="pages"></A>man pages provided</H4> -<DL> -<DT><A HREF="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html">ipsec.conf(5)</A></DT> -<DD> Manual page for IPSEC configuration file.</DD> -<DT><A HREF="manpage.d/ipsec.8.html"> ipsec(8)</A></DT> -<DD STYLE="margin-bottom: 0.2in"> Primary man page for ipsec utilities.</DD> -</DL> -<P> Other man pages are on<A HREF="manpages.html"> this list</A> and in</P> -<UL> -<LI>/usr/local/man/man3</LI> -<LI>/usr/local/man/man5</LI> -<LI>/usr/local/man/man8/ipsec_*</LI> -</UL> -<H4><A NAME="statusinfo"></A>Status information</H4> -<DL> -<DT>ipsec auto --status</DT> -<DD> Command to get status report from running system. Displays Pluto's - state. Includes the list of connections which are currently "added" to - Pluto's internal database; lists state objects reflecting ISAKMP and - IPsec SAs being negotiated or installed.</DD> -<DT> ipsec look</DT> -<DD> Brief status info.</DD> -<DT> ipsec barf</DT> -<DD STYLE="margin-bottom: 0.2in"> Copious debugging info.</DD> -</DL> -<H3><A NAME="testgates"></A> 5.2 Testing between security gateways</H3> -<P>Sometimes you need to test a subnet-subnet tunnel. This is a tunnel - between two security gateways, which protects traffic on behalf of the - subnets behind these gateways. On this network:</P> -<PRE> Sunset==========West------------------East=========Sunrise - IPSec gateway IPSec gateway - local net untrusted net local net</PRE> -<P> you might name this tunnel sunset-sunrise. You can test this tunnel - by having a machine behind one gateway ping a machine behind the other - gateway, but this is not always convenient or even possible.</P> -<P>Simply pinging one gateway from the other is not useful. Such a ping - does not normally go through the tunnel.<STRONG> The tunnel handles - traffic between the two protected subnets, not between the gateways</STRONG> - . Depending on the routing in place, a ping might</P> -<UL> -<LI>either succeed by finding an unencrypted route</LI> -<LI>or fail by finding no route. Packets without an IPSEC eroute are - discarded.</LI> -</UL> -<P><STRONG>Neither event tells you anything about the tunnel</STRONG>. - You can explicitly create an eroute to force such packets through the - tunnel, or you can create additional tunnels as described in our<A HREF="#multitunnel"> - configuration document</A>, but those may be unnecessary complications - in your situation.</P> -<P>The trick is to explicitly test between<STRONG> both gateways' - private-side IP addresses</STRONG>. Since the private-side interfaces - are on the protected subnets, the resulting packets do go via the - tunnel. Use either ping -I or traceroute -i, both of which allow you to - specify a source interface. (Note: unsupported on older Linuxes). The - same principles apply for a road warrior (or other) case where only one - end of your tunnel is a subnet.</P> -<H3><A NAME="ifconfig1"></A>5.3 ifconfig reports for KLIPS debugging</H3> -<P>When diagnosing problems using ifconfig statistics, you may wonder - what type of activity increments a particular counter for an ipsecN - device. Here's an index, posted by KLIPS developer Richard Guy Briggs:</P> -<PRE>Here is a catalogue of the types of errors that can occur for which -statistics are kept when transmitting and receiving packets via klips. -I notice that they are not necessarily logged in the right counter. -. . . - -Sources of ifconfig statistics for ipsec devices - -rx-errors: -- packet handed to ipsec_rcv that is not an ipsec packet. -- ipsec packet with payload length not modulo 4. -- ipsec packet with bad authenticator length. -- incoming packet with no SA. -- replayed packet. -- incoming authentication failed. -- got esp packet with length not modulo 8. - -tx_dropped: -- cannot process ip_options. -- packet ttl expired. -- packet with no eroute. -- eroute with no SA. -- cannot allocate sk_buff. -- cannot allocate kernel memory. -- sk_buff internal error. - - -The standard counters are: - -struct enet_statistics -{ - int rx_packets; /* total packets received */ - int tx_packets; /* total packets transmitted */ - int rx_errors; /* bad packets received */ - int tx_errors; /* packet transmit problems */ - int rx_dropped; /* no space in linux buffers */ - int tx_dropped; /* no space available in linux */ - int multicast; /* multicast packets received */ - int collisions; - - /* detailed rx_errors: */ - int rx_length_errors; - int rx_over_errors; /* receiver ring buff overflow */ - int rx_crc_errors; /* recved pkt with crc error */ - int rx_frame_errors; /* recv'd frame alignment error */ - int rx_fifo_errors; /* recv'r fifo overrun */ - int rx_missed_errors; /* receiver missed packet */ - - /* detailed tx_errors */ - int tx_aborted_errors; - int tx_carrier_errors; - int tx_fifo_errors; - int tx_heartbeat_errors; - int tx_window_errors; -}; - -of which I think only the first 6 are useful.</PRE> -<H3><A NAME="gdb"></A> 5.4 Using GDB on Pluto</H3> -<P>You may need to use the GNU debugger, gdb(1), on Pluto. This should - be necessary only in unusual cases, for example if you encounter a - problem which the Pluto developer cannot readily reproduce or if you - are modifying Pluto.</P> -<P>Here are the Pluto developer's suggestions for doing this:</P> -<PRE>Can you get a core dump and use gdb to find out what Pluto was doing -when it died? - -To get a core dump, you will have to set dumpdir to point to a -suitable directory (see <A HREF="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html">ipsec.conf(5)</A>). - -To get gdb to tell you interesting stuff: - $ script - $ cd dump-directory-you-chose - $ gdb /usr/local/lib/ipsec/pluto core - (gdb) where - (gdb) quit - $ exit - -The resulting output will have been captured by the script command in -a file called "typescript". Send it to the list. - -Do not delete the core file. I may need to ask you to print out some -more relevant stuff.</PRE> -<P> Note that the<VAR> dumpdir</VAR> parameter takes effect only when - the IPsec subsystem is restarted -- reboot or ipsec setup restart.</P> -<P> -<BR> -<BR></P> -<HR> -<H1><A name="compat">Linux FreeS/WAN Compatibility Guide</A></H1> -<P>Much of this document is quoted directly from the Linux FreeS/WAN<A href="mail.html"> - mailing list</A>. Thanks very much to the community of testers, - patchers and commenters there, especially the ones quoted below but - also various contributors we haven't quoted.</P> -<H2><A name="spec">Implemented parts of the IPsec Specification</A></H2> -<P>In general, do not expect Linux FreeS/WAN to do everything yet. This - is a work-in-progress and some parts of the IPsec specification are not - yet implemented.</P> -<H3><A name="in">In Linux FreeS/WAN</A></H3> -<P>Things we do, as of version 1.96:</P> -<UL> -<LI>key management methods -<DL> -<DT>manually keyed</DT> -<DD>using keys stored in /etc/ipsec.conf</DD> -<DT>automatically keyed</DT> -<DD>Automatically negotiating session keys as required. All connections - are automatically re-keyed periodically. The<A href="#Pluto"> Pluto</A> - daemon implements this using the<A href="#IKE"> IKE</A> protocol.</DD> -</DL> -</LI> -<LI>Methods of authenticating gateways for IKE -<DL> -<DT>shared secrets</DT> -<DD>stored in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.secrets.5.html"> ipsec.secrets(5)</A> -</DD> -<DT><A href="#RSA">RSA</A> signatures</DT> -<DD>For details, see<A href="manpage.d/ipsec_pluto.8.html"> pluto(8)</A> -.</DD> -<DT>looking up RSA authentication keys from<A href="#DNS"> DNS</A>.</DT> -<DD>Note that this technique cannot be fully secure until<A href="#SDNS"> - secure DNS</A> is widely deployed.</DD> -</DL> -</LI> -<LI>groups for<A href="#DH"> Diffie-Hellman</A> key negotiation -<DL> -<DT>group 2, modp 1024-bit</DT> -<DT>group 5, modp 1536-bit</DT> -<DD>We implement these two groups. -<P>In negotiating a keying connection (ISAKMP SA, Phase 1) we propose - both groups when we are the initiator, and accept either when a peer - proposes them. Once the keying connection is made, we propose only the - alternative agreed there for data connections (IPsec SA's, Phase 2) - negotiated over that keying connection.</P> -</DD> -</DL> -</LI> -<LI>encryption transforms -<DL> -<DT><A href="#DES">DES</A></DT> -<DD>DES is in the source code since it is needed to implement 3DES, but - single DES is not made available to users because<A href="#desnotsecure"> - DES is insecure</A>.</DD> -<DT><A href="#3DES">Triple DES</A></DT> -<DD>implemented, and used as the default encryption in Linux FreeS/WAN.</DD> -</DL> -</LI> -<LI>authentication transforms -<DL> -<DT><A href="#HMAC">HMAC</A> using<A href="#MD5"> MD5</A></DT> -<DD>implemented, may be used in IKE or by by AH or ESP transforms.</DD> -<DT><A href="#HMAC">HMAC</A> using<A href="#SHA"> SHA</A></DT> -<DD>implemented, may be used in IKE or by AH or ESP transforms.</DD> -</DL> -<P>In negotiations, we propose both of these and accept either.</P> -</LI> -<LI>compression transforms -<DL> -<DT>IPComp</DT> -<DD>IPComp as described in RFC 2393 was added for FreeS/WAN 1.6. Note - that Pluto becomes confused if you ask it to do IPComp when the kernel - cannot.</DD> -</DL> -</LI> -</UL> -<P>All combinations of implemented transforms are supported. Note that - some form of packet-level<STRONG> authentication is required whenever - encryption is used</STRONG>. Without it, the encryption will not be - secure.</P> -<H3><A name="dropped">Deliberately omitted</A></H3> - We do not implement everything in the RFCs because some of those things - are insecure. See our discussions of avoiding<A href="#weak"> bogus - security</A>. -<P>Things we deliberately omit which are required in the RFCs are:</P> -<UL> -<LI>null encryption (to use ESP as an authentication-only service)</LI> -<LI>single DES</LI> -<LI>DH group 1, a 768-bit modp group</LI> -</UL> -<P>Since these are the only encryption algorithms and DH group the RFCs - require, it is possible in theory to have a standards-conforming - implementation which will not interpoperate with FreeS/WAN. Such an - implementation would be inherently insecure, so we do not consider this - a problem.</P> -<P>Anyway, most implementations sensibly include more secure options as - well, so dropping null encryption, single DES and Group 1 does not - greatly hinder interoperation in practice.</P> -<P>We also do not implement some optional features allowed by the RFCs:</P> -<UL> -<LI>aggressive mode for negotiation of the keying channel or ISAKMP SA. - This mode is a little faster than main mode, but exposes more - information to an eavesdropper.</LI> -</UL> -<P>In theory, this should cause no interoperation problems since all - implementations are required to support the more secure main mode, - whether or not they also allow aggressive mode.</P> -<P>In practice, it does sometimes produce problems with implementations - such as Windows 2000 where aggressive mode is the default. Typically, - these are easily solved with a configuration change that overrides that - default.</P> -<H3><A name="not">Not (yet) in Linux FreeS/WAN</A></H3> -<P>Things we don't yet do, as of version 1.96:</P> -<UL> -<LI>key management methods -<UL> -<LI>authenticate key negotiations via local<A href="#PKI"> PKI</A> - server, but see links to user<A href="#patch"> patches</A></LI> -<LI>authenticate key negotiations via<A href="#SDNS"> secure DNS</A></LI> -<LI>unauthenticated key management, using<A href="#DH"> Diffie-Hellman</A> - key agreement protocol without authentication. Arguably, this would be - worth doing since it is secure against all passive attacks. On the - other hand, it is vulnerable to an active<A href="#middle"> - man-in-the-middle attack</A>.</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>encryption transforms -<P>Currently<A href="#3DES"> Triple DES</A> is the only encryption - method Pluto will negotiate.</P> -<P>No additional encryption transforms are implemented, though the RFCs - allow them and some other IPsec implementations support various of - them. We are not eager to add more. See this<A href="#other.cipher"> - FAQ question</A>.</P> -<P><A href="#AES">AES</A>, the successor to the DES standard, is an - excellent candidate for inclusion in FreeS/WAN, see links to user<A href="#patch"> - patches</A>.</P> -</LI> -<LI>authentication transforms -<P>No optional additional authentication transforms are currently - implemented. Likely<A href="#SHA-256"> SHA-256, SHA-384 and SHA-512</A> - will be added when AES is.</P> -</LI> -<LI>Policy checking on decrypted packets -<P>To fully comply with the RFCs, it is not enough just to accept only - packets which survive any firewall rules in place to limit what IPsec - packets get in, and then pass KLIPS authentication. That is what - FreeS/WAN currently does.</P> -<P>We should also apply additional tests, for example ensuring that all - packets emerging from a particular tunnel have source and destination - addresses that fall within the subnets defined for that tunnel, and - that packets with those addresses that did not emerge from the - appropriate tunnel are disallowed.</P> -<P>This will be done as part of a KLIPS rewrite. See these<A href="#applied"> - links</A> and the<A href="mail.html"> design mailing list</A> for - discussion.</P> -</LI> -</UL> -<H2><A name="pfkey">Our PF-Key implementation</A></H2> -<P>We use PF-key Version Two for communication between the KLIPS kernel - code and the Pluto Daemon. PF-Key v2 is defined by<A href="http://www.normos.org/ietf/rfc/rfc2367.txt"> - RFC 2367</A>.</P> -<P>The "PF" stands for Protocol Family. PF-Inet defines a - kernel/userspace interface for the TCP/IP Internet protocols (TCP/IP), - and other members of the PF series handle Netware, Appletalk, etc. - PF-Key is just a PF for key-related matters.</P> -<H3><A name="pfk.port">PF-Key portability</A></H3> -<P>PF-Key came out of Berkeley Unix work and is used in the various BSD - IPsec implementations, and in Solaris. This means there is some hope of - porting our Pluto(8) to one of the BSD distributions, or of running - their photurisd(8) on Linux if you prefer<A href="#photuris"> Photuris</A> - key management over IKE.</P> -<P>It is, however, more complex than that. The PK-Key RFC deliberately - deals only with keying, not policy management. The three PF-Key - implementations we have looked at -- ours, OpenBSD and KAME -- all have - extensions to deal with security policy, and the extensions are - different. There have been discussions aimed at sorting out the - differences, perhaps for a version three PF-Key spec. All players are - in favour of this, but everyone involved is busy and it is not clear - whether or when these discussions might bear fruit.</P> -<H2><A name="otherk">Kernels other than the latest 2.2.x and 2.4.y</A></H2> -<P>We develop and test on Redhat Linux using the most recent kernel in - the 2.2 and 2.4 series. In general, we recommend you use the latest - kernel in one of those series. Complications and caveats are discussed - below.</P> -<H3><A name="kernel.2.0">2.0.x kernels</A></H3> -<P>Consider upgrading to the 2.2 kernel series. If you want to stay with - the 2.0 series, then we strongly recommend 2.0.39. Some useful security - patches were added in 2.0.38.</P> -<P>Various versions of the code have run at various times on most 2.0.xx - kernels, but the current version is only lightly tested on 2.0.39, and - not at all on older kernels.</P> -<P>Some of our patches for older kernels are shipped in 2.0.37 and - later, so they are no longer provided in FreeS/WAN. This means recent - versions of FreeS/WAN will probably not compile on anything earlier - than 2.0.37.</P> -<H3><A name="kernel.production">2.2 and 2.4 kernels</A></H3> -<DL> -<DT>FreeS/WAN 1.0</DT> -<DD>ran only on 2.0 kernels</DD> -<DT>FreeS/WAN 1.1 to 1.8</DT> -<DD>ran on 2.0 or 2.2 kernels -<BR> ran on some development kernels, 2.3 or 2.4-test</DD> -<DT>FreeS/WAN 1.9 to 1.96</DT> -<DD>runs on 2.0, 2.2 or 2.4 kernels</DD> -</DL> -<P>In general,<STRONG> we suggest the latest 2.2 kernel or 2.4 for - production use</STRONG>.</P> -<P>Of course no release can be guaranteed to run on kernels more recent - than it is, so quite often there will be no stable FreeS/WAN for the - absolute latest kernel. See the<A href="#k.versions"> FAQ</A> for - discussion.</P> -<H2><A name="otherdist">Intel Linux distributions other than Redhat</A></H2> -<P>We develop and test on Redhat 6.1 for 2.2 kernels, and on Redhat 7.1 - or 7.2 for 2.4, so minor changes may be required for other - distributions.</P> -<H3><A name="rh7">Redhat 7.0</A></H3> -<P>There are some problems with FreeS/WAN on Redhat 7.0. They are - soluble, but we recommend you upgrade to a later Redhat instead..</P> -<P>Redhat 7 ships with two compilers.</P> -<UL> -<LI>Their<VAR> gcc</VAR> is version 2.96. Various people, including the - GNU compiler developers and Linus, have said fairly emphatically that - using this was a mistake. 2.96 is a development version, not intended - for production use. In particular, it will not compile a Linux kernel.</LI> -<LI>Redhat therefore also ship a separate compiler, which they call<VAR> - kgcc</VAR>, for compiling kernels.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Kernel Makefiles have<VAR> gcc</VAR> as a default, and must be - adjusted to use<VAR> kgcc</VAR> before a kernel will compile on 7.0. - This mailing list message gives details:</P> -<PRE>Subject: Re: AW: Installing IPsec on Redhat 7.0 - Date: Thu, 1 Feb 2001 14:32:52 -0200 (BRST) - From: Mads Rasmussen <mads@cit.com.br> - -> From www.redhat.com/support/docs/gotchas/7.0/gotchas-7-6.html#ss6.1 - -cd to /usr/src/linux and open the Makefile in your favorite editor. You -will need to look for a line similar to this: - -CC = $(CROSS_COMPILE)gcc -D__KERNEL__ -I$(HPATH) - -This line specifies which C compiler to use to build the kernel. It should -be changed to: - -CC = $(CROSS_COMPILE)kgcc -D__KERNEL__ -I$(HPATH) - -for Red Hat Linux 7. The kgcc compiler is egcs 2.91.66. From here you can -proceed with the typical compiling steps.</PRE> -<P>Check the<A href="mail.html"> mailing list</A> archive for more - recent news.</P> -<H3><A name="suse">SuSE Linux</A></H3> -<P>SuSE 6.3 and later versions, at least in Europe, ship with FreeS/WAN - included.</P> -<P>FreeS/WAN packages distributed for SuSE 7.0-7.2 were somehow - miscompiled. You can find fixed packages on<A HREF="http://www.suse.de/~garloff/linux/FreeSWAN"> - Kurt Garloff's page</A>.</P> -<P>Here are some notes for an earlier SuSE version.</P> -<H4><A NAME="9_4_2_1">SuSE Linux 5.3</A></H4> -<PRE>Date: Mon, 30 Nov 1998 -From: Peter Onion <ponion@srd.bt.co.uk> - -... I got Saturdays snapshot working between my two SUSE5.3 machines at home. - -The mods to the install process are quite simple. From memory and looking at -the files on the SUSE53 machine here at work.... - -And extra link in each of the /etc/init.d/rc?.d directories called K35ipsec -which SUSE use to shut a service down. - -A few mods in /etc/init.d/ipsec to cope with the different places that SUSE -put config info, and remove the inculsion of /etc/rc.d/init.d/functions and . -/etc/sysconfig/network as they don't exists and 1st one isn't needed anyway. - -insert ". /etc/rc.config" to pick up the SUSE config info and use - - if test -n "$NETCONFIG" -a "$NETCONFIG" != "YAST_ASK" ; then - -to replace - - [ ${NETWORKING} = "no" ] && exit 0 - -Create /etc/sysconfig as SUSE doesn't have one. - -I think that was all (but I prob forgot something)....</PRE> -<P>You may also need to fiddle initialisation scripts to ensure that<VAR> - /var/run/pluto.pid</VAR> is removed when rebooting. If this file is - present, Pluto does not come up correctly.</P> -<H3><A name="slack">Slackware</A></H3> -<PRE>Subject: Re: linux-IPsec: Slackware distribution - Date: Thu, 15 Apr 1999 12:07:01 -0700 - From: Evan Brewer <dmessiah@silcon.com> - -> Very shortly, I will be needing to install IPsec on at least gateways that -> are running Slackware. . . . - -The only trick to getting it up is that on the slackware dist there is no -init.d directory in /etc/rc.d .. so create one. Then, what I do is take the -IPsec startup script which normally gets put into the init.d directory, and -put it in /etc/rc.d and name ir rc.ipsec .. then I symlink it to the file -in init.d. The only file in the dist you need to really edit is the -utils/Makefile, setup4: - -Everything else should be just fine.</PRE> -<P>A year or so later:</P> -<PRE>Subject: Re: HTML Docs- Need some cleanup? - Date: Mon, 8 Jan 2001 - From: Jody McIntyre <jodym@oeone.com> - -I have successfully installed FreeS/WAN on several Slackware 7.1 machines. -FreeS/WAN installed its rc.ipsec file in /etc/rc.d. I had to manually call -this script from rc.inet2. This seems to be an easier method than Evan -Brewer's.</PRE> -<H3><A name="deb">Debian</A></H3> -<P>A recent (Nov 2001) mailing list points to a<A href="http://www.thing.dyndns.org/debian/vpn.htm"> - web page</A> on setting up several types of tunnel, including IPsec, on - Debian.</P> -<P>Some older information:</P> -<PRE>Subject: FreeS/WAN 1.0 on Debian 2.1 - Date: Tue, 20 Apr 1999 - From: Tim Miller <cerebus+counterpane@haybaler.sackheads.org> - - Compiled and installed without error on a Debian 2.1 system -with kernel-source-2.0.36 after pointing RCDIR in utils/Makefile to -/etc/init.d. - - /var/lock/subsys/ doesn't exist on Debian boxen, needs to be -created; not a fatal error. - - Finally, IPsec scripts appear to be dependant on GNU awk -(gawk); the default Debian awk (mawk-1.3.3-2) had fatal difficulties. -With gawk installed and /etc/alternatives/awk linked to /usr/bin/gawk -operation appears flawless.</PRE> -<P>The scripts in question have been modified since this was posted. Awk - versions should no longer be a problem.</P> -<H3><A name="caldera">Caldera</A></H3> -<PRE>Subject: Re: HTML Docs- Need some cleanup? - Date: Mon, 08 Jan 2001 - From: Andy Bradford <andyb@calderasystems.com> - -On Sun, 07 Jan 2001 22:59:05 EST, Sandy Harris wrote: - -> Intel Linux distributions other than Redhat 5.x and 6.x -> Redhat 7.0 -> SuSE Linux -> SuSE Linux 5.3 -> Slackware -> Debian - -Can you please include Caldera in this list? I have tested it since -FreeS/Wan 1.1 and it works great with our systems---provided one -follows the FreeS/Wan documentation. :-) - -Thank you, -Andy</PRE> -<H2><A name="CPUs">CPUs other than Intel</A></H2> -<P>FreeS/WAN has been run sucessfully on a number of different CPU - architectures. If you have tried it on one not listed here, please post - to the<A href="mail.html"> mailing list</A>.</P> -<H3><A name=" strongarm">Corel Netwinder (StrongARM CPU)</A></H3> -<PRE>Subject: linux-ipsec: Netwinder diffs -Date: Wed, 06 Jan 1999 -From: rhatfield@plaintree.com - -I had a mistake in my IPsec-auto, so I got things working this morning. - -Following are the diffs for my changes. Probably not the best and cleanest way -of doing it, but it works. . . . </PRE> -<P>These diffs are in the 0.92 and later distributions, so these should - work out-of-the-box on Netwinder.</P> -<H3><A name="yellowdog">Yellow Dog Linux on Power PC</A></H3> -<PRE>Subject: Compiling FreeS/WAN 1.1 on YellowDog Linux (PPC) - Date: 11 Dec 1999 - From: Darron Froese <darron@fudgehead.com> - -I'm summarizing here for the record - because it's taken me many hours to do -this (multiple times) and because I want to see IPsec on more linuxes than -just x86. - -Also, I can't remember if I actually did summarize it before... ;-) I'm -working too many late hours. - -That said - here goes. - -1. Get your linux kernel and unpack into /usr/src/linux/ - I used 2.2.13. -<http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.2/linux-2.2.13.tar.bz2> - -2. Get FreeS/WAN and unpack into /usr/src/freeswan-1.1 -<ftp://ftp.xs4all.nl/pub/crypto/freeswan/freeswan-1.1.tar.gz> - -3. Get the gmp src rpm from here: -<ftp://ftp.yellowdoglinux.com//pub/yellowdog/champion-1.1/SRPMS/SRPMS/gmp-2.0.2-9a.src.rpm> - -4. Su to root and do this: rpm --rebuild gmp-2.0.2-9a.src.rpm - -You will see a lot of text fly by and when you start to see the rpm -recompiling like this: - -Executing: %build -+ umask 022 -+ cd /usr/src/redhat/BUILD -+ cd gmp-2.0.2 -+ libtoolize --copy --force -Remember to add `AM_PROG_LIBTOOL' to `configure.in'. -You should add the contents of `/usr/share/aclocal/libtool.m4' to -`aclocal.m4'. -+ CFLAGS=-O2 -fsigned-char -+ ./configure --prefix=/usr - -Hit Control-C to stop the rebuild. NOTE: We're doing this because for some -reason the gmp source provided with FreeS/WAN 1.1 won't build properly on -ydl. - -cd /usr/src/redhat/BUILD/ -cp -ar gmp-2.0.2 /usr/src/freeswan-1.1/ -cd /usr/src/freeswan-1.1/ -rm -rf gmp -mv gmp-2.0.2 gmp - -5. Open the freeswan Makefile and change the line that says: -KERNEL=$(b)zimage (or something like that) to -KERNEL=vmlinux - -6. cd ../linux/ - -7. make menuconfig -Select an option or two and then exit - saving your changes. - -8. cd ../freeswan-1.1/ ; make menugo - -That will start the whole process going - once that's finished compiling, -you have to install your new kernel and reboot. - -That should build FreeS/WAN on ydl (I tried it on 1.1).</PRE> - And a later message on the same topic: -<PRE>Subject: Re: FreeS/WAN, PGPnet and E-mail - Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2000 - From: Darron Froese <darron@fudgehead.com> - -on 1/22/00 6:47 PM, Philip Trauring at philip@trauring.com wrote: - -> I have a PowerMac G3 ... - -The PowerMac G3 can run YDL 1.1 just fine. It should also be able to run -FreeS/WAN 1.2patch1 with a couple minor modifications: - -1. In the Makefile it specifies a bzimage for the kernel compile - you have -to change that to vmlinux for the PPC. - -2. The gmp source that comes with FreeS/WAN (for whatever reason) fails to -compile. I have gotten around this by getting the gmp src rpm from here: - -ftp://ftp.yellowdoglinux.com//pub/yellowdog/champion-1.1/SRPMS/SRPMS/gmp-2.0.2-9a.src.rpm - -If you rip the source out of there - and place it where the gmp source -resides it will compile just fine.</PRE> -<P>FreeS/WAN no longer includes GMP source.</P> -<H3><A name="mklinux">Mklinux</A></H3> -<P>One user reports success on the Mach-based<STRONG> m</STRONG>icro<STRONG> -k</STRONG>ernel Linux.</P> -<PRE>Subject: Smiles on sparc and ppc - Date: Fri, 10 Mar 2000 - From: Jake Hill <jah@alien.bt.co.uk> - -You may or may not be interested to know that I have successfully built -FreeS/WAN on a number of non intel alpha architectures; namely on ppc -and sparc and also on osfmach3/ppc (MkLinux). I can report that it just -works, mostly, with few changes.</PRE> -<H3><A name="alpha">Alpha 64-bit processors</A></H3> -<PRE>Subject: IT WORKS (again) between intel & alpha :-))))) - Date: Fri, 29 Jan 1999 - From: Peter Onion <ponion@srd.bt.co.uk> - -Well I'm happy to report that I've got an IPsec connection between by intel & alpha machines again :-)) - -If you look back on this list to 7th of December I wrote... - --On 07-Dec-98 Peter Onion wrote: --> --> I've about had enuf of wandering around inside the kernel trying to find out --> just what is corrupting outgoing packets... -- --Its 7:30 in the evening ..... -- --I FIXED IT :-)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))) -- --It was my own fault :-(((((((((((((((((( -- --If you ask me very nicly I'll tell you where I was a little too over keen to --change unsigned long int __u32 :-) OPSE ... -- --So tomorrow it will full steam ahead to produce a set of diffs/patches against --0.91 -- --Peter Onion.</PRE> -<P>In general (there have been some glitches), FreeS/WAN has been - running on Alphas since then.</P> -<H3><A name="SPARC">Sun SPARC processors</A></H3> -<P>Several users have reported success with FreeS/WAN on SPARC Linux. - Here is one mailing list message:</P> -<PRE>Subject: Smiles on sparc and ppc - Date: Fri, 10 Mar 2000 - From: Jake Hill <jah@alien.bt.co.uk> - -You may or may not be interested to know that I have successfully built -FreeS/WAN on a number of non intel alpha architectures; namely on ppc -and sparc and also on osfmach3/ppc (MkLinux). I can report that it just -works, mostly, with few changes. - -I have a question, before I make up some patches. I need to hack -gmp/mpn/powerpc32/*.s to build them. Is this ok? The changes are -trivial, but could I also use a different version of gmp? Is it vanilla -here? - -I guess my only real headache is from ipchains, which appears to stop -running when IPsec has been started for a while. This is with 2.2.14 on -sparc.</PRE> -<P>This message, from a different mailing list, may be relevant for - anyone working with FreeS/WAN on Suns:</P> -<PRE>Subject: UltraSPARC DES assembler - Date: Thu, 13 Apr 2000 - From: svolaf@inet.uni2.dk (Svend Olaf Mikkelsen) - To: coderpunks@toad.com - -An UltraSPARC assembler version of the LibDES/SSLeay/OpenSSL des_enc.c -file is available at http://inet.uni2.dk/~svolaf/des.htm. - -This brings DES on UltraSPARC from slower than Pentium at the same -clock speed to significantly faster.</PRE> -<H3><A name="mips">MIPS processors</A></H3> -<P>We know FreeS/WAN runs on at least some MIPS processors because<A href="http://www.lasat.com"> - Lasat</A> manufacture an IPsec box based on an embedded MIPS running - Linux with FreeS/WAN. We have no details.</P> -<H3><A name="crusoe">Transmeta Crusoe</A></H3> -<P>The Merilus<A href="http://www.merilus.com/products/fc/index.shtml"> - Firecard</A>, a Linux firewall on a PCI card, is based on a Crusoe - processor and supports FreeS/WAN.</P> -<H3><A name="coldfire">Motorola Coldfire</A></H3> -<PRE>Subject: Re: Crypto hardware support - Date: Mon, 03 Jul 2000 - From: Dan DeVault <devault@tampabay.rr.com> - -.... I have been running -uClinux with FreeS/WAN 1.4 on a system built by Moreton Bay ( -http://www.moretonbay.com ) and it was using a Coldfire processor -and was able to do the Triple DES encryption at just about -1 mbit / sec rate....... they put a Hi/Fn 7901 hardware encryption -chip on their board and now their system does over 25 mbit of 3DES -encryption........ pretty significant increase if you ask me.</PRE> -<H2><A name="multiprocessor">Multiprocessor machines</A></H2> -<P>FreeS/WAN is designed to work on SMP (symmetric multi-processing) - Linux machines and is regularly tested on dual processor x86 machines.</P> -<P>We do not know of any testing on multi-processor machines with other - CPU architectures or with more than two CPUs. Anyone who does test - this, please report results to the<A href="mail.html"> mailing list</A> -.</P> -<P>The current design does not make particularly efficient use of - multiprocessor machines; some of the kernel work is single-threaded.</P> -<H2><A name="hardware">Support for crypto hardware</A></H2> -<P>Supporting hardware cryptography accelerators has not been a high - priority for the development team because it raises a number of fairly - complex issues:</P> -<UL> -<LI>Can you trust the hardware? If it is not Open Source, how do you - audit its security? Even if it is, how do you check that the design has - no concealed traps?</LI> -<LI>If an interface is added for such hardware, can that interface be - subverted or misused?</LI> -<LI>Is hardware acceleration actually a performance win? It clearly is - in many cases, but on a fast machine it might be better to use the CPU - for the encryption than to pay the overheads of moving data to and from - a crypto board.</LI> -<LI>the current KLIPS code does not provide a clean interface for - hardware accelerators</LI> -</UL> -<P>That said, we have a<A href="#coldfire"> report</A> of FreeS/WAN - working with one crypto accelerator and some work is going on to modify - KLIPS to create a clean generic interface to such products. See this<A href="http://www.jukie.net/~bart/linux-ipsec/"> - web page</A> for some of the design discussion.</P> -<P>More recently, a patch to support some hardware accelerators has been - posted:</P> -<PRE>Subject: [Design] [PATCH] H/W acceleration patch - Date: Tue, 18 Sep 2001 - From: "Martin Gadbois" <martin.gadbois@colubris.com> - -Finally!! -Here's a web site with H/W acceleration patch for FreeS/WAN 1.91, including -S/W and Hifn 7901 crypto support. - -http://sources.colubris.com/ - -Martin Gadbois</PRE> -<P>Hardware accelerators could take performance well beyond what - FreeS/WAN can do in software (discussed<A href="performance.html"> here</A> -). Here is some discussion off the IETF IPsec list, October 2001:</P> -<PRE> ... Currently shipping chips deliver, 600 mbps throughput on a single - stream of 3DES IPsec traffic. There are also chips that use multiple - cores to do 2.4 gbps. We (Cavium) and others have announced even faster - chips. ... Mid 2002 versions will handle at line rate (OC48 and OC192) - IPsec and SSL/TLS traffic not only 3DES CBC but also AES and arc4.</PRE> -<P>The patches to date support chips that have been in production for - some time, not the state-of-the-art latest-and-greatest devices - described in that post. However, they may still outperform software and - they almost certainly reduce CPU overhead.</P> -<H2><A name="ipv6">IP version 6 (IPng)</A></H2> -<P>The Internet currently runs on version four of the IP protocols. IPv4 - is what is in the standard Linux IP stack, and what FreeS/WAN was built - for. In IPv4, IPsec is an optional feature.</P> -<P>The next version of the IP protocol suite is version six, usually - abbreviated either as "IPv6" or as "IPng" for "IP: the next - generation". For IPv6, IPsec is a required feature. Any machine doing - IPv6 is required to support IPsec, much as any machine doing (any - version of) IP is required to support ICMP.</P> -<P>There is a Linux implementation of IPv6 in Linux kernels 2.2 and - above. For details, see the<A href="http://www.cs-ipv6.lancs.ac.uk/ipv6/systems/linux/faq/"> - FAQ</A>. It does not yet support IPsec. The<A href="http://www.linux-ipv6.org/"> - USAGI</A> project are also working on IPv6 for Linux.</P> -<P>FreeS/WAN was originally built for the current standard, IPv4, but we - are interested in seeing it work with IPv6. Some progress has been - made, and a patched version with IPv6 support is<A href="http://www.ipv6.iabg.de/downloadframe/index.html"> - available</A>. For more recent information, check the<A href="mail.html"> - mailing list</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="v6.back">IPv6 background</A></H3> -<P>IPv6 has been specified by an IETF<A href="http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/ipngwg-charter.html"> - working group</A>. The group's page lists over 30 RFCs to date, and - many Internet Drafts as well. The overview is<A href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2460.txt"> - RFC 2460</A>. Major features include:</P> -<UL> -<LI>expansion of the address space from 32 to 128 bits,</LI> -<LI>changes to improve support for -<UL> -<LI>mobile IP</LI> -<LI>automatic network configuration</LI> -<LI>quality of service routing</LI> -<LI>...</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>improved security via IPsec</LI> -</UL> -<P>A number of projects are working on IPv6 implementation. A prominent - Open Source effort is<A href="http://www.kame.net/"> KAME</A>, a - collaboration among several large Japanese companies to implement IPv6 - for Berkeley Unix. Other major players are also working on IPv6. For - example, see pages at:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://playground.sun.com/pub/ipng/html/ipng-main.html">Sun</A> -</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/732/ipv6/index.html">Cisco</A> -</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.microsoft.com/windows2000/techinfo/howitworks/communications/networkbasics/IPv6.asp"> -Microsoft</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>The<A href="http://www.6bone.net/"> 6bone</A> (IPv6 backbone) testbed - network has been up for some time. There is an active<A href="http://www.ipv6.org/"> - IPv6 user group</A>.</P> -<P>One of the design goals for IPv6 was that it must be possible to - convert from v4 to v6 via a gradual transition process. Imagine the - mess if there were a "flag day" after which the entire Internet used - v6, and all software designed for v4 stopped working. Almost every - computer on the planet would need major software changes! There would - be huge costs to replace older equipment. Implementers would be worked - to death before "the day", systems administrators and technical support - would be completely swamped after it. The bugs in every implementation - would all bite simultaneously. Large chunks of the net would almost - certainly be down for substantial time periods. ...</P> -<P>Fortunately, the design avoids any "flag day". It is therefore a - little tricky to tell how quickly IPv6 will take over. The transition - has certainly begun. For examples, see announcements from<A href="http://www.mailbase.ac.uk/lists/internet2/2000-03/0016.html"> - NTT</A> and<A href="http://www.vnunet.com/News/1102383"> Nokia</A>. - However, it is not yet clear how quickly the process will gain - momentum, or when it will be completed. Likely large parts of the - Internet will remain with IPv4 for years to come.</P> -<HR> -<A NAME="interop"></A> -<H1><A NAME="10">Interoperating with FreeS/WAN</A></H1> -<P>The FreeS/WAN project needs you! We rely on the user community to - keep up to date. Mail users@lists.freeswan.org with your interop - success stories.</P> -<P><STRONG>Please note</STRONG>: Most of our interop examples feature - Linux FreeS/WAN 1.x config files. You can convert them to 2.x files - fairly easily with the patch in our<A HREF="#ipsec.conf_v2"> Upgrading - Guide</A>.</P> -<H2><A NAME="10_1">Interop at a Glance</A></H2> -<TABLE BORDER="1"> -<TR><TD> </TD><TD colspan="5">FreeS/WAN VPN</TD><TD>Road Warrior</TD><TD> -OE</TD></TR> -<TR><TD> </TD><TD>PSK</TD><TD>RSA Secret</TD><TD>X.509 -<BR><SMALL><A HREF="#interoprules">(requires patch)</A></SMALL></TD><TD> -NAT-Traversal -<BR><SMALL><A HREF="#interoprules">(requires patch)</A></SMALL></TD><TD> -Manual -<BR>Keying</TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD></TR> -<TR><TD colspan="8">More Compatible</TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#freeswan">FreeS/WAN</A><A NAME="freeswan.top"> </A></TD><TD> -<FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT> -</TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#isakmpd">isakmpd (OpenBSD)</A><A NAME="isakmpd.top"> </A> -</TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> -<FONT color="#cc0000">No </FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#kame">Kame (FreeBSD, -<BR> NetBSD, MacOSX) -<BR> <SMALL>aka racoon</SMALL></A><A NAME="kame.top"> </A></TD><TD><FONT -color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> -<FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#mcafee">McAfee VPN -<BR><SMALL>was PGPNet</SMALL></A><A NAME="mcafee.top"> </A></TD><TD><FONT -color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> -<FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#microsoft">Microsoft -<BR> Windows 2000/XP</A><A NAME="microsoft.top"> </A></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> - </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000"> -No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#ssh">SSH Sentinel</A><A NAME="ssh.top"> </A></TD><TD><FONT -color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT> -</TD><TD><FONT color="#cccc00">Maybe</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#safenet">Safenet SoftPK -<BR>/SoftRemote</A><A NAME="safenet.top"> </A></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> - </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000"> -No</FONT></TD></TR> -<TR><TD colspan="8">Other</TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#6wind">6Wind</A><A NAME="6wind.top"> </A></TD><TD> </TD><TD> - </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> -<FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#alcatel">Alcatel Timestep</A><A NAME="alcatel.top"> </A> -</TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> - </TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#apple">Apple Macintosh -<BR>System 10+</A><A NAME="apple.top"> </A></TD><TD><FONT color="#cccc00"> -Maybe</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#cccc00"> -Maybe</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#cccc00">Maybe</FONT></TD><TD> - </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#ashleylaurent">AshleyLaurent -<BR> VPCom</A><A NAME="ashleylaurent.top"> </A></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT -color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#borderware">Borderware</A><A NAME="borderware.top"> </A> -</TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> - </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000"> -No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- -http://www.cequrux.com/vpn-guides.php3 -"coming soon" guide to connect with FreeS/WAN. ---> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#checkpoint">Check Point FW-1/VPN-1</A><A NAME="checkpoint.top"> - </A></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> -<FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#cisco">Cisco with 3DES</A><A NAME="cisco.top"> </A></TD><TD> -<FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#cccc00">Maybe</FONT> -</TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#cccc00">Maybe</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> - </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#equinux">Equinux VPN Tracker -<BR> (for Mac OS X)</A><A NAME="equinux.top"> </A></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#cccc00">Maybe</FONT></TD><TD> - </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#fsecure">F-Secure</A><A NAME="fsecure.top"> </A></TD><TD> -<FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#cccc00"> -Maybe</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#gauntlet">Gauntlet GVPN</A><A NAME="gauntlet.top"> </A> -</TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000"> -No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#aix">IBM AIX</A><A NAME="aix.top"> </A></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#cccc00">Maybe</FONT></TD><TD> - </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#as400">IBM AS/400</A><A NAME="as400"> </A></TD><TD><FONT -color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> - </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#intel">Intel Shiva -<BR>LANRover/Net Structure</A><A NAME="intel.top"> </A></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT -color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#lancom">LanCom (formerly ELSA)</A><A NAME="lancom.top"> - </A></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> - </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#linksys">Linksys</A><A NAME="linksys.top"> </A></TD><TD> -<FONT color="#cccc00">Maybe</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000"> -No</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> -<FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#lucent">Lucent</A><A NAME="lucent.top"> </A></TD><TD><FONT -color="#cccc00">Partial</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> - </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#netasq">Netasq</A><A NAME="netasq.top"> </A></TD><TD> - </TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> - </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#netcelo">netcelo</A><A NAME="netcelo.top"> </A></TD><TD> - </TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> - </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#netgear">Netgear fvs318</A><A NAME="netgear.top"> </A> -</TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> - </TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#netscreen">Netscreen 100 -<BR>or 5xp</A><A NAME="netscreen.top"> </A></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#cccc00"> -Maybe</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#nortel">Nortel Contivity</A><A NAME="nortel.top"> </A> -</TD><TD><FONT color="#cccc00">Partial</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#cccc00">Maybe</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> - </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#radguard">RadGuard</A><A NAME="radguard.top"> </A></TD><TD> -<FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> - </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#raptor">Raptor</A><A NAME="raptor"> </A></TD><TD><FONT -color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#redcreek">Redcreek Ravlin</A><A NAME="redcreek.top"> </A> -</TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT><FONT color="#cccc00">/Partial</FONT> -</TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000"> -No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#sonicwall">SonicWall</A><A NAME="sonicwall.top"> </A></TD><TD> -<FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT -color="#cccc00">Maybe</FONT></TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD><TD> -<FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#sun">Sun Solaris</A><A NAME="sun.top"> </A></TD><TD><FONT -color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT> -</TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT -color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#symantec">Symantec</A><A NAME="symantec.top"> </A></TD><TD> -<FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> - </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#watchguard">Watchguard -<BR> Firebox</A><A NAME="watchguard.top"> </A></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#xedia">Xedia Access Point -<BR>/QVPN</A><A NAME="xedia.top"> </A></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT -color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -<TR><TD><A HREF="#zyxel">Zyxel Zywall -<BR>/Prestige</A><A NAME="zyxel.top"> </A></TD><TD><FONT color="#00cc00"> -Yes</FONT></TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD><TD><FONT -color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE - - -<TR> -<TD><A HREF="#sample">sample</A></TD> -<TD> </TD> -<TD> </TD> -<TD> </TD> -<TD> </TD> -<TD> </TD> -<TD> </TD> -<TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD> -</TR> - ---> -<TR><TD> </TD><TD>PSK</TD><TD>RSA Secret</TD><TD>X.509 -<BR><SMALL><A HREF="#interoprules">(requires patch)</A></SMALL></TD><TD> -NAT-Traversal -<BR><SMALL><A HREF="#interoprules">(requires patch)</A></SMALL></TD><TD> -Manual -<BR>Keying</TD><TD> </TD><TD> </TD></TR> -<TR><TD> </TD><TD colspan="5">FreeS/WAN VPN</TD><TD>Road Warrior</TD><TD> -OE</TD></TR> - -<!-- PSK RSA X.509 NAT-T Manual RW OE --> -</TABLE> -<H3><A NAME="10_1_1">Key</A></H3> -<TABLE BORDER="1"> -<TR><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT></TD><TD>People report that this - works for them.</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>[Blank]</TD><TD>We don't know.</TD></TR> -<TR><TD><FONT color="#cc0000">No</FONT></TD><TD>We have reason to - believe it was, at some point, not possible to get this to work.</TD></TR> -<TR><TD><FONT color="#cccc00">Partial</FONT></TD><TD>Partial success. - For example, a connection can be created from one end only.</TD></TR> -<TR><TD><FONT color="#00cc00">Yes</FONT><FONT color="#cccc00">/Partial</FONT> -</TD><TD>Mixed reports.</TD></TR> -<TR><TD><FONT color="#cccc00">Maybe</FONT></TD><TD>We think the answer - is "yes", but need confirmation.</TD></TR> -</TABLE> -<A NAME="interoprules"></A> -<H2><A NAME="10_2">Basic Interop Rules</A></H2> -<P>Vanilla FreeS/WAN implements<A HREF="#compat"> these parts</A> of the - IPSec specifications. You can add more with<A HREF="http://www.freeswan.ca"> - Super FreeS/WAN</A>, but what we offer may be enough for many users.</P> -<UL> -<LI> To use X.509 certificates with FreeS/WAN, you will need the<A HREF="http://www.strongsec.org/freeswan"> - X.509 patch</A> or<A HREF="http://www.freeswan.ca"> Super FreeS/WAN</A> -, which includes that patch.</LI> -<LI> To use<A HREF="#NAT.gloss"> Network Address Translation</A> (NAT) - traversal with FreeS/WAN, you will need Arkoon Network Security's<A HREF="http://open-source.arkoon.net"> - NAT traversal patch</A> or<A HREF="http://www.freeswan.ca"> Super - FreeS/WAN</A>, which includes it.</LI> -</UL> -<P>We offer a set of proposals which is not user-adjustable, but covers - all combinations that we can offer. FreeS/WAN always proposes triple - DES encryption and Perfect Forward Secrecy (PFS). In addition, we - propose Diffie Hellman groups 5 and 2 (in that order), and MD5 and - SHA-1 hashes. We accept the same proposals, in the same order of - preference.</P> -<P>Other interop notes:</P> -<UL> -<LI> A<A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/archives/users/2003-September/msg00462.html"> - SHA-1 bug in FreeS/WAN 2.00, 2.01 and 2.02</A> may affect some interop - scenarios. It does not affect 1.x versions, and is fixed in 2.03 and - later.</LI> -<LI> Some other implementations will close a connection with FreeS/WAN - after some time. This may be a problem with rekey lifetimes. Please see<A -HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/archives/users/2003-October/msg00293.html"> - this tip</A> and<A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2001-December/005758.html"> - this workaround</A>.</LI> -</UL> -<H2><A NAME="10_3">Longer Stories</A></H2> -<H3><A NAME="10_3_1">For<EM> More Compatible</EM> Implementations</A></H3> -<H4><A NAME="freeswan">FreeS/WAN</A></H4> -<P> See our documentation at<A HREF="http://www.freeswan.org"> - freeswan.org</A> and the Super FreeS/WAN docs at<A HREF="http://www.freeswan.ca"> - freeswan.ca</A>. Some user-written HOWTOs for FreeS/WAN-FreeS/WAN - connections are listed in<A HREF="#howto"> our Introduction</A>.</P> -<P>See also:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="http://lugbe.ch/action/reports/ipsec_htbe.phtml"> A German - FreeS/WAN-FreeS/WAN page by Markus Wernig (X.509)</A></LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="#freeswan.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="isakmpd">isakmpd (OpenBSD)</A></H4> -<P><A HREF="http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq13.html">OpenBSD FAQ: Using - IPsec</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.rommel.stw.uni-erlangen.de/~hshoexer/ipsec-howto/HOWTO.html"> - Hans-Joerg Hoexer's interop Linux-OpenBSD (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.segfault.net/ipsec/"> Skyper's configuration - (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.hsc.fr/ressources/ipsec/ipsec2001/#config"> - French page with configs (X.509)</A></P> -<P><A HREF="#isakmpd.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="kame">Kame</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI>For FreeBSD and NetBSD. Ships with Mac OS X; see also our<A HREF="#apple"> - Mac</A> section.</LI> -<LI>Also known as<EM> racoon</EM>, its keying daemon.</LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="http://www.kame.net">Kame homepage, with FAQ</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.netbsd.org/Documentation/network/ipsec"> - NetBSD's IPSec FAQ</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/12/msg00560.html"> - Ghislaine's post explaining some interop peculiarities</A></P> -<P><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/09/msg00511.html"> - Itojun's Kame-FreeS/WAN interop tips (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.hsc.fr/ressources/ipsec/ipsec2000"> Ghislaine - Labouret's French page with links to matching FreeS/WAN and Kame - configs (RSA)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lugbe.ch/lostfound/contrib/freebsd_router/"> Markus - Wernig's HOWTO (X.509, BSD gateway)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://web.morgul.net/~frodo/docs/kame+freeswan_interop.html"> - Frodo's Kame-FreeS/WAN interop (X.509)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.wavesec.org/kame.phtml"> Kame as a WAVEsec - client.</A></P> -<P><A HREF="#kame.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="mcafee">PGPNet/McAfee</A></H4> -<P></P> -<UL> -<LI>Now called McAfee VPN Client.</LI> -<LI>PGPNet also came in a freeware version which did not support subnets</LI> -<LI>To support dhcp-over-ipsec, you need the X.509 patch, which is - included in<A HREF="http://www.freeswan.ca"> Super FreeS/WAN</A>.</LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="http://www.freeswan.ca/docs/WindowsInterop"> Tim Carr's - Windows Interop Guide (X.509)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.rommel.stw.uni-erlangen.de/~hshoexer/ipsec-howto/HOWTO.html#Interop2"> - Hans-Joerg Hoexer's Guide for Linux-PGPNet (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/04/msg00339.html"> - Kai Martius' instructions using RSA Key-Extractor Tool (RSA)</A> -<BR> <A HREF="http://www.zengl.net/freeswan/english.html">Christian - Zeng's page (RSA)</A> based on Kai's work. English or German. -<BR><A HREF="http://tirnanog.ls.fi.upm.es/CriptoLab/Biblioteca/InfTech/InfTech_CriptoLab.htm"> - Oscar Delgado's PDF (X.509, no configs)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www-ec.njit.edu/~rxt1077/Howto.txt"> Ryan's HOWTO - for FreeS/WAN-PGPNet (X.509)</A>. Through a Linksys Router with IPsec - Passthru enabled. -<BR><A HREF="http://jixen.tripod.com/#RW-PGP-to-Fwan"> Jean-Francois - Nadeau's Practical Configuration (Road Warrior with PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.evolvedatacom.nl/freeswan.html#toc"> Wouter - Prins' HOWTO (Road Warrior with X.509)</A> -<BR></P> -<P><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/01/msg00271.html"> - Rekeying problem with FreeS/WAN and older PGPNets</A> -<BR></P> -<P><A HREF="http://www.strongsec.com/freeswan/dhcprelay/index.htm"> DHCP - over IPSEC HOWTO for FreeS/WAN (requires X.509 and dhcprelay patches)</A> -</P> -<P><A HREF="#mcafee.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="microsoft">Microsoft Windows 2000/XP</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI>IPsec comes with Win2k, and with XP Support Tools. May require<A HREF="http://www.microsoft.com/windows2000/downloads/recommended/encryption/default.asp"> - High Encryption Pack</A>. WinXP users have also reported better results - with Service Pack 1.</LI> -<LI>The Road Warrior setup works either way round. Windows (XP or 2K) - IPsec can connect as a Road Warrior to FreeS/WAN. However, FreeS/WAN - can also successfully connect as a Road Warrior to Windows IPsec (see - Nate Carlson's configs below).</LI> -<LI>FreeS/WAN version 1.92 or later is required to avoid an - interoperation problem with Windows native IPsec. Earlier FreeS/WAN - versions did not process the Commit Bit as Windows native IPsec - expected.</LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="http://www.freeswan.ca/docs/WindowsInterop"> Tim Carr's - Windows Interop Guide (X.509)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://ipsec.math.ucla.edu/services/ipsec.html"> James - Carter's instructions (X.509, NAT-T)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://jixen.tripod.com/#Win2000-Fwan"> Jean-Francois - Nadeau's Net-net Configuration (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://security.nta.no/freeswan-w2k.html"> Telenor's - Node-node Config (Transport-mode PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://vpn.ebootis.de"> Marcus Mueller's HOWTO using his - VPN config tool (X.509).</A> Tool also works with PSK. -<BR><A HREF="http://www.natecarlson.com/include/showpage.php?cat=linux&page=ipsec-x509"> - Nate Carlson's HOWTO using same tool (Road Warrior with X.509)</A>. - Unusually, FreeS/WAN is the Road Warrior here. -<BR><A HREF="http://tirnanog.ls.fi.upm.es/CriptoLab/Biblioteca/InfTech/InfTech_CriptoLab.htm"> - Oscar Delgado's PDF (X.509, no configs)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2003-July/022425.html"> - Tim Scannell's Windows XP Additional Checklist (X.509)</A> -<BR></P> - -<!-- Note to self: Include L2TP references? --> -<P><A HREF="http://www.microsoft.com/windows2000/en/server/help/default.asp?url=/windows2000/en/server/help/sag_TCPIP_ovr_secfeatures.htm"> - Microsoft's page on Win2k TCP/IP security features</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/Q257/2/25.ASP"> - Microsoft's Win2k IPsec debugging tips</A> -<BR> -<!-- Alt-URL http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;EN-US;q257225 -Perhaps newer? --> -<A HREF="http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,36336,00.html"> - MS VPN may fall back to 1DES</A></P> -<P><A HREF="#microsoft.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="ssh">SSH Sentinel</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI>Popular and well tested.</LI> -<LI>Also rebranded in<A HREF="http://www.zyxel.com"> Zyxel Zywall</A>. - Our Zyxel interop notes are<A HREF="#zyxel"> here</A>.</LI> -<LI> SSH supports IPsec-over-UDP NAT traversal.</LI> -<LI>There is this<A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2001/12/msg00370.html"> - potential problem</A> if you're not using the Legacy Proposal option.</LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="http://www.ssh.com/support/sentinel/documents.cfm"> SSH's - Sentinel-FreeSWAN interop PDF (X.509)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.nadmm.com/show.php?story=articles/vpn.inc"> - Nadeem Hassan's SUSE-to-Sentinel article (Road warrior with X.509)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.zerozone.it/documents/Linux/HowTo/VPN-IPsec-Freeswan-HOWTO.html"> - O-Zone's Italian HOWTO (Road Warrior, X.509, DHCP)</A> -<BR></P> -<P><A HREF="#ssh.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="safenet">Safenet SoftPK/SoftRemote</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI>People recommend SafeNet as a low cost Windows client.</LI> -<LI>SoftRemote seems to be the newer name for SoftPK.</LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2001-November/005061.html"> - Whit Blauvelt's SoftRemote tips</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-October/015591.html"> - Tim Wilson's tips (X.509)</A><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/archives/users/2003-October/msg00607.html"> - Workaround for a "gotcha"</A></P> -<P><A HREF="http://jixen.tripod.com/#Rw-IRE-to-Fwan"> Jean-Francois - Nadeau's Practical Configuration (Road Warrior with PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.terradoncommunications.com/security/whitepapers/safe_net-to-free_swan.pdf"> - Terradon Communications' PDF (Road Warrior with PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-October/?????.html"> - Seaan.net's PDF (Road Warrior to Subnet, with PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.redbaronconsulting.com/freeswan/fswansafenet.pdf"> - Red Baron Consulting's PDF (Road Warrior with X.509)</A></P> -<P><A HREF="#safenet.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H3><A NAME="10_3_2">For<EM> Other Implementations</EM></A></H3> -<H4><A NAME="6wind">6Wind</A></H4> -<P><A HREF="http://www.hsc.fr/ressources/ipsec/ipsec2001/#config"> - French page with configs (X.509)</A></P> -<P><A HREF="#6wind.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="alcatel">Alcatel Timestep</A></H4> -<P><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-June/011878.html"> - Alain Sabban's settings (PSK or PSK road warrior; through static NAT)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/1999/06/msg00100.html"> - Derick Cassidy's configs (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/1999/08/msg00194.html"> - David Kerry's Timestep settings (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-August/013711.html"> - Kevin Gerbracht's ipsec.conf (X.509)</A></P> -<P><A HREF="#alcatel.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="apple">Apple Macintosh System 10+</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI>Since the system is based on FreeBSD, this should interoperate<A HREF="#kame"> - just like FreeBSD</A>.</LI> -<LI> To use Appletalk over IPsec tunnels,<A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2001-November/005116.html"> - run it over TCP/IP</A>, or use Open Door Networks' Shareway IP tool,<A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2001-November/005426.html"> - described here.</A></LI> -<LI>See also the<A HREF="#equinux"> Equinux VPN Tracker</A> for Mac OS - X.</LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="http://ipsec.math.ucla.edu/services/ipsec.html"> James - Carter's instructions (X.509, NAT-T)</A></P> -<P><A HREF="#apple.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="ashleylaurent">AshleyLaurent VPCom</A></H4> -<P><A HREF="http://www.ashleylaurent.com/newsletter/01-28-00.htm"> - Successful interop report, no details</A></P> -<P><A HREF="#ashleylaurent.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="borderware">Borderware</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI>I suspect the Borderware client is a rebranded Safenet. If that's - true, our<A HREF="#safenet"> Safenet section</A> will help.</LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-March/008288.html"> - Philip Reetz' configs (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2001/09/msg00217.html"> - Borderware server does not support FreeS/WAN road warriors</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-February/007733.html"> - Older Borderware may not support Diffie Hellman groups 2, 5</A> -<BR></P> -<P><A HREF="#borderware.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="checkpoint">Check Point VPN-1 or FW-1</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2001/02/msg00099.html"> - Caveat about IP-range inclusion on Check Point.</A></LI> -<LI> Some versions of Check Point may require an aggressive mode patch - to interoperate with FreeS/WAN. -<BR><A HREF="http://www.freeswan.ca/code/super-freeswan"> Super - FreeS/WAN</A> now features this patch. -<!-- -<A HREF="http://www.freeswan.ca/patches/aggressivemode">Steve Harvey's -aggressive mode patch for FreeS/WAN 1.5</A> ---> -</LI> -<LI></LI> -<LI>A Linux FreeS/WAN-Checkpoint connection may close after some time. - Try<A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/archives/users/2003-October/msg00293.html"> - this tip</A> toward a workaround.</LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="http://www.fw-1.de/aerasec/ng/vpn-freeswan/CPNG+Linux-FreeSWAN.html"> - AERAsec's Firewall-1 NG site (PSK, X.509, Road Warrior with X.509, - other algorithms)</A> -<BR> <A HREF="http://www.fw-1.de/aerasec/ng/vpn-freeswan/CPNG+Linux-FreeSWAN.html#support-matrix"> - AERAsec's detailed Check Point-FreeS/WAN support matrix</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://support.checkpoint.com/kb/docs/public/firewall1/4_1/pdf/fw-linuxvpn.pdf"> - Checkpoint.com PDF: Linux as a VPN Client to FW-1 (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.phoneboy.com"> PhoneBoy's Check Point FAQ (on - Check Point only, not FreeS/WAN)</A> -<BR></P> -<P><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2001-August/002351.html"> - Chris Harwell's tips FreeS/WAN configs (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-April/009362.html"> - Daniel Tombeil's configs (PSK)</A></P> -<P><A HREF="#checkpoint.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="cisco">Cisco</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI> Cisco supports IPsec-over-UDP NAT traversal.</LI> -<LI>Cisco VPN Client appears to use nonstandard IPsec and does not work - with FreeS/WAN.<A HREF="https://mj2.freeswan.org/archives/2003-August/maillist.html"> - This message</A> concerns Cisco VPN Client 4.01. -<!-- fix link --> -</LI> -<LI>A Linux FreeS/WAN-Cisco connection may close after some time.<A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2001-December/005758.html"> - Here</A> is a workaround, and<A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/archives/users/2003-October/msg00293.html"> - here</A> is another comment on the same subject.</LI> -<LI><A HREF="http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios120/120newft/120t/120t2/3desips.htm"> -Older Ciscos</A> purchased outside the United States may not have 3DES, - which FreeS/WAN requires.</LI> -<LI><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2001-June/000406.html"> -RSA keying may not be possible between Cisco and FreeS/WAN.</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2001-October/004357.html"> -In ipsec.conf, VPN3000 DN (distinguished name) must be in binary (X.509 - only)</A></LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="http://rr.sans.org/encryption/cisco_router.php"> SANS - Institute HOWTO (PSK).</A> Detailed, with extensive references. -<BR><A HREF="http://www.worldbank.ro/IPSEC/cisco-linux.txt"> Short HOWTO - (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.hsc.fr/ressources/ipsec/ipsec2001/#config"> - French page with configs for Cisco IOS, PIX and VPN 3000 (X.509)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2001-August/002966.html"> - Dave McFerren's sample configs (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2001-September/003422.html"> - Wolfgang Tremmel's sample configs (PSK road warrior)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/11/msg00578.html"> - Old doc from Pete Davis, with William Watson's updated Tips (PSK)</A> -<BR></P> -<P><STRONG>Some PIX specific information:</STRONG> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.wlug.org.nz/FreeSwanToCiscoPix"> Waikato Linux - Users' Group HOWTO. Nice detail (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.johnleach.co.uk/documents/freeswan-pix/freeswan-pix.html"> - John Leach's configs (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.diverdown.cc/vpn/freeswanpix.html"> Greg - Robinson's settings (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-February/007901.html"> - Scott's ipsec.conf for PIX (PSK, FreeS/WAN side only)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2001-October/003949.html"> - Rick Trimble's PIX and FreeS/WAN settings (PSK)</A> -<BR></P> -<P><A href="http://www.cisco.com/public/support/tac"> Cisco VPN support - page</A> -<BR><A href="http://www.ieng.com/warp/public/707/index.shtml#ipsec"> - Cisco IPsec information page</A></P> -<P><A HREF="#cisco.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="equinux">Equinux VPN tracker (for Mac OS X)</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI>Graphical configurator for Mac OS X IPsec. May be an interface to - the<A HREF="#apple"> native Mac OS X IPsec</A>, which is essentially<A HREF="#kame"> - KAME</A>.</LI> -<LI>To use Appletalk over IPsec tunnels,<A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2001-November/005116.html"> - run it over TCP/IP</A>, or use Open Door Networks' Shareway IP tool,<A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2001-November/005426.html"> - described here.</A></LI> -</UL> -<P> Equinux provides<A HREF="http://www.equinux.com/download/HowTo_FreeSWAN.pdf"> - this excellent interop PDF</A> (PSK, RSA, X.509).</P> -<P><A HREF="#equinux.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="fsecure">F-Secure</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI> -<!-- <A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-February/007596.html"> --> - F-Secure supports IPsec-over-UDP NAT traversal.</LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="http://www.pingworks.de/tech/vpn/vpn.txt">pingworks.de's - "Connecting F-Secure's VPN+ to Linux FreeS/WAN" (PSK road warrior)</A> -<BR> <A HREF="http://www.pingworks.de/tech/vpn/vpn.pdf">Same thing - as PDF</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.exim.org/pipermail/linux-ipsec/Week-of-Mon-20010122/000061.html"> - Success report, no detail (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.exim.org/pipermail/linux-ipsec/Week-of-Mon-20010122/000041.html"> - Success report, no detail (Manual)</A></P> - -<!-- Other NAT traversers: -http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-April/009136.html -and ssh sentinel: -http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2001-September/003108.html ---> -<P><A HREF="#fsecure.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="gauntlet">Gauntlet GVPN</A></H4> -<P><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/11/msg00535.html"> - Richard Reiner's ipsec.conf (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-June/011434.html"> - Might work without that pesky firewall... (PSK)</A> -<BR> -<!-- insert archive link --> - In late July, 2003 Alexandar Antik reported success interoperating - with Gauntlet 6.0 for Solaris (X.509). Unfortunately the message is not - properly archived at this time.</P> -<P><A HREF="#gauntlet.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="aix">IBM AIX</A></H4> -<P><A HREF="http://www-1.ibm.com/servers/esdd/articles/security.html"> - IBM's "Built-In Network Security with AIX" (PSK, X.509)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www-1.ibm.com/servers/aix/products/ibmsw/security/vpn/faqandtips/#ques20"> - IBM's tip: importing Linux FreeS/WAN settings into AIX's<VAR> ikedb</VAR> - (PSK)</A></P> -<P><A HREF="#aix.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="as400">IBM AS/400</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-April/009106.html"> - Road Warriors may act flaky</A>.</LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-September/014264.html"> - Richard Welty's tips and tricks</A> -<BR></P> -<P><A HREF="#as400.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="intel">Intel Shiva LANRover / Net Structure</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI>Intel Shiva LANRover is now known as Intel Net Structure.</LI> -<LI><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2001/01/msg00298.html"> - Shiva seems to have two modes: IPsec or the proprietary "Shiva Tunnel".</A> - Of course, FreeS/WAN will only create IPsec tunnels.</LI> -<LI><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2001/02/msg00293.html"> - AH may not work for Shiva-FreeS/WAN.</A> That's OK, since FreeS/WAN has - phased out the use of AH.</LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="http://snowcrash.tdyc.com/freeswan/"> Snowcrash's configs - (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.opus1.com/vpn/index.html"> Old configs from an - interop (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2001-October/003831.html"> - The day Shiva tickled a Pluto bug (PSK)</A> -<BR> <A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2001-October/004270.html"> - Follow up: success!</A></P> -<P><A HREF="#intel.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="lancom">LanCom (formerly ELSA)</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI>This router is popular in Germany.</LI> -</UL> -<P> Jakob Curdes successfully created a PSK connection with the LanCom - 1612 in August 2003. -<!-- add ML link when it appears --> -</P> -<P><A HREF="#lancom.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="linksys">Linksys</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI>Linksys may be used as an IPsec tunnel endpoint,<STRONG> OR</STRONG> - as a router in "IPsec passthrough" mode, so that the IPsec tunnel - passes through the Linksys.</LI> -</UL> -<H5>As tunnel endpoint</H5> -<P><A HREF="http://www.freeswan.ca/docs/BEFVP41/"> Ken Bantoft's - instructions (Road Warrior with PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-February/007814.html"> - Nate Carlson's caveats</A></P> -<H5>In IPsec passthrough mode</H5> -<P><A HREF="http://www-ec.njit.edu/~rxt1077/Howto.txt"> Sample HOWTO - through a Linksys Router</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2002/02/msg00114.html"> - Nadeem Hasan's configs</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2002/02/msg00180.html"> - Brock Nanson's tips</A> -<BR></P> -<P><A HREF="#linksys.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="lucent">Lucent</A></H4> -<P><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-May/010976.html"> - Partial success report; see also the next message in thread</A></P> - -<!-- section done --> -<P><A HREF="#lucent.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="netasq">Netasq</A></H4> -<P><A HREF="http://www.hsc.fr/ressources/ipsec/ipsec2001/#config"> - French page with configs (X.509)</A></P> - -<!-- section done --> -<P><A HREF="#netasq.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="netcelo">Netcelo</A></H4> -<P><A HREF="http://www.hsc.fr/ressources/ipsec/ipsec2001/#config"> - French page with configs (X.509)</A> -<!-- section done --> -</P> -<P><A HREF="#netcelo.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="netgear">Netgear fvs318</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI>With a recent Linux FreeS/WAN, you will require the latest (12/2002) - Netgear firmware, which supports Diffie-Hellman (DH) group 2. For - security reasons, we phased out DH 1 after Linux FreeS/WAN 1.5.</LI> -<LI><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-June/011833.html"> - This message</A> reports the incompatibility between Linux FreeS/WAN - 1.6+ and Netgear fvs318 without the firmware upgrade.</LI> -<LI>We believe Linux FreeS/WAN 1.5 and earlier will interoperate with - any NetGear firmware.</LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2003-February/017891.html"> - John Morris' setup (PSK)</A></P> -<P><A HREF="#netgear.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="netscreen">Netscreen 100 or 5xp</A></H4> -<P><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-August/013409.html"> - Errol Neal's settings (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-October/015265.html"> - Corey Rogers' configs (PSK, no PFS)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-August/013051.html"> - Jordan Share's configs (PSK, 2 subnets, through static NAT)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/08/msg00404.html"> - Set src proxy_id to your protected subnet/mask</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.hsc.fr/ressources/ipsec/ipsec2001/#config"> - French page with ipsec.conf, Netscreen screen shots (X.509, may need to - revert to PSK...)</A></P> -<P><A HREF="http://archives.neohapsis.com/archives/sf/linux/2001-q2/0123.html"> - A report of a company using Netscreen with FreeS/WAN on a large scale - (FreeS/WAN road warriors?)</A></P> -<P><A HREF="#netscreen.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="nortel">Nortel Contivity</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI> Nortel supports IPsec-over-UDP NAT traversal.</LI> -<LI><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2001/02/msg00417.html"> - Some older versions of Contivity and FreeS/WAN will not communicate.</A> -</LI> -<LI><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-May/010924.html"> - FreeS/WAN cannot be used as a "client" to a Nortel Contivity server, - but can be used as a branch-office tunnel.</A></LI> - -<!-- Probably obsoleted by Ken's post -<LI> -(Matthias siebler from old interop) -At one point you could not configure Nortel-FreeS/WAN tunnels as -"Client Tunnels" since FreeS/WAN does not support Aggressive Mode. -Current status of this problem: unknown. -<LI> -<A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2001-November/004612.html"> -How do we map group and user passwords onto the data that FreeS/WAN wants? -</A> -</LI> ---> -<LI><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-October/015455.html"> - Contivity does not send Distinguished Names in the order FS wants them - (X.509).</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2001/03/msg00137.html"> - Connections may time out after 30-40 minutes idle.</A></LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2001/03/msg00137.html"> - JJ Streicher-Bremer's mini HOWTO for old new software. (PSK with two - subnets)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.hsc.fr/ressources/ipsec/ipsec2001/#config"> - French page with configs (X.509)</A>. This succeeds using the above - X.509 tip.</P> - -<!-- I could do more searching but this is a solid start. --> -<P><A HREF="#nortel.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="radguard">Radguard</A></H4> -<P><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/05/msg00009.html"> - Marko Hausalo's configs (PSK).</A> Note: These do create a connection, - as you can see by "IPsec SA established". -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-October/???.html"> - Claudia Schmeing's comments</A></P> -<P><A HREF="#radguard.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="raptor">Raptor (NT or Solaris)</A></H4> -<P></P> -<UL> -<LI>Now known as Symantec Enterprise Firewall.</LI> -<LI>The Raptor does not normally come with X.509, but this may be - available as an add-on.</LI> -<LI><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-May/010256.html"> - Raptor requires alphanumberic PSK values, whereas FreeS/WAN uses hex.</A> -</LI> -<LI>Raptor's tunnel endpoint may be a host, subnet or group of subnets - (see<A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/design/2001-November/001295.html"> - this message</A> ). FreeS/WAN cannot handle the group of subnets; you - must create separate connections for each in order to interoperate.</LI> -<LI><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-May/010113.html"> - Some versions of Raptor accept only single DES.</A> According to this - German message,<A HREF="http://radawana.cg.tuwien.ac.at/mail-archives/lll/200012/msg00065.html"> - the Raptor Mobile Client demo offers single DES only.</A></LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-January/006935.html"> - Peter Mazinger's settings (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2001-November/005522.html"> - Peter Gerland's configs (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/07/msg00597.html"> - Charles Griebel's configs (PSK).</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-July/012275.html"> - Lumir Srch's tips (PSK)</A></P> -<P><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/05/msg00214.html"> - John Hardy's configs (Manual)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/01/msg00236.html"> - Older Raptors want 3DES keys in 3 parts (Manual).</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/06/msg00480.html"> - Different keys for each direction? (Manual)</A> -<BR></P> -<P><A HREF="#raptor.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="redcreek">Redcreek Ravlin</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI>Known issue #1: The Ravlin expects a quick mode renegotiation right - after every Main Mode negotiation.</LI> -<LI> Known issue #2: The Ravlin tries to negotiate a zero connection - lifetime, which it takes to mean "infinite".<A HREF="http://www.bear-cave.org.uk/linux/ravlin/"> - Jim Hague's patch</A> addresses both issues.</LI> -<LI><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/03/msg00191.html"> - Interop works with Ravlin Firmware > 3.33. Includes tips (PSK).</A></LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="#redcreek.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="sonicwall">SonicWall</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2001-June/000998.html"> - Sonicwall cannot be used for Road Warrior setups</A></LI> -<LI> At one point,<A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/05/msg00217.html"> - only Sonicwall PRO supported triple DES</A>.</LI> -<LI><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-March/008600.html"> - Older Sonicwalls (before Nov 2001) feature Diffie Hellman group 1 only</A> -.</LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="http://www.xinit.cx/docs/freeswan.html"> Paul Wouters' - config (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2001/02/msg00073.html"> - Dilan Arumainathan's configuration (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.gravitas.co.uk/vpndebug"> Dariush's setup... - only opens one way (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2003-July/022302.html"> - Andreas Steffen's tips (X.509)</A> -<BR></P> -<P><A HREF="#sonicwall.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="sun">Sun Solaris</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI> Solaris 8+ has a native (in kernel) IPsec implementation.</LI> -<LI><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-May/010503.html"> - Solaris does not seem to support tunnel mode, but you can make IP-in-IP - tunnels instead, like this.</A></LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2003-June/022216.html"> - Reports of some successful interops</A> from a fellow @sun.com. See - also<A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2003-July/022247.html"> - these follow up posts</A>. -<BR><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2001/03/msg00332.html"> - Aleks Shenkman's configs (Manual in transport mode)</A> -<BR> -<!--sparc 64 stuff goes where?--> -</P> -<P><A HREF="#solaris.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="symantec">Symantec</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI>The Raptor, covered<A HREF="#raptor"> above</A>, is now known as - Symantec Enterprise Firewall.</LI> -<LI>Symantec's "distinguished name" is a KEY_ID. See Andreas Steffen's - post, below.</LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-April/009037.html"> - Andreas Steffen's configs for Symantec 200R (PSK)</A></P> -<P><A HREF="#symantec.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="watchguard">Watchguard Firebox</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI>Automatic keying works with WatchGuard 5.0+ only.</LI> -<LI>Seen to interoperate with WatchGuard 1000, II, III; firmware v. 5, - 6..</LI> -<LI>For manual keying, Watchguard's Policy Manager expects SPI numbers - and encryption and authentication keys in decimal (not hex).</LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-July/012595.html"> - WatchGuard's HOWTO (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-August/013342.html"> - Ronald C. Riviera's Settings (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/archives/users/2003-October/msg00179.html"> - Walter Wickersham's Notes (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-October/015587.html"> - Max Enders' Configs (Manual)</A></P> -<P><A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-April/009404.html"> - Old known issue with auto keying</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2001/02/msg00124.html"> - Tips on key generation and format (Manual)</A> -<BR></P> -<P><A HREF="#watchguard.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="xedia">Xedia Access Point/QVPN</A></H4> -<P><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2001/12/msg00520.html"> - Hybrid IPsec/L2TP connection settings (X.509)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/ipsec/1999/08/msg00140.html"> - Xedia's LAN-LAN links don't use multiple tunnels</A> -<BR> <A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/ipsec/1999/08/msg00140.html"> - That explanation, continued</A></P> -<P><A HREF="#xedia.top">Back to chart</A></P> -<H4><A NAME="zyxel">Zyxel</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI>The Zyxel Zywall is a rebranded SSH Sentinel box. See also our - section on<A HREF="#ssh"> SSH</A>.</LI> -<LI>There seems to be a problem with keeping this connection alive. This - is caused at the Zyxel end. See this brief<A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/archives/users/2003-October/msg00141.html"> - discussion and solution.</A></LI> -</UL> -<P><A HREF="http://www.zyxel.com/support/supportnote/zywall/app/zw_freeswan.htm"> - Zyxel's Zywall to FreeS/WAN instructions (PSK)</A> -<BR><A HREF="http://www.zyxel.com/support/supportnote/p652/app/zw_freeswan.htm"> - Zyxel's Prestige to FreeS/WAN instructions (PSK)</A>. Note: not all - Prestige versions include VPN software. -<BR><A HREF="http://www.lancry.net/techdocs/freeswan-zyxel.txt"> Fabrice - Cahen's HOWTO (PSK)</A> -<BR> </P> -<P><A HREF="#zyxel.top">Back to chart</A></P> - -<!-- SAMPLE ENTRY - -<H4><A NAME="timestep">Timestep</A></H4> - -<P>Text goes here. -</P> - ---> -<HR> -<H1><A name="performance">Performance of FreeS/WAN</A></H1> - The performance of FreeS/WAN is adequate for most applications. -<P>In normal operation, the main concern is the overhead for encryption, - decryption and authentication of the actual IPsec (<A href="#ESP">ESP</A> - and/or<A href="#AH"> AH</A>) data packets. Tunnel setup and rekeying - occur so much less frequently than packet processing that, in general, - their overheads are not worth worrying about.</P> -<P>At startup, however, tunnel setup overheads may be significant. If - you reboot a gateway and it needs to establish many tunnels, expect - some delay. This and other issues for large gateways are discussed<A href="#biggate"> - below</A>.</P> -<H2><A name="pub.bench">Published material</A></H2> -<P>The University of Wales at Aberystwyth has done quite detailed speed - tests and put<A href="http://tsc.llwybr.org.uk/public/reports/SWANTIME/"> - their results</A> on the web.</P> -<P>Davide Cerri's<A href="http://www.linux.it/~davide/doc/"> thesis (in - Italian)</A> includes performance results for FreeS/WAN and for<A href="#TLS"> - TLS</A>. He posted an<A href="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2001-December/006303.html"> - English summary</A> on the mailing list.</P> -<P>Steve Bellovin used one of AT&T Research's FreeS/WAN gateways as his - data source for an analysis of the cache sizes required for key - swapping in IPsec. Available as<A href="http://www.research.att.com/~smb/talks/key-agility.email.txt"> - text</A> or<A href="http://www.research.att.com/~smb/talks/key-agility.pdf"> - PDF slides</A> for a talk on the topic.</P> -<P>See also the NAI work mentioned in the next section.</P> -<H2><A name="perf.estimate">Estimating CPU overheads</A></H2> -<P>We can come up with a formula that roughly relates CPU speed to the - rate of IPsec processing possible. It is far from exact, but should be - usable as a first approximation.</P> -<P>An analysis of authentication overheads for high-speed networks, - including some tests using FreeS/WAN, is on the<A href="http://www.pgp.com/research/nailabs/cryptographic/adaptive-cryptographic.asp"> - NAI Labs site</A>. In particular, see figure 3 in this<A href="http://download.nai.com/products/media/pgp/pdf/acsa_final_report.pdf"> - PDF document</A>. Their estimates of overheads, measured in Pentium II - cycles per byte processed are:</P> -<TABLE align="center" border="1"><TBODY></TBODY> -<TR><TH></TH><TH>IPsec</TH><TH>authentication</TH><TH>encryption</TH><TH> -cycles/byte</TH></TR> -<TR><TD>Linux IP stack alone</TD><TD>no</TD><TD>no</TD><TD>no</TD><TD align="right"> -5</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>IPsec without crypto</TD><TD>yes</TD><TD>no</TD><TD>no</TD><TD align="right"> -11</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>IPsec, authentication only</TD><TD>yes</TD><TD>SHA-1</TD><TD>no</TD><TD -align="right">24</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>IPsec with encryption</TD><TD>yes</TD><TD>yes</TD><TD>yes</TD><TD -align="right">not tested</TD></TR> -</TABLE> -<P>Overheads for IPsec with encryption were not tested in the NAI work, - but Antoon Bosselaers'<A href="http://www.esat.kuleuven.ac.be/~bosselae/fast.html"> - web page</A> gives cost for his optimised Triple DES implementation as - 928 Pentium cycles per block, or 116 per byte. Adding that to the 24 - above, we get 140 cycles per byte for IPsec with encryption.</P> -<P>At 140 cycles per byte, a 140 MHz machine can handle a megabyte -- 8 - megabits -- per second. Speeds for other machines will be proportional - to this. To saturate a link with capacity C megabits per second, you - need a machine running at<VAR> C * 140/8 = C * 17.5</VAR> MHz.</P> -<P>However, that estimate is not precise. It ignores the differences - between:</P> -<UL> -<LI>NAI's test packets and real traffic</LI> -<LI>NAI's Pentium II cycles, Bosselaers' Pentium cycles, and your - machine's cycles</LI> -<LI>different 3DES implementations</LI> -<LI>SHA-1 and MD5</LI> -</UL> -<P>and does not account for some overheads you will almost certainly - have:</P> -<UL> -<LI>communication on the client-side interface</LI> -<LI>switching between multiple tunnels -- re-keying, cache reloading and - so on</LI> -</UL> -<P>so we suggest using<VAR> C * 25</VAR> to get an estimate with a bit - of a built-in safety factor.</P> -<P>This covers only IP and IPsec processing. If you have other loads on - your gateway -- for example if it is also working as a firewall -- then - you will need to add your own safety factor atop that.</P> -<P>This estimate matches empirical data reasonably well. For example, - Metheringham's tests, described<A href="#klips.bench"> below</A>, show - a 733 topping out between 32 and 36 Mbit/second, pushing data as fast - as it can down a 100 Mbit link. Our formula suggests you need at least - an 800 to handle a fully loaded 32 Mbit link. The two results are - consistent.</P> -<P>Some examples using this estimation method:</P> -<TABLE align="center" border="1"><TBODY></TBODY> -<TR><TH colspan="2">Interface</TH><TH colspan="3">Machine speed in MHz</TH> -</TR> -<TR><TH>Type</TH><TH>Mbit per -<BR> second</TH><TH>Estimate -<BR> Mbit*25</TH><TH>Minimum IPSEC gateway</TH><TH>Minimum with other - load -<P>(e.g. firewall)</P> -</TH></TR> -<TR><TD>DSL</TD><TD align="right">1</TD><TD align="right">25 MHz</TD><TD rowspan="2"> -whatever you have</TD><TD rowspan="2">133, or better if you have it</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>cable modem</TD><TD align="right">3</TD><TD align="right">75 MHz</TD> -</TR> -<TR><TD><STRONG>any link, light load</STRONG></TD><TD align="right"><STRONG> -5</STRONG></TD><TD align="right">125 MHz</TD><TD>133</TD><TD>200+,<STRONG> - almost any surplus machine</STRONG></TD></TR> -<TR><TD>Ethernet</TD><TD align="right">10</TD><TD align="right">250 MHz</TD><TD> -surplus 266 or 300</TD><TD>500+</TD></TR> -<TR><TD><STRONG>fast link, moderate load</STRONG></TD><TD align="right"><STRONG> -20</STRONG></TD><TD align="right">500 MHz</TD><TD>500</TD><TD>800+,<STRONG> - any current off-the-shelf PC</STRONG></TD></TR> -<TR><TD>T3 or E3</TD><TD align="right">45</TD><TD align="right">1125 MHz</TD><TD> -1200</TD><TD>1500+</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>fast Ethernet</TD><TD align="right">100</TD><TD align="right"> -2500 MHz</TD><TD align="center" colspan="2" rowspan="2">// not feasible - with 3DES in software on current machines //</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>OC3</TD><TD align="right">155</TD><TD align="right">3875 MHz</TD> -</TR> -</TABLE> -<P>Such an estimate is far from exact, but should be usable as minimum - requirement for planning. The key observations are:</P> -<UL> -<LI>older<STRONG> surplus machines</STRONG> are fine for IPsec gateways - at loads up to<STRONG> 5 megabits per second</STRONG> or so</LI> -<LI>a<STRONG> mid-range new machine</STRONG> can handle IPsec at rates - up to<STRONG> 20 megabits per second</STRONG> or more</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="perf.more">Higher performance alternatives</A></H3> -<P><A href="#AES">AES</A> is a new US government block cipher standard, - designed to replace the obsolete<A href="#DES"> DES</A>. If FreeS/WAN - using<A href="#3DES"> 3DES</A> is not fast enough for your application, - the AES<A href="#patch"> patch</A> may help.</P> -<P>To date (March 2002) we have had only one<A href="http://lists.freeswan.org/pipermail/users/2002-February/007771.html"> - mailing list report</A> of measurements with the patch applied. It - indicates that, at least for the tested load on that user's network,<STRONG> - AES roughly doubles IPsec throughput</STRONG>. If further testing - confirms this, it may prove possible to saturate an OC3 link in - software on a high-end box.</P> -<P>Also, some work is being done toward support of<A href="#hardware"> - hardware IPsec acceleration</A> which might extend the range of - requirements FreeS/WAN could meet.</P> -<H3><A NAME="11_2_2">Other considerations</A></H3> -<P>CPU speed may be the main issue for IPsec performance, but of course - it isn't the only one.</P> -<P>You need good ethernet cards or other network interface hardware to - get the best performance. See this<A href="http://www.ethermanage.com/ethernet/ethernet.html"> - ethernet information</A> page and this<A href="http://www.scyld.com/diag"> - Linux network driver</A> page.</P> -<P>The current FreeS/WAN kernel code is largely single-threaded. It is - SMP safe, and will run just fine on a multiprocessor machine (<A href="#multiprocessor"> -discussion</A>), but the load within the kernel is not shared - effectively. This means that, for example to saturate a T3 -- which - needs about a 1200 MHz machine -- you cannot expect something like a - dual 800 to do the job.</P> -<P>On the other hand, SMP machines do tend to share loads well so -- - provided one CPU is fast enough for the IPsec work -- a multiprocessor - machine may be ideal for a gateway with a mixed load.</P> -<H2><A name="biggate">Many tunnels from a single gateway</A></H2> -<P>FreeS/WAN allows a single gateway machine to build tunnels to many - others. There may, however, be some problems for large numbers as - indicated in this message from the mailing list:</P> -<PRE>Subject: Re: Maximum number of ipsec tunnels? - Date: Tue, 18 Apr 2000 - From: "John S. Denker" <jsd@research.att.com> - -Christopher Ferris wrote: - ->> What are the maximum number ipsec tunnels FreeS/WAN can handle?? - -Henry Spencer wrote: - ->There is no particular limit. Some of the setup procedures currently ->scale poorly to large numbers of connections, but there are (clumsy) ->workarounds for that now, and proper fixes are coming. - -1) "Large" numbers means anything over 50 or so. I routinely run boxes -with about 200 tunnels. Once you get more than 50 or so, you need to worry -about several scalability issues: - -a) You need to put a "-" sign in syslogd.conf, and rotate the logs daily -not weekly. - -b) Processor load per tunnel is small unless the tunnel is not up, in which -case a new half-key gets generated every 90 seconds, which can add up if -you've got a lot of down tunnels. - -c) There's other bits of lore you need when running a large number of -tunnels. For instance, systematically keeping the .conf file free of -conflicts requires tools that aren't shipped with the standard freeswan -package. - -d) The pluto startup behavior is quadratic. With 200 tunnels, this eats up -several minutes at every restart. I'm told fixes are coming soon. - -2) Other than item (1b), the CPU load depends mainly on the size of the -pipe attached, not on the number of tunnels. -</PRE> -<P>It is worth noting that item (1b) applies only to repeated attempts - to re-key a data connection (IPsec SA, Phase 2) over an established - keying connection (ISAKMP SA, Phase 1). There are two ways to reduce - this overhead using settings in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> - ipsec.conf(5)</A>:</P> -<UL> -<LI>set<VAR> keyingtries</VAR> to some small value to limit repetitions</LI> -<LI>set<VAR> keylife</VAR> to a short time so that a failing data - connection will be cleaned up when the keying connection is reset.</LI> -</UL> -<P>The overheads for establishing keying connections (ISAKMP SAs, Phase - 1) are lower because for these Pluto does not perform expensive - operations before receiving a reply from the peer.</P> -<P>A gateway that does a lot of rekeying -- many tunnels and/or low - settings for tunnel lifetimes -- will also need a lot of<A href="#random"> - random numbers</A> from the random(4) driver.</P> -<H2><A name="low-end">Low-end systems</A></H2> -<P><EM>Even a 486 can handle a T1 line</EM>, according to this mailing - list message:</P> -<PRE>Subject: Re: linux-ipsec: IPSec Masquerade - Date: Fri, 15 Jan 1999 11:13:22 -0500 - From: Michael Richardson - -. . . A 486/66 has been clocked by Phil Karn to do -10Mb/s encryption.. that uses all the CPU, so half that to get some CPU, -and you have 5Mb/s. 1/3 that for 3DES and you get 1.6Mb/s....</PRE> -<P>and a piece of mail from project technical lead Henry Spencer:</P> -<PRE>Oh yes, and a new timing point for Sandy's docs... A P60 -- yes, a 60MHz -Pentium, talk about antiques -- running a host-to-host tunnel to another -machine shows an FTP throughput (that is, end-to-end results with a real -protocol) of slightly over 5Mbit/s either way. (The other machine is much -faster, the network is 100Mbps, and the ether cards are good ones... so -the P60 is pretty definitely the bottleneck.)</PRE> -<P>From the above, and from general user experience as reported on the - list, it seems clear that a cheap surplus machine -- a reasonable 486, - a minimal Pentium box, a Sparc 5, ... -- can easily handle a home - office or a small company connection using any of:</P> -<UL> -<LI>ADSL service</LI> -<LI>cable modem</LI> -<LI>T1</LI> -<LI>E1</LI> -</UL> -<P>If available, we suggest using a Pentium 133 or better. This should - ensure that, even under maximum load, IPsec will use less than half the - CPU cycles. You then have enough left for other things you may want on - your gateway -- firewalling, web caching, DNS and such.</P> -<H2><A name="klips.bench">Measuring KLIPS</A></H2> -<P>Here is some additional data from the mailing list.</P> -<PRE>Subject: FreeSWAN (specically KLIPS) performance measurements - Date: Thu, 01 Feb 2001 - From: Nigel Metheringham <Nigel.Metheringham@intechnology.co.uk> - -I've spent a happy morning attempting performance tests against KLIPS -(this is due to me not being able to work out the CPU usage of KLIPS so -resorting to the crude measurements of maximum throughput to give a -baseline to work out loading of a box). - -Measurements were done using a set of 4 boxes arranged in a line, each -connected to the next by 100Mbit duplex ethernet. The inner 2 had an -ipsec tunnel between them (shared secret, but I was doing measurements -when the tunnel was up and running - keying should not be an issue -here). The outer pair of boxes were traffic generators or traffic sink. - -The crypt boxes are Compaq DL380s - Uniprocessor PIII/733 with 256K -cache. They have 128M main memory. Nothing significant was running on -the boxes other than freeswan. The kernel was a 2.2.19pre7 patched -with freeswan and ext3. - -Without an ipsec tunnel in the chain (ie the 2 inner boxes just being -100BaseT routers), throughput (measured with ttcp) was between 10644 -and 11320 KB/sec - -With an ipsec tunnel in place, throughput was between 3268 and 3402 -KB/sec - -These measurements are for data pushed across a TCP link, so the -traffic on the wire between the 2 ipsec boxes would have been higher -than this.... - -vmstat (run during some other tests, so not affecting those figures) on -the encrypting box shows approx 50% system & 50% idle CPU - which I -don't believe at all. Interactive feel of the box was significantly -sluggish. - -I also tried running the kernel profiler (see man readprofile) during -test runs. - -A box doing primarily decrypt work showed basically nothing happening - -I assume interrupts were off. -A box doing encrypt work showed the following:- - Ticks Function Load - ~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~ - 956 total 0.0010 - 532 des_encrypt2 0.1330 - 110 MD5Transform 0.0443 - 97 kmalloc 0.1880 - 39 des_encrypt3 0.1336 - 23 speedo_interrupt 0.0298 - 14 skb_copy_expand 0.0250 - 13 ipsec_tunnel_start_xmit 0.0009 - 13 Decode 0.1625 - 11 handle_IRQ_event 0.1019 - 11 .des_ncbc_encrypt_end 0.0229 - 10 speedo_start_xmit 0.0188 - 9 satoa 0.0225 - 8 kfree 0.0118 - 8 ip_fragment 0.0121 - 7 ultoa 0.0365 - 5 speedo_rx 0.0071 - 5 .des_encrypt2_end 5.0000 - 4 _stext 0.0140 - 4 ip_fw_check 0.0035 - 2 rj_match 0.0034 - 2 ipfw_output_check 0.0200 - 2 inet_addr_type 0.0156 - 2 eth_copy_and_sum 0.0139 - 2 dev_get 0.0294 - 2 addrtoa 0.0143 - 1 speedo_tx_buffer_gc 0.0024 - 1 speedo_refill_rx_buf 0.0022 - 1 restore_all 0.0667 - 1 number 0.0020 - 1 net_bh 0.0021 - 1 neigh_connected_output 0.0076 - 1 MD5Final 0.0083 - 1 kmem_cache_free 0.0016 - 1 kmem_cache_alloc 0.0022 - 1 __kfree_skb 0.0060 - 1 ipsec_rcv 0.0001 - 1 ip_rcv 0.0014 - 1 ip_options_fragment 0.0071 - 1 ip_local_deliver 0.0023 - 1 ipfw_forward_check 0.0139 - 1 ip_forward 0.0011 - 1 eth_header 0.0040 - 1 .des_encrypt3_end 0.0833 - 1 des_decrypt3 0.0034 - 1 csum_partial_copy_generic 0.0045 - 1 call_out_firewall 0.0125 - -Hope this data is helpful to someone... however the lack of visibility -into the decrypt side makes things less clear</PRE> -<H2><A name="speed.compress">Speed with compression</A></H2> -<P>Another user reported some results for connections with and without - IP compression:</P> -<PRE>Subject: [Users] Speed with compression - Date: Fri, 29 Jun 2001 - From: John McMonagle <johnm@advocap.org> - -Did a couple tests with compression using the new 1.91 freeswan. - -Running between 2 sites with cable modems. Both using approximately -130 mhz pentium. - -Transferred files with ncftp. - -Compressed file was a 6mb compressed installation file. -Non compressed was 18mb /var/lib/rpm/packages.rpm - - Compressed vpn regular vpn -Compress file 42.59 kBs 42.08 kBs -regular file 110.84 kBs 41.66 kBs - -Load was about 0 either way. -Ping times were very similar a bit above 9 ms. - -Compression looks attractive to me.</PRE> - Later in the same thread, project technical lead Henry Spencer added: -<PRE>> is there a reason not to switch compression on? I have large gateway boxes -> connecting 3 connections, one of them with a measly DS1 link... - -Run some timing tests with and without, with data and loads representative -of what you expect in production. That's the definitive way to decide. -If compression is a net loss, then obviously, leave it turned off. If it -doesn't make much difference, leave it off for simplicity and hence -robustness. If there's a substantial gain, by all means turn it on. - -If both ends support compression and can successfully negotiate a -compressed connection (trivially true if both are FreeS/WAN 1.91), then -the crucial question is CPU cycles. - -Compression has some overhead, so one question is whether *your* data -compresses well enough to save you more CPU cycles (by reducing the volume -of data going through CPU-intensive encryption/decryption) than it costs -you. Last time I ran such tests on data that was reasonably compressible -but not deliberately contrived to be so, this generally was not true -- -compression cost extra CPU cycles -- so compression was worthwhile only if -the link, not the CPU, was the bottleneck. However, that was before the -slow-compression bug was fixed. I haven't had a chance to re-run those -tests yet, but it sounds like I'd probably see a different result. </PRE> - The bug he refers to was a problem with the compression libraries that - had us using C code, rather than assembler, for compression. It was - fixed before 1.91. -<H2><A name="methods">Methods of measuring</A></H2> -<P>If you want to measure the loads FreeS/WAN puts on a system, note - that tools such as top or measurements such as load average are - more-or-less useless for this. They are not designed to measure - something that does most of its work inside the kernel.</P> -<P>Here is a message from FreeS/WAN kernel programmer Richard Guy Briggs - on this:</P> -<PRE>> I have a batch of boxes doing Freeswan stuff. -> I want to measure the CPU loading of the Freeswan tunnels, but am -> having trouble seeing how I get some figures out... -> -> - Keying etc is in userspace so will show up on the per-process -> and load average etc (ie pluto's load) - -Correct. - -> - KLIPS is in the kernel space, and does not show up in load average -> I think also that the KLIPS per-packet processing stuff is running -> as part of an interrupt handler so it does not show up in the -> /proc/stat system_cpu or even idle_cpu figures - -It is not running in interrupt handler. It is in the bottom half. -This is somewhere between user context (careful, this is not -userspace!) and hardware interrupt context. - -> Is this correct, and is there any means of instrumenting how much the -> cpu is being loaded - I don't like the idea of a system running out of -> steam whilst still showing 100% idle CPU :-) - -vmstat seems to do a fairly good job, but use a running tally to get a -good idea. A one-off call to vmstat gives different numbers than a -running stat. To do this, put an interval on your vmstat command -line.</PRE> - and another suggestion from the same thread: -<PRE>Subject: Re: Measuring the CPU usage of Freeswan - Date: Mon, 29 Jan 2001 - From: Patrick Michael Kane <modus@pr.es.to> - -The only truly accurate way to accurately track FreeSWAN CPU usage is to use -a CPU soaker. You run it on an unloaded system as a benchmark, then start up -FreeSWAN and take the difference to determine how much FreeSWAN is eating. -I believe someone has done this in the past, so you may find something in -the FreeSWAN archives. If not, someone recently posted a URL to a CPU -soaker benchmark tool on linux-kernel.</PRE> -<HR> -<H1><A name="test.freeswan">Testing FreeS/WAN</A></H1> - This document discusses testing FreeS/WAN. -<P>Not all types of testing are described here. Other parts of the - documentation describe some tests:</P> -<DL> -<DT><A href="#testinstall">installation</A> document</DT> -<DD>testing for a successful install</DD> -<DT><A href="config.html#testsetup">configuration</A> document</DT> -<DD>basic tests for a working configuration</DD> -<DT><A href="#interop.web">web links</A> document</DT> -<DD>General information on tests for interoperability between various - IPsec implementations. This includes links to several test sites.</DD> -<DT><A href="interop.html">interoperation</A> document.</DT> -<DD>More specific information on FreeS/WAN interoperation with other - implementations.</DD> -<DT><A href="performance.html">performance</A> document</DT> -<DD>performance measurements</DD> -</DL> -<P>The test setups and procedures described here can also be used in - other testing, but this document focuses on testing the IPsec - functionality of FreeS/WAN.</P> -<H2><A NAME="test.oe">Testing opportunistic connections</A></H2> -<P>This section teaches you how to test your opportunistically encrypted - (OE) connections. To set up OE, please see the easy instructions in our<A -HREF="quickstart.html"> quickstart guide</A>.</P> -<H3><A NAME="12_1_1">Basic OE Test</A></H3> -<P>This test is for basic OE functionality. -<!-- You may use it on an -<A HREF="quickstart.html#oppo.client">initiate-only OE</A> box or a -<A HREF="quickstart.html#opp.incoming">full OE</A> box. --> - For additional tests, keep - reading.</P> -<P>Be sure IPsec is running. You can see whether it is with:</P> -<PRE> ipsec setup status</PRE> -<P>If need be, you can restart it with:</P> -<PRE> service ipsec restart</PRE> -<P>Load a FreeS/WAN test website from the host on which you're running - FreeS/WAN. Note: the feds may be watching these sites. Type one of:</P> -<P></P> -<PRE> links oetest.freeswan.org</PRE> -<PRE> links oetest.freeswan.nl</PRE> - -<!--<PRE> links oetest.freeswan.ca</PRE>--> -<P>A positive result looks like this:</P> -<PRE> - You seem to be connecting from: 192.0.2.11 which DNS says is: - gateway.example.com - _________________________________________________________________ - - Status E-route - OE enabled 16 192.139.46.73/32 -> 192.0.2.11/32 => - tun0x2097@192.0.2.11 - OE enabled 176 192.139.46.77/32 -> 192.0.2.11/32 => - tun0x208a@192.0.2.11 -</PRE> -<P>If you see this, congratulations! Your OE box will now encrypt its - own traffic whenever it can. If you have difficulty, see our<A HREF="#oe.trouble"> - OE troubleshooting tips</A>.</P> -<H3><A NAME="12_1_2">OE Gateway Test</A></H3> -<P>If you've set up FreeS/WAN to protect a subnet behind your gateway, - you'll need to run another simple test, which can be done from a - machine running any OS. That's right, your Windows box can be protected - by opportunistic encryption without any FreeS/WAN install or - configuration on that box. From<STRONG> each protected subnet node</STRONG> -, load the FreeS/WAN website with:</P> -<PRE> links oetest.freeswan.org</PRE> -<PRE> links oetest.freeswan.nl</PRE> -<P>A positive result looks like this:</P> -<PRE> - You seem to be connecting from: 192.0.2.98 which DNS says is: - box98.example.com - _________________________________________________________________ - - Status E-route - OE enabled 16 192.139.46.73/32 -> 192.0.2.98/32 => - tun0x134ed@192.0.2.11 - OE enabled 176 192.139.46.77/32 -> 192.0.2.11/32 => - tun0x134d2@192.0.2.11 -</PRE> -<P>If you see this, congratulations! Your OE gateway will now encrypt - traffic for this subnet node whenever it can. If you have difficulty, - see our<A HREF="#oe.trouble"> OE troubleshooting tips</A>.</P> -<H3><A NAME="12_1_3">Additional OE tests</A></H3> -<P>When testing OE, you will often find it useful to execute this - command on the FreeS/WAN host:</P> -<PRE> ipsec eroute</PRE> -<P>If you have established a connection (either for or for a subnet - node) you will see a result like:</P> -<PRE> 192.0.2.11/32 -> 192.139.46.73/32 => tun0x149f@192.139.46.38 -</PRE> -<P>Key:</P> -<TABLE> -<TR><TD>1.</TD><TD>192.0.2.11/32</TD><TD>Local start point of the - protected traffic.</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>2.</TD><TD>192.0.2.194/32</TD><TD>Remote end point of the - protected traffic.</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>3.</TD><TD>192.0.48.38</TD><TD>Remote FreeS/WAN node (gateway or - host). May be the same as (2).</TD></TR> -<TR><TD>4.</TD><TD>[not shown]</TD><TD>Local FreeS/WAN node (gateway or - host), where you've produced the output. May be the same as (1).</TD></TR> -</TABLE> -<P>For extra assurance, you may wish to use a packet sniffer such as<A HREF="http://www.tcpdump.org"> - tcpdump</A> to verify that packets are being encrypted. You should see - output that indicates<STRONG> ESP</STRONG> encrypted data, for example:</P> -<PRE> 02:17:47.353750 PPPoE [ses 0x1e12] IP 154: xy.example.com > oetest.freeswan.org: ESP(spi=0x87150d16,seq=0x55)</PRE> -<H2><A name="test.uml">Testing with User Mode Linux</A></H2> -<P><A href="http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/">User Mode Linux</A> - allows you to run Linux as a user process on another Linux machine.</P> -<P>As of 1.92, the distribution has a new directory named testing. It - contains a collection of test scripts and sample configurations. Using - these, you can bring up several copies of Linux in user mode and have - them build tunnels to each other. This lets you do some testing of a - FreeS/WAN configuration on a single machine.</P> -<P>You need a moderately well-endowed machine for this to work well. - Each UML wants about 16 megs of memory by default, which is plenty for - FreeS/WAN usage. Typical regression testing only occasionally uses as - many as 4 UMLs. If one is doing nothing else with the machine (in - particular, not running X on it), then 128 megs and a 500MHz CPU are - fine.</P> - Documentation on these scripts is<A href="umltesting.html"> here</A>. - There is also documentation on automated testing<A href="makecheck.html"> - here</A>. -<H2><A name="testnet">Configuration for a testbed network</A></H2> -<P>A common test setup is to put a machine with dual Ethernet cards in - between two gateways under test. You need at least five machines; two - gateways, two clients and a testing machine in the middle.</P> -<P>The central machine both routes packets and provides a place to run - diagnostic software for checking IPsec packets. See next section for - discussion of<A href="#tcpdump.faq"> using tcpdump(8)</A> for this.</P> -<P>This makes things more complicated than if you just connected the two - gateway machines directly to each other, but it also makes your test - setup much more like the environment you actually use IPsec in. Those - environments nearly always involve routing, and quite a few apparent - IPsec failures turn out to be problems with routing or with firewalls - dropping packets. This approach lets you deal with those problems on - your test setup.</P> -<P>What you end up with looks like:</P> -<H3><A name="testbed">Testbed network</A></H3> -<PRE> subnet a.b.c.0/24 - | - eth1 = a.b.c.1 - gate1 - eth0 = 192.168.p.1 - | - | - eth0 = 192.168.p.2 - route/monitor box - eth1 = 192.168.q.2 - | - | - eth0 = 192.168.q.1 - gate2 - eth1 = x.y.z.1 - | - subnet x.y.z.0/24</PRE> -<PRE>Where p and q are any convenient values that do not interfere with other -routes you may have. The ipsec.conf(5) file then has, among other things:</PRE> -<PRE>conn abc-xyz - left=192.168.p.1 - leftnexthop=192.168.p.2 - right=192.168.q.1 - rightnexthop=192.168.q.2</PRE> -<P>Once that works, you can remove the "route/monitor box", and connect - the two gateways to the Internet. The only parameters in ipsec.conf(5) - that need to change are the four shown above. You replace them with - values appropriate for your Internet connection, and change the eth0 IP - addresses and the default routes on both gateways.</P> -<P>Note that nothing on either subnet needs to change. This lets you - test most of your IPsec setup before connecting to the insecure - Internet.</P> -<H3><A name="tcpdump.test">Using packet sniffers in testing</A></H3> -<P>A number of tools are available for looking at packets. We will - discuss using<A href="http://www.tcpdump.org/"> tcpdump(8)</A>, a - common Linux tool included in most distributions. Alternatives - offerring more-or-less the same functionality include:</P> -<DL> -<DT><A href="http://www.ethereal.com">Ethereal</A></DT> -<DD>Several people on our mailing list report a preference for this over - tcpdump.</DD> -<DT><A href="http://netgroup-serv.polito.it/windump/">windump</A></DT> -<DD>a Windows version of tcpdump(8), possibly handy if you have Windows - boxes in your network</DD> -<DT><A href="http://reptile.rug.ac.be/~coder/sniffit/sniffit.html"> -Sniffit</A></DT> -<DD>A linux sniffer that we don't know much about. If you use it, please - comment on our mailing list.</DD> -</DL> -<P>See also this<A href="http://www.tlsecurity.net/unix/ids/sniffer/"> - index</A> of packet sniffers.</P> -<P>tcpdump(8) may misbehave if run on the gateways themselves. It is - designed to look into a normal IP stack and may become confused if you - ask it to display data from a stack which has IPsec in play.</P> -<P>At one point, the problem was quite severe. Recent versions of - tcpdump, however, understand IPsec well enough to be usable on a - gateway. You can get the latest version from<A href="http://www.tcpdump.org/"> - tcpdump.org</A>.</P> -<P>Even with a recent tcpdump, some care is required. Here is part of a - post from Henry on the topic:</P> -<PRE>> a) data from sunset to sunrise or the other way is not being -> encrypted (I am using tcpdump (ver. 3.4) -x/ping -p to check -> packages) - -What *interface* is tcpdump being applied to? Use the -i option to -control this. It matters! If tcpdump is looking at the ipsecN -interfaces, e.g. ipsec0, then it is seeing the packets before they are -encrypted or after they are decrypted, so of course they don't look -encrypted. You want to have tcpdump looking at the actual hardware -interfaces, e.g. eth0. - -Actually, the only way to be *sure* what you are sending on the wire is to -have a separate machine eavesdropping on the traffic. Nothing you can do -on the machines actually running IPsec is 100% guaranteed reliable in this -area (although tcpdump is a lot better now than it used to be).</PRE> -<P>The most certain way to examine IPsec packets is to look at them on - the wire. For security, you need to be certain, so we recommend doing - that. To do so, you need a<STRONG> separate sniffer machine located - between the two gateways</STRONG>. This machine can be routing IPsec - packets, but it must not be an IPsec gateway. Network configuration for - such testing is discussed<A href="#testnet"> above</A>.</P> -<P>Here's another mailing list message with advice on using tcpdump(8):</P> -<PRE>Subject: RE: [Users] Encrypted??? - Date: Thu, 29 Nov 2001 - From: "Joe Patterson" <jpatterson@asgardgroup.com> - -tcpdump -nl -i $EXT-IF proto 50 - --nl tells it not to buffer output or resolve names (if you don't do that it -may confuse you by not outputing anything for a while), -i $EXT-IF (replace -with your external interface) tells it what interface to listen on, and -proto 50 is ESP. Use "proto 51" if for some odd reason you're using AH, and -"udp port 500" if you want to see the isakmp key exchange/tunnel setup -packets. - -You can also run `tcpdump -nl -i ipsec0` to see what traffic is on that -virtual interface. Anything you see there *should* be either encrypted or -dropped (unless you've turned on some strange options in your ipsec.conf -file) - -Another very handy thing is ethereal (http://www.ethereal.com/) which runs -on just about anything, has a nice gui interface (or a nice text-based -interface), and does a great job of protocol breakdown. For ESP and AH -it'll basically just tell you that there's a packet of that protocol, and -what the spi is, but for isakmp it'll actually show you a lot of the tunnel -setup information (until it gets to the point in the protocol where isakmp -is encrypted....)</PRE> -<H2><A name="verify.crypt">Verifying encryption</A></H2> -<P>The question of how to verify that messages are actually encrypted - has been extensively discussed on the mailing list. See this<A href="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/07/msg00262.html"> - thread</A>.</P> -<P>If you just want to verify that packets are encrypted, look at them - with a packet sniffer (see<A href="#tcpdump.test"> previous section</A> -) located between the gateways. The packets should, except for some of - the header information, be utterly unintelligible.<STRONG> The output - of good encryption looks<EM> exactly</EM> like random noise</STRONG>.</P> -<P>A packet sniffer can only tell you that the data you looked at was - encrypted. If you have stronger requirements -- for example if your - security policy requires verification that plaintext is not leaked - during startup or under various anomolous conditions -- then you will - need to devise much more thorough tests. If you do that, please post - any results or methodological details which your security policy allows - you to make public.</P> -<P>You can put recognizable data into ping packets with something like:</P> -<PRE> ping -p feedfacedeadbeef 11.0.1.1</PRE> -<P>"feedfacedeadbeef" is a legal hexadecimal pattern that is easy to - pick out of hex dumps.</P> -<P>For other protocols, you may need to check if you have encrypted data - or ASCII text. Encrypted data has approximately equal frequencies for - all 256 possible characters. ASCII text has most characters in the - printable range 0x20-0x7f, a few control characters less than 0x20, and - none at all in the range 0x80-0xff. 0x20, space, is a good character to - look for. In normal English text space occurs about once in seven - characters, versus about once in 256 for random or encrypted data.</P> -<P>One thing to watch for: the output of good compression, like that of - good encryption, looks just like random noise. You cannot tell just by - looking at a data stream whether it has been compressed, encrypted, or - both. You need a little care not to mistake compressed data for - encrypted data in your testing.</P> -<P>Note also that weak encryption also produces random-looking output. - You cannot tell whether the encryption is strong by looking at the - output. To be sure of that, you would need to have both the algorithms - and the implementation examined by experts.</P> -<P>For IPsec, you can get partial assurance from interoperability tests. - See our<A href="interop.html"> interop</A> document. When twenty - products all claim to implement<A href="#3DES"> 3DES</A>, and they all - talk to each other, you can be fairly sure they have it right. Of - course, you might wonder whether all the implementers are consipring to - trick you or, more plausibly, whether some implementations might have - "back doors" so they can get also it wrong when required.. If you're - seriously worried about things like that, you need to get the code you - use audited (good luck if it is not Open Source), or perhaps to talk to - a psychiatrist about treatments for paranoia.</P> -<H2><A name="mail.test">Mailing list pointers</A></H2> -<P>Additional information on testing can be found in these<A href="mail.html"> - mailing list</A> messages:</P> -<UL> -<LI>a user's detailed<A href="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/11/msg00571.html"> - setup diary</A> for his testbed network</LI> -<LI>a FreeS/WAN team member's<A href="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/11/msg00425.html"> - notes</A> from testing at an IPsec interop "bakeoff"</LI> -</UL> -<HR> -<H1><A name="kernelconfig">Kernel configuration for FreeS/WAN</A></H1> -<P> This section lists many of the options available when configuring a - Linux kernel, and explains how they should be set on a FreeS/WAN IPsec - gateway.</P> -<H2><A name="notall">Not everyone needs to worry about kernel - configuration</A></H2> -<P>Note that in many cases you do not need to mess with these.</P> -<P> You may have a Linux distribution which comes with FreeS/WAN - installed (see this<A href="#products"> list</A>). In that case, you - need not do a FreeS/WAN installation or a kernel configuration. Of - course, you might still want to configure and rebuild your kernel to - improve performance or security. This can be done with standard tools - described in the<A href="http://www.linuxdoc.org/HOWTO/Kernel-HOWTO.html"> - Kernel HowTo</A>.</P> -<P>If you need to install FreeS/WAN, then you do need to configure a - kernel. However, you may choose to do that using the simplest - procedure:</P> -<UL> -<LI>Configure, build and test a kernel for your system before adding - FreeS/WAN. See the<A href="http://www.linuxdoc.org/HOWTO/Kernel-HOWTO.html"> - Kernel HowTo</A> for details.<STRONG> This step cannot be skipped</STRONG> -. FreeS/WAN needs the results of your configuration.</LI> -<LI>Then use FreeS/WAN's<VAR> make oldgo</VAR> command. This sets - everything FreeS/WAN needs and retains your values everywhere else.</LI> -</UL> -<P> This document is for those who choose to configure their FreeS/WAN - kernel themselves.</P> -<H2><A name="assume">Assumptions and notation</A></H2> -<P> Help text for most kernel options is included with the kernel files, - and is accessible from within the configuration utilities. We assume - you will refer to that, and to the<A href="http://www.linuxdoc.org/HOWTO/Kernel-HOWTO.html"> - Kernel HowTo</A>, as necessary. This document covers only the - FreeS/WAN-specific aspects of the problem.</P> -<P> To avoid duplication, this document section does not cover settings - for the additional IPsec-related kernel options which become available - after you have patched your kernel with FreeS/WAN patches. There is - help text for those available from within the configuration utility.</P> -<P> We assume a common configuration in which the FreeS/WAN IPsec - gateway is also doing ipchains(8) firewalling for a local network, and - possibly masquerading as well.</P> -<P> Some suggestions below are labelled as appropriate for "a true - paranoid". By this we mean they may cause inconvenience and it is not - entirely clear they are necessary, but they appear to be the safest - choice. Not using them might entail some risk. Of course one suggested - mantra for security administrators is: "I know I'm paranoid. I wonder - if I'm paranoid enough."</P> -<H3><A name="labels">Labels used</A></H3> -<P> Six labels are used to indicate how options should be set. We mark - the labels with [square brackets]. For two of these labels, you have no - choice:</P> -<DL> -<DT>[required]</DT> -<DD>essential for FreeS/WAN operation.</DD> -<DT>[incompatible]</DT> -<DD>incompatible with FreeS/WAN.</DD> -</DL> -<P>those must be set correctly or FreeS/WAN will not work</P> -<P>FreeS/WAN should work with any settings of the others, though of - course not all combinations have been tested. We do label these in - various ways, but<EM> these labels are only suggestions</EM>.</P> -<DL> -<DT>[recommended]</DT> -<DD>useful on most FreeS/WAN gateways</DD> -<DT>[disable]</DT> -<DD>an unwelcome complication on a FreeS/WAN gateway.</DD> -<DT>[optional]</DT> -<DD>Your choice. We outline issues you might consider.</DD> -<DT>[anything]</DT> -<DD>This option has no direct effect on FreeS/WAN and related tools, so - you should be able to set it as you please.</DD> -</DL> -<P> Of course complexity is an enemy in any effort to build secure - systems.<STRONG> For maximum security, any feature that can reasonably - be turned off should be</STRONG>. "If in doubt, leave it out."</P> -<H2><A name="kernelopt">Kernel options for FreeS/WAN</A></H2> -<P> Indentation is based on the nesting shown by 'make menuconfig' with - a 2.2.16 kernel for the i386 architecture.</P> -<DL> -<DT><A name="maturity">Code maturity and level options</A></DT> -<DD> -<DL> -<DT><A name="devel">Prompt for development ... code/drivers</A></DT> -<DD>[optional] If this is<VAR> no</VAR>, experimental drivers are not - shown in later menus. -<P>For most FreeS/WAN work,<VAR> no</VAR> is the preferred setting. - Using new or untested components is too risky for a security gateway.</P> -<P>However, for some hardware (such as the author's network cards) the - only drivers available are marked<VAR> new/experimental</VAR>. In such - cases, you must enable this option or your cards will not appear under - "network device support". A true paranoid would leave this option off - and replace the cards.</P> -</DD> -<DT>Processor type and features</DT> -<DD>[anything]</DD> -<DT>Loadable module support</DT> -<DD> -<DL> -<DT>Enable loadable module support</DT> -<DD>[optional] A true paranoid would disable this. An attacker who has - root access to your machine can fairly easily install a bogus module - that does awful things, provided modules are enabled. A common tool for - attackers is a "rootkit", a set of tools the attacker uses once he or - she has become root on your system. The kit introduces assorted - additional compromises so that the attacker will continue to "own" your - system despite most things you might do to recovery the situation. For - Linux, there is a tool called<A href="http://www.sans.org/newlook/resources/IDFAQ/knark.htm"> - knark</A> which is basically a rootkit packaged as a kernel module. -<P>With modules disabled, an attacker cannot install a bogus module. The - only way he can achieve the same effects is to install a new kernel and - reboot. This is considerably more likely to be noticed.</P> -<P>Many FreeS/WAN gateways run with modules enabled. This simplifies - some administrative tasks and some ipchains features are available only - as modules. Once an enemy has root on your machine your security is - nil, so arguably defenses which come into play only in that situation - are pointless.</P> -<P></P> -</DD> -<DT>Set version information ....</DT> -<DD>[optional] This provides a check to prevent loading modules compiled - for a different kernel.</DD> -<DT>Kernel module loader</DT> -<DD>[disable] It gives little benefit on a typical FreeS/WAN gate and - entails some risk.</DD> -</DL> -</DD> -<DT>General setup</DT> -<DD>We list here only the options that matter for FreeS/WAN. -<DL> -<DT>Networking support</DT> -<DD>[required]</DD> -<DT>Sysctl interface</DT> -<DD>[optional] If this option is turned on and the<VAR> /proc</VAR> - filesystem installed, then you can control various system behaviours by - writing to files under<VAR> /proc/sys</VAR>. For example: -<PRE> echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ipforward</PRE> - turns IP forwarding on. -<P>Disabling this option breaks many firewall scripts. A true paranoid - would disable it anyway since it might conceivably be of use to an - attacker.</P> -</DD> -</DL> -</DD> -<DT>Plug and Play support</DT> -<DD>[anything]</DD> -<DT>Block devices</DT> -<DD>[anything]</DD> -<DT>Networking options</DT> -<DD> -<DL> -<DT>Packet socket</DT> -<DD>[optional] This kernel feature supports tools such as tcpdump(8) - which communicate directly with network hardware, bypassing kernel - protocols. This is very much a two-edged sword: -<UL> -<LI>such tools can be very useful to the firewall admin, especially - during initial testing</LI> -<LI>should an evildoer breach your firewall, such tools could give him - or her a great deal of information about the rest of your network</LI> -</UL> - We recommend disabling this option on production gateways.</DD> -<DT><A name="netlink">Kernel/User netlink socket</A></DT> -<DD>[optional] Required if you want to use<A href="#adv"> advanced - router</A> features.</DD> -<DT>Routing messages</DT> -<DD>[optional]</DD> -<DT>Netlink device emulation</DT> -<DD>[optional]</DD> -<DT>Network firewalls</DT> -<DD>[recommended] You need this if the IPsec gateway also functions as a - firewall. -<P>Even if the IPsec gateway is not your primary firewall, we suggest - setting this so that you can protect the gateway with at least basic - local packet filters.</P> -</DD> -<DT>Socket filtering</DT> -<DD>[disable] This enables an older filtering interface. We suggest - using ipchains(8) instead. To do that, set the "Network firewalls" - option just above, and not this one.</DD> -<DT>Unix domain sockets</DT> -<DD>[required] These sockets are used for communication between the<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.8.html"> - ipsec(8)</A> commands and the<A href="manpage.d/ipsec_pluto.8.html"> - ipsec_pluto(8)</A> daemon.</DD> -<DT>TCP/IP networking</DT> -<DD>[required] -<DL> -<DT>IP: multicasting</DT> -<DD>[anything]</DD> -<DT><A name="adv">IP: advanced router</A></DT> -<DD>[optional] This gives you policy routing, which some people have - used to good advantage in their scripts for FreeS/WAN gateway - management. It is not used in our distributed scripts, so not required - unless you want it for custom scripts. It requires the<A href="#netlink"> - netlink</A> interface between kernel code and the iproute2(8) command.</DD> -<DT>IP: kernel level autoconfiguration</DT> -<DD>[disable] It gives little benefit on a typical FreeS/WAN gate and - entails some risk.</DD> -<DT>IP: firewall packet netlink device</DT> -<DD>[disable]</DD> -<DT>IP: transparent proxy support</DT> -<DD>[optional] This is required in some firewall configurations, but - should be disabled unless you have a definite need for it.</DD> -<DT>IP: masquerading</DT> -<DD>[optional] Required if you want to use<A href="#non-routable"> - non-routable</A> private IP addresses for your local network.</DD> -<DT>IP: Optimize as router not host</DT> -<DD>[recommended]</DD> -<DT>IP: tunneling</DT> -<DD>[required]</DD> -<DT>IP: GRE tunnels over IP</DT> -<DD>[anything]</DD> -<DT>IP: aliasing support</DT> -<DD>[anything]</DD> -<DT>IP: ARP daemon support (EXPERIMENTAL)</DT> -<DD>Not required on most systems, but might prove useful on - heavily-loaded gateways.</DD> -<DT>IP: TCP syncookie support</DT> -<DD>[recommended] It provides a defense against a<A href="#DOS"> denial - of service attack</A> which uses bogus TCP connection requests to waste - resources on the victim machine.</DD> -<DT>IP: Reverse ARP</DT> -<DD></DD> -<DT>IP: large window support</DT> -<DD>[recommended] unless you have less than 16 meg RAM</DD> -</DL> -</DD> -<DT>IPv6</DT> -<DD>[optional] FreeS/WAN does not currently support IPv6, though work on - integrating FreeS/WAN with the Linux IPv6 stack has begun.<A href="#ipv6"> - Details</A>. -<P> It should be possible to use IPv4 FreeS/WAN on a machine which also - does IPv6. This combination is not yet well tested. We would be quite - interested in hearing results from anyone expermenting with it, via the<A -href="mail.html"> mailing list</A>.</P> -<P> We do not recommend using IPv6 on production FreeS/WAN gateways - until more testing has been done.</P> -</DD> -<DT>Novell IPX</DT> -<DD>[disable]</DD> -<DT>Appletalk</DT> -<DD>[disable] Quite a few Linux installations use IP but also have some - other protocol, such as Appletalk or IPX, for communication with local - desktop machines. In theory it should be possible to configure IPsec - for the IP side of things without interfering with the second protocol. -<P>We do not recommend this. Keep the software on your gateway as simple - as possible. If you need a Linux-based Appletalk or IPX server, use a - separate machine.</P> -</DD> -</DL> -</DD> -<DT>Telephony support</DT> -<DD>[anything]</DD> -<DT>SCSI support</DT> -<DD>[anything]</DD> -<DT>I2O device support</DT> -<DD>[anything]</DD> -<DT>Network device support</DT> -<DD>[anything] should work, but there are some points to note. -<P>The development team test almost entirely on 10 or 100 megabit - Ethernet and modems. In principle, any device that can do IP should be - just fine for IPsec, but in the real world any device that has not been - well-tested is somewhat risky. By all means try it, but don't bet your - project on it until you have solid test results.</P> -<P>If you disabled experimental drivers in the<A href="#maturity"> Code - maturity</A> section above, then those drivers will not be shown here. - Check that option before going off to hunt for missing drivers.</P> -<P>If you want Linux to automatically find more than one ethernet - interface at boot time, you need to:</P> -<UL> -<LI>compile the appropriate driver(s) into your kernel. Modules will not - work for this</LI> -<LI>add a line such as -<PRE> - append="ether=0,0,eth0 ether=0,0,eth1" -</PRE> - to your /etc/lilo.conf file. In some cases you may need to specify - parameters such as IRQ or base address. The example uses "0,0" for - these, which tells the system to search. If the search does not succeed - on your hardware, then you should retry with explicit parameters. See - the lilo.conf(5) man page for details.</LI> -<LI>run lilo(8)</LI> -</UL> - Having Linux find the cards this way is not necessary, but is usually - more convenient than loading modules in your boot scripts.</DD> -<DT>Amateur radio support</DT> -<DD>[anything]</DD> -<DT>IrDA (infrared) support</DT> -<DD>[anything]</DD> -<DT>ISDN subsystem</DT> -<DD>[anything]</DD> -<DT>Old CDROM drivers</DT> -<DD>[anything]</DD> -<DT>Character devices</DT> -<DD>The only required character device is: -<DL> -<DT>random(4)</DT> -<DD>[required] This is a source of<A href="#random"> random</A> numbers - which are required for many cryptographic protocols, including several - used in IPsec. -<P>If you are comfortable with C source code, it is likely a good idea - to go in and adjust the<VAR> #define</VAR> lines in<VAR> - /usr/src/linux/drivers/char/random.c</VAR> to ensure that all sources - of randomness are enabled. Relying solely on keyboard and mouse - randomness is dubious procedure for a gateway machine. You could also - increase the randomness pool size from the default 512 bytes (128 - 32-bit words).</P> -</DD> -</DL> -</DD> -<DT>Filesystems</DT> -<DD>[anything] should work, but we suggest limiting a gateway machine to - the standard Linux ext2 filesystem in most cases.</DD> -<DT>Network filesystems</DT> -<DD>[disable] These systems are an unnecessary risk on an IPsec gateway.</DD> -<DT>Console drivers</DT> -<DD>[anything]</DD> -<DT>Sound</DT> -<DD>[anything] should work, but we suggest enabling sound only if you - plan to use audible alarms for firewall problems.</DD> -<DT>Kernel hacking</DT> -<DD>[disable] This might be enabled on test machines, but should not be - on production gateways.</DD> -</DL> -</DD> -</DL> -<HR> -<H1><A name="adv_config">Other configuration possibilities</A></H1> -<P>This document describes various options for FreeS/WAN configuration - which are less used or more complex (often both) than the standard - cases described in our<A href="#config"> config</A> and<A href="#quick_guide"> - quickstart</A> documents.</P> -<H2><A name="thumb">Some rules of thumb about configuration</A></H2> -<H3><A name="cheap.tunnel">Tunnels are cheap</A></H3> -<P>Nearly all of the overhead in IPsec processing is in the encryption - and authentication of packets. Our<A href="performance.html"> - performance</A> document discusses these overheads.</P> -<P>Beside those overheads, the cost of managing additional tunnels is - trivial. Whether your gateway supports one tunnel or ten just does not - matter. A hundred might be a problem; there is a<A href="#biggate"> - section</A> on this in the performance document.</P> -<P>So, in nearly all cases, if using multiple tunnels gives you a - reasonable way to describe what you need to do, you should describe it - that way in your configuration files.</P> -<P>For example, one user recently asked on a mailing list about this - network configuration:</P> -<PRE> netA---gwA---gwB---netB - |----netC - - netA and B are secured netC not. - netA and gwA can not access netC</PRE> -<P>The user had constructed only one tunnel, netA to netB, and wanted to - know how to use ip-route to get netC packets into it. This is entirely - unnecessary. One of the replies was:</P> -<PRE> The simplest way and indeed the right way to - solve this problem is to set up two connections: - - leftsubnet=NetA - left=gwA - right=gwB - rightsubnet=NetB - and - leftsubnet=NetA - left=gwA - right=gwB - rightsubnet=NetC</PRE> -<P>This would still be correct even if we added nets D, E, F, ... to the - above diagram and needed twenty tunnels.</P> -<P>Of course another possibility would be to just use one tunnel, with a - subnet mask that includes both netB and netC (or B, C, D, ...). See - next section.</P> -<P>In general, you can construct as many tunnels as you need. Networks - like netC in this example that do not connect directly to the gateway - are fine, as long as the gateway can route to them.</P> -<P>The number of tunnels can become an issue if it reaches 50 or so. - This is discussed in the<A href="#biggate"> performance</A> document. - Look there for information on supporting hundreds of Road Warriors from - one gateway.</P> -<P>If you find yourself with too many tunnels for some reason like - having eight subnets at one location and nine at another so you end up - with 9*8=72 tunnels, read the next section here.</P> -<H3><A name="subnet.size">Subnet sizes</A></H3> -<P>The subnets used in<VAR> leftsubnet</VAR> and<VAR> rightsubnet</VAR> - can be of any size that fits your needs, and they need not correspond - to physical networks.</P> -<P>You adjust the size by changing the<A href="#subnet"> subnet mask</A> -, the number after the slash in the subnet description. For example</P> -<UL> -<LI>in 192.168.100.0/24 the /24 mask says 24 bits are used to designate - the network. This leave 8 bits to label machines. This subnet has 256 - addresses. .0 and .255 are reserved, so it can have 254 machines.</LI> -<LI>A subnet with a /23 mask would be twice as large, 512 addresses.</LI> -<LI>A subnet with a /25 mask would be half the size, 128 addresses.</LI> -<LI>/0 is the whole Internet</LI> -<LI>/32 is a single machine</LI> -</UL> -<P>As an example of using these in connection descriptions, suppose your - company's head office has four physical networks using the address - ranges:</P> -<DL> -<DT>192.168.100.0/24</DT> -<DD>development</DD> -<DT>192.168.101.0/24</DT> -<DD>production</DD> -<DT>192.168.102.0/24</DT> -<DD>marketing</DD> -<DT>192.168.103.0/24</DT> -<DD>administration</DD> -</DL> -<P>You can use exactly those subnets in your connection descriptions, or - use larger subnets to grant broad access if required:</P> -<DL> -<DT>leftsubnet=192.168.100.0/24</DT> -<DD>remote hosts can access only development</DD> -<DT>leftsubnet=192.168.100.0/23</DT> -<DD>remote hosts can access development or production</DD> -<DT>leftsubnet=192.168.102.0/23</DT> -<DD>remote hosts can access marketing or administration</DD> -<DT>leftsubnet=192.168.100.0/22</DT> -<DD>remote hosts can access any of the four departments</DD> -</DL> -<P>or use smaller subnets to restrict access:</P> -<DL> -<DT>leftsubnet=192.168.103.0/24</DT> -<DD>remote hosts can access any machine in administration</DD> -<DT>leftsubnet=192.168.103.64/28</DT> -<DD>remote hosts can access only certain machines in administration.</DD> -<DT>leftsubnet=192.168.103.42/32</DT> -<DD>remote hosts can access only one particular machine in - administration</DD> -</DL> -<P>To be exact, 192.68.103.64/28 means all addresses whose top 28 bits - match 192.168.103.64. There are 16 of these because there are 16 - possibilities for the remainingg 4 bits. Their addresses are - 192.168.103.64 to 192.168.103.79.</P> -<P>Each connection description can use a different subnet if required.</P> -<P>It is possible to use all the examples above on the same FreeS/WAN - gateway, each in a different connection description, perhaps for - different classes of user or for different remote offices.</P> -<P>It is also possible to have multiple tunnels using different<VAR> - leftsubnet</VAR> descriptions with the same<VAR> right</VAR>. For - example, when the marketing manager is on the road he or she might have - access to:</P> -<DL> -<DT>leftsubnet=192.168.102.0/24</DT> -<DD>all machines in marketing</DD> -<DT>192.168.101.32/29</DT> -<DD>some machines in production</DD> -<DT>leftsubnet=192.168.103.42/32</DT> -<DD>one particular machine in administration</DD> -</DL> -<P>This takes three tunnels, but tunnels are cheap. If the laptop is set - up to build all three tunnels automatically, then he or she can access - all these machines concurrently, perhaps from different windows.</P> -<H3><A name="example.more">Other network layouts</A></H3> -<P>Here is the usual network picture for a site-to-site VPN::</P> -<PRE> Sunset==========West------------------East=========Sunrise - local net untrusted net local net</PRE> -<P>and for the Road Warrior::</P> -<PRE> telecommuter's PC or - traveller's laptop - Sunset==========West------------------East - corporate LAN untrusted net</PRE> -<P>Other configurations are also possible.</P> -<H4><A name="internet.subnet">The Internet as a big subnet</A></H4> -<P>A telecommuter might have:</P> -<PRE> Sunset==========West------------------East ================= firewall --- the Internet - home network untrusted net corporate network</PRE> -<P>This can be described as a special case of the general - subnet-to-subnet connection. The subnet on the right is 0.0.0.0/0, the - whole Internet.</P> -<P>West (the home gateway) can have its firewall rules set up so that - only IPsec packets to East are allowed out. It will then behave as if - its only connection to the world was a wire to East.</P> -<P>When machines on the home network need to reach the Internet, they do - so via the tunnel, East and the corporate firewall. From the viewpoint - of the Internet (perhaps of some EvilDoer trying to break in!), those - home office machines are behind the firewall and protected by it.</P> -<H4><A name="wireless.config">Wireless</A></H4> -<P>Another possible configuration comes up when you do not trust the - local network, either because you have very high security standards or - because your are using easily-intercepted wireless signals.</P> -<P>Some wireless networks have built-in encryption called<A href="#WEP"> - WEP</A>, but its security is dubious. It is a fairly common practice to - use IPsec instead.</P> -<P>In this case, part of your network may look like this:</P> -<PRE> West-----------------------------East == the rest of your network - workstation untrusted wireless net</PRE> -<P>Of course, there would likely be several wireless workstations, each - with its own IPsec tunnel to the East gateway.</P> -<P>The connection descriptions look much like Road Warrior descriptions:</P> -<UL> -<LI>each workstation should have its own unique -<UL> -<LI>identifier for IPsec</LI> -<LI>RSA key</LI> -<LI>connection description.</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>on the gateway, use<VAR> left=%any</VAR>, or the workstation IP - address</LI> -<LI>on workstations,<VAR> left=%defaultroute</VAR>, or the workstation - IP address</LI> -<LI><VAR>leftsubnet=</VAR> is not used.</LI> -</UL> -<P>The<VAR> rightsubnet=</VAR> parameter might be set in any of several - ways:</P> -<DL> -<DT>rightsubnet=0.0.0.0/0</DT> -<DD>allowing workstations to access the entire Internet (see<A href="#internet.subnet"> - above</A>)</DD> -<DT>rightsubnet=a.b.c.0/24</DT> -<DD>allowing access to your entire local network</DD> -<DT>rightsubnet=a.b.c.d/32</DT> -<DD>restricting the workstation to connecting to a particular server</DD> -</DL> -<P>Of course you can mix and match these as required. For example, a - university might allow faculty full Internet access while letting - student laptops connect only to a group of lab machines.</P> -<H2><A name="choose">Choosing connection types</A></H2> -<P>One choice you need to make before configuring additional connections - is what type or types of connections you will use. There are several - options, and you can use more than one concurrently.</P> -<H3><A name="man-auto">Manual vs. automatic keying</A></H3> -<P>IPsec allows two types of connections, with manual or automatic - keying. FreeS/WAN starts them with commands such as:</P> -<PRE> ipsec manual --up <VAR>name</VAR> - ipsec auto --up <VAR>name</VAR></PRE> -<P>The difference is in how they are keyed.</P> -<DL> -<DT><A href="#manual">Manually keyed</A> connections</DT> -<DD>use keys stored in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> ipsec.conf</A> -.</DD> -<DT><A href="#auto">Automatically keyed</A> connections</DT> -<DD>use keys automatically generated by the Pluto key negotiation - daemon. The key negotiation protocol,<A href="#IKE"> IKE</A>, must - authenticate the other system. (It is vulnerable to a<A href="#middle"> - man-in-the-middle attack</A> if used without authentication.) We - currently support two authentication methods: -<UL> -<LI>using shared secrets stored in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.secrets.5.html"> - ipsec.secrets</A>.</LI> -<LI>RSA<A href="#public"> public key</A> authentication, with our - machine's private key in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.secrets.5.html"> - ipsec.secrets</A>. Public keys for other machines may either be placed - in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> ipsec.conf</A> or provided via - DNS.</LI> -</UL> -<P>A third method, using RSA keys embedded in<A href="#X509"> X.509</A> - certtificates, is provided by user<A href="#patch"> patches</A>.</P> -</DD> -</DL> -<P><A href="#manual">Manually keyed</A> connections provide weaker - security than<A href="#auto"> automatically keyed</A> connections. An - opponent who reads ipsec.secrets(5) gets your encryption key and can - read all data encrypted by it. If he or she has an archive of old - messages, all of them back to your last key change are also readable.</P> -<P>With automatically-(re)-keyed connections, an opponent who reads - ipsec.secrets(5) gets the key used to authenticate your system in IKE - -- the shared secret or your private key, depending what authentication - mechanism is in use. However, he or she does not automatically gain - access to any encryption keys or any data.</P> -<P>An attacker who has your authentication key can mount a<A href="#middle"> - man-in-the-middle attack</A> and, if that succeeds, he or she will get - encryption keys and data. This is a serious danger, but it is better - than having the attacker read everyting as soon as he or she breaks - into ipsec.secrets(5).. Moreover, the keys change often so an opponent - who gets one key does not get a large amount of data. To read all your - data, he or she would have to do a man-in-the-middle attack at every - key change.</P> -<P>We discuss using<A href="#prodman"> manual keying in production</A> - below, but this is<STRONG> not recommended</STRONG> except in special - circumstances, such as needing to communicate with some implementation - that offers no auto-keyed mode compatible with FreeS/WAN.</P> -<P>Manual keying may also be useful for testing. There is some - discussion of this in our<A href="#man4debug"> FAQ</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="auto-auth">Authentication methods for auto-keying</A></H3> -<P>The IKE protocol which Pluto uses to negotiate connections between - gateways must use some form of authentication of peers. A gateway must - know who it is talking to before it can create a secure connection. We - support two basic methods for this authentication:</P> -<UL> -<LI>shared secrets, stored in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.secrets.5.html"> - ipsec.secrets(5)</A></LI> -<LI>RSA authentication</LI> -</UL> -<P>There are, howver, several variations on the RSA theme, using - different methods of managing the RSA keys:</P> -<UL> -<LI>our RSA private key in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.secrets.5.html"> - ipsec.secrets(5)</A> with other gateways' public keys -<DL> -<DT>either</DT> -<DD>stored in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> ipsec.conf(5)</A></DD> -<DT>or</DT> -<DD>looked up via<A href="#DNS"> DNS</A></DD> -</DL> -</LI> -<LI>authentication with<A href="#X509"> x.509</A> certificates.; See our<A -href="#patch"> links section</A> for information on user-contributed - patches for this.:</LI> -</UL> -<P>Public keys in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> ipsec.conf(5</A> -) give a reasonably straightforward method of specifying keys for - explicitly configured connections.</P> -<P>Putting public keys in DNS allows us to support<A href="#carpediem"> - opportunistic encryption</A>. Any two FreeS/WAN gateways can provide - secure communication, without either of them having any preset - information about the other.</P> -<P>X.509 certificates may be required to interface to various<A href="#PKI"> - PKI</A>s.</P> -<H3><A name="adv-pk">Advantages of public key methods</A></H3> -<P>Authentication with a<A href="#public"> public key</A> method such as<A -href="#RSA"> RSA</A> has some important advantages over using shared - secrets.</P> -<UL> -<LI>no problem of secure transmission of secrets -<UL> -<LI>A shared secret must be shared, so you have the problem of - transmitting it securely to the other party. If you get this wrong, you - have no security.</LI> -<LI>With a public key technique, you transmit only your public key. The - system is designed to ensure that it does not matter if an enemy - obtains public keys. The private key never leaves your machine.</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>easier management -<UL> -<LI>Suppose you have 20 branch offices all connecting to one gateway at - head office, and all using shared secrets. Then the head office admin - has 20 secrets to manage. Each of them must be kept secret not only - from outsiders, but also from 19 of the branch office admins. The - branch office admins have only one secret each to manage. -<P>If the branch offices need to talk to each other, this becomes - problematic. You need another 20*19/2 = 190 secrets for - branch-to-branch communication, each known to exactly two branches. Now - all the branch admins have the headache of handling 20 keys, each - shared with exactly one other branch or with head office.</P> -<P>For larger numbers of branches, the number of connections and secrets - increases quadratically and managing them becomes a nightmare. A - 1000-gateway fully connected network needs 499,500 secrets, each known - to exactly two players. There are ways to reduce this problem, for - example by introducing a central key server, but these involve - additional communication overheads, more administrative work, and new - threats that must be carefully guarded against.</P> -</LI> -<LI>With public key techniques, the<EM> only</EM> thing you have to keep - secret is your private key, and<EM> you keep that secret from everyone</EM> -. -<P>As network size increaes, the number of public keys used increases - linearly with the number of nodes. This still requires careful - administration in large applications, but is nothing like the disaster - of a quadratic increase. On a 1000-gateway network, you have 1000 - private keys, each of which must be kept secure on one machine, and - 1000 public keys which must be distributed. This is not a trivial - problem, but it is manageable.</P> -</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>does not require fixed IP addresses -<UL> -<LI>When shared secrets are used in IPsec, the responder must be able to - tell which secret to use by looking at the IP address on the incoming - packets. When the other parties do not have a fixed IP address to be - identified by (for example, on nearly all dialup ISP connections and - many cable or ADSL links), this does not work well -- all must share - the same secret!</LI> -<LI>When RSA authentication is in use, the initiator can identify itself - by name before the key must be determined. The responder then checks - that the message is signed with the public key corresponding to that - name.</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -</UL> -<P>There is also a disadvantage:</P> -<UL> -<LI>your private key is a single point of attack, extremely valuable to - an enemy -<UL> -<LI>with shared secrets, an attacker who steals your ipsec.secrets file - can impersonate you or try<A href="#middle"> man-in-the-middle</A> - attacks, but can only attack connections described in that file</LI> -<LI>an attacker who steals your private key gains the chance to attack - not only existing connections<EM> but also any future connections</EM> - created using that key</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -</UL> -<P>This is partly counterbalanced by the fact that the key is never - transmitted and remains under your control at all times. It is likely - necessary, however, to take account of this in setting security policy. - For example, you should change gateway keys when an administrator - leaves the company, and should change them periodically in any case.</P> -<P>Overall, public key methods are<STRONG> more secure, more easily - managed and more flexible</STRONG>. We recommend that they be used for - all connections, unless there is a compelling reason to do otherwise.</P> -<H2><A name="prodsecrets">Using shared secrets in production</A></H2> -<P>Generally, public key methods are preferred for reasons given above, - but shared secrets can be used with no loss of security, just more work - and perhaps more need to take precautions.</P> -<P>What I call "shared secrets" are sometimes also called "pre-shared - keys". They are used only for for authentication, never for encryption. - Calling them "pre-shared keys" has confused some users into thinking - they were encryption keys, so I prefer to avoid the term..</P> -<P>If you are interoperating with another IPsec implementation, you may - find its documentation calling them "passphrases".</P> -<H3><A name="secrets">Putting secrets in ipsec.secrets(5)</A></H3> -<P>If shared secrets are to be used to<A href="#authentication"> - authenticate</A> communication for the<A href="#DH"> Diffie-Hellman</A> - key exchange in the<A href="#IKE"> IKE</A> protocol, then those secrets - must be stored in<VAR> /etc/ipsec.secrets</VAR>. For details, see the<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.secrets.5.html"> - ipsec.secrets(5)</A> man page.</P> -<P>A few considerations are vital:</P> -<UL> -<LI>make the secrets long and unguessable. Since they need not be - remembered by humans, very long ugly strings may be used. We suggest - using our<A href="manpage.d/ipsec_ranbits.8.html"> ipsec_ranbits(8)</A> - utility to generate long (128 bits or more) random strings.</LI> -<LI>transmit secrets securely. You have to share them with other - systems, but you lose if they are intercepted and used against you. Use<A -href="#PGP"> PGP</A>,<A href="#ssh"> SSH</A>, hand delivery of a floppy - disk which is then destroyed, or some other trustworthy method to - deliver them.</LI> -<LI>store secrets securely, in root-owned files with permissions - rw------.</LI> -<LI>limit sharing of secrets. Alice, Bob, Carol and Dave may all talk to - each other, but only Alice and Bob should know the secret for an - Alice-Bob link.</LI> -<LI><STRONG>do not share private keys</STRONG>. The private key for RSA - authentication of your system is stored in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.secrets.5.html"> - ipsec.secrets(5)</A>, but it is a different class of secret from the - pre-shared keys used for the "shared secret" authentication. No-one but - you should have the RSA private key.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Each line has the IP addresses of the two gateways plus the secret. - It should look something like this:</P> -<PRE> 10.0.0.1 11.0.0.1 : PSK "jxTR1lnmSjuj33n4W51uW3kTR55luUmSmnlRUuWnkjRj3UuTV4T3USSu23Uk55nWu5TkTUnjT"</PRE> -<P><VAR>PSK</VAR> indicates the use of a<STRONG> p</STRONG>re-<STRONG>s</STRONG> -hared<STRONG> k</STRONG>ey. The quotes and the whitespace shown are - required.</P> -<P>You can use any character string as your secret. For security, it - should be both long and extremely hard to guess. We provide a utility - to generate such strings,<A href="manpage.d/ipsec_ranbits.8.html"> - ipsec_ranbits(8)</A>.</P> -<P>You want the same secret on the two gateways used, so you create a - line with that secret and the two gateway IP addresses. The - installation process supplies an example secret, useful<EM> only</EM> - for testing. You must change it for production use.</P> -<H3><A name="securing.secrets">File security</A></H3> -<P>You must deliver this file, or the relevant part of it, to the other - gateway machine by some<STRONG> secure</STRONG> means.<EM> Don't just - FTP or mail the file!</EM> It is vital that the secrets in it remain - secret. An attacker who knew those could easily have<EM> all the data - on your "secure" connection</EM>.</P> -<P>This file must be owned by root and should have permissions<VAR> - rw-------</VAR>.</P> -<H3><A name="notroadshared">Shared secrets for road warriors</A></H3> -<P>You can use a shared secret to support a single road warrior - connecting to your gateway, and this is a reasonable thing to do in - some circumstances. Public key methods have advantages, discussed<A href="#choose"> - above</A>, but they are not critical in this case.</P> -<P>To do this, the line in ipsec.secrets(5) is something like:</P> -<PRE> 10.0.0.1 0.0.0.0 : PSK "jxTR1lnmSjuj33n4W51uW3kTR55luUmSmnlRUuWnkjRj3UuTV4T3USSu23Uk55nWu5TkTUnjT"</PRE> - where the<VAR> 0.0.0.0</VAR> means that any IP address is acceptable. -<P><STRONG>For more than one road warrior, shared secrets are<EM> not</EM> - recommended.</STRONG> If shared secrets are used, then when the - responder needs to look up the secret, all it knows about the sender is - an IP address. This is fine if the sender is at a fixed IP address - specified in the config file. It is also fine if only one road warrior - uses the wildcard<VAR> 0.0.0.0</VAR> address. However, if you have more - than one road warrior using shared secret authentication, then they - must all use that wildcard and therefore<STRONG> all road warriors - using PSK autentication must use the same secret</STRONG>. Obviously, - this is insecure.</P> -<P><STRONG>For multiple road warriors, use public key authentication.</STRONG> - Each roadwarrior can then have its own identity (our<VAR> leftid=</VAR> - or<VAR> rightid=</VAR> parameters), its own public/private key pair, - and its own secure connection.</P> -<H2><A name="prodman">Using manual keying in production</A></H2> -<P>Generally,<A href="#auto"> automatic keying</A> is preferred over<A href="#manual"> - manual keying</A> for production use because it is both easier to - manage and more secure. Automatic keying frees the admin from much of - the burden of managing keys securely, and can provide<A href="#PFS"> - perfect forward secrecy</A>. This is discussed in more detail<A href="#man-auto"> - above</A>.</P> -<P>However, it is possible to use manual keying in production if that is - what you want to do. This might be necessary, for example, in order to - interoperate with some device that either does not provide automatic - keying or provides it in some version we cannot talk to.</P> -<P>Note that with manual keying<STRONG> all security rests with the keys</STRONG> -. If an adversary acquires your keys, you've had it. He or she can read - everything ever sent with those keys, including old messages he or she - may have archived.</P> -<P>You need to<STRONG> be really paranoid about keys</STRONG> if you're - going to rely on manual keying for anything important.</P> -<UL> -<LI>keep keys in files with 600 permissions, owned by root</LI> -<LI>be extremely careful about security of your gateway systems. Anyone - who breaks into a gateway and gains root privileges can get all your - keys and read everything ever encrypted with those keys, both old - messages he has archived and any new ones you may send.</LI> -<LI>change keys regularly. This can be a considerable bother, (and - provides an excellent reason to consider automatic keying instead), but - it is<EM> absolutely essential</EM> for security. Consider a manually - keyed system in which you leave the same key in place for months: -<UL> -<LI>an attacker can have a very large sample of text sent with that key - to work with. This makes various cryptographic attacks much more likely - to succeed.</LI> -<LI>The chances of the key being compromised in some non-cryptographic - manner -- a spy finds it on a discarded notepad, someone breaks into - your server or your building and steals it, a staff member is bribed, - tricked, seduced or coerced into revealing it, etc. -- also increase - over time.</LI> -<LI>a successful attacker can read everything ever sent with that key. - This makes any successful attack extremely damaging.</LI> -</UL> - It is clear that you must change keys often to have any useful - security. The only question is how often.</LI> -<LI>use<A href="#PGP"> PGP</A> or<A href="#ssh"> SSH</A> for all key - transfers</LI> -<LI>don't edit files with keys in them when someone can look over your - shoulder</LI> -<LI>worry about network security; could someone get keys by snooping - packets on the LAN between your X desktop and the gateway?</LI> -<LI>lock up your backup tapes for the gateway system</LI> -<LI>... and so on</LI> -</UL> -<P>Linux FreeS/WAN provides some facilities to help with this. In - particular, it is good policy to<STRONG> keep keys in separate files</STRONG> - so you can edit configuration information in /etc/ipsec.conf without - exposing keys to "shoulder surfers" or network snoops. We support this - with the<VAR> also=</VAR> and<VAR> include</VAR> syntax in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> - ipsec.conf(5)</A>.</P> -<P>See the last example in our<A href="examples"> examples</A> file. In - the /etc/ipsec.conf<VAR> conn samplesep</VAR> section, it has the line:</P> -<PRE> also=samplesep-keys</PRE> -<P>which tells the "ipsec manual" script to insert the configuration - description labelled "samplesep-keys" if it can find it. The - /etc/ipsec.conf file must also have a line such as:</P> -<PRE>include ipsec.*.conf</PRE> -<P>which tells it to read other files. One of those other files then - might contain the additional data:</P> -<PRE>conn samplesep-keys - spi=0x200 - esp=3des-md5-96 - espenckey=0x01234567_89abcdef_02468ace_13579bdf_12345678_9abcdef0 - espauthkey=0x12345678_9abcdef0_2468ace0_13579bdf</PRE> -<P>The first line matches the label in the "also=" line, so the indented - lines are inserted. The net effect is exactly as if the inserted lines - had occurred in the original file in place of the "also=" line.</P> -<P>Variables set here are:</P> -<DL> -<DT>spi</DT> -<DD>A number needed by the manual keying code. Any 3-digit hex number - will do, but if you have more than one manual connection then<STRONG> - spi must be different</STRONG> for each connection.</DD> -<DT>esp</DT> -<DD>Options for<A href="#ESP"> ESP</A> (Encapsulated Security Payload), - the usual IPsec encryption mode. Settings here are for<A href="#encryption"> - encryption</A> using<A href="#3DES"> triple DES</A> and<A href="#authentication"> - authentication</A> using<A href="#MD5"> MD5</A>. Note that encryption - without authentication should not be used; it is insecure.</DD> -<DT>espenkey</DT> -<DD>Key for ESP encryption. Here, a 192-bit hex number for triple DES.</DD> -<DT>espauthkey</DT> -<DD>Key for ESP authentication. Here, a 128-bit hex number for MD5.</DD> -</DL> -<P><STRONG>Note</STRONG> that the<STRONG> example keys we supply</STRONG> - are intended<STRONG> only for testing</STRONG>. For real use, you - should go to automatic keying. If that is not possible, create your own - keys for manual mode and keep them secret</P> -<P>Of course, any files containing keys<STRONG> must</STRONG> have 600 - permissions and be owned by root.</P> -<P>If you connect in this way to multiple sites, we recommend that you - keep keys for each site in a separate file and adopt some naming - convention that lets you pick them all up with a single "include" line. - This minimizes the risk of losing several keys to one error or attack - and of accidentally giving another site admin keys which he or she has - no business knowing.</P> -<P>Also note that if you have multiple manually keyed connections on a - single machine, then the<VAR> spi</VAR> parameter must be different for - each one. Any 3-digit hex number is OK, provided they are different for - each connection. We reserve the range 0x100 to 0xfff for manual - connections. Pluto assigns SPIs from 0x1000 up for automatically keyed - connections.</P> -<P>If<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> ipsec.conf(5)</A> contains - keys for manual mode connections, then it too must have permissions<VAR> - rw-------</VAR>. We recommend instead that, if you must manual keying - in production, you keep the keys in separate files.</P> -<P>Note also that<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> ipsec.conf</A> - is installed with permissions<VAR> rw-r--r--</VAR>. If you plan to use - manually keyed connections for anything more than initial testing, you<B> - must</B>:</P> -<UL> -<LI>either change permissions to<VAR> rw-------</VAR></LI> -<LI>or store keys separately in secure files and access them via include - statements in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> ipsec.conf</A>.</LI> -</UL> -<P>We recommend the latter method for all but the simplest - configurations.</P> -<H3><A name="ranbits">Creating keys with ranbits</A></H3> -<P>You can create new<A href="#random"> random</A> keys with the<A href="manpage.d/ipsec_ranbits.8.html"> - ranbits(8)</A> utility. For example, the commands:</P> -<PRE> umask 177 - ipsec ranbits 192 > temp - ipsec ranbits 128 >> temp</PRE> -<P>create keys in the sizes needed for our default algorithms:</P> -<UL> -<LI>192-bit key for<A href="#3DES"> 3DES</A> encryption -<BR> (only 168 bits are used; parity bits are ignored)</LI> -<LI>128-bit key for keyed<A href="#MD5"> MD5</A> authentication</LI> -</UL> -<P>If you want to use<A href="#SHA"> SHA</A> instead of<A href="#MD5"> - MD5</A>, that requires a 160-bit key</P> -<P>Note that any<STRONG> temporary files</STRONG> used must be kept<STRONG> - secure</STRONG> since they contain keys. That is the reason for the - umask command above. The temporary file should be deleted as soon as - you are done with it. You may also want to change the umask back to its - default value after you are finished working on keys.</P> -<P>The ranbits utility may pause for a few seconds if not enough entropy - is available immediately. See ipsec_ranbits(8) and random(4) for - details. You may wish to provide some activity to feed entropy into the - system. For example, you might move the mouse around, type random - characters, or do<VAR> du /usr > /dev/null</VAR> in the background.</P> -<H2><A name="boot">Setting up connections at boot time</A></H2> -<P>You can tell the system to set up connections automatically at boot - time by putting suitable stuff in /etc/ipsec.conf on both systems. The - relevant section of the file is labelled by a line reading<VAR> config - setup</VAR>.</P> -<P>Details can be found in the<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> - ipsec.conf(5)</A> man page. We also provide a file of<A href="examples"> - example configurations</A>.</P> -<P>The most likely options are something like:</P> -<DL> -<DT>interfaces="ipsec0=eth0 ipsec1=ppp0"</DT> -<DD>Tells KLIPS which interfaces to use. Up to four interfaces numbered - ipsec[0-3] are supported. Each interface can support an arbitrary - number of tunnels. -<P>Note that for PPP, you give the ppp[0-9] device name here, not the - underlying device such as modem (or eth1 if you are using PPPoE).</P> -</DD> -<DT>interfaces=%defaultroute</DT> -<DD>Alternative setting, useful in simple cases. KLIPS will pick up both - its interface and the next hop information from the settings of the - Linux default route.</DD> -<DT>forwardcontrol=no</DT> -<DD>Normally "no". Set to "yes" if the IP forwarding option is disabled - in your network configuration. (This can be set as a kernel - configuration option or later. e.g. on Redhat, it's in - /etc/sysconfig/network and on SuSE you can adjust it with Yast.) Linux - FreeS/WAN will then enable forwarding when starting up and turn it off - when going down. This is used to ensure that no packets will be - forwarded before IPsec comes up and takes control.</DD> -<DT>syslog=daemon.error</DT> -<DD>Used in messages to the system logging daemon (syslogd) to specify - what type of software is sending the messages. If the settings are - "daemon.error" as in our example, then syslogd treats the messages as - error messages from a daemon. -<P>Note that<A href="#Pluto"> Pluto</A> does not currently pay attention - to this variable. The variable controls setup messages only.</P> -</DD> -<DT>klipsdebug=</DT> -<DD>Debug settings for<A href="#KLIPS"> KLIPS</A>.</DD> -<DT>plutodebug=</DT> -<DD>Debug settings for<A href="#Pluto"> Pluto</A>.</DD> -<DT>... for both the above DEBUG settings</DT> -<DD>Normally, leave empty as shown above for no debugging output. -<BR> Use "all" for maximum information. -<BR> See ipsec_klipsdebug(8) and ipsec_pluto(8) man page for other - options. Beware that if you set /etc/ipsec.conf to enable debug output, - your system's log files may get large quickly.</DD> -<DT>dumpdir=/safe/directory</DT> -<DD>Normally, programs started by ipsec setup don't crash. If they do, - by default, no core dump will be produced because such dumps would - contain secrets. If you find you need to debug such crashes, you can - set dumpdir to the name of a directory in which to collect the core - file.</DD> -<DT>manualstart=</DT> -<DD>List of manually keyed connections to be automatically started at - boot time. Useful for testing, but not for long term use. Connections - which are automatically started should also be automatically re-keyed.</DD> -<DT>pluto=yes</DT> -<DD>Whether to start<A href="#Pluto"> Pluto</A> when ipsec startup is - done. -<BR> This parameter is optional and defaults to "yes" if not present. -<P>"yes" is strongly recommended for production use so that the keying - daemon (Pluto) will automatically re-key the connections regularly. The - ipsec-auto parameters ikelifetime, ipseclifetime and reykeywindow give - you control over frequency of rekeying.</P> -</DD> -<DT>plutoload="reno-van reno-adam reno-nyc"</DT> -<DD>List of tunnels (by name, e.g. fred-susan or reno-van in our - examples) to be loaded into Pluto's internal database at startup. In - this example, Pluto loads three tunnels into its database when it is - started. -<P>If plutoload is "%search", Pluto will load any connections whose - description includes "auto=add" or "auto=start".</P> -</DD> -<DT>plutostart="reno-van reno-adam reno-nyc"</DT> -<DD>List of tunnels to attempt to negotiate when Pluto is started. -<P>If plutostart is "%search", Pluto will start any connections whose - description includes "auto=start".</P> -<P>Note that, for a connection intended to be permanent,<STRONG> both - gateways should be set try to start</STRONG> the tunnel. This allows - quick recovery if either gateway is rebooted or has its IPsec - restarted. If only one gateway is set to start the tunnel and the other - gateway restarts, the tunnel may not be rebuilt.</P> -</DD> -<DT>plutowait=no</DT> -<DD>Controls whether Pluto waits for one tunnel to be established before - starting to negotiate the next. You might set this to "yes" -<UL> -<LI>if your gateway is a very limited machine and you need to conserve - resources.</LI> -<LI>for debugging; the logs are clearer if only one connection is - brought up at a time</LI> -</UL> - For a busy and resource-laden production gateway, you likely want "no" - so that connections are brought up in parallel and the whole process - takes less time.</DD> -</DL> -<P>The example assumes you are at the Reno office and will use IPsec to - Vancouver, New York City and Amsterdam.</P> -<H2><A name="multitunnel">Multiple tunnels between the same two gateways</A> -</H2> -<P>Consider a pair of subnets, each with a security gateway, connected - via the Internet:</P> -<PRE> 192.168.100.0/24 left subnet - | - 192.168.100.1 - North Gateway - 101.101.101.101 left - | - 101.101.101.1 left next hop - [Internet] - 202.202.202.1 right next hop - | - 202.202.202.202 right - South gateway - 192.168.200.1 - | - 192.168.200.0/24 right subnet</PRE> -<P>A tunnel specification such as:</P> -<PRE>conn northnet-southnet - left=101.101.101.101 - leftnexthop=101.101.101.1 - leftsubnet=192.168.100.0/24 - leftfirewall=yes - right=202.202.202.202 - rightnexthop=202.202.202.1 - rightsubnet=192.168.200.0/24 - rightfirewall=yes</PRE> - will allow machines on the two subnets to talk to each other. You might - test this by pinging from polarbear (192.168.100.7) to penguin - (192.168.200.5). -<P>However,<STRONG> this does not cover other traffic you might want to - secure</STRONG>. To handle all the possibilities, you might also want - these connection descriptions:</P> -<PRE>conn northgate-southnet - left=101.101.101.101 - leftnexthop=101.101.101.1 - right=202.202.202.202 - rightnexthop=202.202.202.1 - rightsubnet=192.168.200.0/24 - rightfirewall=yes - -conn northnet-southgate - left=101.101.101.101 - leftnexthop=101.101.101.1 - leftsubnet=192.168.100.0/24 - leftfirewall=yes - right=202.202.202.202 - rightnexthop=202.202.202.1</PRE> -<P>Without these, neither gateway can do IPsec to the remote subnet. - There is no IPsec tunnel or eroute set up for the traffic.</P> -<P>In our example, with the non-routable 192.168.* addresses used, - packets would simply be discarded. In a different configuration, with - routable addresses for the remote subnet,<STRONG> they would be sent - unencrypted</STRONG> since there would be no IPsec eroute and there - would be a normal IP route.</P> -<P>You might also want:</P> -<PRE>conn northgate-southgate - left=101.101.101.101 - leftnexthop=101.101.101.1 - right=202.202.202.202 - rightnexthop=202.202.202.1</PRE> -<P>This is required if you want the two gateways to speak IPsec to each - other.</P> -<P>This requires a lot of duplication of details. Judicious use of<VAR> - also=</VAR> and<VAR> include</VAR> can reduce this problem.</P> -<P>Note that, while FreeS/WAN supports all four tunnel types, not all - implementations do. In particular, some versions of Windows 2000 and - the freely downloadable version of PGP provide only "client" - functionality. You cannot use them as gateways with a subnet behind - them. To get that functionality, you must upgrade to Windows 2000 - server or the commercially available PGP products.</P> -<H3><A name="advroute">One tunnel plus advanced routing</A></H3> - It is also possible to use the new routing features in 2.2 and later - kernels to avoid most needs for multple tunnels. Here is one mailing - list message on the topic: -<PRE>Subject: Re: linux-ipsec: IPSec packets not entering tunnel? - Date: Mon, 20 Nov 2000 - From: Justin Guyett <jfg@sonicity.com> - -On Mon, 20 Nov 2000, Claudia Schmeing wrote: - -> Right Left -> "home" "office" -> 10.92.10.0/24 ---- 24.93.85.110 ========= 216.175.164.91 ---- 10.91.10.24/24 -> -> I've created all four tunnels, and can ping to test each of them, -> *except* homegate-officenet. - -I keep wondering why people create all four tunnels. Why not route -traffic generated from home to 10.91.10.24/24 out ipsec0 with iproute2? -And 99% of the time you don't need to access "office" directly, which -means you can eliminate all but the subnet<->subnet connection.</PRE> - and FreeS/WAN technical lead Henry Spencer's comment: -<PRE>> I keep wondering why people create all four tunnels. Why not route -> traffic generated from home to 10.91.10.24/24 out ipsec0 with iproute2? - -This is feasible, given some iproute2 attention to source addresses, but -it isn't something we've documented yet... (partly because we're still -making some attempt to support 2.0.xx kernels, which can't do this, but -mostly because we haven't caught up with it yet). - -> And 99% of the time you don't need to access "office" directly, which -> means you can eliminate all but the subnet<->subnet connection. - -Correct in principle, but people will keep trying to ping to or from the -gateways during testing, and sometimes they want to run services on the -gateway machines too.</PRE> - -<!-- Is this in the right spot in this document? --> -<H2><A name="opp.gate">An Opportunistic Gateway</A></H2> -<H3><A NAME="14_7_1">Start from full opportunism</A></H3> -<P>Full opportunism allows you to initiate and receive opportunistic - connections on your machine. The remaining instructions in this section - assume you have first set up full opportunism on your gateway using<A HREF="#opp.incoming"> - these instructions</A>. Both sets of instructions require mailing DNS - records to your ISP. Collect DNS records for both the gateway (above) - and the subnet nodes (below) before contacting your ISP.</P> -<H3><A NAME="14_7_2">Reverse DNS TXT records for each protected machine</A> -</H3> -<P>You need these so that your Opportunistic peers can:</P> -<UL> -<LI>discover the gateway's address, knowing only the IP address that - packets are bound for</LI> -<LI>verify that the gateway is authorised to encrypt for that endpoint</LI> -</UL> -<P>On the gateway, generate a TXT record with:</P> -<PRE> ipsec showhostkey --txt 192.0.2.11</PRE> -<P>Use your gateway address in place of 192.0.2.11.</P> -<P>You should see (keys are trimmed for clarity throughout our example):</P> -<PRE> ; RSA 2048 bits gateway.example.com Sat Apr 15 13:53:22 2000 - IN TXT "X-IPsec-Server(10)=192.0.2.11" " AQOF8tZ2...+buFuFn/"</PRE> -<P><B>This MUST BE the same key as in your gateway's TXT record, or - nothing will work.</B></P> -<P>In a text file, make one copy of this TXT record for each subnet - node:</P> -<PRE> ; RSA 2048 bits gateway.example.com Sat Apr 15 13:53:22 2000 - IN TXT "X-IPsec-Server(10)=192.0.2.11" " AQOF8tZ2...+buFuFn/" - - ; RSA 2048 bits gateway.example.com Sat Apr 15 13:53:22 2000 - IN TXT "X-IPsec-Server(10)=192.0.2.11" " AQOF8tZ2...+buFuFn/" - - ; RSA 2048 bits gateway.example.com Sat Apr 15 13:53:22 2000 - IN TXT "X-IPsec-Server(10)=192.0.2.11" " AQOF8tZ2...+buFuFn/"</PRE> -<P>Above each entry, insert a line like this:</P> -<PRE> 98.2.0.192.in-addr.arpa. IN PTR arthur.example.com.</PRE> -<P>It must include:</P> -<UL> -<LI>The subnet node's address in reverse map format. For example, - 192.0.2.120 becomes<VAR> 120.2.0.192.in-addr.arpa.</VAR>. Note the - final period.</LI> -<LI><VAR>IN PTR</VAR></LI> -<LI>The node's name, ie.<VAR> arthur.example.com.</VAR>. Note the final - period.</LI> -</UL> -<P>The result will be a file of TXT records, like this:</P> -<PRE> 98.2.0.192.in-addr.arpa. IN PTR arthur.example.com. - ; RSA 2048 bits gateway.example.com Sat Apr 15 13:53:22 2000 - IN TXT "X-IPsec-Server(10)=192.0.2.11" " AQOF8tZ2...+buFuFn/" - - 99.2.0.192.in-addr.arpa. IN PTR ford.example.com. - ; RSA 2048 bits gateway.example.com Sat Apr 15 13:53:22 2000 - IN TXT "X-IPsec-Server(10)=192.0.2.11" " AQOF8tZ2...+buFuFn/" - - 100.2.0.192.in-addr.arpa. IN PTR trillian.example.com. - ; RSA 2048 bits gateway.example.com Sat Apr 15 13:53:22 2000 - IN TXT "X-IPsec-Server(10)=192.0.2.11" " AQOF8tZ2...+buFuFn/"</PRE> -<H3><A NAME="14_7_3">Publish your records</A></H3> -<P>Ask your ISP to publish all the reverse DNS records you have - collected. There may be a delay of up to 48 hours as the records - propagate.</P> -<H3><A NAME="14_7_4">...and test them</A></H3> -<P>Check a couple of records with commands like this one:</P> -<PRE> ipsec verify --host ford.example.com - ipsec verify --host trillian.example.com</PRE> -<P>The<VAR> verify</VAR> command checks for TXT records for both the - subnet host and its gateway. You should see output like:</P> -<PRE> ... - Looking for TXT in reverse map: 99.2.0.192.in-addr.arpa [OK] - ... - Looking for TXT in reverse map: 11.2.0.192.in-addr.arpa [OK] - ... - Looking for TXT in reverse map: 100.2.0.192.in-addr.arpa [OK] - ... - Looking for TXT in reverse map: 11.2.0.192.in-addr.arpa [OK] - ...</PRE> -<H3><A NAME="14_7_5">No Configuration Needed</A></H3> -<P>FreeS/WAN 2.x ships with a built-in, automatically enabled OE - connection<VAR> conn packetdefault</VAR> which applies OE, if possible, - to all outbound traffic routed through the FreeS/WAN box. The<A HREF="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> - ipsec.conf(5) manual</A> describes this connection in detail. While the - effect is much the same as<VAR> private-or-clear</VAR>, the - implementation is different: notably, it does not use policy groups.</P> -<P>You can create more complex OE configurations for traffic forwarded - through a FreeS/WAN box, as explained in our<A HREF="#policygroups"> - policy groups document</A>, or disable OE using<A HREF="#disable_policygroups"> - these instructions</A>.</P> -<H2><A name="extruded.config">Extruded Subnets</A></H2> -<P>What we call<A href="glossary.html#extruded"> extruded subnets</A> - are a special case of<A href="glossary.html#VPN.gloss"> VPNs</A>.</P> -<P>If your buddy has some unused IP addresses, in his subnet far off at - the other side of the Internet, he can loan them to you... provided - that the connection between you and him is fast enough to carry all the - traffic between your machines and the rest of the Internet. In effect, - he "extrudes" a part of his address space over the network to you, with - your Internet traffic appearing to originate from behind his Internet - gateway.</P> -<P>As far as the Internet is concerned, your new extruded net is behind - your buddy's gateway. You route all your packets for the Internet at - large out his gateway, and receive return packets the same way. You - route your local packets locally.</P> -<P>Suppose your friend has a.b.c.0/24 and wants to give you - a.b.c.240/28. The initial situation is:</P> -<PRE> subnet gateway Internet - a.b.c.0/24 a.b.c.1 p.q.r.s</PRE> - where anything from the Internet destined for any machine in a.b.c.0/24 - is routed via p.q.r.s and that gateway knows what to do from there. -<P>Of course it is quite normal for various smaller subnets to exist - behind your friend's gateway. For example, your friend's company might - have a.b.c.16/28=development, a.b.c.32/28=marketing and so on. The - Internet neither knows not cares about this; it just delivers packets - to the p.q.r.s and lets the gateway do whatever needs to be done from - there.</P> -<P>What we want to do is take a subnet, perhaps a.b.c.240/28, out of - your friend's physical location<EM> while still having your friend's - gateway route to it</EM>. As far as the Internet is concerned, you - remain behind that gateway.</P> -<PRE> subnet gateway Internet your gate extruded - - a.b.c.0/24 a.b.c.1 p.q.r.s d.e.f.g a.b.c.240/28 - - ========== tunnel ==========</PRE> -<P>The extruded addresses have to be a complete subnet.</P> -<P>In our example, the friend's security gateway is also his Internet - gateway, but this is not necessary. As long as all traffic from the - Internet to his addresses passes through the Internet gate, the - security gate could be a machine behind that. The IG would need to - route all traffic for the extruded subnet to the SG, and the SG could - handle the rest.</P> -<P>First, configure your subnet using the extruded addresses. Your - security gateway's interface to your subnet needs to have an extruded - address (possibly using a Linux<A href="#virtual"> virtual interface</A> -, if it also has to have a different address). Your gateway needs to - have a route to the extruded subnet, pointing to that interface. The - other machines at your site need to have addresses in that subnet, and - default routes pointing to your gateway.</P> -<P>If any of your friend's machines need to talk to the extruded subnet,<EM> - they</EM> need to have a route for the extruded subnet, pointing at his - gateway.</P> -<P>Then set up an IPsec subnet-to-subnet tunnel between your gateway and - his, with your subnet specified as the extruded subnet, and his subnet - specified as "0.0.0.0/0".</P> -<P>The tunnel description should be:</P> -<PRE>conn extruded - left=p.q.r.s - leftsubnet=0.0.0.0/0 - right=d.e.f.g - rightsubnet=a.b.c.0/28</PRE> -<P>If either side was doing firewalling for the extruded subnet before - the IPsec connection is set up, you'll need to poke holes in your<A HREF="#firewall"> - firewall</A> to allow packets through.</P> -<P>And it all just works. Your SG routes traffic for 0.0.0.0/0 -- that - is, the whole Internet -- through the tunnel to his SG, which then - sends it onward as if it came from his subnet. When traffic for the - extruded subnet arrives at his SG, it gets sent through the tunnel to - your SG, which passes it to the right machine.</P> -<P>Remember that when ipsec_manual or ipsec_auto takes a connection - down, it<EM> does not undo the route</EM> it made for that connection. - This lets you take a connection down and bring up a new one, or a - modified version of the old one, without having to rebuild the route it - uses and without any risk of packets which should use IPsec - accidentally going out in the clear. Because the route always points - into KLIPS, the packets will always go there. Because KLIPS temporarily - has no idea what to do with them (no eroute for them), they will be - discarded.</P> -<P>If you<EM> do</EM> want to take the route down, this is what the - "unroute" operation in manual and auto is for. Just do an unroute after - doing the down.</P> -<P>Note that the route for a connection may have replaced an existing - non-IPsec route. Nothing in Linux FreeS/WAN will put that pre-IPsec - route back. If you need it back, you have to create it with the route - command.</P> -<H2><A name="roadvirt">Road Warrior with virtual IP address</A></H2> -<P>Please note that<A HREF="http://www.freeswan.ca/download.php"> Super - FreeS/WAN</A> now features DHCP-over-IPsec, which is an alternate - procedure for Virtual IP address assignment.</P> -<P></P> -<P>Here is a mailing list message about another way to configure for - road warrior support:</P> -<PRE>Subject: Re: linux-ipsec: understanding the vpn - Date: Thu, 28 Oct 1999 10:43:22 -0400 - From: Irving Reid <irving@nevex.com> - -> local-------linux------internet------mobile -> LAN box user -> ... - -> now when the mobile user connects to the linux box -> it is given a virtual IP address, i have configured it to -> be in the 10.x.x.x range. mobile user and linux box -> have a tunnel between them with these IP addresses. - -> Uptil this all is fine. - -If it is possible to configure your mobile client software *not* to -use a virtual IP address, that will make your life easier. It is easier -to configure FreeS/WAN to use the actual address the mobile user gets -from its ISP. - -Unfortunately, some Windows clients don't let you choose. - -> what i would like to know is that how does the mobile -> user communicate with other computers on the local -> LAN , of course with the vpn ? - -> what IP address should the local LAN -> computers have ? I guess their default gateway -> should be the linux box ? and does the linux box need -> to be a 2 NIC card box or one is fine. - -As someone else stated, yes, the Linux box would usually be the default -IP gateway for the local lan. - -However... - -If you mobile user has software that *must* use a virtual IP address, -the whole picture changes. Nobody has put much effort into getting -FreeS/WAN to play well in this environment, but here's a sketch of one -approach: - -Local Lan 1.0.0.0/24 - | - +- Linux FreeS/WAN 1.0.0.2 - | - | 1.0.0.1 - Router - | 2.0.0.1 - | -Internet - | - | 3.0.0.1 -Mobile User - Virtual Address: 1.0.0.3 - -Note that the Local Lan network (1.0.0.x) can be registered, routable -addresses. - -Now, the Mobile User sets up an IPSec security association with the -Linux box (1.0.0.2); it should ESP encapsulate all traffic to the -network 1.0.0.x **EXCEPT** UDP port 500. 500/udp is required for the key -negotiation, which needs to work outside of the IPSec tunnel. - -On the Linux side, there's a bunch of stuff you need to do by hand (for -now). FreeS/WAN should correctly handle setting up the IPSec SA and -routes, but I haven't tested it so this may not work... - -The FreeS/WAN conn should look like: - -conn mobile - right=1.0.0.2 - rightsubnet=1.0.0.0/24 - rightnexthop=1.0.0.1 - left=0.0.0.0 # The infamous "road warrior" - leftsubnet=1.0.0.3/32 - -Note that the left subnet contains *only* the remote host's virtual -address. - -Hopefully the routing table on the FreeS/WAN box ends up looking like -this: - -% netstat -rn -Kernel IP routing table -Destination Gateway Genmask Flags MSS Window irtt Iface -1.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U 1500 0 0 eth0 -127.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.0.0.0 U 3584 0 0 lo -0.0.0.0 1.0.0.1 0.0.0.0 UG 1500 0 0 eth0 -1.0.0.3 1.0.0.1 255.255.255.255 UG 1433 0 0 ipsec0 - -So, if anybody sends a packet for 1.0.0.3 to the Linux box, it should -get bundled up and sent through the tunnel. To get the packets for -1.0.0.3 to the Linux box in the first place, you need to use "proxy -ARP". - -How this works is: when a host or router on the local Ethernet segment -wants to send a packet to 1.0.0.3, it sends out an Ethernet level -broadcast "ARP request". If 1.0.0.3 was on the local LAN, it would -reply, saying "send IP packets for 1.0.0.3 to my Ethernet address". - -Instead, you need to set up the Linux box so that _it_ answers ARP -requests for 1.0.0.3, even though that isn't its IP address. That -convinces everyone else on the lan to send 1.0.0.3 packets to the Linux -box, where the usual FreeS/WAN processing and routing take over. - -% arp -i eth0 -s 1.0.0.3 -D eth0 pub - -This says, if you see an ARP request on interface eth0 asking for -1.0.0.3, respond with the Ethernet address of interface eth0. - -Now, as I said at the very beginning, if it is *at all* possible to -configure your client *not* to use the virtual IP address, you can avoid -this whole mess.</PRE> -<H2><A name="dynamic">Dynamic Network Interfaces</A></H2> -<P>Sometimes you have to cope with a situation where the network - interface(s) aren't all there at boot. The common example is notebooks - with PCMCIA.</P> -<H3><A name="basicdyn">Basics</A></H3> -<P>The key issue here is that the<VAR> config setup</VAR> section of the<VAR> - /etc/ipsec.conf</VAR> configuration file lists the connection between - ipsecN and hardware interfaces, in the<VAR> interfaces=</VAR> variable. - At any time when<VAR> ipsec setup start</VAR> or<VAR> ipsec setup - restart</VAR> is run this variable<STRONG> must</STRONG> correspond to - the current real situation. More precisely, it<STRONG> must not</STRONG> - mention any hardware interfaces which don't currently exist. The - difficulty is that an<VAR> ipsec setup start</VAR> command is normally - run at boot time so interfaces that are not up then are mis-handled.</P> -<H3><A name="bootdyn">Boot Time</A></H3> -<P>Normally, an<VAR> ipsec setup start</VAR> is run at boot time. - However, if the hardware situation at boot time is uncertain, one of - two things must be done.</P> -<UL> -<LI>One possibility is simply not to have IPsec brought up at boot time. - To do this: -<PRE> chkconfig --level 2345 ipsec off</PRE> - That's for modern Red Hats or other Linuxes with chkconfig. Systems - which lack this will require fiddling with symlinks in /etc/rc.d/rc?.d - or the equivalent.</LI> -<LI>Another possibility is to bring IPsec up with no interfaces, which - is less aesthetically satisfying but simpler. Just put -<PRE> interfaces=</PRE> - in the configuration file. KLIPS and Pluto will be started, but won't - do anything.</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="changedyn">Change Time</A></H3> -<P>When the hardware *is* in place, IPsec has to be made aware of it. - Someday there may be a nice way to do this.</P> -<P>Right now, the way to do it is to fix the<VAR> /etc/ipsec.conf</VAR> - file appropriately, so<VAR> interfaces</VAR> reflects the new - situation, and then restart the IPsec subsystem. This does break any - existing IPsec connections.</P> -<P>If IPsec wasn't brought up at boot time, do</P> -<PRE> ipsec setup start</PRE> - while if it was, do -<PRE> ipsec setup restart</PRE> - which won't be as quick. -<P>If some of the hardware is to be taken out, before doing that, amend - the configuration file so interfaces no longer includes it, and do</P> -<PRE> ipsec setup restart</PRE> -<P>Again, this breaks any existing connections.</P> -<H2><A name="unencrypted">Unencrypted tunnels</A></H2> -<P>Sometimes you might want to create a tunnel without encryption. Often - this is a bad idea, even if you have some data which need not be - private. See this<A href="#traffic.resist"> discussion</A>.</P> -<P>The IPsec protocols provide two ways to do build such tunnels:</P> -<DL> -<DT>using ESP with null encryption</DT> -<DD>not supported by FreeS/WAN</DD> -<DT>using<A href="#AH"> AH</A> without<A href="#ESP"> ESP</A></DT> -<DD>supported for manually keyed connections</DD> -<DD>possible with explicit commands via<A href="manpage.d/ipsec_whack.8.html"> - ipsec_whack(8)</A> (see this<A href="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2001/02/msg00190.html"> - list message</A>)</DD> -<DD>not supported in the<A href="manpage.d/ipsec_auto.8.html"> - ipsec_auto(8)</A> scripts.</DD> -</DL> - One situation in which this comes up is when otherwise some data would - be encrypted twice. Alice wants a secure tunnel from her machine to - Bob's. Since she's behind one security gateway and he's behind another, - part of the tunnel that they build passes through the tunnel that their - site admins have built between the gateways. All of Alice and Bob's - messages are encrypted twice. -<P>There are several ways to handle this.</P> -<UL> -<LI>Just accept the overhead of double encryption. The site admins might - choose this if any of the following apply: -<UL> -<LI>policy says encrypt everything (usually, it should)</LI> -<LI>they don't entirely trust Alice and Bob (usually, if they don't have - to, they shouldn't)</LI> -<LI>if they don't feel the saved cycles are worth the time they'd need - to build a non-encrypted tunnel for Alice and Bob's packets (often, - they aren't)</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>Use a plain IP-in-IP tunnel. These are not well documented. A good - starting point is in the Linux kernel source tree, in - /usr/src/linux/drivers/net/README.tunnel.</LI> -<LI>Use a manually-keyed AH-only tunnel.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Note that if Alice and Bob want end-to-end security, they must build - a tunnel end-to-end between their machines or use some other end-to-end - tool such as PGP or SSL that suits their data. The only question is - whether the admins build some special unencrypted tunnel for those - already-encrypted packets.</P> -<HR> -<H1><A name="install">Installing FreeS/WAN</A></H1> -<P>This document will teach you how to install Linux FreeS/WAN. If your - distribution comes with Linux FreeS/WAN, we offer tips to get you - started.</P> -<H2><A NAME="15_1">Requirements</A></H2> -<P>To install FreeS/WAN you must:</P> -<UL> -<LI>be running Linux with the 2.4 or 2.2 kernel series. See this<A HREF="http://www.freeswan.ca/download.php#contact"> - kernel compatibility table</A>. -<BR>We also have experimental support for 2.6 kernels. Here are two - basic approaches: -<UL> -<LI> install FreeS/WAN, including its<A HREF="#parts"> KLIPS</A> kernel - code. This will remove the native IPsec stack and replace it with - KLIPS.</LI> -<LI> install the FreeS/WAN<A HREF="#parts"> userland tools</A> (keying - daemon and supporting scripts) for use with<A HREF="http://lartc.org/howto/lartc.ipsec.html"> - 2.6 kernel native IPsec</A>,</LI> -</UL> - See also these<A HREF="2.6.known-issues"> known issues with 2.6</A>.</LI> -<LI>have root access to your Linux box</LI> -<LI>choose the version of FreeS/WAN you wish to install based on<A HREF="http://www.freeswan.org/mail.html"> - mailing list reports</A> -<!-- or -our updates page (coming soon)--> -</LI> -</UL> -<H2><A NAME="15_2">Choose your install method</A></H2> -<P>There are three basic ways to get FreeS/WAN onto your system:</P> -<UL> -<LI>activating and testing a FreeS/WAN that<A HREF="#distroinstall"> - shipped with your Linux distribution</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#rpminstall">RPM install</A></LI> -<LI><A HREF="#srcinstall">Install from source</A></LI> -</UL> -<A NAME="distroinstall"></A> -<H2><A NAME="15_3">FreeS/WAN ships with some Linuxes</A></H2> -<P>FreeS/WAN comes with<A HREF="#distwith"> these distributions</A>.</P> -<P>If you're running one of these, include FreeS/WAN in the choices you - make during installation, or add it later using the distribution's - tools.</P> -<H3><A NAME="15_3_1">FreeS/WAN may be altered...</A></H3> -<P>Your distribution may have integrated extra features, such as Andreas - Steffen's X.509 patch, into FreeS/WAN. It may also use custom startup - script locations or directory names.</P> -<H3><A NAME="15_3_2">You might need to create an authentication keypair</A> -</H3> -<P>If your FreeS/WAN came with your distribution, you may wish to - generate a fresh RSA key pair. FreeS/WAN will use these keys for - authentication.</P> -<P> To do this, become root, and type:</P> -<PRE> ipsec newhostkey --output /etc/ipsec.secrets --hostname xy.example.com - chmod 600 /etc/ipsec.secrets</PRE> -<P>where you replace xy.example.com with your machine's fully-qualified - domain name. Generate some randomness, for example by wiggling your - mouse, to speed the process.</P> -<P>The resulting ipsec.secrets looks like:</P> -<PRE>: RSA { - # RSA 2192 bits xy.example.com Sun Jun 8 13:42:19 2003 - # for signatures only, UNSAFE FOR ENCRYPTION - #pubkey=0sAQOFppfeE3cC7wqJi... - Modulus: 0x85a697de137702ef0... - # everything after this point is secret - PrivateExponent: 0x16466ea5033e807... - Prime1: 0xdfb5003c8947b7cc88759065... - Prime2: 0x98f199b9149fde11ec956c814... - Exponent1: 0x9523557db0da7a885af90aee... - Exponent2: 0x65f6667b63153eb69db8f300dbb... - Coefficient: 0x90ad00415d3ca17bebff123413fc518... - } -# do not change the indenting of that "}"</PRE> -<P>In the actual file, the strings are much longer.</P> -<H3><A NAME="15_3_3">Start and test FreeS/WAN</A></H3> -<P>You can now<A HREF="#starttest"> start FreeS/WAN and test whether - it's been successfully installed.</A>.</P> -<A NAME="rpminstall"></A> -<H2><A NAME="15_4">RPM install</A></H2> -<P>These instructions are for a recent Red Hat with a stock Red Hat - kernel. We know that Mandrake and SUSE also produce FreeS/WAN RPMs. If - you're running either, install using your distribution's tools.</P> -<H3><A NAME="15_4_1">Download RPMs</A></H3> -<P>Decide which functionality you need:</P> -<UL> -<LI>standard FreeS/WAN RPMs. Use these shortcuts: -<BR> -<UL> -<LI>(for 2.6 kernels: userland only) -<BR> ncftpget - ftp://ftp.xs4all.nl/pub/crypto/freeswan/binaries/RedHat-RPMs/\*userland* -</LI> -<LI>(for 2.4 kernels) -<BR> ncftpget - ftp://ftp.xs4all.nl/pub/crypto/freeswan/binaries/RedHat-RPMs/`uname -r - | tr -d 'a-wy-z'`/\*</LI> -<LI> or view all the offerings at our<A href="ftp://ftp.xs4all.nl/pub/crypto/freeswan/binaries/RedHat-RPMs"> - FTP site</A>.</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>unofficial<A href="http://www.freeswan.ca/download.php"> Super - FreeS/WAN</A> RPMs, which include Andreas Steffen's X.509 patch and - more. Super FreeS/WAN RPMs do not currently include<A HREF="#NAT.gloss"> - Network Address Translation</A> (NAT) traversal, but Super FreeS/WAN - source does.</LI> -</UL> -<A NAME="2.6.rpm"></A> -<P>For 2.6 kernels, get the latest FreeS/WAN userland RPM, for example:</P> -<PRE> freeswan-userland-2.04.9-0.i386.rpm</PRE> -<P>Note: FreeS/WAN's support for 2.6 kernel IPsec is preliminary. Please - see<A HREf="2.6.known-issues"> 2.6.known-issues</A>, and the latest<A HREF="http://www.freeswan.org/mail.html"> - mailing list reports</A>.</P> -<P>Change to your new FreeS/WAN directory, and make and install the</P> -<P>For 2.4 kernels, get both kernel and userland RPMs. Check your kernel - version with</P> -<PRE> uname -r</PRE> -<P>Get a kernel module which matches that version. For example:</P> -<PRE> freeswan-module-2.04_2.4.20_20.9-0.i386.rpm</PRE> -<P>Note: These modules<B> will only work on the Red Hat kernel they were - built for</B>, since they are very sensitive to small changes in the - kernel.</P> -<P>Get FreeS/WAN utilities to match. For example:</P> -<PRE> freeswan-userland-2.04_2.4.20_20.9-0.i386.rpm</PRE> -<H3><A NAME="15_4_2">For freeswan.org RPMs: check signatures</A></H3> -<P>While you're at our ftp site, grab the RPM signing key</P> -<PRE> freeswan-rpmsign.asc</PRE> -<P>If you're running RedHat 8.x or later, import this key into the RPM - database:</P> -<PRE> rpm --import freeswan-rpmsign.asc</PRE> -<P>For RedHat 7.x systems, you'll need to add it to your<A HREF="#PGP"> - PGP</A> keyring:</P> -<PRE> pgp -ka freeswan-rpmsign.asc</PRE> -<P>Check the digital signatures on both RPMs using:</P> -<PRE> rpm --checksig freeswan*.rpm </PRE> -<P>You should see that these signatures are good:</P> -<PRE> freeswan-module-2.04_2.4.20_20.9-0.i386.rpm: pgp md5 OK - freeswan-userland-2.04_2.4.20_20.9-0.i386.rpm: pgp md5 OK</PRE> -<H3><A NAME="15_4_3">Install the RPMs</A></H3> -<P>Become root:</P> -<PRE> su</PRE> -<P>For a first time install, use:</P> -<PRE> rpm -ivh freeswan*.rpm</PRE> -<P>To upgrade existing RPMs (and keep all .conf files in place), use:</P> -<PRE> rpm -Uvh freeswan*.rpm</PRE> -<P>If you're upgrading from FreeS/WAN 1.x to 2.x RPMs, and encounter - problems, see<A HREF="#upgrading.rpms"> this note</A>.</P> -<H3><A NAME="15_4_4">Start and Test FreeS/WAN</A></H3> -<P>Now,<A HREF="#starttest"> start FreeS/WAN and test your install</A>.</P> -<A NAME="srcinstall"></A> -<H2><A NAME="15_5">Install from Source</A></H2> - -<!-- Most of this section, along with "Start and Test", can replace -INSTALL. --> -<H3><A NAME="15_5_1">Decide what functionality you need</A></H3> -<P>Your choices are:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="ftp://ftp.xs4all.nl/pub/crypto/freeswan">standard FreeS/WAN</A> -,</LI> -<LI>standard FreeS/WAN plus any of these<A HREF="#patch"> user-supported - patches</A>, or</LI> -<LI><A HREF="http://www.freeswan.ca/download">Super FreeS/WAN</A>, an - unofficial FreeS/WAN pre-patched with many of the above. Provides - additional algorithms, X.509, SA deletion, dead peer detection, and<A HREF="#NAT.gloss"> - Network Address Translation</A> (NAT) traversal.</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A NAME="15_5_2">Download FreeS/WAN</A></H3> -<P>Download the source tarball you've chosen, along with any patches.</P> -<H3><A NAME="15_5_3">For freeswan.org source: check its signature</A></H3> -<P>While you're at our ftp site, get our source signing key</P> -<PRE> freeswan-sigkey.asc</PRE> -<P>Add it to your PGP keyring:</P> -<PRE> pgp -ka freeswan-sigkey.asc</PRE> -<P>Check the signature using:</P> -<PRE> pgp freeswan-2.04.tar.gz.sig freeswan-2.04.tar.gz</PRE> -<P>You should see something like:</P> -<PRE> Good signature from user "Linux FreeS/WAN Software Team (build@freeswan.org)". - Signature made 2002/06/26 21:04 GMT using 2047-bit key, key ID 46EAFCE1</PRE> - -<!-- Note to self: build@freeswan.org has angled brackets in the original. - Changed because it conflicts with HTML tags. --> -<H3><A NAME="15_5_4">Untar, unzip</A></H3> -<P>As root, unpack your FreeS/WAN source into<VAR> /usr/src</VAR>.</P> -<PRE> su - mv freeswan-2.04.tar.gz /usr/src - cd /usr/src - tar -xzf freeswan-2.04.tar.gz -</PRE> -<H3><A NAME="15_5_5">Patch if desired</A></H3> -<P>Now's the time to add any patches. The contributor may have special - instructions, or you may simply use the patch command.</P> -<H3><A NAME="15_5_6">... and Make</A></H3> -<P>Choose one of the methods below.</P> -<H4><A NAME="15_5_6_1">Userland-only Install for 2.6 kernels</A></H4> -<A NAME="2.6.src"></A> -<P>Note: FreeS/WAN's support for 2.6 kernel IPsec is preliminary. Please - see<A HREf="2.6.known-issues"> 2.6.known-issues</A>, and the latest<A HREF="http://www.freeswan.org/mail.html"> - mailing list reports</A>.</P> -<P>Change to your new FreeS/WAN directory, and make and install the - FreeS/WAN userland tools.</P> -<PRE> cd /usr/src/freeswan-2.04 - make programs - make install</PRE> -<P>Now,<A HREF="#starttest"> start FreeS/WAN and test your install</A>.</P> -<H4><A NAME="15_5_6_2">KLIPS install for 2.2, 2.4, or 2.6 kernels</A></H4> -<A NAME="modinstall"></A> -<P>To make a modular version of KLIPS, along with other FreeS/WAN - programs you'll need, use the command sequence below. This will change - to your new FreeS/WAN directory, make the FreeS/WAN module (and other - stuff), and install it all.</P> -<PRE> cd /usr/src/freeswan-2.04 - make oldmod - make minstall</PRE> -<P><A HREF="#starttest">Start FreeS/WAN and test your install</A>.</P> -<P>To link KLIPS statically into your kernel (using your old kernel - settings), and install other FreeS/WAN components, do:</P> -<PRE> cd /usr/src/freeswan-2.04 - make oldmod - make minstall</PRE> -<P>Reboot your system and<A HREF="#testonly"> test your install</A>.</P> -<P>For other ways to compile KLIPS, see our Makefile.</P> -<A name="starttest"></A> -<H2><A NAME="15_6">Start FreeS/WAN and test your install</A></H2> -<P>Bring FreeS/WAN up with:</P> -<PRE> service ipsec start</PRE> -<P>This is not necessary if you've rebooted.</P> -<A name="testonly"></A> -<H2><A NAME="15_7">Test your install</A></H2> -<P>To check that you have a successful install, run:</P> -<PRE> ipsec verify</PRE> -<P>You should see at least:</P> -<PRE> - Checking your system to see if IPsec got installed and started correctly - Version check and ipsec on-path [OK] - Checking for KLIPS support in kernel [OK] - Checking for RSA private key (/etc/ipsec.secrets) [OK] - Checking that pluto is running [OK] -</PRE> -<P>If any of these first four checks fails, see our<A href="#install.check"> - troubleshooting guide</A>.</P> -<H2><A NAME="15_8">Making FreeS/WAN play well with others</A></H2> -<P>There are at least a couple of things on your system that might - interfere with FreeS/WAN, and now's a good time to check these:</P> -<UL> -<LI>Firewalling. You need to allow UDP 500 through your firewall, plus - ESP (protocol 50) and AH (protocol 51). For more information, see our - updated firewalls document (coming soon).</LI> -<LI>Network address translation. Do not NAT the packets you will be - tunneling.</LI> -</UL> -<H2><A NAME="15_9">Configure for your needs</A></H2> -<P>You'll need to configure FreeS/WAN for your local site. Have a look - at our<A HREF="quickstart.html"> opportunism quickstart guide</A> to - see if that easy method is right for your needs. Or, see how to<A HREF="config.html"> - configure a network-to-network or Road Warrior style VPN</A>.</P> -<HR> -<H1><A NAME="config">How to configure FreeS/WAN</A></H1> -<P>This page will teach you how to configure a simple network-to-network - link or a Road Warrior connection between two Linux FreeS/WAN boxes.</P> -<P>See also these related documents:</P> -<UL> -<LI>our<A HREF="#quickstart"> quickstart</A> guide to<A HREF="#carpediem"> - opportunistic encryption</A></LI> -<LI>our guide to configuration with<A HREF="#policygroups"> policy - groups</A></LI> -<LI>our<A HREF="#adv_config"> advanced configuration</A> document</LI> -</UL> -<P> The network-to-network setup allows you to connect two office - networks into one Virtual Private Network, while the Road Warrior - connection secures a laptop's telecommute to work. Our examples also - show the basic procedure on the Linux FreeS/WAN side where another - IPsec peer is in play.</P> -<P> Shortcut to<A HREF="#config.netnet"> net-to-net</A>. -<BR> Shortcut to<A HREF="#config.rw"> Road Warrior</A>.</P> -<H2><A NAME="16_1">Requirements</A></H2> -<P>To configure the network-to-network connection you must have:</P> -<UL> -<LI>two Linux gateways with static IPs</LI> -<LI>a network behind each gate. Networks must have non-overlapping IP - ranges.</LI> -<LI>Linux FreeS/WAN<A HREF="#install"> installed</A> on both gateways</LI> -<LI><A HREF="http://www.tcpdump.org"><VAR>tcpdump</VAR></A> on the local - gate, to test the connection</LI> -</UL> -<P>For the Road Warrior you need:</P> -<UL> -<LI>one Linux box with a static IP</LI> -<LI>a Linux laptop with a dynamic IP</LI> -<LI>Linux FreeS/WAN installed on both</LI> -<LI>for testing,<VAR> tcpdump</VAR> on your gateway or laptop</LI> -</UL> -<P>If both IPs are dynamic, your situation is a bit trickier. Your best - bet is a variation on the<A HREF="#config.rw"> Road Warrior</A>, as - described in<A HREF="http://lists.freeswan.org/archives/users/2003-October/msg00282.html"> - this mailing list message</A>.</P> -<H2><A name="config.netnet"></A>Net-to-Net connection</H2> -<H3><A name="netnet.info.ex">Gather information</A></H3> -<P>For each gateway, compile the following information:</P> -<UL> -<LI>gateway IP</LI> -<LI>IP range of the subnet you will be protecting. This doesn't have to - be your whole physical subnet.</LI> -<LI>a name by which that gateway can identify itself for IPsec - negotiations. Its form is a Fully Qualified Domain Name preceded by an - @ sign, ie. @xy.example.com. -<BR> It does not need to be within a domain that you own. It can be a - made-up name.</LI> -</UL> -<H4><A NAME="16_2_1_1">Get your leftrsasigkey</A></H4> -<P>On your local Linux FreeS/WAN gateway, print your IPsec public key:</P> -<PRE> ipsec showhostkey --left</PRE> -<P>The output should look like this (with the key shortened for easy - reading):</P> -<PRE> # RSA 2048 bits xy.example.com Fri Apr 26 15:01:41 2002 - leftrsasigkey=0sAQOnwiBPt...</PRE> -<P>Don't have a key? Use<A HREF="manpage.d/ipsec_newhostkey.8.html"><VAR> - ipsec newhostkey</VAR></A> to create one.</P> -<H4><A NAME="16_2_1_2">...and your rightrsasigkey</A></H4> -<P>Get a console on the remote side:</P> -<PRE> ssh2 ab.example.com</PRE> -<P>In that window, type:</P> -<PRE> ipsec showhostkey --right</PRE> -<P>You'll see something like:</P> -<PRE> # RSA 2192 bits ab.example.com Thu May 16 15:26:20 2002 - rightrsasigkey=0sAQOqH55O...</PRE> -<H3><A NAME="16_2_2">Edit<VAR> /etc/ipsec.conf</VAR></A></H3> -<P>Back on the local gate, copy our template to<VAR> /etc/ipsec.conf</VAR> -. (on Mandrake,<VAR> /etc/freeswan/ipsec.conf</VAR>). Substitute the - information you've gathered for our example data.</P> -<PRE>conn net-to-net - left=192.0.2.2 # Local vitals - leftsubnet=192.0.2.128/29 # - leftid=@xy.example.com # - leftrsasigkey=0s1LgR7/oUM... # - leftnexthop=%defaultroute # correct in many situations - right=192.0.2.9 # Remote vitals - rightsubnet=10.0.0.0/24 # - rightid=@ab.example.com # - rightrsasigkey=0sAQOqH55O... # - rightnexthop=%defaultroute # correct in many situations - auto=add # authorizes but doesn't start this - # connection at startup</PRE> -<P> "Left" and "right" should represent the machines that have FreeS/WAN - installed on them, and "leftsubnet" and "rightsubnet" machines that are - being protected. /32 is assumed for left/right and left/rightsubnet - parameters.</P> -<P>Copy<VAR> conn net-to-net</VAR> to the remote-side /etc/ipsec.conf. - If you've made no other modifications to either<VAR> ipsec.conf</VAR>, - simply:</P> -<PRE> scp2 ipsec.conf root@ab.example.com:/etc/ipsec.conf</PRE> -<H3><A NAME="16_2_3">Start your connection</A></H3> -<P>Locally, type:</P> -<PRE> ipsec auto --up net-to-net</PRE> -<P>You should see:</P> -<PRE> 104 "net-net" #223: STATE_MAIN_I1: initiate - 106 "net-net" #223: STATE_MAIN_I2: sent MI2, expecting MR2 - 108 "net-net" #223: STATE_MAIN_I3: sent MI3, expecting MR3 - 004 "net-net" #223: STATE_MAIN_I4: ISAKMP SA established - 112 "net-net" #224: STATE_QUICK_I1: initiate - 004 "net-net" #224: STATE_QUICK_I2: sent QI2, IPsec SA established</PRE> -<P>The important thing is<VAR> IPsec SA established</VAR>. If you're - unsuccessful, see our<A HREF="#trouble"> troubleshooting tips</A>.</P> -<H3><A NAME="16_2_4">Do not MASQ or NAT packets to be tunneled</A></H3> -<P>If you are using<A HREF="#masq"> IP masquerade</A> or<A HREF="#NAT.gloss"> - Network Address Translation (NAT)</A> on either gateway, you must now - exempt the packets you wish to tunnel from this treatment. For example, - if you have a rule like:</P> -<PRE>iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o eth0 -s 10.0.0.0/24 -j MASQUERADE -</PRE> -<P>change it to something like:</P> -<PRE>iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o eth0 -s 10.0.0.0/24 -d \! 192.0.2.128/29 -j MASQUERADE</PRE> -<P>This may be necessary on both gateways.</P> -<H3><A NAME="16_2_5">Test your connection</A></H3> -<P>Sit at one of your local subnet nodes (not the gateway), and ping a - subnet node on the other (again, not the gateway).</P> -<PRE> ping fileserver.toledo.example.com</PRE> -<P>While still pinging, go to the local gateway and snoop your outgoing - interface, for example:</P> -<PRE> tcpdump -i ppp0</PRE> -<P>You want to see ESP (Encapsulating Security Payload) packets moving<B> - back and forth</B> between the two gateways at the same frequency as - your pings:</P> -<PRE> 19:16:32.046220 192.0.2.2 > 192.0.2.9: ESP(spi=0x3be6c4dc,seq=0x3) - 19:16:32.085630 192.0.2.9 > 192.0.2.2: ESP(spi=0x5fdd1cf8,seq=0x6)</PRE> -<P>If you see this, congratulations are in order! You have a tunnel - which will protect any IP data from one subnet to the other, as it - passes between the two gates. If not, go and<A HREF="#trouble"> - troubleshoot</A>.</P> -<P>Note: your new tunnel protects only net-net traffic, not - gateway-gateway, or gateway-subnet. If you need this (for example, if - machines on one net need to securely contact a fileserver on the IPsec - gateway), you'll need to create<A HREF="#adv_config"> extra connections</A> -.</P> -<H3><A NAME="16_2_6">Finishing touches</A></H3> -<P>Now that your connection works, name it something sensible, like:</P> -<PRE>conn winstonnet-toledonet</PRE> -<P>To have the tunnel come up on-boot, replace</P> -<PRE> auto=add</PRE> -<P>with:</P> -<PRE> auto=start</PRE> -<P>Copy these changes to the other side, for example:</P> -<PRE> scp2 ipsec.conf root@ab.example.com:/etc/ipsec.conf</PRE> -<P>Enjoy!</P> -<H2><A name="config.rw"></A>Road Warrior Configuration</H2> -<H3><A name="rw.info.ex">Gather information</A></H3> -<P>You'll need to know:</P> -<UL> -<LI>the gateway's static IP</LI> -<LI>the IP range of the subnet behind that gateway</LI> -<LI>a name by which each side can identify itself for IPsec - negotiations. Its form is a Fully Qualified Domain Name preceded by an - @ sign, ie. @road.example.com. -<BR> It does not need to be within a domain that you own. It can be a - made-up name.</LI> -</UL> -<H4><A NAME="16_3_1_1">Get your leftrsasigkey...</A></H4> -<P>On your laptop, print your IPsec public key:</P> -<PRE> ipsec showhostkey --left</PRE> -<P>The output should look like this (with the key shortened for easy - reading):</P> -<PRE> # RSA 2192 bits road.example.com Sun Jun 9 02:45:02 2002 - leftrsasigkey=0sAQPIPN9uI...</PRE> -<P>Don't have a key? See<A HREF="old_config.html#genrsakey"> these - instructions</A>.</P> -<H4><A NAME="16_3_1_2">...and your rightrsasigkey</A></H4> -<P>Get a console on the gateway:</P> -<PRE> ssh2 xy.example.com</PRE> -<P>View the gateway's public key with:</P> -<PRE> ipsec showhostkey --right</PRE> -<P>This will yield something like</P> -<PRE> # RSA 2048 bits xy.example.com Fri Apr 26 15:01:41 2002 - rightrsasigkey=0sAQOnwiBPt...</PRE> -<H3><A NAME="16_3_2">Customize<VAR> /etc/ipsec.conf</VAR></A></H3> -<P>On your laptop, copy this template to<VAR> /etc/ipsec.conf</VAR>. (on - Mandrake,<VAR> /etc/freeswan/ipsec.conf</VAR>). Substitute the - information you've gathered for our example data.</P> -<PRE>conn road - left=%defaultroute # Picks up our dynamic IP - leftnexthop=%defaultroute # - leftid=@road.example.com # Local information - leftrsasigkey=0sAQPIPN9uI... # - right=192.0.2.10 # Remote information - rightsubnet=10.0.0.0/24 # - rightid=@xy.example.com # - rightrsasigkey=0sAQOnwiBPt... # - auto=add # authorizes but doesn't start this - # connection at startup</PRE> -<P>The template for the gateway is different. Notice how it reverses<VAR> - left</VAR> and<VAR> right</VAR>, in keeping with our convention that<STRONG> - L</STRONG>eft is<STRONG> L</STRONG>ocal,<STRONG> R</STRONG>ight<STRONG> - R</STRONG>emote. Be sure to switch your rsasigkeys in keeping with - this.</P> -<PRE> ssh2 xy.example.com - vi /etc/ipsec.conf</PRE> -<P>and add:</P> -<PRE>conn road - left=192.0.2.2 # Gateway's information - leftid=@xy.example.com # - leftsubnet=192.0.2.128/29 # - leftrsasigkey=0sAQOnwiBPt... # - rightnexthop=%defaultroute # correct in many situations - right=%any # Wildcard: we don't know the laptop's IP - rightid=@road.example.com # - rightrsasigkey=0sAQPIPN9uI... # - auto=add # authorizes but doesn't start this - # connection at startup</PRE> -<H3><A NAME="16_3_3">Start your connection</A></H3> -<P>You must start the connection from the Road Warrior side. On your - laptop, type:</P> -<PRE> ipsec auto --start net-to-net</PRE> -<P>You should see:</P> -<PRE>104 "net-net" #223: STATE_MAIN_I1: initiate -106 "road" #301: STATE_MAIN_I2: sent MI2, expecting MR2 -108 "road" #301: STATE_MAIN_I3: sent MI3, expecting MR3 -004 "road" #301: STATE_MAIN_I4: ISAKMP SA established -112 "road" #302: STATE_QUICK_I1: initiate -004 "road" #302: STATE_QUICK_I2: sent QI2, IPsec SA established</PRE> -<P>Look for<VAR> IPsec SA established</VAR>. If you're unsuccessful, see - our<A HREF="#trouble"> troubleshooting tips</A>.</P> -<H3><A NAME="16_3_4">Do not MASQ or NAT packets to be tunneled</A></H3> -<P>If you are using<A HREF="#masq"> IP masquerade</A> or<A HREF="#NAT.gloss"> - Network Address Translation (NAT)</A> on either gateway, you must now - exempt the packets you wish to tunnel from this treatment. For example, - if you have a rule like:</P> -<PRE>iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o eth0 -s 10.0.0.0/24 -j MASQUERADE -</PRE> -<P>change it to something like:</P> -<PRE>iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o eth0 -s 10.0.0.0/24 -d \! 192.0.2.128/29 -j MASQUERADE</PRE> -<H3><A NAME="16_3_5">Test your connection</A></H3> -<P>From your laptop, ping a subnet node behind the remote gateway. Do - not choose the gateway itself for this test.</P> -<PRE> ping ns.winston.example.com</PRE> -<P>Snoop the packets exiting the laptop, with a command like:</P> -<PRE> tcpdump -i wlan0</PRE> -<P>You have success if you see (Encapsulating Security Payload) packets - travelling<B> in both directions</B>:</P> -<PRE> 19:16:32.046220 192.0.2.2 > 192.0.2.9: ESP(spi=0x3be6c4dc,seq=0x3) - 19:16:32.085630 192.0.2.9 > 192.0.2.2: ESP(spi=0x5fdd1cf8,seq=0x6)</PRE> -<P>If you do, great! Traffic between your Road Warrior and the net - behind your gateway is protected. If not, see our<A HREF="#trouble"> - troubleshooting hints</A>.</P> -<P>Your new tunnel protects only traffic addressed to the net, not to - the IPsec gateway itself. If you need the latter, you'll want to make - an<A HREF="#adv_config"> extra tunnel.</A>.</P> -<H3><A NAME="16_3_6">Finishing touches</A></H3> -<P>On both ends, name your connection wisely, like:</P> -<PRE>conn mike-to-office</PRE> -<P><B>On the laptop only,</B> replace</P> -<PRE> auto=add</PRE> -<P>with:</P> -<PRE> auto=start</PRE> -<P>so that you'll be connected on-boot.</P> -<P>Happy telecommuting!</P> -<H3><A NAME="16_3_7">Multiple Road Warriors</A></H3> -<P>If you're using RSA keys, as we did in this example, you can add as - many Road Warriors as you like. The left/rightid parameter lets Linux - FreeS/WAN distinguish between multiple Road Warrior peers, each with - its own public key.</P> -<P>The situation is different for shared secrets (PSK). During a PSK - negotiation, ID information is not available at the time Pluto is - trying to determine which secret to use, so, effectively, you can only - define one Roadwarrior connection. All your PSK road warriors must - therefore share one secret.</P> -<H2><A NAME="16_4">What next?</A></H2> -<P>Using the principles illustrated here, you can try variations such - as:</P> -<UL> -<LI>a telecommuter with a static IP</LI> -<LI>a road warrior with a subnet behind it</LI> -</UL> -<P>Or, look at some of our<A HREF="#adv_config"> more complex - configuration examples.</A>.</P> -<HR> -<H1><A name="background">Linux FreeS/WAN background</A></H1> -<P>This section discusses a number of issues which have three things in - common:</P> -<UL> -<LI>They are not specifically FreeS/WAN problems</LI> -<LI>You may have to understand them to get FreeS/WAN working right</LI> -<LI>They are not simple questions</LI> -</UL> -<P>Grouping them here lets us provide the explanations some users will - need without unduly complicating the main text.</P> -<P>The explanations here are intended to be adequate for FreeS/WAN - purposes (please comment to the<A href="mail.html"> users mailing list</A> - if you don't find them so), but they are not trying to be complete or - definitive. If you need more information, see the references provided - in each section.</P> -<H2><A name="dns.background">Some DNS background</A></H2> -<P><A href="#carpediem">Opportunistic encryption</A> requires that the - gateway systems be able to fetch public keys, and other IPsec-related - information, from each other's DNS (Domain Name Service) records.</P> -<P><A href="#DNS">DNS</A> is a distributed database that maps names to - IP addresses and vice versa.</P> -<P>Much good reference material is available for DNS, including:</P> -<UL> -<LI>the<A href="http://www.linuxdoc.org/HOWTO/DNS-HOWTO.html"> DNS HowTo</A> -</LI> -<LI>the standard<A href="#DNS.book"> DNS reference</A> book</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.linuxdoc.org/LDP/nag2/index.html">Linux Network - Administrator's Guide</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.nominum.com/resources/whitepapers/bind-white-paper.html"> -BIND overview</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.nominum.com/resources/documentation/Bv9ARM.pdf"> -BIND 9 Administrator's Reference</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>We give only a brief overview here, intended to help you use DNS for - FreeS/WAN purposes.</P> -<H3><A name="forward.reverse">Forward and reverse maps</A></H3> -<P>Although the implementation is distributed, it is often useful to - speak of DNS as if it were just two enormous tables:</P> -<UL> -<LI>the forward map: look up a name, get an IP address</LI> -<LI>the reverse map: look up an IP address, get a name</LI> -</UL> -<P>Both maps can optionally contain additional data. For opportunistic - encryption, we insert the data need for IPsec authentication.</P> -<P>A system named gateway.example.com with IP address 10.20.30.40 should - have at least two DNS records, one in each map:</P> -<DL> -<DT>gateway.example.com. IN A 10.20.30.40</DT> -<DD>used to look up the name and get an IP address</DD> -<DT>40.30.20.10.in-addr.arpa. IN PTR gateway.example.com.</DT> -<DD>used for reverse lookups, looking up an address to get the - associated name. Notice that the digits here are in reverse order; the - actual address is 10.20.30.40 but we use 40.30.20.10 here.</DD> -</DL> -<H3><A NAME="17_1_2">Hierarchy and delegation</A></H3> -<P>For both maps there is a hierarchy of DNS servers and a system of - delegating authority so that, for example:</P> -<UL> -<LI>the DNS administrator for example.com can create entries of the form<VAR> - name</VAR>.example.com</LI> -<LI>the example.com admin cannot create an entry for counterexample.com; - only someone with authority for .com can do that</LI> -<LI>an admin might have authority for 20.10.in-addr.arpa.</LI> -<LI>in either map, authority can be delegated -<UL> -<LI>the example.com admin could give you authority for - westcoast.example.com</LI> -<LI>the 20.10.in-addr.arpa admin could give you authority for - 30.20.10.in-addr.arpa</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -</UL> -<P>DNS zones are the units of delegation. There is a hierarchy of zones.</P> -<H3><A NAME="17_1_3">Syntax of DNS records</A></H3> -<P>Returning to the example records:</P> -<PRE> gateway.example.com. IN A 10.20.30.40 - 40.30.20.10.in-addr.arpa. IN PTR gateway.example.com.</PRE> -<P>some syntactic details are:</P> -<UL> -<LI>the IN indicates that these records are for<STRONG> In</STRONG> -ternet addresses</LI> -<LI>The final periods in '.com.' and '.arpa.' are required. They - indicate the root of the domain name system.</LI> -</UL> -<P>The capitalised strings after IN indicate the type of record. - Possible types include:</P> -<UL> -<LI><STRONG>A</STRONG>ddress, for forward lookups</LI> -<LI><STRONG>P</STRONG>oin<STRONG>T</STRONG>e<STRONG>R</STRONG>, for - reverse lookups</LI> -<LI><STRONG>C</STRONG>anonical<STRONG> NAME</STRONG>, records to support - aliasing, multiple names for one address</LI> -<LI><STRONG>M</STRONG>ail e<STRONG>X</STRONG>change, used in mail - routing</LI> -<LI><STRONG>SIG</STRONG>nature, used in<A href="#SDNS"> secure DNS</A></LI> -<LI><STRONG>KEY</STRONG>, used in<A href="#SDNS"> secure DNS</A></LI> -<LI><STRONG>T</STRONG>e<STRONG>XT</STRONG>, a multi-purpose record type</LI> -</UL> -<P>To set up for opportunistic encryption, you add some TXT records to - your DNS data. Details are in our<A href="quickstart.html"> quickstart</A> - document.</P> -<H3><A NAME="17_1_4">Cacheing, TTL and propagation delay</A></H3> -<P>DNS information is extensively cached. With no caching, a lookup by - your system of "www.freeswan.org" might involve:</P> -<UL> -<LI>your system asks your nameserver for "www.freeswan.org"</LI> -<LI>local nameserver asks root server about ".org", gets reply</LI> -<LI>local nameserver asks .org nameserver about "freeswan.org", gets - reply</LI> -<LI>local nameserver asks freeswan.org nameserver about - "www.freeswan.org", gets reply</LI> -</UL> -<P>However, this can be a bit inefficient. For example, if you are in - the Phillipines, the closest a root server is in Japan. That might send - you to a .org server in the US, and then to freeswan.org in Holland. If - everyone did all those lookups every time they clicked on a web link, - the net would grind to a halt.</P> -<P>Nameservers therefore cache information they look up. When you click - on another link at www.freeswan.org, your local nameserver has the IP - address for that server in its cache, and no further lookups are - required.</P> -<P>Intermediate results are also cached. If you next go to - lists.freeswan.org, your nameserver can just ask the freeswan.org - nameserver for that address; it does not need to query the root or .org - nameservers because it has a cached address for the freeswan.org zone - server.</P> -<P>Of course, like any cacheing mechanism, this can create problems of - consistency. What if the administrator for freeswan.org changes the IP - address, or the authentication key, for www.freeswan.org? If you use - old information from the cache, you may get it wrong. On the other - hand, you cannot afford to look up fresh information every time. Nor - can you expect the freeswan.org server to notify you; that isn't in the - protocols.</P> -<P>The solution that is in the protocols is fairly simple. Cacheable - records are marked with Time To Live (TTL) information. When the time - expires, the caching server discards the record. The next time someone - asks for it, the server fetches a fresh copy. Of course, a server may - also discard records before their TTL expires if it is running out of - cache space.</P> -<P>This implies that there will be some delay before the new version of - a changed record propagates around the net. Until the TTLs on all - copies of the old record expire, some users will see it because that is - what is in their cache. Other users may see the new record immediately - because they don't have an old one cached.</P> -<H2><A name="MTU.trouble">Problems with packet fragmentation</A></H2> -<P>It seems, from mailing list reports, to be moderately common for - problems to crop up in which small packets pass through the IPsec - tunnels just fine but larger packets fail.</P> -<P>These problems are caused by various devices along the way - mis-handling either packet fragments or<A href="#pathMTU"> path MTU - discovery</A>.</P> -<P>IPsec makes packets larger by adding an ESP or AH header. This can - tickle assorted bugs in fragment handling in routers and firewalls, or - in path MTU discovery mechanisms, and cause a variety of symptoms which - are both annoying and, often, quite hard to diagnose.</P> -<P>An explanation from project technical lead Henry Spencer:</P> -<PRE>The problem is IP fragmentation; more precisely, the problem is that the -second, third, etc. fragments of an IP packet are often difficult for -filtering mechanisms to classify. - -Routers cannot rely on reassembling the packet, or remembering what was in -earlier fragments, because the fragments may be out of order or may even -follow different routes. So any general, worst-case filtering decision -pretty much has to be made on each fragment independently. (If the router -knows that it is the only route to the destination, so all fragments -*must* pass through it, reassembly would be possible... but most routers -don't want to bother with the complications of that.) - -All fragments carry roughly the original IP header, but any higher-level -header is (for IP purposes) just the first part of the packet data... so -only the first fragment carries that. So, for example, on examining the -second fragment of a TCP packet, you could tell that it's TCP, but not -what port number it is destined for -- that information is in the TCP -header, which appears in the first fragment only. - -The result of this classification difficulty is that stupid routers and -over-paranoid firewalls may just throw fragments away. To get through -them, you must reduce your MTU enough that fragmentation will not occur. -(In some cases, they might be willing to attempt reassembly, but have very -limited resources to devote to it, meaning that packets must be small and -fragments few in number, leading to the same conclusion: smaller MTU.)</PRE> -<P>In addition to the problem Henry describes, you may also have trouble - with<A href="#pathMTU"> path MTU discovery</A>.</P> -<P>By default, FreeS/WAN uses a large<A href="#MTU"> MTU</A> for the - ipsec device. This avoids some problems, but may complicate others. - Here's an explanation from Claudia:</P> -<PRE>Here are a couple of pieces of background information. Apologies if you -have seen these already. An excerpt from one of my old posts: - - An MTU of 16260 on ipsec0 is usual. The IPSec device defaults to this - high MTU so that it does not fragment incoming packets before encryption - and encapsulation. If after IPSec processing packets are larger than 1500, - [ie. the mtu of eth0] then eth0 will fragment them. - - Adding IPSec headers adds a certain number of bytes to each packet. - The MTU of the IPSec interface refers to the maximum size of the packet - before the IPSec headers are added. In some cases, people find it helpful - to set ipsec0's MTU to 1500-(IPSec header size), which IIRC is about 1430. - - That way, the resulting encapsulated packets don't exceed 1500. On most - networks, packets less than 1500 will not need to be fragmented. - -and... (from Henry Spencer) - - The way it *ought* to work is that the MTU advertised by the ipsecN - interface should be that of the underlying hardware interface, less a - pinch for the extra headers needed. - - Unfortunately, in certain situations this breaks many applications. - There is a widespread implicit assumption that the smallest MTUs are - at the ends of paths, not in the middle, and another that MTUs are - never less than 1500. A lot of code is unprepared to handle paths - where there is an "interior minimum" in the MTU, especially when it's - less than 1500. So we advertise a big MTU and just let the resulting - big packets fragment. - -This usually works, but we do get bitten in cases where some intermediate -point can't handle all that fragmentation. We can't win on this one.</PRE> -<P>The MTU can be changed with an<VAR> overridemtu=</VAR> statement in - the<VAR> config setup</VAR> section of<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> - ipsec.conf.5</A>.</P> -<P>For a discussion of MTU issues and some possible solutions using - Linux advanced routing facilities, see the<A href="http://www.linuxguruz.org/iptables/howto/2.4routing-15.html#ss15.6"> - Linux 2.4 Advanced Routing HOWTO</A>. For a discussion of MTU and NAT - (Network Address Translation), see<A HREF="http://harlech.math.ucla.edu/services/ipsec.html"> - James Carter's MTU notes</A>.</P> -<H2><A name="nat.background">Network address translation (NAT)</A></H2> -<P><STRONG>N</STRONG>etwork<STRONG> A</STRONG>ddress<STRONG> T</STRONG> -ranslation is a service provided by some gateway machines. Calling it - NAPT (adding the word<STRONG> P</STRONG>ort) would be more precise, but - we will follow the widespread usage.</P> -<P>A gateway doing NAT rewrites the headers of packets it is forwarding, - changing one or more of:</P> -<UL> -<LI>source address</LI> -<LI>source port</LI> -<LI>destination address</LI> -<LI>destination port</LI> -</UL> -<P>On Linux 2.4, NAT services are provided by the<A href="http://netfilter.samba.org"> - netfilter(8)</A> firewall code. There are several<A href="http://netfilter.samba.org/documentation/index.html#HOWTO"> - Netfilter HowTos</A> including one on NAT.</P> -<P>For older versions of Linux, this was referred to as "IP masquerade" - and different tools were used. See this<A href="http://www.e-infomax.com/ipmasq/"> - resource page</A>.</P> -<P>Putting an IPsec gateway behind a NAT gateway is not recommended. See - our<A href="#NAT"> firewalls document</A>.</P> -<H3><A NAME="17_3_1">NAT to non-routable addresses</A></H3> -<P>The most common application of NAT uses private<A href="#non-routable"> - non-routable</A> addresses.</P> -<P>Often a home or small office network will have:</P> -<UL> -<LI>one connection to the Internet</LI> -<LI>one assigned publicly visible IP address</LI> -<LI>several machines that all need access to the net</LI> -</UL> -<P>Of course this poses a problem since several machines cannot use one - address. The best solution might be to obtain more addresses, but often - this is impractical or uneconomical.</P> -<P>A common solution is to have:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="#non-routable">non-routable</A> addresses on the local - network</LI> -<LI>the gateway machine doing NAT</LI> -<LI>all packets going outside the LAN rewritten to have the gateway as - their source address</LI> -</UL> -<P>The client machines are set up with reserved<A href="#non-routable"> - non-routable</A> IP addresses defined in RFC 1918. The masquerading - gateway, the machine with the actual link to the Internet, rewrites - packet headers so that all packets going onto the Internet appear to - come from one IP address, that of its Internet interface. It then gets - all the replies, does some table lookups and more header rewriting, and - delivers the replies to the appropriate client machines.</P> -<P>As far as anyone else on the Internet is concerned, the systems - behind the gateway are completely hidden. Only one machine with one IP - address is visible.</P> -<P>For IPsec on such a gateway, you can entirely ignore the NAT in:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html">ipsec.conf(5)</A></LI> -<LI>firewall rules affecting your Internet-side interface</LI> -</UL> -<P>Those can be set up exactly as they would be if your gateway had no - other systems behind it.</P> -<P>You do, however, have to take account of the NAT in firewall rules - which affect packet forwarding.</P> -<H3><A NAME="17_3_2">NAT to routable addresses</A></H3> -<P>NAT to routable addresses is also possible, but is less common and - may make for rather tricky routing problems. We will not discuss it - here. See the<A href="http://netfilter.samba.org/documentation/index.html#HOWTO"> - Netfilter HowTos</A>.</P> -<HR> -<H1><A name="user.examples">FreeS/WAN script examples</A></H1> - This file is intended to hold a collection of user-written example - scripts or configuration files for use with FreeS/WAN. -<P> So far it has only one entry.</P> -<H2><A name="poltorak">Poltorak's Firewall script</A></H2> -<PRE> -From: Poltorak Serguei <poltorak@dataforce.net> -Subject: [Users] Using FreeS/WAN -Date: Tue, 16 Oct 2001 - -Hello. - -I'm using FreeS/WAN IPsec for half a year. I learned a lot of things about -it and I think it would be interesting for someone to see the result of my -experiments and usage of FreeS/WAN. If you find a mistake in this -file, please e-mail me. And excuse me for my english... I'm learning.. :) - -I'll talk about vary simple configuration: - -addresses prefix = 192.168 - - lan1 sgw1 .0.0/24 (Internet) sgw2 lan2 - .1.0/24---[ .1.1 ; .0.1 ]===================[ .0.10 ; . 2.10 ]---.2.0/24 - - -We need to let lan1 see lan2 across Internet like it is behind sgw1. The -same for lan2. And we need to do IPX bridge for Novel Clients and NDS -synchronization. - -my config: -------------------- ipsec.conf ------------------- -conn lan1-lan2 - type=tunnel - compress=yes - #------------------- - left=192.168.0.1 - leftsubnet=192.168.1.0/24 - #------------------- - right=192.168.0.10 - rightsubnet=192.168.2.0/24 - #------------------- - auth=esp - authby=secret ---------------- end of ipsec.conf ---------------- - -ping .2.x from .1.y (y != 1) -It works?? Fine. Let's continue... - -Why y != 1 ?? Because kernel of sgw1 have 2 IP addresses and it will choose -the first IP (which is used to go to Internet) .0.1 and the packet won't go -through IPsec tunnel :( But if do ping on .1.1 kernel will respond from -that address (.1.1) and the packet will be tunneled. The same problem occurred then -.2.x sends a packet to .1.2 which is down at the moment. What happens? .1.1 -sends ARP requesting .1.2... after 3 tries it send to .2.x an destunreach, -but from his "natural" IP or .0.1 . So the error message won't be delivered! -It's a big problem... - -Resolution... One can manipulate with ipsec0 or ipsec0:0 to solve the -problem (if ipsec0 has .1.1 kernel will send packets correctly), but there -are powerful and elegant iproute2 :) We simply need to change source address -of packet that goes to other secure lan. This is done with - -ip route replace 192.168.2.0/24 via 192.168.0.10 dev ipsec0 src 192.168.1.1 - -Cool!! Now it works!! - -The second step. We want install firewall on sgw1 and sgw2. Encryption of -traffic without security isn't a good idea. I don't use {left|right}firewall, -because I'm running firewall from init scripts. - -We want IPsec data between lan1-lan2, some ICMP errors (destination -unreachable, TTL exceeded, parameter problem and source quench), replying on -pings from both lans and Internet, ipxtunnel data for IPX and of course SSH -between sgw1 and sgw2 and from/to one specified host. - -I'm using ipchains. With iptables there are some changes. - ----------------- rc.firewall --------------------- -#!/bin/sh -# -# Firewall for IPsec lan1-lan2 -# - -IPC=/sbin/ipchains -ANY=0.0.0.0/0 - -# left -SGW1_EXT=192.168.0.1 -SGW1_INT=192.168.1.1 -LAN1=192.168.1.0/24 - -# right -SGW2_EXT=192.168.0.10 -SGW2_INT=192.168.2.10 -LAN2=192.168.2.0/24 - -# SSH from and to this host -SSH_PEER_HOST=_SOME_HOST_ - -# this is for left. exchange these values for right. -MY_EXT=$SGW1_EXT -MY_INT=$SGW1_INT -PEER_EXT=$SGW2_EXT -PEER_INT=$SGW2_INT -INT_IF=eth1 -EXT_IF=eth0 -IPSEC_IF=ipsec0 -MY_LAN=$LAN1 -PEER_LAN=$LAN2 - -$IPC -F -$IPC -P input DENY -$IPC -P forward DENY -$IPC -P output DENY - -# Loopback traffic -$IPC -A input -i lo -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -i lo -j ACCEPT - -# for IPsec SGW1-SGW2 -## IKE -$IPC -A input -p udp -s $PEER_EXT 500 -d $MY_EXT 500 -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p udp -s $MY_EXT 500 -d $PEER_EXT 500 -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -## ESP -$IPC -A input -p 50 -s $PEER_EXT -d $MY_EXT -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -### we don't need this line ### $IPC -A output -p 50 -s $MY_EXT -d $PEER_EXT -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -## forward LAN1-LAN2 -$IPC -A forward -s $MY_LAN -d $PEER_LAN -i $IPSEC_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A forward -s $PEER_LAN -d $MY_LAN -i $INT_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -s $PEER_LAN -d $MY_LAN -i $INT_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A input -s $PEER_LAN -d $MY_LAN -i $IPSEC_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A input -s $MY_LAN -d $PEER_LAN -i $INT_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -s $MY_LAN -d $PEER_LAN -i $IPSEC_IF -j ACCEPT - -# ICMP -# -## Dest unreachable -### from/to Internet -$IPC -A input -p icmp --icmp-type destination-unreachable -s $ANY -d $MY_EXT -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p icmp --icmp-type destination-unreachable -s $MY_EXT -d $ANY -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -### from/to Lan -$IPC -A input -p icmp --icmp-type destination-unreachable -s $ANY -d $MY_INT -i $INT_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p icmp --icmp-type destination-unreachable -s $MY_INT -d $ANY -i $INT_IF -j ACCEPT -### from/to Peer Lan -$IPC -A input -p icmp --icmp-type destination-unreachable -s $ANY -d $MY_INT -i $IPSEC_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p icmp --icmp-type destination-unreachable -s $MY_INT -d $ANY -i $IPSEC_IF -j ACCEPT -# -## Source quench -### from/to Internet -$IPC -A input -p icmp --icmp-type source-quench -s $ANY -d $MY_EXT -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p icmp --icmp-type source-quench -s $MY_EXT -d $ANY -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -### from/to Lan -$IPC -A input -p icmp --icmp-type source-quench -s $ANY -d $MY_INT -i $INT_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p icmp --icmp-type source-quench -s $MY_INT -d $ANY -i $INT_IF -j ACCEPT -### from/to Peer Lan -$IPC -A input -p icmp --icmp-type source-quench -s $ANY -d $MY_INT -i $IPSEC_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p icmp --icmp-type source-quench -s $MY_INT -d $ANY -i $IPSEC_IF -j ACCEPT -# -## Parameter problem -### from/to Internet -$IPC -A input -p icmp --icmp-type parameter-problem -s $ANY -d $MY_EXT -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p icmp --icmp-type parameter-problem -s $MY_EXT -d $ANY -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -### from/to Lan -$IPC -A input -p icmp --icmp-type parameter-problem -s $ANY -d $MY_INT -i $INT_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p icmp --icmp-type parameter-problem -s $MY_INT -d $ANY -i $INT_IF -j ACCEPT -### from/to Peer Lan -$IPC -A input -p icmp --icmp-type parameter-problem -s $ANY -d $MY_INT -i $IPSEC_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p icmp --icmp-type parameter-problem -s $MY_INT -d $ANY -i $IPSEC_IF -j ACCEPT -# -## Time To Live exceeded -### from/to Internet -$IPC -A input -p icmp --icmp-type time-exceeded -s $ANY -d $MY_EXT -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p icmp --icmp-type time-exceeded -s $MY_EXT -d $ANY -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -### to Lan -$IPC -A input -p icmp --icmp-type time-exceeded -s $ANY -d $MY_INT -i $INT_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p icmp --icmp-type time-exceeded -s $MY_INT -d $ANY -i $INT_IF -j ACCEPT -### to Peer Lan -$IPC -A input -p icmp --icmp-type time-exceeded -s $ANY -d $MY_INT -i $IPSEC_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p icmp --icmp-type time-exceeded -s $MY_INT -d $ANY -i $IPSEC_IF -j ACCEPT - -# ICMP PINGs -## from Internet -$IPC -A input -p icmp -s $ANY -d $MY_EXT --icmp-type echo-request -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p icmp -s $MY_EXT -d $ANY --icmp-type echo-reply -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -## from LAN -$IPC -A input -p icmp -s $ANY -d $MY_INT --icmp-type echo-request -i $INT_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p icmp -s $MY_INT -d $ANY --icmp-type echo-reply -i $INT_IF -j ACCEPT -## from Peer LAN -$IPC -A input -p icmp -s $ANY -d $MY_INT --icmp-type echo-request -i $IPSEC_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p icmp -s $MY_INT -d $ANY --icmp-type echo-reply -i $IPSEC_IF -j ACCEPT - -# SSH -## from SSH_PEER_HOST -$IPC -A input -p tcp -s $SSH_PEER_HOST -d $MY_EXT 22 -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p tcp \! -y -s $MY_EXT 22 -d $SSH_PEER_HOST -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -## to SSH_PEER_HOST -$IPC -A input -p tcp \! -y -s $SSH_PEER_HOST 22 -d $MY_EXT -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p tcp -s $MY_EXT -d $SSH_PEER_HOST 22 -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -## from PEER -$IPC -A input -p tcp -s $PEER_EXT -d $MY_EXT 22 -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p tcp \! -y -s $MY_EXT 22 -d $PEER_EXT -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -## to PEER -$IPC -A input -p tcp \! -y -s $PEER_EXT 22 -d $MY_EXT -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p tcp -s $MY_EXT -d $PEER_EXT 22 -i $EXT_IF -j ACCEPT - -# ipxtunnel -$IPC -A input -p udp -s $PEER_INT 2005 -d $MY_INT 2005 -i $IPSEC_IF -j ACCEPT -$IPC -A output -p udp -s $MY_INT 2005 -d $PEER_INT 2005 -i $IPSEC_IF -j ACCEPT - ----------------- end of rc.firewall ---------------------- - -To understand this we need to look on this scheme: - - ++-----------------------<----------------------------+ - || ipsec0 | - \/ | - eth0 +--------+ /---------/ yes /---------/ yes +-----------------------+ ------->| INPUT |-->/ ?local? /----->/ ?IPsec? /----->| decrypt decapsulate | - eth1 +--------+ /---------/ /---------/ +-----------------------+ - || no || no - \/ \/ - +----------+ +---------+ +-------+ - | routing | | local | | local | - | decision | | deliver | | send | - +----------+ +---------+ +-------+ - || || - \/ \/ - +---------+ +----------+ - | forward | | routing | - +---------+ | decision | - || +----------+ - || || - ++----------------<-----------------++ - || - \/ - +--------+ eth0 - | OUTPUT | eth1 - +--------+ ipsec0 - || - \/ - /---------/ yes +-----------------------+ - / ?IPsec? /----->| encrypt encapsulate | - /---------/ +-----------------------+ - || no || - || || - || \/ eth0, eth1 - ++-----------------------++--------------> - -This explain how a packet traverse TCP/IP stack in IPsec capable kernel. - -FIX ME, please, if there are any errors - -Test the new firewall now. - - -Now about IPX. I tried 3 programs for tunneling IPX: tipxd, SIB and ipxtunnel - -tipxd didn't send packets.. :( -SIB and ipxtunnel worked fine :) -With ipxtunnel there was a little problem. In sources there are an error. - ---------------------- in main.c ------------------------ -< bytes += p.len; ---- -> bytes += len; --------------------------------------------------------- - -After this FIX everything goes right... - -------------------- /etc/ipxtunnel.conf ---------------- -port 2005 -remote 192.168.101.97 2005 -interface eth1 ---------------- end of /etc/ipxtunnel.conf ------------- - -I use IPX tunnel between .1.1 and .2.10 so we don't need to encrypt nor -authenticate encapsulated IPX packets, it is done with IPsec. - -If you don't wont to use iproute2 to change source IP you need to use SIB -(it is able to bind local address) or establish tunnel between .0.1 and -.0.10 (external IPs, you need to do encryption in the program, but it isn't -strong). - -For now I'm using ipxtunnel. - -I think that's all for the moment. If there are any error, please e-mail me: -poltorak@df.ru . It would be cool if someone puts the scheme of TCP/IP in -kernel and firewall example on FreeS/WAN's manual pages. - -PoltoS -</PRE> -<HR> -<H1><A name="makecheck">How to configure to use "make check"</A></H1> -<H2><A NAME="19_1">What is "make check"</A></H2> -<P> "make check" is a target in the top level makefile. It takes care of - running a number of unit and system tests to confirm that FreeSWAN has - been compiled correctly, and that no new bugs have been introduced.</P> -<P> As FreeSWAN contains both kernel and userspace components, doing - testing of FreeSWAN requires that the kernel be simulated. This is - typically difficult to do as a kernel requires that it be run on bare - hardware. A technology has emerged that makes this simpler. This is<A HREF="http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net"> - User Mode Linux</A>.</P> -<P> User-Mode Linux is a way to build a Linux kernel such that it can - run as a process under another Linux (or in the future other) kernel. - Presently, this can only be done for 2.4 guest kernels. The host kernel - can be 2.2 or 2.4.</P> -<P> "make check" expects to be able to build User-Mode Linux kernels - with FreeSWAN included. To do this it needs to have some files - downloaded and extracted prior to running "make check". This is - described in the<A HREF="umltesting.html"> UML testing</A> document.</P> -<P> After having run the example in the UML testing document and - successfully brought up the four machine combination, you are ready to - use "make check"</P> -<H2><A NAME="19_2">Running "make check"</A></H2> -<P> "make check" works by walking the FreeSWAN source tree invoking the - "check" target at each node. At present there are tests defined only - for the <CODE>klips</CODE> directory. These tests will use the UML - infrastructure to test out pieces of the <CODE>klips</CODE> code.</P> -<P> The results of the tests can be recorded. If the environment - variable <CODE>$REGRESSRESULTS</CODE> is non-null, then the results of - each test will be recorded. This can be used as part of a nightly - regression testing system, see<A HREF="nightly.html"> Nightly testing</A> - for more details.</P> -<P> "make check" otherwise prints a minimal amount of output for each - test, and indicates pass/fail status of each test as they are run. - Failed tests do not cause failure of the target in the form of exit - codes.</P> -<H1><A NAME="20">How to write a "make check" test</A></H1> -<H2><A NAME="20_1">Structure of a test</A></H2> -<P> Each test consists of a set of directories under <CODE>testing/</CODE> -. There are directories for <CODE>klips</CODE>, <CODE>pluto</CODE>, <CODE> -packaging</CODE> and <CODE>libraries</CODE>. Each directory has a list - of tests to run is stored in a file called <CODE>TESTLIST</CODE> in - that directory. e.g. <CODE>testing/klips/TESTLIST</CODE>.</P> -<H2 NAME="TESTLIST"><A NAME="20_2">The TESTLIST</A></H2> -<P> This isn't actually a shell script. It just looks like one. Some - tools other than /bin/sh process it. Lines that start with # are - comments.</P> -<PRE> -# test-kind directory-containing-test expectation [PR#] -</PRE> -<P>The first word provides the test type, detailed below.</P> -<P> The second word is the name of the test to run. This the directory - in which the test case is to be found..</P> -<P>The third word may be one of:</P> -<DL> -<DT> blank/good</DT> -<DD>the test is believed to function, report failure</DD> -<DT> bad</DT> -<DD> the test is known to fail, report unexpected success</DD> -<DT> suspended</DT> -<DD> the test should not be run</DD> -</DL> -<P> The fourth word may be a number, which is a PR# if the test is - failing.</P> -<H2><A NAME="20_3">Test kinds</A></H2> - The test types are: -<DL> -<DT>skiptest</DT> -<DD>means run no test.</DD> -<DT>ctltest</DT> -<DD>means run a single system without input/output.</DD> -<DT>klipstest</DT> -<DD>means run a single system with input/output networks</DD> -<DT><A HREF="#umlplutotest">umlplutotest</A></DT> -<DD>means run a pair of systems</DD> -<DT><A HREF="#umlXhost">umlXhost</A></DT> -<DD>run an arbitrary number of systems</DD> -<DT>suntest (TBD)</DT> -<DD>means run a quad of east/west/sunrise/sunset</DD> -<DT>roadtest (TBD)</DT> -<DD>means run a trio of east-sunrise + warrior</DD> -<DT>extrudedtest (TBD)</DT> -<DD>means run a quad of east-sunrise + warriorsouth + park</DD> -<DT>mkinsttest</DT> -<DD>a test of the "make install" machinery.</DD> -<DT>kernel_test_patch</DT> -<DD>a test of the "make kernelpatch" machinery.</DD> -</DL> - Tests marked (TBD) have yet to be fully defined. -<P> Each test directory has a file in it called <CODE>testparams.sh</CODE> -. This file sets a number of environment variables to define the - parameters of the test.</P> -<H2><A NAME="20_4">Common parameters</A></H2> -<DL> -<DT>TESTNAME</DT> -<DD>the name of the test (repeated for checking purposes)</DD> -<DT>TEST_TYPE</DT> -<DD>the type of the test (repeat of type type above)</DD> -<DT>TESTHOST</DT> -<DD>the name of the UML machine to run for the test, typically "east" or - "west"</DD> -<DT>TEST_PURPOSE</DT> -<DD>The purpose of the test is one of: -<DL> -<DT>goal</DT> -<DD>The goal purpose is where a test is defined for code that is not yet - finished. The test indicates when the goals have in fact been reached.</DD> -<DT>regress</DT> -<DD>This is a test to determine that a previously existing bug has been - repaired. This test will initially be created to reproduce the bug in - isolation, and then the bug will be fixed.</DD> -<DT>exploit</DT> -<DD>This is a set of packets/programs that causes a vulnerability to be - exposed. It is a specific variation of the regress option.</DD> -</DL> -</DD> -<DT>TEST_GOAL_ITEM</DT> -<DT></DT> -<DD>in the case of a goal test, this is a reference to the requirements - document</DD> -<DT>TEST_PROB_REPORT</DT> -<DD>in the case of regression test, this the problem report number from - GNATS</DD> -<DT>TEST_EXPLOIT_URL</DT> -<DD>in the case of an exploit, this is a URL referencing the paper - explaining the origin of the test and the origin of exploit software</DD> -<DT>REF_CONSOLE_OUTPUT</DT> -<DD>a file in the test directory that contains the sanitized console - output against which to compare the output of the actual test.</DD> -<DT>REF_CONSOLE_FIXUPS</DT> -<DD>a list of scripts (found in <CODE>klips/test/fixups</CODE>) to apply - to sanitize the console output of the machine under test. These are - typically perl, awk or sed scripts that remove things in the kernel - output that change each time the test is run and/or compiled.</DD> -<DT>INIT_SCRIPT</DT> -<DD> -<P>a file of commands that is fed into the virtual machine's console in - single user mode prior to starting the tests. This file will usually - set up any eroute's and SADB entries that are required for the test.</P> -<P>Lines beginning with # are skipped. Blank lines are skipped. - Otherwise, a shell prompted is waited for each time (consisting of <CODE> -\n#</CODE>) and then the command is sent. Note that the prompt is waited - for before the command and not after, so completion of the last command - in the script is not required. This is often used to invoke a program - to monitor the system, e.g. <CODE>ipsec pf_key</CODE>.</P> -</DD> -<DT>RUN_SCRIPT</DT> -<DD> -<P>a file of commands that is fed into the virtual machine's console in - single user mode, before the packets are sent. On single machine tests, - this script doesn't provide any more power than INIT_SCRIPT, but is - implemented for consistency's sake.</P> -</DD> -<DT>FINAL_SCRIPT</DT> -<DD> -<P>a file of commands that is fed into the virtual machine's console in - single user mode after the final packet is sent. Similar to - INIT_SCRIPT, above. If not specified, then the single command "halt" is - sent. If specified, then the script should end with a halt command to - nicely shutdown the UML.</P> -</DD> -<DT>CONSOLEDIFFDEBUG</DT> -<DD>If set to "true" then the series of console fixups (see - REF_CONSOLE_FIXUPS) will be output after it is constructed. (It should - be set to "false", or unset otherwise)</DD> -<DT>NETJIGDEBUG</DT> -<DD>If set to "true" then the series of console fixups (see - REF_CONSOLE_FIXUPS) will be output after it is constructed. (It should - be set to "false", or unset otherwise)</DD> -<DT>NETJIGTESTDEBUG</DT> -<DD> If set to "netjig", then the results of talking to the <CODE> -uml_netjig</CODE> will be printed to stderr during the test. In - addition, the jig will be invoked with --debug, which causes it to log - its process ID, and wait 60 seconds before continuing. This can be used - if you are trying to debug the <CODE>uml_netjig</CODE> program itself.</DD> -<DT>HOSTTESTDEBUG</DT> -<DD> If set to "hosttest", then the results of taling to the consoles of - the UMLs will be printed to stderr during the test.</DD> -<DT>NETJIGWAITUSER</DT> -<DD> If set to "waituser", then the scripts will wait forever for user - input before they shut the tests down. Use this is if you are debugging - through the kernel.</DD> -<DT>PACKETRATE</DT> -<DD> A number, in miliseconds (default is 500ms) at which packets will - be replayed by the netjig.</DD> -</DL> -<H2><A NAME="20_5">KLIPStest paramaters</A></H2> -<P> The klipstest function starts a program (<CODE> -testing/utils/uml_netjig/uml_netjig</CODE>) to setup a bunch of I/O - sockets (that simulate network interfaces). It then exports the - references to these sockets to the environment and invokes (using - system()) a given script. It waits for the script to finish.</P> - -<!-- <IMG SRC="single_netjig.png" ALT="block diagram of uml_netjig"> --> -<P> The script invoked (<CODE>testing/utils/host-test.tcl</CODE>) is a - TCL<A HREF="http://expect.nist.gov/"> expect</A> script that arranges - to start the UML and configure it appropriately for the test. The - configuration is done with the script given above for<VAR> INIT_SCRIPT</VAR> -. The TCL script then forks, leaves the UML in the background and exits. - uml_netjig continues. It then starts listening to the simulated network - answering ARPs and inserting packets as appropriate.</P> -<P> The klipstest function invokes <CODE>uml_netjig</CODE> with - arguments to capture output from network interface(s) and insert - packets as appropriate:</P> -<DL> -<DT>PUB_INPUT</DT> -<DD>a<A HREF="http://www.tcpdump.org/"> pcap</A> file to feed in on the - public (encrypted) interface. (typically, eth1)</DD> -<DT>PRIV_INPUT</DT> -<DD>a pcap file to feed in on the private (plain-text) interface - (typically, eth0).</DD> -<DT>REF_PUB_OUTPUT</DT> -<DD>a text file containing tcpdump output. Packets on the public (eth1) - interface are captured to a<A HREF="http://www.tcpdump.org/"> pcap</A> - file by <CODE>uml_netjig</CODE>. The klipstest function then uses - tcpdump on the file to produce text output, which is compared to the - file given.</DD> -<DT>REF_PUB_FILTER</DT> -<DD>a program that will filter the TCPDUMP output to do further - processing. Defaults to "cat".</DD> -<DT>REF_PRIV_OUTPUT</DT> -<DD>a text file containing tcpdump output. Packets on the private (eth0) - interface are captured and compared after conversion by tcpdump, as - with<VAR> REFPUBOUTPUT</VAR>.</DD> -<DT>REF_PRIV_FILTER</DT> -<DD>a program that will filter the TCPDUMP output to do further - processing. Defaults to "cat".</DD> -<DT>EXITONEMPTY</DT> -<DD>a flag for <CODE>uml_netjig</CODE>. It should contain - "--exitonempty" of uml_netjig should exit when all of the input (<VAR> -PUBINPUT</VAR>,<VAR>PRIVINPUT</VAR>) packets have been injected.</DD> -<DT>ARPREPLY</DT> -<DD>a flag for <CODE>uml_netjig</CODE>. It should contain "--arpreply" - if <CODE>uml_netjig</CODE> should reply to ARP requests. One will - typically set this to avoid having to fudge the ARP cache manually.</DD> -<DT>TCPDUMPFLAGS</DT> -<DD>a set of flags for the tcpdump used when converting captured output. - Typical values will include "-n" to turn off DNS, and often "-E" to set - the decryption key (tcpdump 3.7.1 and higher only) for ESP packets. The - "-t" flag (turn off timestamps) is provided automatically</DD> -<DT>NETJIG_EXTRA</DT> -<DD>additional comments to be sent to the netjig. This may arrange to - record or create additional networks, or may toggle options.</DD> -</DL> -<H2><A NAME="20_6">mkinsttest paramaters</A></H2> -<P> The basic concept of the <CODE>mkinsttest</CODE> test type is that - it performs a "make install" to a temporary $DESTDIR. The resulting - tree can then be examined to determine if it was done properly. The - files can be uninstalled to determine if the file list was correct, or - the contents of files can be examined more precisely.</P> -<DL> -<DT>INSTALL_FLAGS</DT> -<DD>If set, then an install will be done. This provides the set of flags - to provide for the install. The target to be used (usually "install") - must be among the flags.</DD> -<DT>POSTINSTALL_SCRIPT</DT> -<DD>If set, a script to run after initial "make install". Two arguments - are provided: an absolute path to the root of the FreeSWAN src tree, - and an absolute path to the temporary installation area.</DD> -<DT>INSTALL2_FLAGS</DT> -<DD>If set, a second install will be done using these flags. Similarly - to INSTALL_FLAGS, the target must be among the flags.</DD> -<DT>UNINSTALL_FLAGS</DT> -<DD>If set, an uninstall will be done using these flags. Similarly to - INSTALL_FLAGS, the target (usually "uninstall") must be among the - flags.</DD> -<DT>REF_FIND_f_l_OUTPUT</DT> -<DD>If set, a <CODE>find $ROOT ( -type f -or -type -l )</CODE> will be - done to get a list of a real files and symlinks. The resulting file - will be compared to the file listed by this option.</DD> -<DT>REF_FILE_CONTENTS</DT> -<DD>If set, it should point to a file containing records for the form: -<PRE> - -<!--VARIABLE--> -reffile</(null)> -<!--VARIABLE--> -samplefile</(null)> -</PRE> - one record per line. A diff between the provided reference file, and - the sample file (located in the temporary installation root) will be - done for each record.</DD> -</DL> -<H2><A NAME="20_7">rpm_build_install_test paramaters</A></H2> -<P> The <CODE>rpm_build_install_test</CODE> type is to verify that the - proper packing list is produced by "make rpm", and that the mechanisms - for building the kernel modules produce consistent results.</P> -<DL> -<DT>RPM_KERNEL_SOURCE</DT> -<DD>Point to an extracted copy of the RedHat kernel source code. - Variables from the environment may be used.</DD> -<DT>REF_RPM_CONTENTS</DT> -<DD>This is a file containing one record per line. Each record consists - of a RPM name (may contain wildcards) and a filename to compare the - contents to. The RPM will be located and a file list will be produced - with rpm2cpio.</DD> -</DL> -<H2><A NAME="20_8">libtest paramaters</A></H2> -<P> The libtest test is for testing library routines. The library file - is expected to provided an <CODE>#ifdef</CODE> by the name of<VAR> - library</VAR> -<!--CODE_MAIN</CODE--> -. The libtest type invokes the C compiler to compile this - file, links it against <CODE>libfreeswan.a</CODE> (to resolve any other - dependancies) and runs the test with the <CODE>-r</CODE> argument to - invoke a regression test.</(null)></P> -<P>The library test case is expected to do a self-test, exiting with - status code 0 if everything is okay, and with non-zero otherwise. A - core dump (exit code greater than 128) is noted specifically.</P> -<P> Unlike other tests, there are no subdirectories required, or other - parameters to set.</P> -<H2 NAME="umlplutotest"><A NAME="20_9">umlplutotest paramaters</A></H2> -<P> The umlplutotest function starts a pair of user mode line processes. - This is a 2-host version of umlXhost. The "EAST" and "WEST" slots are - defined.</P> -<H2 NAME="umlXhost"><A NAME="20_10">umlXhost parameters</A></H2> -<P> The umlXtest function starts an arbitrary number of user mode line - processes.</P> - -<!-- <IMG SRC="single_netjig.png" ALT="block diagram of uml_netjig"> --> -<P> The script invoked (<CODE>testing/utils/Xhost-test.tcl</CODE>) is a - TCL<A HREF="http://expect.nist.gov/"> expect</A> script that arranges - to start each UML and configure it appropriately for the test. It then - starts listening (using uml_netjig) to the simulated network answering - ARPs and inserting packets as appropriate.</P> -<P> umlXtest has a series of slots, each of which should be filled by a - host. The list of slots is controlled by the variable, XHOST_LIST. This - variable should be set to a space seperated list of slots. The former - umlplutotest is now implemented as a variation of the umlXhost test, - with XHOST_LIST="EAST WEST".</P> -<P> For each host slot that is defined, a series of variables should be - filled in, defining what configuration scripts to use for that host.</P> -<P> The following are used to control the console input and output to - the system. Where the string ${host} is present, the host slot should - be filled in. I.e. for the two host system with XHOST_LIST="EAST WEST", - then the variables: EAST_INIT_SCRIPT and WEST_INIT_SCRIPT will exist.</P> -<DL> -<DT>${host}HOST</DT> -<DD>The name of the UML host which will fill this slot</DD> -<DT>${host}_INIT_SCRIPT</DT> -<DD> -<P>a file of commands that is fed into the virtual machine's console in - single user mode prior to starting the tests. This file will usually - set up any eroute's and SADB entries that are required for the test. - Similar to INIT_SCRIPT, above.</P> -</DD> -<DT>${host}_RUN_SCRIPT</DT> -<DD> -<P>a file of commands that is fed into the virtual machine's console in - single user mode, before the packets are sent. This set of commands is - run after all of the virtual machines are initialized. I.e. after - EAST_INIT_SCRIPT<B> AND</B> WEST_INIT_SCRIPT. This script can therefore - do things that require that all machines are properly configured.</P> -</DD> -<DT>${host}_RUN2_SCRIPT</DT> -<DD> -<P>a file of commands that is fed into the virtual machine's console in - single user mode, after the packets are sent. This set of commands is - run before any of the virtual machines have been shut down. (I.e. - before EAST_FINAL_SCRIPT<B> AND</B> WEST_FINAL_SCRIPT.) This script can - therefore catch post-activity status reports.</P> -</DD> -<DT>${host}_FINAL_SCRIPT</DT> -<DD> -<P>a file of commands that is fed into the virtual machine's console in - single user mode after the final packet is sent. Similar to - INIT_SCRIPT, above. If not specified, then the single command "halt" is - sent. Note that when this script is run, the other virtual machines may - already have been killed. If specified, then the script should end with - a halt command to nicely shutdown the UML.</P> -</DD> -<DT>REF_${host}_CONSOLE_OUTPUT</DT> -<DD>Similar to REF_CONSOLE_OUTPUT, above.</DD> -</DL> -<P>Some additional flags apply to all hosts:</P> -<DL> -<DT>REF_CONSOLE_FIXUPS</DT> -<DD>a list of scripts (found in <CODE>klips/test/fixups</CODE>) to apply - to sanitize the console output of the machine under test. These are - typically perl, awk or sed scripts that remove things in the kernel - output that change each time the test is run and/or compiled.</DD> -</DL> -<P> In addition to input to the console, the networks may have input fed - to them:</P> -<DL> -<DT>EAST_INPUT/WEST_INPUT</DT> -<DD>a<A HREF="http://www.tcpdump.org/"> pcap</A> file to feed in on the - private network side of each network. The "EAST" and "WEST" here refer - to the networks, not the hosts.</DD> -<DT>REF_PUB_FILTER</DT> -<DD>a program that will filter the TCPDUMP output to do further - processing. Defaults to "cat".</DD> -<DT>REF_EAST_FILTER/REF_WEST_FILTER</DT> -<DD>a program that will filter the TCPDUMP output to do further - processing. Defaults to "cat".</DD> -< -<DT>TCPDUMPFLAGS</DT> -<DD>a set of flags for the tcpdump used when converting captured output. - Typical values will include "-n" to turn off DNS, and often "-E" to set - the decryption key (tcpdump 3.7.1 and higher only) for ESP packets. The - "-t" flag (turn off timestamps) is provided automatically</DD> -<DT>REF_EAST_OUTPUT/REF_WEST_OUTPUT</DT> -<DD>a text file containing tcpdump output. Packets on the private (eth0) - interface are captured and compared after conversion by tcpdump, as - with<VAR> REF_PUB_OUTPUT</VAR>.</DD> -<P> There are two additional environment variables that may be set on - the command line:</P> -<DL> -<DT> NETJIGVERBOSE=verbose export NETJIGVERBOSE</DT> -<DD> If set, then the test output will be "chatty", and let you know - what commands it is running, and as packets are sent. Without it set, - the output is limited to success/failure messages.</DD> -<DT> NETJIGTESTDEBUG=netjig export NETJIGTESTDEBUG</DT> -<DD> This will enable debugging of the communication with uml_netjig, - and turn on debugging in this utility. This does not imply - NETJIGVERBOSE.</DD> -</DL> -<DT> HOSTTESTDEBUG=hosttest export HOSTTESTDEBUG</DT> -<DD> This will show all interactions with the user-mode-linux consoles</DD> -</DL> -<H2 NAME="kernelpatch"><A NAME="20_11">kernel_patch_test paramaters</A></H2> -<P> The kernel_patch_test function takes some kernel source, copies it - with lndir, and then applies the patch as produced by "make - kernelpatch".</P> -<P> The following are used to control the input and output to the - system:</P> -<DL> -<DT>KERNEL_NAME</DT> -<DD>the kernel name, typically something like "linus" or "rh"</DD> -<DT>KERNEL_VERSION</DT> -<DD>the kernel version number, as in "2.2" or "2.4".</DD> -<DT>KERNEL_${KERNEL_NAME}${KERNEL_VERSION}_SRC</DT> -<DD>This variable should set in the environment, probably in - ~/freeswan-regress-env.sh. Examples of this variables would be - KERNEL_LINUS2_0_SRC or KERNEL_RH7_3_SRC. This variable should point to - an extracted copy of the kernel source in question.</DD> -<DT>REF_PATCH_OUTPUT</DT> -<DD>a copy of the patch output to compare against</DD> -<DT>KERNEL_PATCH_LEAVE_SOURCE</DT> -<DD>If set to a non-empty string, then the patched kernel source is not - removed at the end of the test. This will typically be set in the - environment while debugging.</DD> -</DL> -<H2 NAME="modtest"><A NAME="20_12">module_compile paramaters</A></H2> -<P> The module_compile test attempts to build the KLIPS module against a - given set of kernel source. This is also done by the RPM tests, but in - a very specific manner.</P> -<P> There are two variations of this test - one where the kernel either - doesn't need to be configured, or is already done, and tests were there - is a local configuration file.</P> -<P> Where the kernel doesn't need to be configured, the kernel source - that is found is simply used. It may be a RedHat-style kernel, where - one can cause it to configure itself via rhconfig.h-style definitions. - Or, it may just be a kernel tree that has been configured.</P> -<P> If the variable KERNEL_CONFIG_FILE is set, then a new directory is - created for the kernel source. It is populated with lndir(1). The - referenced file is then copied in as .config, and "make oldconfig" is - used to configure the kernel. This resulting kernel is then used as the - reference source.</P> -<P> In all cases, the kernel source is found the same was for the - kernelpatch test, i.e. via KERNEL_VERSION/KERNEL_NAME and - KERNEL_${KERNEL_NAME}${KERNEL_VERSION}_SRC.</P> -<P> Once there is kernel source, the module is compiled using the - top-level "make module" target.</P> -<P> The test is considered successful if an executable is found in - OUTPUT/module/ipsec.o at the end of the test.</P> -<DL> -<DT>KERNEL_NAME</DT> -<DD>the kernel name, typically something like "linus" or "rh"</DD> -<DT>KERNEL_VERSION</DT> -<DD>the kernel version number, as in "2.2" or "2.4".</DD> -<DT>KERNEL_${KERNEL_NAME}${KERNEL_VERSION}_SRC</DT> -<DD>This variable should set in the environment, probably in - ~/freeswan-regress-env.sh. Examples of this variables would be - KERNEL_LINUS2_0_SRC or KERNEL_RH7_3_SRC. This variable should point to - an extracted copy of the kernel source in question.</DD> -<DT>KERNEL_CONFIG_FILE</DT> -<DD>The configuration file for the kernel.</DD> -<DT>KERNEL_PATCH_LEAVE_SOURCE</DT> -<DD>If set to a non-empty string, then the configured kernel source is - not removed at the end of the test. This will typically be set in the - environment while debugging.</DD> -<DT>MODULE_DEF_INCLUDE</DT> -<DD>The include file that will be used to configure the KLIPS module, - and possibly the kernel source.</DD> -</DL> -<H1><A NAME="21">Current pitfalls</A></H1> -<DL> -<DT> "tcpdump dissector" not available.</DT> -<DD> This is a non-fatal warning. If uml_netjig is invoked with the -t - option, then it will attempt to use tcpdump's dissector to decode each - packet that it processes. The dissector is presently not available, so - this option it normally turned off at compile time. The dissector - library will be released with tcpdump version 4.0.</DD> -</DL> -<HR> -<H1><A name="umltesting">User-Mode-Linux Testing guide</A></H1> -<P> User mode linux is a way to compile a linux kernel such that it can - run as a process in another linux system (potentially as a *BSD or - Windows process later). See<A HREF="http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/"> - http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/</A></P> -<P> UML is a good platform for testing and experimenting with FreeS/WAN. - It allows several network nodes to be simulated on a single machine. - Creating, configuring, installing, monitoring, and controling these - nodes is generally easier and easier to script with UML than real - hardware.</P> -<P> You'll need about 500Mb of disk space for a full - sunrise-east-west-sunset setup. You can possibly get this down by 130Mb - if you remove the sunrise/sunset kernel build. If you just want to run, - then you can even remove the east/west kernel build.</P> -<P> Nothing need be done as super user. In a couple of steps, we note - where super user is required to install commands in system-wide - directories, but ~/bin could be used instead. UML seems to use a - system-wide /tmp/uml directory so different users may interfere with - one another. Later UMLs use ~/.uml instead, so multiple users running - UML tests should not be a problem, but note that a single user running - the UML tests will only be able run one set. Further, UMLs sometimes - get stuck and hang around. These "zombies" (most will actually be in - the "T" state in the process table) will interfere with subsequent - tests.</P> -<H2><A NAME="22_1">Preliminary Notes on BIND</A></H2> -<P> As of 2003/3/1, the Light-Weight Resolver is used by pluto. This - requires that BIND9 be running. It also requires that BIND9 development - libraries be present in the build environment. The DNSSEC code is only - truly functional in BIND9 snapshots. The library code could be 9.2.2, - we believe. We are using BIND9 20021115 snapshot code from<A HREF="ftp://ftp.isc.org/isc/bind9/snapshots"> - ftp://ftp.isc.org/isc/bind9/snapshots</A>.</P> -<P> FreeS/WAN may well require a newer BIND than is on your system. Many - distributions have moved to BIND9.2.2 recently due to a security - advisory. BIND is five components.</P> -<OL> -<LI> named</LI> -<LI> dnssec-*</LI> -<LI> client side resolver libraries</LI> -<LI> client side utility libraries I thought there were lib and named - parts to dnsssec...</LI> -<LI> dynamic DNS update utilities</LI> -</OL> -<P> The only piece that we need for *building* is #4. That's the only - part that has to be on the build host. What is the difference between - resolver and util libs? If you want to edit - testing/baseconfigs/all/etc/bind, you'll need a snapshot version. The - resolver library contains the resolver. FreeS/WAN has its own copy of - that in lib/liblwres.</P> -<H2><A NAME="22_2">Steps to Install UML for FreeS/WAN</A></H2> -<OL> -<LI> Get the following files: -<OL type="a"> -<LI> from<A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/freeswan/uml/"> - http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/freeswan/uml/</A> - umlfreeroot-15.1.tar.gz (or highest numbered one). This is a debian - potato root file system. You can use this even on a Redhat host, as it - has the newer GLIBC2.2 libraries as well. -<!-- If you are using - Redhat 7.2 or newer as your development machine, you can create the - image from your installation media. See <A HREF="uml-rhroot.html">Building a RedHat root"></A>. - A future document will explain how to build this from .DEB files as well. ---> - -<!-- -<LI> umlfreesharemini.tar.gz (or umlfreeshareall.tar.gz). - If you are a Debian potato user, you don't need it you can use your - native /usr/share. -</UL> ---> -</LI> -<LI> From<A HREF="ftp://ftp.xs4all.nl/pub/crypto/freeswan/"> - ftp://ftp.xs4all.nl/pub/crypto/freeswan/</A> a snapshot or release - (1.92 or better)</LI> -<LI> From a<A HREF="http://www.kernel.org/mirrors/"> - http://www.kernel.org mirror</A>, the virgin 2.4.19 kernel. Please - realize that we have defaults in our tree for kernel configuration. We - try to track the latest UML kernels. If you use a newer kernel, you may - have faults in the kernel build process. You can see what the latest - that is being regularly tested by visiting<A HREF="http://bugs.freeswan.org:81/regress/HEAD/lastgood/freeswan-regress-env.sh"> - freeswan-regress-env.sh</A>.</LI> -<LI> -<!-- Note: this step is refered to as "step 1d" below. --> - Get<A HREF="http://ftp.nl.linux.org/uml/"> - http://ftp.nl.linux.org/uml/</A> uml-patch-2.4.19-47.bz2 or the one - associated with your kernel. As of 2003/03/05, uml-patch-2.4.19-47.bz2 - works for us.<STRONG> More recent versions of the patch have not been - tested by us.</STRONG></LI> -<LI> You'll probably want to visit<A HREF="http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net"> - http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net</A> and get the UML utilities. - These are not needed for the build or interactive use (but - recommended). They are necessary for the regression testing procedures - used by "make check". We currently use uml_utilities_20020212.tar.bz2.</LI> -<LI> You need tcpdump version 3.7.1 or better. This is newer than the - version included in most LINUX distributions. You can check the version - of an installed tcpdump with the --version flag. If you need a newer - tcpdump fetch both tcpdump and libpcap source tar files from<A HREF="http://www.tcpdump.org/"> - http://www.tcpdump.org/</A> or a mirror.</LI> -</OL> -</LI> -<LI> Pick a suitable place, and extract the following files: -<OL type="a"> -<LI> -<!-- Note: this step is refered to as "step 2a" later. --> - 2.4.19 kernel. For instance: -<PRE> - <CODE> cd /c2/kernel - tar xzvf ../download/pub/linux/kernel/v2.4/linux-2.4.19.tar.gz -</CODE> -</PRE> -</LI> -<LI> extract the umlfreeroot file -<!-- (unless you <A HREF="uml-rhroot.html">built your own from RPMs</A>) --> - -<PRE> - <CODE> mkdir -p /c2/user-mode-linux/basic-root - cd /c2/user-mode-linux/basic-root - tar xzvf ../download/umlfreeroot-15.1.tar.gz -</CODE> -</PRE> -</LI> -<LI> FreeSWAN itself (or checkout "all" from CVS) -<PRE> - <CODE> mkdir -p /c2/freeswan/sandbox - cd /c2/freeswan/sandbox - tar xzvf ../download/snapshot.tar.gz -</CODE> -</PRE> -</LI> -</OL> -</LI> -<LI> If you need to build a newer tcpdump: -<UL> -<LI> Make sure you have OpenSSL installed -- it is needed for - cryptographic routines.</LI> -<LI> Unpack libpcap and tcpdump source in parallel directories (the - tcpdump build procedures look for libpcap next door).</LI> -<LI> Change directory into the libpcap source directory and then build - the library: -<PRE> - <CODE> ./configure - make -</CODE> -</PRE> -</LI> -<LI> Change into the tcpdump source directory, build tcpdump, and - install it. -<PRE> - <CODE> ./configure - make - # Need to be superuser to install in system directories. - # Installing in ~/bin would be an alternative. - su -c "make install" -</CODE> -</PRE> -</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI> If you need the uml utilities, unpack them somewhere then build and - install them: -<PRE> - <CODE> cd tools - make all - # Need to be superuser to install in system directories. - # Installing in ~/bin would be an alternative. - su -c "make install BIN_DIR=/usr/local/bin" -</CODE> -</PRE> -</LI> -<LI> set up the configuration file -<UL> -<LI> <CODE>cd /c2/freeswan/sandbox/freeswan-1.97/testing/utils</CODE></LI> -<LI> copy umlsetup-sample.sh to ../../umlsetup.sh: <CODE> cp - umlsetup-sample.sh ../../umlsetup.sh</CODE></LI> -<LI> open up ../../umlsetup.sh in your favorite editor.</LI> -<LI> change POOLSPACE= to point to the place with at least 500Mb of - disk. Best if it is on the same partition as the "umlfreeroot" - extraction, as it will attempt to use hard links if possible to save - disk space.</LI> -<LI> Set TESTINGROOT if you intend to run the script outside of the - sandbox/snapshot/release directory. Otherwise, it will configure - itself.</LI> -<LI> KERNPOOL should point to the directory with your 2.4.19 kernel - tree. This tree should be unconfigured! This is the directory you used - in step 2a.</LI> -<LI> UMLPATCH should point at the bz2 file you downloaded at 1d. If - using a kernel that already includes the patch, set this to /dev/null.</LI> -<LI> FREESWANDIR should point at the directory where you unpacked the - snapshot/release. Include the "freeswan-snap2001sep16b" or whatever in - it. If you are running from CVS, then you point at the directory where - top, klips, etc. are. The script will fix up the directory so that it - can be used.</LI> -<LI> BASICROOT should be set to the directory used in 2b, or to the - directory that you created with RPMs.</LI> -<LI> SHAREDIR should be set to the directory used in 2c, to /usr/share - for Debian potato users, or to $BASICROOT/usr/share.</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI> -<PRE> <CODE>cd $TESTINGROOT/utils -sh make-uml.sh -</CODE></PRE> - It will grind for awhile. If there are errors it will bail. If so, run - it under "script" and send the output to bugs@lists.freeswan.org.</LI> -<LI> You will have a bunch of stuff under $POOLSPACE. Open four xterms: -<PRE> <CODE> for i in sunrise sunset east west - do - xterm -name $i -title $i -e $POOLSPACE/$i/start.sh done -</CODE></PRE> -</LI> -<LI> Login as root. Password is "root" (Note, these virtual machines are - networked together, but are not configured to talk to the rest of the - world.)</LI> -<LI> verify that pluto started on east/west, run "ipsec look"</LI> -<LI> login to sunrise. run "ping sunset"</LI> -<LI> login to west. run "tcpdump -p -i eth1 -n" (tcpdump must be version - 3.7.1 or newer)</LI> -<LI> Closing a console xterm will shut down that UML.</LI> -<LI> You can "make check", if you want to. It is run from - /c2/freeswan/sandbox/freeswan-1.97.</LI> -</OL> -<H1><A NAME="23">Debugging the kernel with GDB</A></H1> -<P> With User-Mode-Linux, you can debug the kernel using GDB. See -<!--HREF="http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/debugging.html"--> - - http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/debugging.html.</(null)></P> -<P> Typically, one will want to address a test case for a failing - situation. Running GDB from Emacs, or from other front ends is - possible. First start GDB.</P> -<P> Tell it to open the UMLPOOL/swan/linux program.</P> -<P> Note the PID of GDB:</P> -<PRE> -marajade-[projects/freeswan/mgmt/planning] mcr 1029 %ps ax | grep gdb - 1659 pts/9 SN 0:00 /usr/bin/gdb -fullname -cd /mara4/freeswan/kernpatch/UMLPOOL/swan/ linux -</PRE> -<P> Set the following in the environment:</P> -<PRE> -UML_east_OPT="debug gdb-pid=1659" -</PRE> -<P> Then start the user-mode-linux in the test scheme you wish:</P> -<PRE> -marajade-[kernpatch/testing/klips/east-icmp-02] mcr 1220 %../../utils/runme.sh -</PRE> - The user-mode-linux will stop on boot, giving you a chance to attach to - the process: -<PRE> -(gdb) file linux -Reading symbols from linux...done. -(gdb) attach 1 -Attaching to program: /mara4/freeswan/kernpatch/UMLPOOL/swan/linux, process 1 -0xa0118bc1 in kill () at hostfs_kern.c:770 -</PRE> -<P> At this point, break points should be created as appropriate.</P> -<H2><A NAME="23_1">Other notes about debugging</A></H2> -<P> If you are running a standard test, after all the packets are sent, - the UML will be shutdown. This can cause problems, because the UML may - get terminated while you are debugging.</P> -<P> The environment variable <CODE>NETJIGWAITUSER</CODE> can be set to - "waituser". If so, then the testing system will prompt before exiting - the test.</P> -<H1><A NAME="24">User-Mode-Linux mysteries</A></H1> -<UL> -<LI> running more than one UML of the same name (e.g. "west") can cause - problems.</LI> -<LI> running more than one UML from the same root file system is not a - good idea.</LI> -<LI> all this means that running "make check" twice on the same machine - is probably not a good idea.</LI> -<LI> occationally, UMLs will get stuck. This can happen like: -<!--BLOCK--> - 15134 ? T - 0:00 /spare/hugh/uml/uml2.4.18-sept5/umlbuild/east/linux (east) - [/bin/sh] 15138 ? T 0:00 - /spare/hugh/uml/uml2.4.18-sept5/umlbuild/east/linux (east) [halt]</(null)> - these will need to be killed. Note that they are in "T"racing mode.</LI> -<LI> UMLs can also hang, and will report "Tracing myself and I can't get - out". This is a bug in UML. There are ways to find out what is going on - and report this to the UML people, but we don't know the magic right - now.</LI> -</UL> -<H1><A NAME="25">Getting more info from uml_netjig</A></H1> -<P> uml_netjig can be compiled with a built-in tcpdump. This uses - not-yet-released code from<A HREF="http://www.tcpdump.org/"> - www.tcpdump.org</A>. Please see the instructions in <CODE> -testing/utils/uml_netjig/Makefile</CODE>.</P> -<HR> -<H1><A name="politics">History and politics of cryptography</A></H1> -<P>Cryptography has a long and interesting history, and has been the - subject of considerable political controversy.</P> -<H2><A name="intro.politics">Introduction</A></H2> -<H3><A NAME="26_1_1">History</A></H3> -<P>The classic book on the history of cryptography is David Kahn's<A href="#Kahn"> - The Codebreakers</A>. It traces codes and codebreaking from ancient - Egypt to the 20th century.</P> -<P>Diffie and Landau<A href="#diffie"> Privacy on the Line: The Politics - of Wiretapping and Encryption</A> covers the history from the First - World War to the 1990s, with an emphasis on the US.</P> -<H4><A NAME="26_1_1_1">World War II</A></H4> -<P>During the Second World War, the British "Ultra" project achieved one - of the greatest intelligence triumphs in the history of warfare, - breaking many Axis codes. One major target was the Enigma cipher - machine, a German device whose users were convinced it was unbreakable. - The American "Magic" project had some similar triumphs against Japanese - codes.</P> -<P>There are many books on this period. See our bibliography for - several. Two I particularly like are:</P> -<UL> -<LI>Andrew Hodges has done a superb<A href="http://www.turing.org.uk/book/"> - biography</A> of Alan Turing, a key player among the Ultra - codebreakers. Turing was also an important computer pioneer. The terms<A -href="http://www.abelard.org/turpap/turpap.htm"> Turing test</A> and<A href="http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/turing-machine/"> - Turing machine</A> are named for him, as is the<A href="http://www.acm.org"> - ACM</A>'s highest technical<A href="http://www.acm.org/awards/taward.html"> - award</A>.</LI> -<LI>Neal Stephenson's<A href="#neal"> Cryptonomicon</A> is a novel with - cryptography central to the plot. Parts of it take place during WW II, - other parts today.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Bletchley Park, where much of the Ultra work was done, now has a - museum and a<A href="http://www.bletchleypark.org.uk/"> web site</A>.</P> -<P>The Ultra work introduced three major innovations.</P> -<UL> -<LI>The first break of Enigma was achieved by Polish Intelligence in - 1931. Until then most code-breakers had been linguists, but a different - approach was needed to break machine ciphers. Polish Intelligence - recruited bright young mathematicians to crack the "unbreakable" - Enigma. When war came in 1939, the Poles told their allies about this, - putting Britain on the road to Ultra. The British also adopted a - mathematical approach.</LI> -<LI>Machines were extensively used in the attacks. First the Polish - "Bombe" for attacking Enigma, then British versions of it, then - machines such as Collosus for attacking other codes. By the end of the - war, some of these machines were beginning to closely resemble digital - computers. After the war, a team at Manchester University, several old - Ultra hands included, built one of the world's first actual - general-purpose digital computers.</LI> -<LI>Ultra made codebreaking a large-scale enterprise, producing - intelligence on an industrial scale. This was not a "black chamber", - not a hidden room in some obscure government building with a small crew - of code-breakers. The whole operation -- from wholesale interception of - enemy communications by stations around the world, through large-scale - code-breaking and analysis of the decrypted material (with an enormous - set of files for cross-referencing), to delivery of intelligence to - field commanders -- was huge, and very carefully managed.</LI> -</UL> -<P>So by the end of the war, Allied code-breakers were expert at - large-scale mechanised code-breaking. The payoffs were enormous.</P> -<H4><A name="postwar">Postwar and Cold War</A></H4> -<P>The wartime innovations were enthusiastically adopted by post-war and - Cold War signals intelligence agencies. Presumably many nations now - have some agency capable of sophisticated attacks on communications - security, and quite a few engage in such activity on a large scale.</P> -<P>America's<A href="#NSA"> NSA</A>, for example, is said to be both the - world's largest employer of mathematicians and the world's largest - purchaser of computer equipment. Such claims may be somewhat - exaggerated, but beyond doubt the NSA -- and similar agencies in other - countries -- have some excellent mathematicians, lots of powerful - computers, sophisticated software, and the organisation and funding to - apply them on a large scale. Details of the NSA budget are secret, but - there are some published<A href="http://www.fas.org/irp/nsa/nsabudget.html"> - estimates</A>.</P> -<P>Changes in the world's communications systems since WW II have - provided these agencies with new targets. Cracking the codes used on an - enemy's military or diplomatic communications has been common practice - for centuries. Extensive use of radio in war made large-scale attacks - such as Ultra possible. Modern communications make it possible to go - far beyond that. Consider listening in on cell phones, or intercepting - electronic mail, or tapping into the huge volumes of data on new media - such as fiber optics or satellite links. None of these targets existed - in 1950. All of them can be attacked today, and almost certainly are - being attacked.</P> -<P>The Ultra story was not made public until the 1970s. Much of the - recent history of codes and code-breaking has not been made public, and - some of it may never be. Two important books are:</P> -<UL> -<LI>Bamford's<A href="#puzzle"> The Puzzle Palace</A>, a history of the - NSA</LI> -<LI>Hager's<A href="http://www.fas.org/irp/eprint/sp/index.html"> Secret - Power</A>, about the<A href="http://sg.yahoo.com/government/intelligence/echelon_network/"> - Echelon</A> system -- the US, UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand - co-operating to monitor much of the world's communications.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Note that these books cover only part of what is actually going on, - and then only the activities of nations open and democratic enough that - (some of) what they are doing can be discovered. A full picture, - including:</P> -<UL> -<LI>actions of the English-speaking democracies not covered in those - books</LI> -<LI>actions of other more-or-less sane governments</LI> -<LI>the activities of various more-or-less insane governments</LI> -<LI>possibilities for unauthorized action by government employees</LI> -<LI>possible actions by large non-government organisations: - corporations, criminals, or conspiracies</LI> -</UL> -<P>might be really frightening.</P> -<H4><A name="recent">Recent history -- the crypto wars</A></H4> -<P>Until quite recently, cryptography was primarily a concern of - governments, especially of the military, of spies, and of diplomats. - Much of it was extremely secret.</P> -<P>In recent years, that has changed a great deal. With computers and - networking becoming ubiquitous, cryptography is now important to almost - everyone. Among the developments since the 1970s:</P> -<UL> -<LI>The US gov't established the Data Encryption Standard,<A href="#DES"> - DES</A>, a<A href="#block"> block cipher</A> for cryptographic - protection of unclassfied documents.</LI> -<LI>DES also became widely used in industry, especially regulated - industries such as banking.</LI> -<LI>Other nations produced their own standards, such as<A href="glossary.html#GOST"> - GOST</A> in the Soviet Union.</LI> -<LI><A href="#public">Public key</A> cryptography was invented by Diffie - and Hellman.</LI> -<LI>Academic conferences such as<A href="http://www-cse.ucsd.edu/users/mihir/crypto2k.html"> - Crypto</A> and<A href="http://www.esat.kuleuven.ac.be/cosic/eurocrypt2000/"> - Eurocrypt</A> began.</LI> -<LI>Several companies began offerring cryptographic products:<A href="#RSAco"> - RSA</A>,<A href="#PGPI"> PGP</A>, the many vendors with<A href="#PKI"> - PKI</A> products, ...</LI> -<LI>Cryptography appeared in other products: operating systems, word - processors, ...</LI> -<LI>Network protocols based on crypto were developed:<A href="#ssh"> SSH</A> -,<A href="#SSL"> SSL</A>,<A href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A>, ...</LI> -<LI>Crytography came into widespread use to secure bank cards, - terminals, ...</LI> -<LI>The US government replaced<A href="#DES"> DES</A> with the much - stronger Advanced Encryption Standard,<A href="#AES"> AES</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>This has led to a complex ongoing battle between various mainly - government groups wanting to control the spread of crypto and various - others, notably the computer industry and the<A href="http://online.offshore.com.ai/security/"> - cypherpunk</A> crypto advocates, wanting to encourage widespread use.</P> -<P>Steven Levy has written a fine history of much of this, called<A href="#crypto"> - Crypto: How the Code rebels Beat the Government -- Saving Privacy in - the Digital Age</A>.</P> -<P>The FreeS/WAN project is to a large extent an outgrowth of cypherpunk - ideas. Our reasons for doing the project can be seen in these quotes - from the<A href="http://www.eff.org/pub/Privacy/Crypto_misc/cypherpunk.manifesto"> - Cypherpunk Manifesto</A>:</P> -<BLOCKQUOTE> Privacy is necessary for an open society in the electronic - age. ... -<P>We cannot expect governments, corporations, or other large, faceless - organizations to grant us privacy out of their beneficence. It is to - their advantage to speak of us, and we should expect that they will - speak. ...</P> -<P>We must defend our own privacy if we expect to have any. ...</P> -<P>Cypherpunks write code. We know that someone has to write software to - defend privacy, and since we can't get privacy unless we all do, we're - going to write it. We publish our code so that our fellow Cypherpunks - may practice and play with it. Our code is free for all to use, - worldwide. We don't much care if you don't approve of the software we - write. We know that software can't be destroyed and that a widely - dispersed system can't be shut down.</P> -<P>Cypherpunks deplore regulations on cryptography, for encryption is - fundamentally a private act. ...</P> -<P>For privacy to be widespread it must be part of a social contract. - People must come and together deploy these systems for the common good. - ...</P> -</BLOCKQUOTE> -<P>To quote project leader John Gilmore:</P> -<BLOCKQUOTE> We are literally in a race between our ability to build and - deploy technology, and their ability to build and deploy laws and - treaties. Neither side is likely to back down or wise up until it has - definitively lost the race.</BLOCKQUOTE> -<P>If FreeS/WAN reaches its goal of making<A href="#opp.intro"> - opportunistic encryption</A> widespread so that secure communication - can become the default for a large part of the net, we will have struck - a major blow.</P> -<H3><A name="intro.poli">Politics</A></H3> -<P>The political problem is that nearly all governments want to monitor - their enemies' communications, and some want to monitor their citizens. - They may be very interested in protecting some of their own - communications, and often some types of business communication, but not - in having everyone able to communicate securely. They therefore attempt - to restrict availability of strong cryptography as much as possible.</P> -<P>Things various governments have tried or are trying include:</P> -<UL> -<LI>Echelon, a monitor-the-world project of the US, UK, NZ, Australian - and Canadian<A href="#SIGINT"> signals intelligence</A> agencies. See - this<A href="http://sg.yahoo.com/government/intelligence/echelon_network/"> - collection</A> of links and this<A href="http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2640682,00.html"> - story</A> on the French Parliament's reaction.</LI> -<LI>Others governments may well have their own Echelon-like projects. To - quote the Dutch Minister of Defense, as reported in a German<A href="http://www.heise.de/tp/english/inhalt/te/4729/1.html"> - magazine</A>:<BLOCKQUOTE> The government believes not only the - governments associated with Echelon are able to intercept communication - systems, but that it is an activity of the investigative authorities - and intelligence services of many countries with governments of - different political signature.</BLOCKQUOTE> Even if they have nothing - on the scale of Echelon, most intelligence agencies and police forces - certainly have some interception capability.</LI> -<LI><A href="#NSA">NSA</A> tapping of submarine communication cables, - described in<A href="http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2764372,00.html"> - this article</A></LI> -<LI>A proposal for international co-operation on<A href="http://www.heise.de/tp/english/special/enfo/4306/1.html"> - Internet surveillance</A>.</LI> -<LI>Alleged<A href="http://cryptome.org/nsa-sabotage.htm"> sabotage</A> - of security products by the<A href="#NSA"> NSA</A> (the US signals - intelligence agency).</LI> -<LI>The German armed forces and some government departments will stop - using American software for fear of NSA "back doors", according to this<A -href="http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/4/17679.html"> news story</A> -.</LI> -<LI>The British Regulation of Investigatory Powers bill. See this<A href="http://www.fipr.org/rip/index.html"> - web page.</A> and perhaps this<A href="http://ars.userfriendly.org/cartoons/?id=20000806&mode=classic"> - cartoon</A>.</LI> -<LI>A Russian<A href="http://www.eff.org/pub/Privacy/Foreign_and_local/Russia/russian_crypto_ban_english.edict"> - ban</A> on cryptography</LI> -<LI>Chinese<A href="http://www.eff.org/pub/Misc/Publications/Declan_McCullagh/www/global/china"> - controls</A> on net use.</LI> -<LI>The FBI's carnivore system for covert searches of email. See this<A href="http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2601502,00.html"> - news coverage</A> and this<A href="http://www.crypto.com/papers/carnivore-risks.html"> - risk assessment</A>. The government had an external review of some - aspects of this system done. See this<A href="http://www.crypto.com/papers/carnivore_report_comments.html"> - analysis</A> of that review. Possible defenses against Carnivore - include: -<UL> -<LI><A href="#PGP">PGP</A> for end-to-end mail encryption</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.home.aone.net.au/qualcomm/">secure sendmail</A> - for server-to-server encryption</LI> -<LI>IPsec encryption on the underlying IP network</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>export laws restricting strong cryptography as a munition. See<A href="#exlaw"> - discussion</A> below.</LI> -<LI>various attempts to convince people that fundamentally flawed - cryptography, such as encryption with a<A href="#escrow"> back door</A> - for government access to data or with<A href="#shortkeys"> inadequate - key lengths</A>, was adequate for their needs.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Of course governments are by no means the only threat to privacy and - security on the net. Other threats include:</P> -<UL> -<LI>industrial espionage, as for example in this<A href="http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2626931,00.html"> - news story</A></LI> -<LI>attacks by organised criminals, as in this<A href="http://www.sans.org/newlook/alerts/NTE-bank.htm"> - large-scale attack</A></LI> -<LI>collection of personal data by various companies. -<UL> -<LI>for example, consider the various corporate winners of Privacy - International's<A href="http://www.privacyinternational.org/bigbrother/"> - Big Brother Awards</A>.</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.zeroknowledge.com">Zero Knowledge</A> sell tools - to defend against this</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>individuals may also be a threat in a variety of ways and for a - variety of reasons</LI> -<LI>in particular, an individual with access to government or industry - data collections could do considerable damage using that data in - unauthorized ways.</LI> -</UL> -<P>One<A href="http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2640674,00.html"> - study</A> enumerates threats and possible responses for small and - medium businesses. VPNs are a key part of the suggested strategy.</P> -<P>We consider privacy a human right. See the UN's<A href="http://www.un.org/Overview/rights.html"> - Universal Declaration of Human Rights</A>, article twelve:</P> -<BLOCKQUOTE> No one shall be subjected to arbitrary interference with - his privacy, family, home or correspondence, nor to attacks upon his - honor and reputation. Everyone has the right to the protection of the - law against such interference or attacks.</BLOCKQUOTE> -<P>Our objective is to help make privacy possible on the Internet using - cryptography strong enough not even those well-funded government - agencies are likely to break it. If we can do that, the chances of - anyone else breaking it are negliible.</P> -<H3><A NAME="26_1_3">Links</A></H3> -<P>Many groups are working in different ways to defend privacy on the - net and elsewhere. Please consider contributing to one or more of these - groups:</P> -<UL> -<LI>the EFF's<A href="http://www.eff.org/crypto/"> Privacy Now!</A> - campaign</LI> -<LI>the<A href="http://www.gilc.org"> Global Internet Liberty Campaign</A> -</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.cpsr.org/program/privacy/privacy.html">Computer - Professionals for Social Responsibility</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>For more on these issues see:</P> -<UL> -<LI>Steven Levy (Newsweek's chief technology writer and author of the - classic "Hackers") new book<A href="#crypto"> Crypto: How the Code - Rebels Beat the Government--Saving Privacy in the Digital Age</A></LI> -<LI>Simson Garfinkel (Boston Globe columnist and author of books on<A href="#PGP"> - PGP</A> and<A href="#practical"> Unix Security</A>) book<A href="#Garfinkel"> - Database Nation: the death of privacy in the 21st century</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>There are several collections of<A href="#quotes"> crypto quotes</A> - on the net.</P> -<P>See also the<A href="biblio.html"> bibliography</A> and our list of<A href="#policy"> - web references</A> on cryptography law and policy.</P> -<H3><A NAME="26_1_4">Outline of this section</A></H3> -<P>The remainder of this section includes two pieces of writing by our - project leader</P> -<UL> -<LI>his<A href="#gilmore"> rationale</A> for starting this</LI> -<LI>another<A href="#policestate"> discussion</A> of project goals</LI> -</UL> -<P>and discussions of:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="#desnotsecure">why we do not use DES</A></LI> -<LI><A href="#exlaw">cryptography export laws</A></LI> -<LI>why<A href="#escrow"> government access to keys</A> is not a good - idea</LI> -<LI>the myth that<A href="#shortkeys"> short keys</A> are adequate for - some security requirements</LI> -</UL> -<P>and a section on<A href="#press"> press coverage of FreeS/WAN</A>.</P> -<H2><A name="leader">From our project leader</A></H2> -<P>FreeS/WAN project founder John Gilmore wrote a web page about why we - are doing this. The version below is slightly edited, to fit this - format and to update some links. For a version without these edits, see - his<A href="http://www.toad.com/gnu/"> home page</A>.</P> -<CENTER> -<H3><A name="gilmore">Swan: Securing the Internet against Wiretapping</A> -</H3> -</CENTER> -<P>My project for 1996 was to<B> secure 5% of the Internet traffic - against passive wiretapping</B>. It didn't happen in 1996, so I'm still - working on it in 1997, 1998, and 1999! If we get 5% in 1999 or 2000, we - can secure 20% the next year, against both active and passive attacks; - and 80% the following year. Soon the whole Internet will be private and - secure. The project is called S/WAN or S/Wan or Swan for Secure Wide - Area Network; since it's free software, we call it FreeSwan to - distinguish it from various commercial implementations.<A href="http://www.rsa.com/rsa/SWAN/"> - RSA</A> came up with the term "S/WAN". Our main web site is at<A href="http://www.freeswan.org/"> - http://www.freeswan.org/</A>. Want to help?</P> -<P>The idea is to deploy PC-based boxes that will sit between your local - area network and the Internet (near your firewall or router) which - opportunistically encrypt your Internet packets. Whenever you talk to a - machine (like a Web site) that doesn't support encryption, your traffic - goes out "in the clear" as usual. Whenever you connect to a machine - that does support this kind of encryption, this box automatically - encrypts all your packets, and decrypts the ones that come in. In - effect, each packet gets put into an "envelope" on one side of the net, - and removed from the envelope when it reaches its destination. This - works for all kinds of Internet traffic, including Web access, Telnet, - FTP, email, IRC, Usenet, etc.</P> -<P>The encryption boxes are standard PC's that use freely available - Linux software that you can download over the Internet or install from - a cheap CDROM.</P> -<P>This wasn't just my idea; lots of people have been working on it for - years. The encryption protocols for these boxes are called<A href="#IPSEC"> - IPSEC (IP Security)</A>. They have been developed by the<A href="http://www.ietf.cnri.reston.va.us/html.charters/ipsec-charter.html"> - IP Security Working Group</A> of the<A href="http://www.ietf.org/"> - Internet Engineering Task Force</A>, and will be a standard part of the - next major version of the Internet protocols (<A href="http://playground.sun.com/pub/ipng/html/ipng-main.html"> -IPv6</A>). For today's (IP version 4) Internet, they are an option.</P> -<P>The<A href="http://www.iab.org/iab"> Internet Architecture Board</A> - and<A href="http://www.ietf.org/"> Internet Engineering Steering Group</A> - have taken a<A href="iab-iesg.stmt"> strong stand</A> that the Internet - should use powerful encryption to provide security and privacy. I think - these protocols are the best chance to do that, because they can be - deployed very easily, without changing your hardware or software or - retraining your users. They offer the best security we know how to - build, using the Triple-DES, RSA, and Diffie-Hellman algorithms.</P> -<P>This "opportunistic encryption box" offers the "fax effect". As each - person installs one for their own use, it becomes more valuable for - their neighbors to install one too, because there's one more person to - use it with. The software automatically notices each newly installed - box, and doesn't require a network administrator to reconfigure it. - Instead of "virtual private networks" we have a "REAL private network"; - we add privacy to the real network instead of layering a - manually-maintained virtual network on top of an insecure Internet.</P> -<H4><A NAME="26_2_1_1">Deployment of IPSEC</A></H4> -<P>The US government would like to control the deployment of IP Security - with its<A href="#exlaw"> crypto export laws</A>. This isn't a problem - for my effort, because the cryptographic work is happening outside the - United States. A foreign philanthropist, and others, have donated the - resources required to add these protocols to the Linux operating - system.<A href="http://www.linux.org/"> Linux</A> is a complete, freely - available operating system for IBM PC's and several kinds of - workstation, which is compatible with Unix. It was written by Linus - Torvalds, and is still maintained by a talented team of expert - programmers working all over the world and coordinating over the - Internet. Linux is distributed under the<A href="#GPL"> GNU Public - License</A>, which gives everyone the right to copy it, improve it, - give it to their friends, sell it commercially, or do just about - anything else with it, without paying anyone for the privilege.</P> -<P>Organizations that want to secure their network will be able to put - two Ethernet cards into an IBM PC, install Linux on it from a $30 CDROM - or by downloading it over the net, and plug it in between their - Ethernet and their Internet link or firewall. That's all they'll have - to do to encrypt their Internet traffic everywhere outside their own - local area network.</P> -<P>Travelers will be able to run Linux on their laptops, to secure their - connection back to their home network (and to everywhere else that they - connect to, such as customer sites). Anyone who runs Linux on a - standalone PC will also be able to secure their network connections, - without changing their application software or how they operate their - computer from day to day.</P> -<P>There will also be numerous commercially available firewalls that use - this technology.<A href="http://www.rsa.com/"> RSA Data Security</A> is - coordinating the<A href="http://www.rsa.com/rsa/SWAN"> S/Wan (Secure - Wide Area Network)</A> project among more than a dozen vendors who use - these protocols. There's a<A href="http://www.rsa.com/rsa/SWAN/swan_test.htm"> - compatability chart</A> that shows which vendors have tested their - boxes against which other vendors to guarantee interoperatility.</P> -<P>Eventually it will also move into the operating systems and - networking protocol stacks of major vendors. This will probably take - longer, because those vendors will have to figure out what they want to - do about the export controls.</P> -<H4><A NAME="26_2_1_2">Current status</A></H4> -<P>My initial goal of securing 5% of the net by Christmas '96 was not - met. It was an ambitious goal, and inspired me and others to work hard, - but was ultimately too ambitious. The protocols were in an early stage - of development, and needed a lot more protocol design before they could - be implemented. As of April 1999, we have released version 1.0 of the - software (<A href="ftp://ftp.xs4all.nl/freeswan/freeswan-1.0.tar.gz"> -freeswan-1.0.tar.gz</A>), which is suitable for setting up Virtual - Private Networks using shared secrets for authentication. It does not - yet do opportunistic encryption, or use DNSSEC for authentication; - those features are coming in a future release.</P> -<DL> -<DT>Protocols</DT> -<DD>The low-level encrypted packet formats are defined. The system for - publishing keys and providing secure domain name service is defined. - The IP Security working group has settled on an NSA-sponsored protocol - for key agreement (called ISAKMP/Oakley), but it is still being worked - on, as the protocol and its documentation is too complex and - incomplete. There are prototype implementations of ISAKMP. The protocol - is not yet defined to enable opportunistic encryption or the use of - DNSSEC keys.</DD> -<DT>Linux Implementation</DT> -<DD>The Linux implementation has reached its first major release and is - ready for production use in manually-configured networks, using Linux - kernel version 2.0.36.</DD> -<DT>Domain Name System Security</DT> -<DD>There is now a release of BIND 8.2 that includes most DNS Security - features. -<P>The first prototype implementation of Domain Name System Security was - funded by<A href="#DARPA"> DARPA</A> as part of their<A href="http://www.darpa.mil/ito/research/is/index.html"> - Information Survivability program</A>.<A href="http://www.tis.com"> - Trusted Information Systems</A> wrote a modified version of<A href="http://www.isc.org/bind.html"> - BIND</A>, the widely-used Berkeley implementation of the Domain Name - System.</P> -<P>TIS, ISC, and I merged the prototype into the standard version of - BIND. The first production version that supports KEY and SIG records is<B> - bind-4.9.5</B>. This or any later version of BIND will do for - publishing keys. It is available from the<A href="http://www.isc.org/bind.html"> - Internet Software Consortium</A>. This version of BIND is not - export-controlled since it does not contain any cryptography. Later - releases starting with BIND 8.2 include cryptography for authenticating - DNS records, which is also exportable. Better documentation is needed.</P> -</DD> -</DL> -<H4><A NAME="26_2_1_3">Why?</A></H4> -<P>Because I can. I have made enough money from several successful - startup companies, that for a while I don't have to work to support - myself. I spend my energies and money creating the kind of world that - I'd like to live in and that I'd like my (future) kids to live in. - Keeping and improving on the civil rights we have in the United States, - as we move more of our lives into cyberspace, is a particular goal of - mine.</P> -<H4><A NAME="26_2_1_4">What You Can Do</A></H4> -<DL> -<DT>Install the latest BIND at your site.</DT> -<DD>You won't be able to publish any keys for your domain, until you - have upgraded your copy of BIND. The thing you really need from it is - the new version of<I> named</I>, the Name Daemon, which knows about the - new KEY and SIG record types. So, download it from the<A href="http://www.isc.org/bind.html"> - Internet Software Consortium</A> and install it on your name server - machine (or get your system administrator, or Internet Service - Provider, to install it). Both your primary DNS site and all of your - secondary DNS sites will need the new release before you will be able - to publish your keys. You can tell which sites this is by running the - Unix command "dig MYDOMAIN ns" and seeing which sites are mentioned in - your NS (name server) records.</DD> -<DT>Set up a Linux system and run a 2.0.x kernel on it</DT> -<DD>Get a machine running Linux (say the 5.2 release from<A href="http://www.redhat.com"> - Red Hat</A>). Give the machine two Ethernet cards.</DD> -<DT>Install the Linux IPSEC (Freeswan) software</DT> -<DD>If you're an experienced sysadmin or Linux hacker, install the - freeswan-1.0 release, or any later release or snapshot. These releases - do NOT provide automated "opportunistic" operation; they must be - manually configured for each site you wish to encrypt with.</DD> -<DT>Get on the linux-ipsec mailing list</DT> -<DD>The discussion forum for people working on the project, and testing - the code and documentation, is: linux-ipsec@clinet.fi. To join this - mailing list, send email to<A href="mailto:linux-ipsec-REQUEST@clinet.fi"> - linux-ipsec-REQUEST@clinet.fi</A> containing a line of text that says - "subscribe linux-ipsec". (You can later get off the mailing list the - same way -- just send "unsubscribe linux-ipsec").</DD> -<P></P> -<DT>Check back at this web page every once in a while</DT> -<DD>I update this page periodically, and there may be new information in - it that you haven't seen. My intent is to send email to the mailing - list when I update the page in any significant way, so subscribing to - the list is an alternative.</DD> -</DL> -<P>Would you like to help? I can use people who are willing to write - documentation, install early releases for testing, write cryptographic - code outside the United States, sell pre-packaged software or systems - including this technology, and teach classes for network administrators - who want to install this technology. To offer to help, send me email at - gnu@toad.com. Tell me what country you live in and what your - citizenship is (it matters due to the export control laws; personally I - don't care). Include a copy of your resume and the URL of your home - page. Describe what you'd like to do for the project, and what you're - uniquely qualified for. Mention what other volunteer projects you've - been involved in (and how they worked out). Helping out will require - that you be able to commit to doing particular things, meet your - commitments, and be responsive by email. Volunteer projects just don't - work without those things.</P> -<H4><A NAME="26_2_1_5">Related projects</A></H4> -<DL> -<DT>IPSEC for NetBSD</DT> -<DD>This prototype implementation of the IP Security protocols is for - another free operating system.<A href="ftp://ftp.funet.fi/pub/unix/security/net/ip/BSDipsec.tar.gz"> - Download BSDipsec.tar.gz</A>.</DD> -<DT>IPSEC for<A href="http://www.openbsd.org"> OpenBSD</A></DT> -<DD>This prototype implementation of the IP Security protocols is for - yet another free operating system. It is directly integrated into the - OS release, since the OS is maintained in Canada, which has freedom of - speech in software.</DD> -</DL> -<H3><A name="policestate">Stopping wholesale monitoring</A></H3> -<P>From a message project leader John Gilmore posted to the mailing - list:</P> -<PRE>John Denker wrote: - -> Indeed there are several ways in which the documentation overstates the -> scope of what this project does -- starting with the name -> FreeS/WAN. There's a big difference between having an encrypted IP tunnel -> versus having a Secure Wide-Area Network. This software does a fine job of -> the former, which is necessary but not sufficient for the latter. - -The goal of the project is to make it very hard to tap your wide area -communications. The current system provides very good protection -against passive attacks (wiretapping and those big antenna farms). -Active attacks, which involve the intruder sending packets to your -system (like packets that break into sendmail and give them a root -shell :-) are much harder to guard against. Active attacks that -involve sending people (breaking into your house and replacing parts -of your computer with ones that transmit what you're doing) are also -much harder to guard against. Though we are putting effort into -protecting against active attacks, it's a much bigger job than merely -providing strong encryption. It involves general computer security, -and general physical security, which are two very expensive problems -for even a site to solve, let alone to build into a whole society. - -The societal benefit of building an infrastructure that protects -well against passive attacks is that it makes it much harder to do -undetected bulk monitoring of the population. It's a defense against -police-states, not against policemen. - -Policemen can put in the effort required to actively attack sites that -they have strong suspicions about. But police states won't be able to -build systems that automatically monitor everyone's communications. -Either they will be able to monitor only a small subset of the -populace (by targeting those who screwed up their passive security), -or their monitoring activities will be detectable by those monitored -(active attacks leave packet traces or footprints), which can then be -addressed through the press and through political means if they become -too widespread. - -FreeS/WAN does not protect very well against traffic analysis, which -is a kind of widespread police-state style monitoring that still -reveals significant information (who's talking to who) without -revealing the contents of what was said. Defenses against traffic -analysis are an open research problem. Zero Knowledge Systems is -actively deploying a system designed to thwart it, designed by Ian -Goldberg. The jury is out on whether it actually works; a lot more -experience with it will be needed.</PRE> -<P>Notes on things mentioned in that message:</P> -<UL> -<LI>Denker is a co-author of a<A href="#applied"> paper</A> on a large - FreeS/WAN application.</LI> -<LI>Information on Zero Knowledge is on their<A href="http://www.zks.net/"> - web site</A>. Their Freedom product, designed to provide untracable - pseudonyms for use on the net, is no longer marketed.</LI> -<LI>Another section of our documentation discusses ways to<A href="#traffic.resist"> - resist traffic analysis</A>.</LI> -</UL> -<H2><A name="weak">Government promotion of weak crypto</A></H2> -<P>Various groups, especially governments and especially the US - government, have a long history of advocating various forms of bogus - security.</P> -<P>We regard bogus security as extremely dangerous. If users are - deceived into relying on bogus security, then they may be exposed to - large risks. They would be better off having no security and knowing - it. At least then they would be careful about what they said.</P> -<P><STRONG>Avoiding bogus security is a key design criterion for - everything we do in FreeS/WAN</STRONG>. The most conspicuous example is - our refusal to support<A href="#desnotsecure"> single DES</A>. Other - IPsec "features" which we do not implement are discussed in our<A href="#dropped"> - compatibility</A> document.</P> -<H3><A name="escrow">Escrowed encryption</A></H3> -<P>Various governments have made persistent attempts to encourage or - mandate "escrowed encrytion", also called "key recovery", or GAK for - "government access to keys". The idea is that cryptographic keys be - held by some third party and turned over to law enforcement or security - agencies under some conditions.</P> -<PRE> Mary had a little key - she kept it in escrow, - and every thing that Mary said, - the feds were sure to know.</PRE> -<P>A<A href="#quotes"> crypto quotes</A> page attributes this to<A href="http://www.scramdisk.clara.net/"> - Sam Simpson</A>.</P> -<P>There is an excellent paper available on<A href="http://www.cdt.org/crypto/risks98/"> - Risks of Escrowed Encryption</A>, from a group of cryptographic - luminaries which included our project leader.</P> -<P>Like any unnecessary complication, GAK tends to weaken security of - any design it infects. For example:</P> -<UL> -<LI>Matt Blaze found a fatal flaw in the US government's Clipper chip - shortly after design information became public. See his paper "Protocol - Failure in the Escrowed Encryption Standard" on his<A href="http://www.crypto.com/papers/"> - papers</A> page.</LI> -<LI>a rather<A href="http://www.pgp.com/other/advisories/adk.asp"> nasty - bug</A> was found in the "additional decryption keys" "feature" of some - releases of<A href="#PGP"> PGP</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>FreeS/WAN does not support escrowed encryption, and never will.</P> -<H3><A name="shortkeys">Limited key lengths</A></H3> -<P>Various governments, and some vendors, have also made persistent - attempts to convince people that:</P> -<UL> -<LI>weak systems are sufficient for some data</LI> -<LI>strong cryptography should be reserved for cases where the extra - overheads are justified</LI> -</UL> -<P><STRONG>This is utter nonsense</STRONG>.</P> -<P>Weak systems touted include:</P> -<UL> -<LI>the ludicrously weak (deliberately crippled) 40-bit ciphers that - until recently were all various<A href="#exlaw"> export laws</A> - allowed</LI> -<LI>56-bit single DES, discussed<A href="#desnotsecure"> below</A></LI> -<LI>64-bit symmetric ciphers and 512-bit RSA, the maximums for - unrestricted export under various current laws</LI> -</UL> -<P>The notion that choice of ciphers or keysize should be determined by - a trade-off between security requirements and overheads is pure - bafflegab.</P> -<UL> -<LI>For most<A href="#symmetric"> symmetric ciphers</A>, it is simply a - lie. Any block cipher has some natural maximum keysize inherent in the - design -- 128 bits for<A href="#IDEA"> IDEA</A> or<A href="#CAST128"> - CAST-128</A>, 256 for Serpent or Twofish, 448 for<A href="#Blowfish"> - Blowfish</A> and 2048 for<A href="#RC4"> RC4</A>. Using a key size - smaller than that limit gives<EM> exactly zero</EM> savings in - overhead. The crippled 40-bit or 64-bit version of the cipher provides<EM> - no advantage whatsoever</EM>.</LI> -<LI><A href="#AES">AES</A> uses 10 rounds with 128-bit keys, 12 rounds - for 192-bit and 14 rounds for 256-bit, so there actually is a small - difference in overhead, but not enough to matter in most applications.</LI> -<LI>For<A href="#3DES"> triple DES</A> there is a grain of truth in the - argument. 3DES is indeed three times slower than single DES. However, - the solution is not to use the insecure single DES, but to pick a - faster secure cipher.<A href="#CAST128"> CAST-128</A>,<A href="#Blowfish"> - Blowfish</A> and the<A href="#AES"> AES candidate</A> ciphers are are - all considerably faster in software than DES (let alone 3DES!), and - apparently secure.</LI> -<LI>For<A href="#public"> public key</A> techniques, there are extra - overheads for larger keys, but they generally do not affect overall - performance significantly. Practical public key applications are - usually<A href="#hybrid"> hybrid</A> systems in which the bulk of the - work is done by a symmetric cipher. The effect of increasing the cost - of the public key operations is typically negligible because the public - key operations use only a tiny fraction of total resources. -<P>For example, suppose public key operations use use 1% of the time in - a hybrid system and you triple the cost of public key operations. The - cost of symmetric cipher operations is unchanged at 99% of the original - total cost, so the overall effect is a jump from 99 + 1 = 100 to 99 + 3 - = 102, a 2% rise in system cost.</P> -</LI> -</UL> -<P>In short,<STRONG> there has never been any technical reason to use - inadequate ciphers</STRONG>. The only reason there has ever been for - anyone to use such ciphers is that government agencies want weak - ciphers used so that they can crack them. The alleged savings are - simply propaganda.</P> -<PRE> Mary had a little key (It's all she could export), - and all the email that she sent was opened at the Fort.</PRE> -<P>A<A href="#quotes"> crypto quotes</A> page attributes this to<A href="http://theory.lcs.mit.edu:80/~rivest/"> - Ron Rivest</A>. NSA headquarters is at Fort Meade, Maryland.</P> -<P>Our policy in FreeS/WAN is to use only cryptographic components with - adequate keylength and no known weaknesses.</P> -<UL> -<LI>We do not implement single DES because it is clearly<A href="#desnotsecure"> - insecure</A>, so implemeting it would violate our policy of avoiding - bogus security. Our default cipher is<A href="#3DES"> 3DES</A></LI> -<LI>Similarly, we do not implement the 768-bit Group 1 for<A href="#DH"> - Diffie-Hellman</A> key negotiation. We provide only the 1024-bit Group - 2 and 1536-bit Group 5.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Detailed discussion of which IPsec features we implement or omit is - in out<A href="compat.html"> compatibility document</A>.</P> -<P>These decisions imply that we cannot fully conform to the IPsec RFCs, - since those have DES as the only required cipher and Group 1 as the - only required DH group. (In our view, the standards were subverted into - offerring bogus security.) Fortunately, we can still interoperate with - most other IPsec implementations since nearly all implementers provide - at least 3DES and Group 2 as well.</P> -<P>We hope that eventually the RFCs will catch up with our (and others') - current practice and reject dubious components. Some of our team and a - number of others are working on this in<A href="#ietf"> IETF</A> - working groups.</P> -<H4><A NAME="26_3_2_1">Some real trade-offs</A></H4> -<P>Of course, making systems secure does involve costs, and trade-offs - can be made between cost and security. However, the real trade-offs - have nothing to do with using weaker ciphers.</P> -<P>There can be substantial hardware and software costs. There are often - substantial training costs, both to train administrators and to - increase user awareness of security issues and procedures. There are - almost always substantial staff or contracting costs.</P> -<P>Security takes staff time for planning, implementation, testing and - auditing. Some of the issues are subtle; you need good (hence often - expensive) people for this. You also need people to monitor your - systems and respond to problems. The best safe ever built is insecure - if an attacker can work on it for days without anyone noticing. Any - computer is insecure if the administrator is "too busy" to check the - logs.</P> -<P>Moreover, someone in your organisation (or on contract to it) needs - to spend considerable time keeping up with new developments. EvilDoers<EM> - will</EM> know about new attacks shortly after they are found. You need - to know about them before your systems are attacked. If your vendor - provides a patch, you need to apply it. If the vendor does nothing, you - need to complain or start looking for another vendor.</P> -<P>For a fairly awful example, see this<A href="http://www.sans.org/newlook/alerts/NTE-bank.htm"> - report</A>. In that case over a million credit card numbers were taken - from e-commerce sites, using security flaws in Windows NT servers. - Microsoft had long since released patches for most or all of the flaws, - but the site administrators had not applied them.</P> -<P>At an absolute minimum, you must do something about such issues<EM> - before</EM> an exploitation tool is posted to the net for downloading - by dozens of "script kiddies". Such a tool might appear at any time - from the announcement of the security hole to several months later. - Once it appears, anyone with a browser and an attitude can break any - system whose administrators have done nothing about the flaw.</P> -<P>Compared to those costs, cipher overheads are an insignificant factor - in the cost of security.</P> -<P>The only thing using a weak cipher can do for you is to cause all - your other investment to be wasted.</P> -<H2><A name="exlaw">Cryptography Export Laws</A></H2> -<P>Many nations restrict the export of cryptography and some restrict - its use by their citizens or others within their borders.</P> -<H3><A name="USlaw">US Law</A></H3> -<P>US laws, as currently interpreted by the US government, forbid export - of most cryptographic software from the US in machine-readable form - without government permission. In general, the restrictions apply even - if the software is widely-disseminated or public-domain and even if it - came from outside the US originally. Cryptography is legally a munition - and export is tightly controlled under the<A href="#EAR"> EAR</A> - Export Administration Regulations.</P> -<P>If you are a US citizen, your brain is considered US territory no - matter where it is physically located at the moment. The US believes - that its laws apply to its citizens everywhere, not just within the US. - Providing technical assistance or advice to foreign "munitions" - projects is illegal. The US government has very little sense of humor - about this issue and does not consider good intentions to be sufficient - excuse. Beware.</P> -<P>The<A href="http://www.bxa.doc.gov/Encryption/"> official website</A> - for these regulations is run by the Commerce Department's Bureau of - Export Administration (BXA).</P> -<P>The<A href="http://www.eff.org/bernstein/"> Bernstein case</A> - challenges the export restrictions on Constitutional grounds. Code is - speech so restrictions on export of code violate the First Amendment's - free speech provisions. This argument has succeeded in two levels of - court so far. It is quite likely to go on to the Supreme Court.</P> -<P>The regulations were changed substantially in January 2000, - apparently as a government attempt to get off the hook in the Bernstein - case. It is now legal to export public domain source code for - encryption, provided you notify the<A href="#BXA"> BXA</A>.</P> -<P>There are, however, still restrictions in force. Moreover, the - regulations can still be changed again whenever the government chooses - to do so. Short of a Supreme Court ruling (in the Berstein case or - another) that overturns the regulations completely, the problem of - export regulation is not likely to go away in the forseeable future.</P> -<H4><A name="UScontrib">US contributions to FreeS/WAN</A></H4> -<P>The FreeS/WAN project<STRONG> cannot accept software contributions,<EM> - not even small bug fixes</EM>, from US citizens or residents</STRONG>. - We want it to be absolutely clear that our distribution is not subject - to US export law. Any contribution from an American might open that - question to a debate we'd prefer to avoid. It might also put the - contributor at serious legal risk.</P> -<P>Of course Americans can still make valuable contributions (many - already have) by reporting bugs, or otherwise contributing to - discussions, on the project<A href="mail.html"> mailing list</A>. Since - the list is public, this is clearly constitutionally protected free - speech.</P> -<P>Note, however, that the export laws restrict Americans from providing - technical assistance to foreign "munitions" projects. The government - might claim that private discussions or correspondence with FreeS/WAN - developers were covered by this. It is not clear what the courts would - do with such a claim, so we strongly encourage Americans to use the - list rather than risk the complications.</P> -<H3><A name="wrong">What's wrong with restrictions on cryptography</A></H3> -<P>Some quotes from prominent cryptography experts:</P> -<BLOCKQUOTE> The real aim of current policy is to ensure the continued - effectiveness of US information warfare assets against individuals, - businesses and governments in Europe and elsewhere. -<BR><A href="http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/users/rja14"> Ross Anderson, - Cambridge University</A></BLOCKQUOTE><BLOCKQUOTE> If the government - were honest about its motives, then the debate about crypto export - policy would have ended years ago. -<BR><A href="http://www.counterpane.com"> Bruce Schneier, Counterpane - Systems</A></BLOCKQUOTE><BLOCKQUOTE> The NSA regularly lies to people - who ask it for advice on export control. They have no reason not to; - accomplishing their goal by any legal means is fine by them. Lying by - government employees is legal. -<BR> John Gilmore.</BLOCKQUOTE> -<P>The Internet Architecture Board (IAB) and the Internet Engineering - Steering Group (IESG) made a<A href="iab-iesg.stmt"> strong statement</A> - in favour of worldwide access to strong cryptography. Essentially the - same statement is in the appropriately numbered<A href="ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc1984.txt"> - RFC 1984</A>. Two critical paragraphs are:</P> -<BLOCKQUOTE> ... various governments have actual or proposed policies on - access to cryptographic technology ... -<P>(a) ... export controls ... -<BR> (b) ... short cryptographic keys ... -<BR> (c) ... keys should be in the hands of the government or ... -<BR> (d) prohibit the use of cryptology ...</P> -<P>We believe that such policies are against the interests of consumers - and the business community, are largely irrelevant to issues of - military security, and provide only a marginal or illusory benefit to - law enforcement agencies, ...</P> -<P>The IAB and IESG would like to encourage policies that allow ready - access to uniform strong cryptographic technology for all Internet - users in all countries.</P> -</BLOCKQUOTE> -<P>Our goal in the FreeS/WAN project is to build just such "strong - cryptographic technology" and to distribute it "for all Internet users - in all countries".</P> -<P>More recently, the same two bodies (IESG and IAB) have issued<A href="ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2804.txt"> - RFC 2804</A> on why the IETF should not build wiretapping capabilities - into protocols for the convenience of security or law enforcement - agenicies. The abstract from that document is:</P> -<BLOCKQUOTE> The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) has been asked - to take a position on the inclusion into IETF standards-track documents - of functionality designed to facilitate wiretapping. -<P>This memo explains what the IETF thinks the question means, why its - answer is "no", and what that answer means.</P> -</BLOCKQUOTE> A quote from the debate leading up to that RFC:<BLOCKQUOTE> - We should not be building surveillance technology into standards. Law - enforcement was not supposed to be easy. Where it is easy, it's called - a police state. -<BR> Jeff Schiller of MIT, in a discussion of FBI demands for wiretap - capability on the net, as quoted by<A href="http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,31895,00.html"> - Wired</A>.</BLOCKQUOTE> -<P>The<A href="http://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/raven"> Raven</A> - mailing list was set up for this IETF discussion.</P> -<P>Our goal is to go beyond that RFC and prevent Internet wiretapping - entirely.</P> -<H3><A name="Wassenaar">The Wassenaar Arrangement</A></H3> -<P>Restrictions on the export of cryptography are not just US policy, - though some consider the US at least partly to blame for the policies - of other nations in this area.</P> -<P>A number of countries:</P> -<P>Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Canada, Czech - Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, - Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, - Portugal, Republic of Korea, Romania, Russian Federation, Slovak - Republic, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, Ukraine, United Kingdom - and United States</P> -<P>have signed the Wassenaar Arrangement which restricts export of - munitions and other tools of war. Cryptographic sofware is covered - there.</P> -<P>Wassenaar details are available from the<A href="http://www.wassenaar.org/"> - Wassenaar Secretariat</A>, and elsewhere in a more readable<A href="http://www.fitug.de/news/wa/index.html"> - HTML version</A>.</P> -<P>For a critique see the<A href="http://www.gilc.org/crypto/wassenaar"> - GILC site</A>:</P> -<BLOCKQUOTE> The Global Internet Liberty Campaign (GILC) has begun a - campaign calling for the removal of cryptography controls from the - Wassenaar Arrangement. -<P>The aim of the Wassenaar Arrangement is to prevent the build up of - military capabilities that threaten regional and international security - and stability . . .</P> -<P>There is no sound basis within the Wassenaar Arrangement for the - continuation of any export controls on cryptographic products.</P> -</BLOCKQUOTE> -<P>We agree entirely.</P> -<P>An interesting analysis of Wassenaar can be found on the<A href="http://www.cyber-rights.org/crypto/wassenaar.htm"> - cyber-rights.org</A> site.</P> -<H3><A name="status">Export status of Linux FreeS/WAN</A></H3> -<P>We believe our software is entirely exempt from these controls since - the Wassenaar<A href="http://www.wassenaar.org/list/GTN%20and%20GSN%20-%2099.pdf"> - General Software Note</A> says:</P> -<BLOCKQUOTE> The Lists do not control "software" which is either: -<OL> -<LI>Generally available to the public by . . . retail . . . or</LI> -<LI>"In the public domain".</LI> -</OL> -</BLOCKQUOTE> -<P>There is a note restricting some of this, but it is a sub-heading - under point 1, so it appears not to apply to public domain software.</P> -<P>Their glossary defines "In the public domain" as:</P> -<BLOCKQUOTE> . . . "technology" or "software" which has been made - available without restrictions upon its further dissemination. -<P>N.B. Copyright restrictions do not remove "technology" or "software" - from being "in the public domain".</P> -</BLOCKQUOTE> -<P>We therefore believe that software freely distributed under the<A href="#GPL"> - GNU Public License</A>, such as Linux FreeS/WAN, is exempt from - Wassenaar restrictions.</P> -<P>Most of the development work is being done in Canada. Our - understanding is that the Canadian government accepts this - interpretation.</P> -<UL> -<LI>A web statement of<A href="http://www.dfait-maeci.gc.ca/~eicb/notices/ser113-e.htm"> - Canadian policy</A> is available from the Department of Foreign Affairs - and International Trade.</LI> -<LI>Another document from that department states that<A href="http://www.dfait-maeci.gc.ca/~eicb/export/gr1_e.htm"> - public domain software</A> is exempt from the export controls.</LI> -<LI>A researcher's<A href="http://insight.mcmaster.ca/org/efc/pages/doc/crypto-export.html"> - analysis</A> of Canadian policy is also available.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Recent copies of the freely modifiable and distributable source code - exist in many countries. Citizens all over the world participate in its - use and evolution, and guard its ongoing distribution. Even if Canadian - policy were to change, the software would continue to evolve in - countries which do not restrict exports, and would continue to be - imported from there into unfree countries. "The Net culture treats - censorship as damage, and routes around it."</P> -<H3><A name="help">Help spread IPsec around</A></H3> -<P>You can help. If you don't know of a Linux FreeS/WAN archive in your - own country, please download it now to your personal machine, and - consider making it publicly accessible if that doesn't violate your own - laws. If you have the resources, consider going one step further and - setting up a mirror site for the whole<A href="#munitions"> munitions</A> - Linux crypto software archive.</P> -<P>If you make Linux CD-ROMs, please consider including this code, in a - way that violates no laws (in a free country, or in a domestic-only CD - product).</P> -<P>Please send a note about any new archive mirror sites or CD - distributions to linux-ipsec@clinet.fi so we can update the - documentation.</P> -<P>Lists of current<A href="#sites"> mirror sites</A> and of<A href="#distwith"> - distributions</A> which include FreeS/WAN are in our introduction - section.</P> -<H2><A name="desnotsecure">DES is Not Secure</A></H2> -<P>DES, the<STRONG> D</STRONG>ata<STRONG> E</STRONG>ncryption<STRONG> S</STRONG> -tandard, can no longer be considered secure. While no major flaws in its - innards are known, it is fundamentally inadequate because its<STRONG> - 56-bit key is too short</STRONG>. It is vulnerable to<A href="#brute"> - brute-force search</A> of the whole key space, either by large - collections of general-purpose machines or even more quickly by - specialized hardware. Of course this also applies to<STRONG> any other - cipher with only a 56-bit key</STRONG>. The only reason anyone could - have for using a 56 or 64-bit key is to comply with various<A href="exportlaw.html"> - export laws</A> intended to ensure the use of breakable ciphers.</P> -<P>Non-government cryptologists have been saying DES's 56-bit key was - too short for some time -- some of them were saying it in the 70's when - DES became a standard -- but the US government has consistently - ridiculed such suggestions.</P> -<P>A group of well-known cryptographers looked at key lengths in a<A href="http://www.counterpane.com/keylength.html"> - 1996 paper</A>. They suggested a<EM> minimum</EM> of 75 bits to - consider an existing cipher secure and a<EM> minimum of 90 bits for new - ciphers</EM>. More recent papers, covering both<A href="#symmetric"> - symmetric</A> and<A href="#public"> public key</A> systems are at<A href="http://www.cryptosavvy.com/"> - cryptosavvy.com</A> and<A href="http://www.rsasecurity.com/rsalabs/bulletins/bulletin13.html"> - rsa.com</A>. For all algorithms, the minimum keylengths recommended in - such papers are significantly longer than the maximums allowed by - various export laws.</P> -<P>In a<A href="http://www.privacy.nb.ca/cryptography/archives/cryptography/html/1998-09/0095.html"> - 1998 ruling</A>, a German court described DES as "out-of-date and not - safe enough" and held a bank liable for using it.</P> -<H3><A name="deshware">Dedicated hardware breaks DES in a few days</A></H3> -<P>The question of DES security has now been settled once and for all. - In early 1998, the<A href="http://www.eff.org/"> Electronic Frontier - Foundation</A> built a<A href="http://www.eff.org/descracker.html"> - DES-cracking machine</A>. It can find a DES key in an average of a few - days' search. The details of all this, including complete code listings - and complete plans for the machine, have been published in<A href="#EFF"> -<CITE> Cracking DES</CITE></A>, by the Electronic Frontier Foundation.</P> -<P>That machine cost just over $200,000 to design and build. "Moore's - Law" is that machines get faster (or cheaper, for the same speed) by - roughly a factor of two every 18 months. At that rate, their $200,000 - in 1998 becomes $50,000 in 2001.</P> -<P>However, Moore's Law is not exact and the $50,000 estimate does not - allow for the fact that a copy based on the published EFF design would - cost far less than the original. We cannot say exactly what such a - cracker would cost today, but it would likely be somewhere between - $10,000 and $100,000.</P> -<P>A large corporation could build one of these out of petty cash. The - cost is low enough for a senior manager to hide it in a departmental - budget and avoid having to announce or justify the project. Any - government agency, from a major municipal police force up, could afford - one. Or any other group with a respectable budget -- criminal - organisations, political groups, labour unions, religious groups, ... - Or any millionaire with an obsession or a grudge, or just strange taste - in toys.</P> -<P>One might wonder if a private security or detective agency would have - one for rent. They wouldn't need many clients to pay off that - investment.</P> -<H3><A name="spooks">Spooks may break DES faster yet</A></H3> -<P>As for the security and intelligence agencies of various nations, - they may have had DES crackers for years, and theirs may be much - faster. It is difficult to make most computer applications work well on - parallel machines, or to design specialised hardware to accelerate - them. Cipher-cracking is one of the very few exceptions. It is entirely - straightforward to speed up cracking by just adding hardware. Within - very broad limits, you can make it as fast as you like if you have the - budget. The EFF's $200,000 machine breaks DES in a few days. An<A href="http://www.planepage.com/"> - aviation website</A> gives the cost of a B1 bomber as $200,000,000. - Spending that much, an intelligence agency could break DES in an - average time of<EM> six and a half minutes</EM>.</P> -<P>That estimate assumes they use the EFF's 1998 technology and just - spend more money. They may have an attack that is superior to brute - force, they quite likely have better chip technology (Moore's law, a - bigger budget, and whatever secret advances they may have made) and of - course they may have spent the price of an aircraft carrier, not just - one aircraft.</P> -<P>In short, we have<EM> no idea</EM> how quickly these organisations - can break DES. Unless they're spectacularly incompetent or horribly - underfunded, they can certainly break it, but we cannot guess how - quickly. Pick any time unit between days and milliseconds; none is - entirely unbelievable. More to the point, none of them is of any - comfort if you don't want such organisations reading your - communications.</P> -<P>Note that this may be a concern even if nothing you do is a threat to - anyone's national security. An intelligence agency might well consider - it to be in their national interest for certain companies to do well. - If you're competing against such companies in a world market and that - agency can read your secrets, you have a serious problem.</P> -<P>One might wonder about technology the former Soviet Union and its - allies developed for cracking DES during the Cold War. They must have - tried; the cipher was an American standard and widely used. Certainly - those countries have some fine mathematicians, and those agencies had - budget. How well did they succeed? Is their technology now for sale or - rent?</P> -<H3><A name="desnet">Networks break DES in a few weeks</A></H3> -<P>Before the definitive EFF effort, DES had been cracked several times - by people using many machines. See this<A href="http://www.distributed.net/pressroom/DESII-1-PR.html"> - press release</A> for example.</P> -<P>A major corporation, university, or government department could break - DES by using spare cycles on their existing collection of computers, by - dedicating a group of otherwise surplus machines to the problem, or by - combining the two approaches. It might take them weeks or months, - rather than the days required for the EFF machine, but they could do - it.</P> -<P>What about someone working alone, without the resources of a large - organisation? For them, cracking DES will not be easy, but it may be - possible. A few thousand dollars buys a lot of surplus workstations. A - pile of such machines will certainly heat your garage nicely and might - break DES in a few months or years. Or enroll at a university and use - their machines. Or use an employer's machines. Or crack security - somewhere and steal the resources to crack a DES key. Or write a virus - that steals small amounts of resources on many machines. Or . . .</P> -<P>None of these approaches are easy or break DES really quickly, but an - attacker only needs to find one that is feasible and breaks DES quickly - enough to be dangerous. How much would you care to bet that this will - be impossible if the attacker is clever and determined? How valuable is - your data? Are you authorised to risk it on a dubious bet?</P> -<H3><A name="no_des">We disable DES</A></H3> -<P>In short, it is now absolutely clear that<STRONG> DES is not secure</STRONG> - against</P> -<UL> -<LI>any<STRONG> well-funded opponent</STRONG></LI> -<LI>any opponent (even a penniless one) with access (even stolen access) - to<STRONG> enough general purpose computers</STRONG></LI> -</UL> -<P>That is why<STRONG> Linux FreeS/WAN disables all transforms which use - plain DES</STRONG> for encryption.</P> -<P>DES is in the source code, because we need DES to implement our - default encryption transform,<A href="#3DES"> Triple DES</A>.<STRONG> - We urge you not to use single DES</STRONG>. We do not provide any easy - way to enable it in FreeS/WAN, and our policy is to provide no - assistance to anyone wanting to do so.</P> -<H3><A name="40joke">40-bits is laughably weak</A></H3> -<P>The same is true, in spades, of ciphers -- DES or others -- crippled - by 40-bit keys, as many ciphers were required to be until recently - under various<A href="#exlaw"> export laws</A>. A brute force search of - such a cipher's keyspace is 2<SUP>16</SUP> times faster than a similar - search against DES. The EFF's machine can do a brute-force search of a - 40-bit key space in<EM> seconds</EM>. One contest to crack a 40-bit - cipher was won by a student<A href="http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/18.80.html#subj1"> - using a few hundred idle machines at his university</A>. It took only - three and half hours.</P> -<P>We do not, and will not, implement any 40-bit cipher.</P> -<H3><A name="altdes">Triple DES is almost certainly secure</A></H3> -<P><A href="#3DES">Triple DES</A>, usually abbreviated 3DES, applies DES - three times, with three different keys. DES seems to be basically an - excellent cipher design; it has withstood several decades of intensive - analysis without any disastrous flaws being found. It's only major flaw - is that the small keyspace allows brute force attacks to succeeed. - Triple DES enlarges the key space to 168 bits, making brute-force - search a ridiculous impossibility.</P> -<P>3DES is currently the only block cipher implemented in FreeS/WAN. - 3DES is, unfortunately, about 1/3 the speed of DES, but modern CPUs - still do it at quite respectable speeds. Some<A href="#benchmarks"> - speed measurements</A> for our code are available.</P> -<H3><A name="aes.ipsec">AES in IPsec</A></H3> -<P>The<A href="#AES"> AES</A> project has chosen a replacement for DES, - a new standard cipher for use in non-classified US government work and - in regulated industries such as banking. This cipher will almost - certainly become widely used for many applications, including IPsec.</P> -<P>The winner, announced in October 2000 after several years of analysis - and discussion, was the<A href="http://www.esat.kuleuven.ac.be/~rijmen/rijndael/"> - Rijndael</A> cipher from two Belgian designers.</P> -<P>It is almost certain that FreeS/WAN will add AES support.<A href="#patch"> - AES patches</A> are already available.</P> -<H2><A name="press">Press coverage of Linux FreeS/WAN:</A></H2> -<H3><A NAME="26_6_1">FreeS/WAN 1.0 press</A></H3> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.wired.com/news/news/technology/story/19136.html"> -Wired</A> "Linux-Based Crypto Stops Snoops", James Glave April 15 1999</LI> -<LI><A href="http://slashdot.org/articles/99/04/15/1851212.shtml"> -Slashdot</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://dgl.com/itinfo/1999/it990415.html">DGL</A>, Damar - Group Limited; looking at FreeS/WAN from a perspective of business - computing</LI> -<LI><A href="http://linuxtoday.com/stories/5010.html">Linux Today</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.tbtf.com/archive/1999-04-21.html#Tcep">TBTF</A>, - Tasty Bits from the Technology Front</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.salonmagazine.com/tech/log/1999/04/16/encryption/index.html"> -Salon Magazine</A> "Free Encryption Takes a Big Step"</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="release">Press release for version 1.0</A></H3> -<PRE> Strong Internet Privacy Software Free for Linux Users Worldwide - -Toronto, ON, April 14, 1999 - - -The Linux FreeS/WAN project today released free software to protect -the privacy of Internet communications using strong encryption codes. -FreeS/WAN automatically encrypts data as it crosses the Internet, to -prevent unauthorized people from receiving or modifying it. One -ordinary PC per site runs this free software under Linux to become a -secure gateway in a Virtual Private Network, without having to modify -users' operating systems or application software. The project built -and released the software outside the United States, avoiding US -government regulations which prohibit good privacy protection. -FreeS/WAN version 1.0 is available immediately for downloading at -http://www.xs4all.nl/~freeswan/. - -"Today's FreeS/WAN release allows network administrators to build -excellent secure gateways out of old PCs at no cost, or using a cheap -new PC," said John Gilmore, the entrepreneur who instigated the -project in 1996. "They can build operational experience with strong -network encryption and protect their users' most important -communications worldwide." - -"The software was written outside the United States, and we do not -accept contributions from US citizens or residents, so that it can be -freely published for use in every country," said Henry Spencer, who -built the release in Toronto, Canada. "Similar products based in the -US require hard-to-get government export licenses before they can be -provided to non-US users, and can never be simply published on a Web -site. Our product is freely available worldwide for immediate -downloading, at no cost." - -FreeS/WAN provides privacy against both quiet eavesdropping (such as -"packet sniffing") and active attempts to compromise communications -(such as impersonating participating computers). Secure "tunnels" carry -information safely across the Internet between locations such as a -company's main office, distant sales offices, and roaming laptops. This -protects the privacy and integrity of all information sent among those -locations, including sensitive intra-company email, financial transactions -such as mergers and acquisitions, business negotiations, personal medical -records, privileged correspondence with lawyers, and information about -crimes or civil rights violations. The software will be particularly -useful to frequent wiretapping targets such as private companies competing -with government-owned companies, civil rights groups and lawyers, -opposition political parties, and dissidents. - -FreeS/WAN provides privacy for Internet packets using the proposed -standard Internet Protocol Security (IPSEC) protocols. FreeS/WAN -negotiates strong keys using Diffie-Hellman key agreement with 1024-bit -keys, and encrypts each packet with 168-bit Triple-DES (3DES). A modern -$500 PC can set up a tunnel in less than a second, and can encrypt -6 megabits of packets per second, easily handling the whole available -bandwidth at the vast majority of Internet sites. In preliminary testing, -FreeS/WAN interoperated with 3DES IPSEC products from OpenBSD, PGP, SSH, -Cisco, Raptor, and Xedia. Since FreeS/WAN is distributed as source code, -its innards are open to review by outside experts and sophisticated users, -reducing the chance of undetected bugs or hidden security compromises. - -The software has been in development for several years. It has been -funded by several philanthropists interested in increased privacy on -the Internet, including John Gilmore, co-founder of the Electronic -Frontier Foundation, a leading online civil rights group. - -Press contacts: -Hugh Daniel, +1 408 353 8124, hugh@toad.com -Henry Spencer, +1 416 690 6561, henry@spsystems.net - -* FreeS/WAN derives its name from S/WAN, which is a trademark of RSA Data - Security, Inc; used by permission.</PRE> -<HR> -<H1><A name="ipsec.detail">The IPsec protocols</A></H1> -<P>This section provides information on the IPsec protocols which - FreeS/WAN implements. For more detail, see the<A href="rfc.html"> RFCs</A> -.</P> -<P>The basic idea of IPsec is to provide security functions,<A href="#authentication"> - authentication</A> and<A href="#encryption"> encryption</A>, at the IP - (Internet Protocol) level. This requires a higher-level protocol (IKE) - to set things up for the IP-level services (ESP and AH).</P> -<H2><A NAME="27_1">Protocols and phases</A></H2> -<P>Three protocols are used in an IPsec implementation:</P> -<DL> -<DT>ESP, Encapsulating Security Payload</DT> -<DD>Encrypts and/or authenticates data</DD> -<DT>AH, Authentication Header</DT> -<DD>Provides a packet authentication service</DD> -<DT>IKE, Internet Key Exchange</DT> -<DD>Negotiates connection parameters, including keys, for the other two</DD> -</DL> -<P>The term "IPsec" (also written as IPSEC) is slightly ambiguous. In - some contexts, it includes all three of the above but in other contexts - it refers only to AH and ESP.</P> -<P>There is more detail below, but a quick summary of how the whole - thing works is:</P> -<DL> -<DT>Phase one IKE (main mode exchange)</DT> -<DD>sets up a keying channel (ISAKMP SA) between the two gateways</DD> -<DT>Phase two IKE (quick mode exchange)</DT> -<DD>sets up data channels (IPsec SAs)</DD> -<DT>IPsec proper</DT> -<DD>exchanges data using AH or ESP</DD> -</DL> -<P>Both phases of IKE are repeated periodically to automate re-keying.</P> -<H2><A name="others">Applying IPsec</A></H2> -<P>Authentication and encryption functions for network data can, of - course, be provided at other levels. Many security protocols work at - levels above IP.</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="#PGP">PGP</A> encrypts and authenticates mail messages</LI> -<LI><A href="#ssh">SSH</A> authenticates remote logins and then encrypts - the session</LI> -<LI><A href="#SSL">SSL</A> or<A href="#TLS"> TLS</A> provides security - at the sockets layer, e.g. for secure web browsing</LI> -</UL> -<P>and so on. Other techniques work at levels below IP. For example, - data on a communications circuit or an entire network can be encrypted - by specialised hardware. This is common practice in high-security - applications.</P> -<H3><A name="advantages">Advantages of IPsec</A></H3> -<P>There are, however, advantages to doing it at the IP level instead - of, or as well as, at other levels.</P> -<P>IPsec is the<STRONG> most general way to provide these services for - the Internet</STRONG>.</P> -<UL> -<LI>Higher-level services protect a<EM> single protocol</EM>; for - example PGP protects mail.</LI> -<LI>Lower level services protect a<EM> single medium</EM>; for example a - pair of encryption boxes on the ends of a line make wiretaps on that - line useless unless the attacker is capable of breaking the encryption.</LI> -</UL> -<P>IPsec, however, can protect<EM> any protocol</EM> running above IP - and<EM> any medium</EM> which IP runs over. More to the point, it can - protect a mixture of application protocols running over a complex - combination of media. This is the normal situation for Internet - communication; IPsec is the only general solution.</P> -<P>IPsec can also provide some security services "in the background", - with<STRONG> no visible impact on users</STRONG>. To use<A href="#PGP"> - PGP</A> encryption and signatures on mail, for example, the user must - at least:</P> -<UL> -<LI>remember his or her passphrase,</LI> -<LI>keep it secure</LI> -<LI>follow procedures to validate correspondents' keys</LI> -</UL> -<P>These systems can be designed so that the burden on users is not - onerous, but any system will place some requirements on users. No such - system can hope to be secure if users are sloppy about meeting those - requirements. The author has seen username and password stuck on - terminals with post-it notes in an allegedly secure environment, for - example.</P> -<H3><A name="limitations">Limitations of IPsec</A></H3> -<P>IPsec is designed to secure IP links between machines. It does that - well, but it is important to remember that there are many things it - does not do. Some of the important limitations are:</P> -<DL> -<DT><A name="depends">IPsec cannot be secure if your system isn't</A></DT> -<DD>System security on IPsec gateway machines is an essential - requirement if IPsec is to function as designed. No system can be - trusted if the underlying machine has been subverted. See books on Unix - security such as<A href="#practical"> Garfinkel and Spafford</A> or our - web references for<A href="#linsec"> Linux security</A> or more general<A -href="#compsec"> computer security</A>. -<P>Of course, there is another side to this. IPsec can be a powerful - tool for improving system and network security. For example, requiring - packet authentication makes various spoofing attacks harder and IPsec - tunnels can be extremely useful for secure remote administration of - various things.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="not-end-to-end">IPsec is not end-to-end</A></DT> -<DD>IPsec cannot provide the same end-to-end security as systems working - at higher levels. IPsec encrypts an IP connection between two machines, - which is quite a different thing than encrypting messages between users - or between applications. -<P>For example, if you need mail encrypted from the sender's desktop to - the recipient's desktop and decryptable only by the recipient, use<A href="#PGP"> - PGP</A> or another such system. IPsec can encrypt any or all of the - links involved -- between the two mail servers, or between either - server and its clients. It could even be used to secure a direct IP - link from the sender's desktop machine to the recipient's, cutting out - any sort of network snoop. What it cannot ensure is end-to-end - user-to-user security. If only IPsec is used to secure mail, then - anyone with appropriate privileges on any machine where that mail is - stored (at either end or on any store-and-forward servers in the path) - can read it.</P> -<P>In another common setup, IPsec encrypts packets at a security gateway - machine as they leave the sender's site and decrypts them on arrival at - the gateway to the recipient's site. This does provide a useful - security service -- only encrypted data is passed over the Internet -- - but it does not even come close to providing an end-to-end service. In - particular, anyone with appropriate privileges on either site's LAN can - intercept the message in unencrypted form.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="notpanacea">IPsec cannot do everything</A></DT> -<DD>IPsec also cannot provide all the functions of systems working at - higher levels of the protocol stack. If you need a document - electronically signed by a particular person, then you need his or her<A -href="#signature"> digital signature</A> and a<A href="#public"> public - key cryptosystem</A> to verify it with. -<P>Note, however, that IPsec authentication of the underlying - communication can make various attacks on higher-level protocols more - difficult. In particular, authentication prevents<A href="#middle"> - man-in-the-middle attacks</A>.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="no_user">IPsec authenticates machines, not users</A></DT> -<DD>IPsec uses strong authentication mechanisms to control which - messages go to which machines, but it does not have the concept of user - ID, which is vital to many other security mechansims and policies. This - means some care must be taken in fitting the various security - mechansims on a network together. For example, if you need to control - which users access your database server, you need some non-IPsec - mechansim for that. IPsec can control which machines connect to the - server, and can ensure that data transfer to those machines is done - securely, but that is all. Either the machines themselves must control - user access or there must be some form of user authentication to the - database, independent of IPsec.</DD> -<DT><A name="DoS">IPsec does not stop denial of service attacks</A></DT> -<DD><A href="#DOS">Denial of service</A> attacks aim at causing a system - to crash, overload, or become confused so that legitimate users cannot - get whatever services the system is supposed to provide. These are - quite different from attacks in which the attacker seeks either to use - the service himself or to subvert the service into delivering incorrect - results. -<P>IPsec shifts the ground for DoS attacks; the attacks possible against - systems using IPsec are different than those that might be used against - other systems. It does not, however, eliminate the possibility of such - attacks.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="traffic">IPsec does not stop traffic analysis</A></DT> -<DD><A href="#traffic">Traffic analysis</A> is the attempt to derive - intelligence from messages without regard for their contents. In the - case of IPsec, it would mean analysis based on things visible in the - unencrypted headers of encrypted packets -- source and destination - gateway addresses, packet size, et cetera. Given the resources to - acquire such data and some skill in analysing it (both of which any - national intelligence agency should have), this can be a very powerful - technique. -<P>IPsec is not designed to defend against this. Partial defenses are - certainly possible, and some are<A href="#traffic.resist"> described - below</A>, but it is not clear that any complete defense can be - provided.</P> -</DD> -</DL> -<H3><A name="uses">IPsec is a general mechanism for securing IP</A></H3> -<P>While IPsec does not provide all functions of a mail encryption - package, it can encrypt your mail. In particular, it can ensure that - all mail passing between a pair or a group of sites is encrypted. An - attacker looking only at external traffic, without access to anything - on or behind the IPsec gateway, cannot read your mail. He or she is - stymied by IPsec just as he or she would be by<A href="#PGP"> PGP</A>.</P> -<P>The advantage is that IPsec can provide the same protection for<STRONG> - anything transmitted over IP</STRONG>. In a corporate network example, - PGP lets the branch offices exchange secure mail with head office. SSL - and SSH allow them to securely view web pages, connect as terminals to - machines, and so on. IPsec can support all those applications, plus - database queries, file sharing (NFS or Windows), other protocols - encapsulated in IP (Netware, Appletalk, ...), phone-over-IP, - video-over-IP, ... anything-over-IP. The only limitation is that IP - Multicast is not yet supported, though there are Internet Draft - documents for that.</P> -<P>IPsec creates<STRONG> secure tunnels through untrusted networks</STRONG> -. Sites connected by these tunnels form VPNs,<A href="#VPN"> Virtual - Private Networks</A>.</P> -<P>IPsec gateways can be installed wherever they are required.</P> -<UL> -<LI>One organisation might choose to install IPsec only on firewalls - between their LANs and the Internet. This would allow them to create a - VPN linking several offices. It would provide protection against anyone - outside their sites.</LI> -<LI>Another might install IPsec on departmental servers so everything on - the corporate backbone net was encrypted. This would protect messages - on that net from everyone except the sending and receiving department.</LI> -<LI>Another might be less concerned with information secrecy and more - with controlling access to certain resources. They might use IPsec - packet authentication as part of an access control mechanism, with or - without also using the IPsec encryption service.</LI> -<LI>It is even possible (assuming adequate processing power and an IPsec - implementation in each node) to make every machine its own IPsec - gateway so that everything on a LAN is encrypted. This protects - information from everyone outside the sending and receiving machine.</LI> -<LI>These techniques can be combined in various ways. One might, for - example, require authentication everywhere on a network while using - encryption only for a few links.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Which of these, or of the many other possible variants, to use is up - to you.<STRONG> IPsec provides mechanisms; you provide the policy</STRONG> -.</P> -<P><STRONG>No end user action is required</STRONG> for IPsec security to - be used; they don't even have to know about it. The site - administrators, of course, do have to know about it and to put some - effort into making it work. Poor administration can compromise IPsec as - badly as the post-it notes mentioned above. It seems reasonable, - though, for organisations to hope their system administrators are - generally both more security-conscious than end users and more able to - follow computer security procedures. If not, at least there are fewer - of them to educate or replace.</P> -<P>IPsec can be, and often should be, used with along with security - protocols at other levels. If two sites communicate with each other via - the Internet, then IPsec is the obvious way to protect that - communication. If two others have a direct link between them, either - link encryption or IPsec would make sense. Choose one or use both. - Whatever you use at and below the IP level, use other things as - required above that level. Whatever you use above the IP level, - consider what can be done with IPsec to make attacks on the higher - levels harder. For example,<A href="#middle"> man-in-the-middle attacks</A> - on various protocols become difficult if authentication at packet level - is in use on the potential victims' communication channel.</P> -<H3><A name="authonly">Using authentication without encryption</A></H3> -<P>Where appropriate, IPsec can provide authentication without - encryption. One might do this, for example:</P> -<UL> -<LI>where the data is public but one wants to be sure of getting the - right data, for example on some web sites</LI> -<LI>where encryption is judged unnecessary, for example on some company - or department LANs</LI> -<LI>where strong encryption is provided at link level, below IP</LI> -<LI>where strong encryption is provided in other protocols, above IP -<BR> Note that IPsec authentication may make some attacks on those - protocols harder.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Authentication has lower overheads than encryption.</P> -<P>The protocols provide four ways to build such connections, using - either an AH-only connection or ESP using null encryption, and in - either manually or automatically keyed mode. FreeS/WAN supports only - one of these, manually keyed AH-only connections, and<STRONG> we do not - recommend using that</STRONG>. Our reasons are discussed under<A href="#traffic.resist"> - Resisting traffic analysis</A> a few sections further along.</P> -<H3><A name="encnoauth">Encryption without authentication is dangerous</A> -</H3> -<P>Originally, the IPsec encryption protocol<A href="#ESP"> ESP</A> - didn't do integrity checking. It only did encryption. Steve Bellovin - found many ways to attack ESP used without authentication. See his - paper<A href="http://www.research.att.com/~smb/papers/badesp.ps"> - Problem areas for the IP Security Protocols</A>. To make a secure - connection, you had to add an<A href="#AH"> AH</A> Authentication - Header as well as ESP. Rather than incur the overhead of several layers - (and rather than provide an ESP layer that didn't actually protect the - traffic), the IPsec working group built integrity and replay checking - directly into ESP.</P> -<P>Today, typical usage is one of:</P> -<UL> -<LI>ESP for encryption and authentication</LI> -<LI>AH for authentication alone</LI> -</UL> -<P>Other variants are allowed by the standard, but not much used:</P> -<DL> -<DT>ESP encryption without authentication</DT> -<DD><STRONG>Bellovin has demonstrated fatal flaws in this. Do not use.</STRONG> -</DD> -<DT>ESP encryption with AH authentication</DT> -<DD>This has higher overheads than using the authentication in ESP, and - no obvious benefit in most cases. The exception might be a network - where AH authentication was widely or universally used. If you're going - to do AH to conform with network policy, why authenticate again in the - ESP layer?</DD> -<DT>Authenticate twice, with AH and with ESP</DT> -<DD>Why? Of course, some folk consider "belt and suspenders" the - sensible approach to security. If you're among them, you might use both - protocols here. You might also use both to satisfy different parts of a - security policy. For example, an organisation might require AH - authentication everywhere but two users within the organisation might - use ESP as well.</DD> -<DT>ESP authentication without encryption</DT> -<DD>The standard allows this, calling it "null encryption". FreeS/WAN - does not support it. We recommend that you use AH instead if - authentication is all you require. AH authenticates parts of the IP - header, which ESP-null does not do.</DD> -</DL> -<P>Some of these variants cannot be used with FreeS/WAN because we do - not support ESP-null and do not support automatic keying of AH-only - connections.</P> -<P>There are fairly frequent suggestions that AH be dropped entirely - from the IPsec specifications since ESP and null encryption can handle - that situation. It is not clear whether this will occur. My guess is - that it is unlikely.</P> -<H3><A name="multilayer">Multiple layers of IPsec processing are - possible</A></H3> -<P>The above describes combinations possible on a single IPsec - connection. In a complex network you may have several layers of IPsec - in play, with any of the above combinations at each layer.</P> -<P>For example, a connection from a desktop machine to a database server - might require AH authentication. Working with other host, network and - database security measures, AH might be just the thing for access - control. You might decide not to use ESP encryption on such packets, - since it uses resources and might complicate network debugging. Within - the site where the server is, then, only AH would be used on those - packets.</P> -<P>Users at another office, however, might have their whole connection - (AH headers and all) passing over an IPsec tunnel connecting their - office to the one with the database server. Such a tunnel should use - ESP encryption and authentication. You need authentication in this - layer because without authentication the encryption is vulnerable and - the gateway cannot verify the AH authentication. The AH is between - client and database server; the gateways aren't party to it.</P> -<P>In this situation, some packets would get multiple layers of IPsec - applied to them, AH on an end-to-end client-to-server basis and ESP - from one office's security gateway to the other.</P> -<H3><A name="traffic.resist">Resisting traffic analysis</A></H3> -<P><A href="#traffic">Traffic analysis</A> is the attempt to derive - useful intelligence from encrypted traffic without breaking the - encryption.</P> -<P>Is your CEO exchanging email with a venture capital firm? With - bankruptcy trustees? With an executive recruiting agency? With the - holder of some important patents? If an eavesdropper learns about any - of those, then he has interesting intelligence on your company, whether - or not he can read the messages themselves.</P> -<P>Even just knowing that there is network traffic between two sites may - tell an analyst something useful, especially when combined with - whatever other information he or she may have. For example, if you know - Company A is having cashflow problems and Company B is looking for - aquisitions, then knowing that packets are passing between the two is - interesting. It is more interesting if you can tell it is email, and - perhaps yet more if you know the sender and recipient.</P> -<P>Except in the simplest cases, traffic analysis is hard to do well. It - requires both considerable resources and considerable analytic skill. - However, intelligence agencies of various nations have been doing it - for centuries and many of them are likely quite good at it by now. - Various commercial organisations, especially those working on "targeted - marketing" may also be quite good at analysing certain types of - traffic.</P> -<P>In general, defending against traffic analysis is also difficult. - Inventing a really good defense could get you a PhD and some - interesting job offers.</P> -<P>IPsec is not designed to stop traffic analysis and we know of no - plausible method of extending it to do so. That said, there are ways to - make traffic analysis harder. This section describes them.</P> -<H4><A name="extra">Using "unnecessary" encryption</A></H4> -<P>One might choose to use encryption even where it appears unnecessary - in order to make analysis more difficult. Consider two offices which - pass a small volume of business data between them using IPsec and also - transfer large volumes of Usenet news. At first glance, it would seem - silly to encrypt the newsfeed, except possibly for any newsgroups that - are internal to the company. Why encrypt data that is all publicly - available from many sites?</P> -<P>However, if we encrypt a lot of news and send it down the same - connection as our business data, we make<A href="#traffic"> traffic - analysis</A> much harder. A snoop cannot now make inferences based on - patterns in the volume, direction, sizes, sender, destination, or - timing of our business messages. Those messages are hidden in a mass of - news messages encapsulated in the same way.</P> -<P>If we're going to do this we need to ensure that keys change often - enough to remain secure even with high volumes and with the adversary - able to get plaintext of much of the data. We also need to look at - other attacks this might open up. For example, can the adversary use a - chosen plaintext attack, deliberately posting news articles which, when - we receive and encrypt them, will help break our encryption? Or can he - block our business data transmission by flooding us with silly news - articles? Or ...</P> -<P>Also, note that this does not provide complete protection against - traffic analysis. A clever adversary might still deduce useful - intelligence from statistical analysis (perhaps comparing the input - newsfeed to encrypted output, or comparing the streams we send to - different branch offices), or by looking for small packets which might - indicate establishment of TCP connections, or ...</P> -<P>As a general rule, though, to improve resistance to traffic analysis, - you should<STRONG> encrypt as much traffic as possible, not just as - much as seems necessary.</STRONG></P> -<H4><A name="multi-encrypt">Using multiple encryption</A></H4> -<P>This also applies to using multiple layers of encryption. If you have - an IPsec tunnel between two branch offices, it might appear silly to - send<A href="#PGP"> PGP</A>-encrypted email through that tunnel. - However, if you suspect someone is snooping your traffic, then it does - make sense:</P> -<UL> -<LI>it protects the mail headers; they cannot even see who is mailing - who</LI> -<LI>it protects against user bungles or software malfunctions that - accidentally send messages in the clear</LI> -<LI>it makes any attack on the mail encryption much harder; they have to - break IPsec or break into your network before they can start on the - mail encryption</LI> -</UL> -<P>Similar arguments apply for<A href="#SSL"> SSL</A>-encrypted web - traffic or<A href="#ssh"> SSH</A>-encrypted remote login sessions, even - for end-to-end IPsec tunnels between systems in the two offices.</P> -<H4><A name="fewer">Using fewer tunnels</A></H4> -<P>It may also help to use fewer tunnels. For example, if all you - actually need encrypted is connections between:</P> -<UL> -<LI>mail servers at branch and head offices</LI> -<LI>a few branch office users and the head office database server</LI> -</UL> -<P>You might build one tunnel per mail server and one per remote - database user, restricting traffic to those applications. This gives - the traffic analyst some information, however. He or she can - distinguish the tunnels by looking at information in the ESP header - and, given that distinction and the patterns of tunnel usage, might be - able to figure out something useful. Perhaps not, but why take the - risk?</P> -<P>We suggest instead that you build one tunnel per branch office, - encrypting everything passing from head office to branches. This has a - number of advantages:</P> -<UL> -<LI>it is easier to build and administer</LI> -<LI>it resists traffic analysis somewhat better</LI> -<LI>it provides security for whatever you forgot. For example, if some - user at a remote office browses proprietary company data on some head - office web page (that the security people may not even know about!), - then that data is encrypted before it reaches the Internet.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Of course you might also want to add additional tunnels. For example, - if some of the database data is confidential and should not be exposed - even within the company, then you need protection from the user's - desktop to the database server. We suggest you do that in whatever way - seems appropriate -- IPsec, SSH or SSL might fit -- but, whatever you - choose, pass it between locations via a gateway-to-gateway IPsec tunnel - to provide some resistance to traffic analysis.</P> -<H2><A name="primitives">Cryptographic components</A></H2> -<P>IPsec combines a number of cryptographic techniques, all of them - well-known and well-analyzed. The overall design approach was - conservative; no new or poorly-understood components were included.</P> -<P>This section gives a brief overview of each technique. It is intended - only as an introduction. There is more information, and links to - related topics, in our<A href="glossary.html"> glossary</A>. See also - our<A href="biblio.html"> bibliography</A> and cryptography<A href="#crypto.link"> - web links</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="block.cipher">Block ciphers</A></H3> -<P>The<A href="#encryption"> encryption</A> in the<A href="#ESP"> ESP</A> - encapsulation protocol is done with a<A href="#block"> block cipher</A> -.</P> -<P>We do not implement<A href="#DES"> single DES</A>. It is<A href="#desnotsecure"> - insecure</A>. Our default, and currently only, block cipher is<A href="#3DES"> - triple DES</A>.</P> -<P>The<A href="#rijndael"> Rijndael</A> block cipher has won the<A href="#AES"> - AES</A> competition to choose a relacement for DES. It will almost - certainly be added to FreeS/WAN and to other IPsec implementations.<A href="#patch"> - Patches</A> are already available.</P> -<H3><A name="hash.ipsec">Hash functions</A></H3> -<H4><A name="hmac.ipsec">The HMAC construct</A></H4> -<P>IPsec packet authentication is done with the<A href="#HMAC"> HMAC</A> - construct. This is not just a hash of the packet data, but a more - complex operation which uses both a hashing algorithm and a key. It - therefore does more than a simple hash would. A simple hash would only - tell you that the packet data was not changed in transit, or that - whoever changed it also regenerated the hash. An HMAC also tells you - that the sender knew the HMAC key.</P> -<P>For IPsec HMAC, the output of the hash algorithm is truncated to 96 - bits. This saves some space in the packets. More important, it prevents - an attacker from seeing all the hash output bits and perhaps creating - some sort of attack based on that knowledge.</P> -<H4><A NAME="27_3_2_2">Choice of hash algorithm</A></H4> -<P>The IPsec RFCs require two hash algorithms --<A href="#MD5"> MD5</A> - and<A href="#SHA"> SHA-1</A> -- both of which FreeS/WAN implements.</P> -<P>Various other algorithms -- such as RIPEMD and Tiger -- are listed in - the RFCs as optional. None of these are in the FreeS/WAN distribution, - or are likely to be added, although user<A href="#patch"> patches</A> - exist for several of them.</P> -<P>Additional hash algorithms --<A href="#SHA-256"> SHA-256, SHA-384 and - SHA-512</A> -- may be required to give hash strength matching the - strength of<A href="#AES"> AES</A>. These are likely to be added to - FreeS/WAN along with AES.</P> -<H3><A name="DH.keying">Diffie-Hellman key agreement</A></H3> -<P>The<A href="#DH"> Diffie-Hellman</A> key agreement protocol allows - two parties (A and B or<A href="#alicebob"> Alice and Bob</A>) to agree - on a key in such a way that an eavesdropper who intercepts the entire - conversation cannot learn the key.</P> -<P>The protocol is based on the<A href="#dlog"> discrete logarithm</A> - problem and is therefore thought to be secure. Mathematicians have been - working on that problem for years and seem no closer to a solution, - though there is no proof that an efficient solution is impossible.</P> -<H3><A name="RSA.auth">RSA authentication</A></H3> -<P>The<A href="#RSA"> RSA</A> algorithm (named for its inventors -- - Rivest, Shamir and Adleman) is a very widely used<A href="glossary.html#"> - public key</A> cryptographic technique. It is used in IPsec as one - method of authenticating gateways for Diffie-Hellman key negotiation.</P> -<H2><A name="structure">Structure of IPsec</A></H2> -<P>There are three protocols used in an IPsec implementation:</P> -<DL> -<DT>ESP, Encapsulating Security Payload</DT> -<DD>Encrypts and/or authenticates data</DD> -<DT>AH, Authentication Header</DT> -<DD>Provides a packet authentication service</DD> -<DT>IKE, Internet Key Exchange</DT> -<DD>Negotiates connection parameters, including keys, for the other two</DD> -</DL> -<P>The term "IPsec" is slightly ambiguous. In some contexts, it includes - all three of the above but in other contexts it refers only to AH and - ESP.</P> -<H3><A name="IKE.ipsec">IKE (Internet Key Exchange)</A></H3> -<P>The IKE protocol sets up IPsec (ESP or AH) connections after - negotiating appropriate parameters (algorithms to be used, keys, - connection lifetimes) for them. This is done by exchanging packets on - UDP port 500 between the two gateways.</P> -<P>IKE (RFC 2409) was the outcome of a long, complex process in which - quite a number of protocols were proposed and debated. Oversimplifying - mildly, IKE combines:</P> -<DL> -<DT>ISAKMP (RFC 2408)</DT> -<DD>The<STRONG> I</STRONG>nternet<STRONG> S</STRONG>ecurity<STRONG> A</STRONG> -ssociation and<STRONG> K</STRONG>ey<STRONG> M</STRONG>anagement<STRONG> - P</STRONG>rotocol manages negotiation of connections and defines<A href="#SA"> - SA</A>s (Security Associations) as a means of describing connection - properties.</DD> -<DT>IPsec DOI for ISAKMP (RFC 2407)</DT> -<DD>A<STRONG> D</STRONG>omain<STRONG> O</STRONG>f<STRONG> I</STRONG> -nterpretation fills in the details necessary to turn the rather abstract - ISAKMP protocol into a more tightly specified protocol, so it becomes - applicable in a particular domain.</DD> -<DT>Oakley key determination protocol (RFC 2412)</DT> -<DD>Oakley creates keys using the<A href="#DH"> Diffie-Hellman</A> key - agreement protocol.</DD> -</DL> -<P>For all the details, you would need to read the four<A href="rfc.html"> - RFCs</A> just mentioned (over 200 pages) and a number of others. We - give a summary below, but it is far from complete.</P> -<H4><A name="phases">Phases of IKE</A></H4> -<P>IKE negotiations have two phases.</P> -<DL> -<DT>Phase one</DT> -<DD>The two gateways negotiate and set up a two-way ISAKMP SA which they - can then use to handle phase two negotiations. One such SA between a - pair of gateways can handle negotiations for multiple tunnels.</DD> -<DT>Phase two</DT> -<DD>Using the ISAKMP SA, the gateways negotiate IPsec (ESP and/or AH) - SAs as required. IPsec SAs are unidirectional (a different key is used - in each direction) and are always negotiated in pairs to handle two-way - traffic. There may be more than one pair defined between two gateways.</DD> -</DL> -<P>Both of these phases use the UDP protocol and port 500 for their - negotiations.</P> -<P>After both IKE phases are complete, you have IPsec SAs to carry your - encrypted data. These use the ESP or AH protocols. These protocols do - not have ports. Ports apply only to UDP or TCP.</P> -<P>The IKE protocol is designed to be extremely flexible. Among the - things that can be negotiated (separately for each SA) are:</P> -<UL> -<LI>SA lifetime before rekeying</LI> -<LI>encryption algorithm used. We currently support only<A href="#3DES"> - triple DES</A>. Single DES is<A href="#desnotsecure"> insecure</A>. The - RFCs say you MUST do DES, SHOULD do 3DES and MAY do various others. We - do not do any of the others.</LI> -<LI>authentication algorithms. We support<A href="#MD5"> MD5</A> and<A href="#SHA"> - SHA</A>. These are the two the RFCs require.</LI> -<LI>choice of group for<A href="#DH"> Diffie-Hellman</A> key agreement. - We currently support Groups 2 and 5 (which are defined modulo primes of - various lengths) and do not support Group 1 (defined modulo a shorter - prime, and therefore cryptographically weak) or groups 3 and 4 (defined - using elliptic curves). The RFCs require only Group 1.</LI> -</UL> -<P>The protocol also allows implementations to add their own encryption - algorithms, authentication algorithms or Diffie-Hellman groups. We do - not support any such extensions, but there are some<A href="#patch"> - patches</A> that do.</P> -<P>There are a number of complications:</P> -<UL> -<LI>The gateways must be able to authenticate each other's identities - before they can create a secure connection. This host authentication is - part of phase one negotiations, and is a required prerequisite for - packet authentication used later. Host authentication can be done in a - variety of ways. Those supported by FreeS/WAN are discussed in our<A href="#auto-auth"> - advanced configuration</A> document.</LI> -<LI>Phase one can be done in two ways. -<UL> -<LI>Main Mode is required by the RFCs and supported in FreeS/WAN. It - uses a 6-packet exzchange.</LI> -<LI>Aggressive Mode is somewhat faster (only 3 packets) but reveals more - to an eavesdropper. This is optional in the RFCs, not currently - supported by FreeS/WAN, and not likely to be.</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>A new group exchange may take place after phase one but before phase - two, defining an additional group for use in the<A href="#DH"> - Diffie-Hellman</A> key agreement part of phase two. FreeS/WAN does not - currently support this.</LI> -<LI>Phase two always uses Quick Mode, but there are two variants of - that: -<UL> -<LI>One variant provides<A href="#PFS"> Perfect Forward Secrecy (PFS)</A> -. An attacker that obtains your long-term host authentication key does - not immediately get any of your short-term packet encryption of packet - authentication keys. He must conduct another successful attack each - time you rekey to get the short-term keys. Having some short-term keys - does not help him learn others. In particular, breaking your system - today does not let him read messages he archived yestarday, assuming - you've changed short-term keys in the meanwhile. We enable PFS as the - default.</LI> -<LI>The other variant disables PFS and is therefore slightly faster. We - do not recommend this since it is less secure, but FreeS/WAN does - support it. You can enable it with a<VAR> pfs=no</VAR> statement in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> - ipsec.conf(5)</A>.</LI> -<LI>The protocol provides no way to negotiate which variant will be - used. If one gateway is set for PFS and the other is not, the - negotiation fails. This has proved a fairly common source of - interoperation problems.</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>Several types of notification message may be sent by either side - during either phase, or later. FreeS/WAN does not currently support - these, but they are a likely addition in future releases.</LI> -<LI>There is a commit flag which may optionally be set on some messages. - The<A href="http://www.lounge.org/ike_doi_errata.html"> errata</A> page - for the RFCs includes two changes related to this, one to clarify the - description of its use and one to block a<A href="#DOS"> denial of - service</A> attack which uses it. We currently do not implement this - feature.</LI> -</UL> -<P>These complications can of course lead to problems, particularly when - two different implementations attempt to interoperate. For example, we - have seen problems such as:</P> -<UL> -<LI>Some implementations (often products crippled by<A href="#exlaw"> - export laws</A>) have the insecure DES algorithm as their only - supported encryption method. Other parts of our documentation discuss - the<A href="#desnotsecure"> reasons we do not implement single DES</A>, - and<A href="interop.html#noDES"> how to cope with crippled products</A> -.</LI> -<LI>Windows 2000 IPsec tries to negotiate using Aggressive Mode, which - we don't support. Later on, it uses the commit bit, which we also don't - support.</LI> -<LI>Various implementations disable PFS by default, and therefore will - not talk to FreeS/WAN until you either turn on PFS on their end or turn - it off in FreeS/WAN with a<VAR> pfs=no</VAR> entry in the connection - description.</LI> -<LI>FreeS/WAN's interaction with PGPnet is complicated by their use of - notification messages we do not yet support.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Despite this, we do interoperate successfully with many - implementations, including both Windows 2000 and PGPnet. Details are in - our<A href="interop.html"> interoperability</A> document.</P> -<H4><A name="sequence">Sequence of messages in IKE</A></H4> -<P>Each phase (see<A href="#phases"> previous section</A>)of IKE - involves a series of messages. In Pluto error messages, these are - abbreviated using:</P> -<DL> -<DT>M</DT> -<DD><STRONG>M</STRONG>ain mode, settting up the keying channel (ISAKMP - SA)</DD> -<DT>Q</DT> -<DD><STRONG>Q</STRONG>uick mode, setting up the data channel (IPsec SA)</DD> -<DT>I</DT> -<DD><STRONG>I</STRONG>nitiator, the machine that starts the negotiation</DD> -<DT>R</DT> -<DD><STRONG>R</STRONG>esponder</DD> -</DL> -<P>For example, the six messages of a main mode negotiation, in - sequence, are labelled:</P> -<PRE> MI1 ----------> - <---------- MR1 - MI2 ----------> - <---------- MR2 - MI3 ----------> - <---------- MR3</PRE> -<H4><A name="struct.exchange">Structure of IKE messages</A></H4> -<P>Here is our Pluto developer explaining some of this on the mailing - list:</P> -<PRE>When one IKE system (for example, Pluto) is negotiating with another -to create an SA, the Initiator proposes a bunch of choices and the -Responder replies with one that it has selected. - -The structure of the choices is fairly complicated. An SA payload -contains a list of lists of "Proposals". The outer list is a set of -choices: the selection must be from one element of this list. - -Each of these elements is a list of Proposals. A selection must be -made from each of the elements of the inner list. In other words, -*all* of them apply (that is how, for example, both AH and ESP can -apply at once). - -Within each of these Proposals is a list of Transforms. For each -Proposal selected, one Transform must be selected (in other words, -each Proposal provides a choice of Transforms). - -Each Transform is made up of a list of Attributes describing, well, -attributes. Such as lifetime of the SA. Such as algorithm to be -used. All the Attributes apply to a Transform. - -You will have noticed a pattern here: layers alternate between being -disjunctions ("or") and conjunctions ("and"). - -For Phase 1 / Main Mode (negotiating an ISAKMP SA), this structure is -cut back. There must be exactly one Proposal. So this degenerates to -a list of Transforms, one of which must be chosen.</PRE> -<H3><A name="services">IPsec Services, AH and ESP</A></H3> -<P>IPsec offers two services,<A href="#authentication"> authentication</A> - and<A href="#encryption"> encryption</A>. These can be used separately - but are often used together.</P> -<DL> -<DT>Authentication</DT> -<DD>Packet-level authentication allows you to be confident that a packet - came from a particular machine and that its contents were not altered - en route to you. No attempt is made to conceal or protect the contents, - only to assure their integrity. Packet authentication can be provided - separately using an<A href="#AH"> Authentication Header</A>, described - just below, or it can be included as part of the<A href="#ESP"> ESP</A> - (Encapsulated Security Payload) service, described in the following - section. That service offers encryption as well as authentication. In - either case, the<A href="#HMAC"> HMAC</A> construct is used as the - authentication mechanism. -<P>There is a separate authentication operation at the IKE level, in - which each gateway authenticates the other. This can be done in a - variety of ways.</P> -</DD> -<DT>Encryption</DT> -<DD>Encryption allows you to conceal the contents of a message from - eavesdroppers. -<P>In IPsec this is done using a<A href="#block"> block cipher</A> - (normally<A href="#3DES"> Triple DES</A> for Linux). In the most used - setup, keys are automatically negotiated, and periodically - re-negotiated, using the<A href="#IKE"> IKE</A> (Internet Key Exchange) - protocol. In Linux FreeS/WAN this is handled by the Pluto Daemon.</P> -<P>The IPsec protocol offering encryption is<A href="#ESP"> ESP</A>, - Encapsulated Security Payload. It can also include a packet - authentication service.</P> -</DD> -</DL> -<P>Note that<STRONG> encryption should always be used with some packet - authentication service</STRONG>. Unauthenticated encryption is - vulnerable to<A href="#middle"> man-in-the-middle attacks</A>. Also - note that encryption does not prevent<A href="#traffic"> traffic - analysis</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="AH.ipsec">The Authentication Header (AH)</A></H3> -<P>Packet authentication can be provided separately from encryption by - adding an authentication header (AH) after the IP header but before the - other headers on the packet. This is the subject of this section. - Details are in RFC 2402.</P> -<P>Each of the several headers on a packet header contains a "next - protocol" field telling the system what header to look for next. IP - headers generally have either TCP or UDP in this field. When IPsec - authentication is used, the packet IP header has AH in this field, - saying that an Authentication Header comes next. The AH header then has - the next header type -- usually TCP, UDP or encapsulated IP.</P> -<P>IPsec packet authentication can be added in transport mode, as a - modification of standard IP transport. This is shown in this diagram - from the RFC:</P> -<PRE> BEFORE APPLYING AH - ---------------------------- - IPv4 |orig IP hdr | | | - |(any options)| TCP | Data | - ---------------------------- - - AFTER APPLYING AH - --------------------------------- - IPv4 |orig IP hdr | | | | - |(any options)| AH | TCP | Data | - --------------------------------- - || - except for mutable fields</PRE> -<P>Athentication can also be used in tunnel mode, encapsulating the - underlying IP packet beneath AH and an additional IP header.</P> -<PRE> || -IPv4 | new IP hdr* | | orig IP hdr* | | | - |(any options)| AH | (any options) |TCP | Data | - ------------------------------------------------ - || - | in the new IP hdr |</PRE> -<P>This would normally be used in a gateway-to-gateway tunnel. The - receiving gateway then strips the outer IP header and the AH header and - forwards the inner IP packet.</P> -<P>The mutable fields referred to are things like the time-to-live field - in the IP header. These cannot be included in authentication - calculations because they change as the packet travels.</P> -<H4><A name="keyed">Keyed MD5 and Keyed SHA</A></H4> -<P>The actual authentication data in the header is typically 96 bits and - depends both on a secret shared between sender and receiver and on - every byte of the data being authenticated. The technique used is<A href="#HMAC"> - HMAC</A>, defined in RFC 2104.</P> -<P>The algorithms involved are the<A href="#MD5"> MD5</A> Message Digest - Algorithm or<A href="#SHA"> SHA</A>, the Secure Hash Algorithm. For - details on their use in this application, see RFCs 2403 and 2404 - respectively.</P> -<P>For descriptions of the algorithms themselves, see RFC 1321 for MD5 - and<A href="#FIPS"> FIPS</A> (Federal Information Processing Standard) - number 186 from<A href="#NIST"> NIST</A>, the US National Institute of - Standards and Technology for SHA.<A href="#schneier"><CITE> Applied - Cryptography</CITE></A> covers both in some detail, MD5 starting on - page 436 and SHA on 442.</P> -<P>These algorithms are intended to make it nearly impossible for anyone - to alter the authenticated data in transit. The sender calculates a - digest or hash value from that data and includes the result in the - authentication header. The recipient does the same calculation and - compares results. For unchanged data, the results will be identical. - The hash algorithms are designed to make it extremely difficult to - change the data in any way and still get the correct hash.</P> -<P>Since the shared secret key is also used in both calculations, an - interceptor cannot simply alter the authenticated data and change the - hash value to match. Without the key, he or she (or even the dreaded - They) cannot produce a usable hash.</P> -<H4><A name="sequence">Sequence numbers</A></H4> -<P>The authentication header includes a sequence number field which the - sender is required to increment for each packet. The receiver can - ignore it or use it to check that packets are indeed arriving in the - expected sequence.</P> -<P>This provides partial protection against<A href="#replay"> replay - attacks</A> in which an attacker resends intercepted packets in an - effort to confuse or subvert the receiver. Complete protection is not - possible since it is necessary to handle legitmate packets which are - lost, duplicated, or delivered out of order, but use of sequence - numbers makes the attack much more difficult.</P> -<P>The RFCs require that sequence numbers never cycle, that a new key - always be negotiated before the sequence number reaches 2^32-1. This - protects both against replays attacks using packets from a previous - cyclce and against<A href="#birthday"> birthday attacks</A> on the the - packet authentication algorithm.</P> -<P>In Linux FreeS/WAN, the sequence number is ignored for manually keyed - connections and checked for automatically keyed ones. In manual mode, - there is no way to negotiate a new key, or to recover from a sequence - number problem, so we don't use sequence numbers.</P> -<H3><A name="ESP.ipsec">Encapsulated Security Payload (ESP)</A></H3> -<P>The ESP protocol is defined in RFC 2406. It provides one or both of - encryption and packet authentication. It may be used with or without AH - packet authentication.</P> -<P>Note that<STRONG> some form of packet authentication should<EM> - always</EM> be used whenever data is encrypted</STRONG>. Without - authentication, the encryption is vulnerable to active attacks which - may allow an enemy to break the encryption. ESP should<STRONG> always</STRONG> - either include its own authentication or be used with AH - authentication.</P> -<P>The RFCs require support for only two mandatory encryption algorithms - --<A href="#DES"> DES</A>, and null encryption -- and for two - authentication methods -- keyed MD5 and keyed SHA. Implementers may - choose to support additional algorithms in either category.</P> -<P>The authentication algorithms are the same ones used in the IPsec<A href="#AH"> - authentication header</A>.</P> -<P>We do not implement single DES since<A href="#desnotsecure"> DES is - insecure</A>. Instead we provide<A href="#3DES"> triple DES or 3DES</A> -. This is currently the only encryption algorithm supported.</P> -<P>We do not implement null encryption since it is obviously insecure.</P> -<H2><A name="modes">IPsec modes</A></H2> -<P>IPsec can connect in two modes. Transport mode is a host-to-host - connection involving only two machines. In tunnel mode, the IPsec - machines act as gateways and trafiic for any number of client machines - may be carried.</P> -<H3><A name="tunnel.ipsec">Tunnel mode</A></H3> -<P>Security gateways are required to support tunnel mode connections. In - this mode the gateways provide tunnels for use by client machines - behind the gateways. The client machines need not do any IPsec - processing; all they have to do is route things to gateways.</P> -<H3><A name="transport.ipsec">Transport mode</A></H3> -<P>Host machines (as opposed to security gateways) with IPsec - implementations must also support transport mode. In this mode, the - host does its own IPsec processing and routes some packets via IPsec.</P> -<H2><A name="parts">FreeS/WAN parts</A></H2> -<H3><A name="KLIPS.ipsec">KLIPS: Kernel IPsec Support</A></H3> -<P>KLIPS is<STRONG> K</STRONG>erne<STRONG>L</STRONG><STRONG> IP</STRONG> -SEC<STRONG> S</STRONG>upport, the modifications necessary to support - IPsec within the Linux kernel. KILPS does all the actual IPsec - packet-handling, including</P> -<UL> -<LI>encryption</LI> -<LI>packet authentication calculations</LI> -<LI>creation of ESP and AH headers for outgoing packets</LI> -<LI>interpretation of those headers on incoming packets</LI> -</UL> -<P>KLIPS also checks all non-IPsec packets to ensure they are not - bypassing IPsec security policies.</P> -<H3><A name="Pluto.ipsec">The Pluto daemon</A></H3> -<P><A href="manpage.d/ipsec_pluto.8.html">Pluto(8)</A> is a daemon which - implements the IKE protocol. It</P> -<UL> -<LI>handles all the Phase one ISAKMP SAs</LI> -<LI>performs host authentication and negotiates with other gateways</LI> -<LI>creates IPsec SAs and passes the data required to run them to KLIPS</LI> -<LI>adjust routing and firewall setup to meet IPsec requirements. See - our<A href="firewall.html"> IPsec and firewalling</A> document for - details.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Pluto is controlled mainly by the<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> - ipsec.conf(5)</A> configuration file.</P> -<H3><A name="command">The ipsec(8) command</A></H3> -<P>The<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.8.html"> ipsec(8)</A> command is a front - end shellscript that allows control over IPsec activity.</P> -<H3><A name="ipsec.conf">Linux FreeS/WAN configuration file</A></H3> -<P>The configuration file for Linux FreeS/WAN is</P> -<PRE> /etc/ipsec.conf</PRE> -<P>For details see the<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.conf.5.html"> - ipsec.conf(5)</A> manual page .</P> -<H2><A name="key">Key management</A></H2> -<P>There are several ways IPsec can manage keys. Not all are implemented - in Linux FreeS/WAN.</P> -<H3><A name="current">Currently Implemented Methods</A></H3> -<H4><A name="manual">Manual keying</A></H4> -<P>IPsec allows keys to be manually set. In Linux FreeS/WAN, such keys - are stored with the connection definitions in /etc/ipsec.conf.</P> -<P><A href="#manual">Manual keying</A> is useful for debugging since it - allows you to test the<A href="#KLIPS"> KLIPS</A> kernel IPsec code - without the<A href="#Pluto"> Pluto</A> daemon doing key negotiation.</P> -<P>In general, however, automatic keying is preferred because it is more - secure.</P> -<H4><A name="auto">Automatic keying</A></H4> -<P>In automatic keying, the<A href="#Pluto"> Pluto</A> daemon negotiates - keys using the<A href="#IKE"> IKE</A> Internet Key Exchange protocol. - Connections are automatically re-keyed periodically.</P> -<P>This is considerably more secure than manual keying. In either case - an attacker who acquires a key can read every message encrypted with - that key, but automatic keys can be changed every few hours or even - every few minutes without breaking the connection or requiring - intervention by the system administrators. Manual keys can only be - changed manually; you need to shut down the connection and have the two - admins make changes. Moreover, they have to communicate the new keys - securely, perhaps with<A href="#PGP"> PGP</A> or<A href="#ssh"> SSH</A> -. This may be possible in some cases, but as a general solution it is - expensive, bothersome and unreliable. Far better to let<A href="#Pluto"> - Pluto</A> handle these chores; no doubt the administrators have enough - to do.</P> -<P>Also, automatic keying is inherently more secure against an attacker - who manages to subvert your gateway system. If manual keying is in use - and an adversary acquires root privilege on your gateway, he reads your - keys from /etc/ipsec.conf and then reads all messages encrypted with - those keys.</P> -<P>If automatic keying is used, an adversary with the same privileges - can read /etc/ipsec.secrets, but this does not contain any keys, only - the secrets used to authenticate key exchanges. Having an adversary - able to authenticate your key exchanges need not worry you overmuch. - Just having the secrets does not give him any keys. You are still - secure against<A href="#passive"> passive</A> attacks. This property of - automatic keying is called<A href="#PFS"> perfect forward secrecy</A>, - abbreviated PFS.</P> -<P>Unfortunately, having the secrets does allow an<A href="#active"> - active attack</A>, specifically a<A href="#middle"> man-in-the-middle</A> - attack. Losing these secrets to an attacker may not be quite as - disastrous as losing the actual keys, but it is<EM> still a serious - security breach</EM>. These secrets should be guarded as carefully as - keys.</P> -<H3><A name="notyet">Methods not yet implemented</A></H3> -<H4><A name="noauth">Unauthenticated key exchange</A></H4> -<P>It would be possible to exchange keys without authenticating the - players. This would support<A href="#carpediem"> opportunistic - encryption</A> -- allowing any two systems to encrypt their - communications without requiring a shared PKI or a previously - negotiated secret -- and would be secure against<A href="#passive"> - passive attacks</A>. It would, however, be highly vulnerable to active<A -href="#middle"> man-in-the-middle</A> attacks. RFC 2408 therefore - specifies that all<A href="#ISAKMP"> ISAKMP</A> key management - interactions<EM> must</EM> be authenticated.</P> -<P>There is room for debate here. Should we provide immediate security - against<A href="#passive"> passive attacks</A> and encourage widespread - use of encryption, at the expense of risking the more difficult<A href="#active"> - active attacks</A>? Or should we wait until we can implement a solution - that can both be widespread and offer security against active attacks?</P> -<P>So far, we have chosen the second course, complying with the RFCs and - waiting for secure DNS (see<A href="#DNS"> below</A>) so that we can do<A -href="#carpediem"> opportunistic encryption</A> right.</P> -<H4><A name="DNS">Key exchange using DNS</A></H4> -<P>The IPsec RFCs allow key exchange based on authentication services - provided by<A href="#SDNS"> Secure DNS</A>. Once Secure DNS service - becomes widely available, we expect to make this the<EM> primary key - management method for Linux FreeS/WAN</EM>. It is the best way we know - of to support<A href="#carpediem"> opportunistic encryption</A>, - allowing two systems without a common PKI or previous negotiation to - secure their communication.</P> -<P>We currently have code to acquire RSA keys from DNS but do not yet - have code to validate Secure DNS signatures.</P> -<H4><A name="PKI">Key exchange using a PKI</A></H4> -<P>The IPsec RFCs allow key exchange based on authentication services - provided by a<A href="#PKI"> PKI</A> or Public Key Infrastructure. With - many vendors selling such products and many large organisations - building these infrastructures, this will clearly be an important - application of IPsec and one Linux FreeS/WAN will eventually support.</P> -<P>On the other hand, this is not as high a priority for Linux FreeS/WAN - as solutions based on<A href="#SDNS"> secure DNS</A>. We do not expect - any PKI to become as universal as DNS.</P> -<P>Some<A href="#patch"> patches</A> to handle authentication with X.509 - certificates, which most PKIs use, are available.</P> -<H4><A name="photuris">Photuris</A></H4> -<P><A href="#photuris">Photuris</A> is another key management protocol, - an alternative to IKE and ISAKMP, described in RFCs 2522 and 2523 which - are labelled "experimental". Adding Photuris support to Linux FreeS/WAN - might be a good project for a volunteer. The likely starting point - would be the OpenBSD photurisd code.</P> -<H4><A name="skip">SKIP</A></H4> -<P><A href="#SKIP">SKIP</A> is yet another key management protocol, - developed by Sun. At one point it was fairly widely used, but it now - seems moribund, displaced by IKE. Sun now (as of Solaris 8.0) ship an - IPsec implementation using IKE. We have no plans to implement SKIP. If - a user were to implement it, we would almost certainly not want to add - the code to our distribution.</P> -<HR> -<H1><A name="lists">Mailing lists and newsgroups</A></H1> -<H2><A name="list.fs">Mailing lists about FreeS/WAN</A></H2> -<H3><A name="projlist">The project mailing lists</A></H3> -<P>The Linux FreeS/WAN project has several email lists for user support, - bug reports and software development discussions.</P> -<P>We had a single list on clinet.fi for several years (Thanks, folks!), - then one list on freeswan.org, but now we've split into several lists:</P> -<DL> -<DT><A href="mailto:users-request@lists.freeswan.org?body=subscribe"> -users</A></DT> -<DD> -<UL> -<LI>The general list for discussing use of the software</LI> -<LI>The place for seeking<STRONG> help with problems</STRONG> (but - please check the<A href="faq.html"> FAQ</A> first).</LI> -<LI>Anyone can post.</LI> -</UL> -</DD> -<DT><A href="mailto:bugs-request@lists.freeswan.org?body=subscribe">bugs</A> -</DT> -<DD> -<UL> -<LI>For<STRONG> bug reports</STRONG>.</LI> -<LI>If you are not certain what is going on -- could be a bug, a - configuration error, a network problem, ... -- please post to the users - list instead.</LI> -<LI>Anyone can post.</LI> -</UL> -</DD> -<DT><A href="mailto:design-request@lists.freeswan.org?body=subscribe"> -design</A></DT> -<DD> -<UL> -<LI><STRONG>Design discussions</STRONG>, for people working on FreeS/WAN - development or others with an interest in design and security issues.</LI> -<LI>It would be a good idea to read the existing design papers (see this<A -href="#applied"> list</A>) before posting.</LI> -<LI>Anyone can post.</LI> -</UL> -</DD> -<DT><A href="mailto:announce-request@lists.freeswan.org?body=subscribe"> -announce</A></DT> -<DD> -<UL> -<LI>A<STRONG> low-traffic</STRONG> list.</LI> -<LI><STRONG>Announcements</STRONG> about FreeS/WAN and related software.</LI> -<LI>All posts here are also sent to the users list. You need not - subscribe to both.</LI> -<LI>Only the FreeS/WAN team can post.</LI> -<LI>If you have something you feel should go on this list, send it to<VAR> - announce-admin@lists.freeswan.org</VAR>. Unless it is obvious, please - include a short note explaining why we should post it.</LI> -</UL> -</DD> -<DT><A href="mailto:briefs-request@lists.freeswan.org?body=subscribe"> -briefs</A></DT> -<DD> -<UL> -<LI>A<STRONG> low-traffic</STRONG> list.</LI> -<LI><STRONG>Weekly summaries</STRONG> of activity on the users list.</LI> -<LI>All posts here are also sent to the users list. You need not - subscribe to both.</LI> -<LI>Only the FreeS/WAN team can post.</LI> -</UL> -</DD> -</DL> -<P>To subscribe to any of these, you can:</P> -<UL> -<LI>just follow the links above</LI> -<LI>use our<A href="http://www.freeswan.org/mail.html"> web interface</A> -</LI> -<LI>send mail to<VAR> listname</VAR>-request@lists.freeswan.org with a - one-line message body "subscribe"</LI> -</UL> -<P>Archives of these lists are available via the<A href="http://www.freeswan.org/mail.html"> - web interface</A>.</P> -<H4><A name="which.list">Which list should I use?</A></H4> -<P>For most questions, please check the<A href="faq.html"> FAQ</A> - first, and if that does not have an answer, ask on the users list. "My - configuration doesn't work." does not belong on the bugs list, and "Can - FreeS/WAN do such-and-such" or "How do I configure it to..." do not - belong in design discussions.</P> -<P>Cross-posting the same message to two or more of these lists is - discouraged. Quite a few people read more than one list and getting - multiple copies is annoying.</P> -<H4><A name="policy.list">List policies</A></H4> -<P><STRONG>US citizens or residents are asked not to post code to the - lists, not even one-line bug fixes</STRONG>. The project cannot accept - code which might entangle it in US<A href="#exlaw"> export restrictions</A> -.</P> -<P>Non-subscribers can post to some of these lists. This is necessary; - someone working on a gateway install who encounters a problem may not - have access to a subscribed account.</P> -<P>Some spam turns up on these lists from time to time. For discussion - of why we do not attempt to filter it, see the<A href="#spam"> FAQ</A>. - Please do not clutter the lists with complaints about this.</P> -<H3><A name="archive">Archives of the lists</A></H3> -<P>Searchable archives of the old single list have existed for some - time. At time of writing, it is not yet clear how they will change for - the new multi-list structure.</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec">Canada</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.nexial.com">Holland</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>Note that these use different search engines. Try both.</P> -<P>Archives of the new lists are available via the<A href="http://www.freeswan.org/mail.html"> - web interface</A>.</P> -<H2><A name="indexes">Indexes of mailing lists</A></H2> -<P><A href="http://paml.net/">PAML</A> is the standard reference for<STRONG> - P</STRONG>ublicly<STRONG> A</STRONG>ccessible<STRONG> M</STRONG>ailing<STRONG> - L</STRONG>ists. When we last checked, it had over 7500 lists on an - amazing variety of topics. It also has FAQ information and a search - engine.</P> -<P>There is an index of<A href="http://oslab.snu.ac.kr/~djshin/linux/mail-list/index.shtml"> - Linux mailing lists</A> available.</P> -<P>A list of<A href="http://xforce.iss.net/maillists/otherlists.php"> - computer security mailing lists</A>, with descriptions.</P> -<H2><A name="otherlists">Lists for related software and topics</A></H2> -<P>Most links in this section point to subscription addresses for the - various lists. Send the one-line message "subscribe<VAR> list_name</VAR> -" to subscribe to any of them.</P> -<H3><A NAME="28_3_1">Products that include FreeS/WAN</A></H3> -<P>Our introduction document gives a<A href="#products"> list of - products that include FreeS/WAN</A>. If you have, or are considering, - one of those, check the supplier's web site for information on mailing - lists for their users.</P> -<H3><A name="linux.lists">Linux mailing lists</A></H3> -<UL> -<LI><A href="mailto:majordomo@vger.kernel.org"> -linux-admin@vger.kernel.org</A>, for Linux system administrators</LI> -<LI><A href="mailto:netfilter-request@lists.samba.org"> -netfilter@lists.samba.org</A>, about Netfilter, which replaces IPchains - in kernels 2.3.15 and later</LI> -<LI><A href="mailto:security-audit-request@ferret.lmh.ox.ac.uk"> -security-audit@ferret.lmh.ox.ac.uk</A>, for people working on security - audits of various Linux programs</LI> -<LI><A href="mailto:securedistros-request@humbolt.geo.uu.nl"> -securedistros@humbolt.geo.uu.nl</A>, for discussion of issues common to - all the half dozen projects working on secure Linux distributions.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Each of the scure distribution projects also has its own web site and - mailing list. Some of the sites are:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://bastille-linux.org/">Bastille Linux</A> scripts to - harden Redhat, e.g. by changing permissions and modifying inialisation - scripts</LI> -<LI><A href="http://immunix.org/">Immunix</A> take a different approach, - using a modified compiler to build kernel and utilities with better - resistance to various types of overflow and exploit</LI> -<LI>the<A href="#NSA"> NSA</A> have contractors working on a<A href="#SElinux"> - Security Enhanced Linux</A>, primarily adding stronger access control - mechanisms. You can download the current version (which interestingly - is under GPL and not export resrtricted) or subscribe to the mailing - list from the<A href="http://www.nsa.gov/selinux"> project web page</A> -.</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="ietf">Lists for IETF working groups</A></H3> -<P>Each<A href="#ietf"> IETF</A> working group has an associated mailing - list where much of the work takes place.</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="mailto:majordomo@lists.tislabs.com">ipsec@lists.tislabs.com</A> -, the IPsec<A href="http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/ipsec-charter.html"> - working group</A>. This is where the protocols are discussed, new - drafts announced, and so on. By now, the IPsec working group is winding - down since the work is essentially complete. A<A href="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/ipsec/"> - list archive</A> is available.</LI> -<LI><A href="mailto:ipsec-policy-request@vpnc.org">IPsec policy</A> - list, and its<A href="http://www.vpnc.org/ipsec-policy/"> archive</A></LI> -<LI><A href="mailto:ietf-ipsra-request@vpnc.org">IP secure remote access</A> - list, and its<A href="http://www.vpnc.org/ietf-ipsra/mail-archive/"> - archive</A></LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="other">Other mailing lists</A></H3> -<UL> -<LI><A href="mailto:ipc-announce-request@privacy.org"> -ipc-announce@privacy.org</A> a low-traffic list with announcements of - developments in privacy, encryption and online civil rights</LI> -<LI>a VPN mailing list's<A href="http://kubarb.phsx.ukans.edu/~tbird/vpn.html"> - home page</A></LI> -</UL> -<H2><A name="newsgroups">Usenet newsgroups</A></H2> -<UL> -<LI>sci.crypt</LI> -<LI>sci.crypt.research</LI> -<LI>comp.dcom.vpn</LI> -<LI>talk.politics.crypto</LI> -</UL> -<HR> -<H1><A name="weblink">Web links</A></H1> -<H2><A name="freeswan">The Linux FreeS/WAN Project</A></H2> -<P>The main project web site is<A href="http://www.freeswan.org/"> - www.freeswan.org</A>.</P> -<P>Links to other project-related<A href="#sites"> sites</A> are - provided in our introduction section.</P> -<H3><A name="patch">Add-ons and patches for FreeS/WAN</A></H3> -<P>Some user-contributed patches have been integrated into the FreeS/WAN - distribution. For a variety of reasons, those listed below have not.</P> -<P>Note that not all patches are a good idea.</P> -<UL> -<LI>There are a number of "features" of IPsec which we do not implement - because they reduce security. See this<A href="#dropped"> discussion</A> -. We do not recommend using patches that implement these. One example is - aggressive mode.</LI> -<LI>We do not recommend adding "features" of any sort unless they are - clearly necessary, or at least have clear benefits. For example, - FreeS/WAN would not become more secure if it offerred a choice of 14 - ciphers. If even one was flawed, it would certainly become less secure - for anyone using that cipher. Even with 14 wonderful ciphers, it would - be harder to maintain and administer, hence more vulnerable to various - human errors.</LI> -</UL> -<P>This is not to say that patches are necessarily bad, only that using - them requires some deliberation. For example, there might be perfectly - good reasons to add a specific cipher in your application: perhaps GOST - to comply with government standards in Eastern Europe, or AES for - performance benefits.</P> -<H4><A NAME="29_1_1_1">Current patches</A></H4> -<P>Patches believed current::</P> -<UL> -<LI>patches for<A href="http://www.strongsec.com/freeswan/"> X.509 - certificate support</A>, also available from a<A href="http://www.twi.ch/~sna/strongsec/freeswan/"> - mirror site</A></LI> -<LI>patches to add<A href="http://www.irrigacion.gov.ar/juanjo/ipsec"> - AES and other ciphers</A>. There is preliminary data indicating AES - gives a substantial<A href="#perf.more"> performance gain</A>.</LI> -</UL> -<P>There is also one add-on that takes the form of a modified FreeS/WAN - distribution, rather than just patches to the standard distribution:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.ipv6.iabg.de/downloadframe/index.html">IPv6 - support</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>Before using any of the above,, check the<A href="mail.html"> mailing - lists</A> for news of newer versions and to see whether they have been - incorporated into more recent versions of FreeS/WAN.</P> -<H4><A NAME="29_1_1_2">Older patches</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://sources.colubris.com/en/projects/FreeSWAN/">hardware - acceleration</A></LI> -<LI>a<A href="http://tzukanov.narod.ru/"> series</A> of patches that -<UL> -<LI>provide GOST, a Russian gov't. standard cipher, in MMX assembler</LI> -<LI>add GOST to OpenSSL</LI> -<LI>add GOST to the International kernel patch</LI> -<LI>let FreeS/WAN use International kernel patch ciphers</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>Neil Dunbar's patches for<A href="ftp://hplose.hpl.hp.com/pub/nd/pluto-openssl.tar.gz"> - certificate support</A>, using code from<A href="http://www.openssl.org"> - Open SSL</A>.</LI> -<LI>Luc Lanthier's<A href="ftp://ftp.netwinder.org/users/f/firesoul/"> - patches</A> for<A href="#PKIX"> PKIX</A> support.</LI> -<LI><A href="ftp://ftp.heise.de/pub/ct/listings/9916-180.tgz">patches</A> - to add<A href="#Blowfish"> Blowfish</A>,<A href="#IDEA"> IDEA</A> and<A href="#CAST128"> - CAST-128</A> to FreeS/WAN</LI> -<LI>patches for FreeS/WAN 1.3, Pluto support for<A href="http://alcatraz.webcriminals.com/~bastiaan/ipsec/"> - external authentication</A>, for example with a smartcard or SKEYID.</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.zengl.net/freeswan/download/">patches and - utilities</A> for using FreeS/WAN with PGPnet</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.freelith.com/lithworks/crypto/freeswan_patch.htm"> -Blowfish encryption and Tiger hash</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.cendio.se/~bellman/aggressive-pluto.snap.tar.gz"> -patches</A> for aggressive mode support</LI> -</UL> -<P>These patches are for older versions of FreeS/WAN and will likely not - work with the current version. Older versions of FreeS/WAN may be - available on some of the<A href="#sites"> distribution sites</A>, but - we recommend using the current release.</P> -<H4><A name="VPN.masq">VPN masquerade patches</A></H4> -<P>Finally, there are some patches to other code that may be useful with - FreeS/WAN:</P> -<UL> -<LI>a<A href="ftp://ftp.rubyriver.com/pub/jhardin/masquerade/ip_masq_vpn.html"> - patch</A> to make IPsec, PPTP and SSH VPNs work through a Linux - firewall with<A href="#masq"> IP masquerade</A>.</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.linuxdoc.org/HOWTO/VPN-Masquerade-HOWTO.html"> -Linux VPN Masquerade HOWTO</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>Note that this is not required if the same machine does IPsec and - masquerading, only if you want a to locate your IPsec gateway on a - masqueraded network. See our<A href="#NAT"> firewalls</A> document for - discussion of why this is problematic.</P> -<P>At last report, this patch could not co-exist with FreeS/WAN on the - same machine.</P> -<H3><A name="dist">Distributions including FreeS/WAN</A></H3> -<P>The introductory section of our document set lists several<A href="#distwith"> - Linux distributions</A> which include FreeS/WAN.</P> -<H3><A name="used">Things FreeS/WAN uses or could use</A></H3> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://openpgp.net/random">/dev/random</A> support page, - discussion of and code for the Linux<A href="#random"> random number - driver</A>. Out-of-date when we last checked (January 2000), but still - useful.</LI> -<LI>other programs related to random numbers: -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.mindrot.org/audio-entropyd.html">audio entropy - daemon</A> to gather noise from a sound card and feed it into - /dev/random</LI> -<LI>an<A href="http://www.lothar.com/tech/crypto/"> entropy-gathering - daemon</A></LI> -<LI>a driver for the random number generator in recent<A href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/gkernel/"> - Intel chipsets</A>. This driver is included as standard in 2.4 kernels.</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>a Linux<A href="http://www.marko.net/l2tp/"> L2TP Daemon</A> which - might be useful for communicating with Windows 2000 which builds L2TP - tunnels over its IPsec connections</LI> -<LI>to use opportunistic encryption, you need a recent version of<A href="#BIND"> - BIND</A>. You can get one from the<A href="http://www.isc.org"> - Internet Software Consortium</A> who maintain BIND.</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="alternatives">Other approaches to VPNs for Linux</A></H3> -<UL> -<LI>other Linux<A href="#linuxipsec"> IPsec implementations</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.tik.ee.ethz.ch/~skip/">ENskip</A>, a free - implementation of Sun's<A href="#SKIP"> SKIP</A> protocol</LI> -<LI><A href="http://sunsite.auc.dk/vpnd/">vpnd</A>, a non-IPsec VPN - daemon for Linux which creates tunnels using<A href="#Blowfish"> - Blowfish</A> encryption</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.winton.org.uk/zebedee/">Zebedee</A>, a simple - GPLd tunnel-building program with Linux and Win32 versions. The name is - from<STRONG> Z</STRONG>lib compression,<STRONG> B</STRONG>lowfish - encryption and<STRONG> D</STRONG>iffie-Hellman key exchange.</LI> -<LI>There are at least two PPTP implementations for Linux -<UL> -<LI>Moreton Bay's<A href="http://www.moretonbay.com/vpn/pptp.html"> - PoPToP</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://cag.lcs.mit.edu/~cananian/Projects/PPTP/">PPTP-Linux</A> -</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI><A href="http://sites.inka.de/sites/bigred/devel/cipe.html">CIPE</A> - (crypto IP encapsulation) project, using their own lightweight protocol - to encrypt between routers</LI> -<LI><A href="http://tinc.nl.linux.org/">tinc</A>, a VPN Daemon</LI> -</UL> -<P>There is a list of<A href="http://www.securityportal.com/lskb/10000000/kben10000005.html"> - Linux VPN</A> software in the<A href="http://www.securityportal.com/lskb/kben00000001.html"> - Linux Security Knowledge Base</A>.</P> -<H2><A name="ipsec.link">The IPsec Protocols</A></H2> -<H3><A name="general">General IPsec or VPN information</A></H3> -<UL> -<LI>The<A href="http://www.vpnc.org"> VPN Consortium</A> is a group for - vendors of IPsec products. Among other things, they have a good - collection of<A href="http://www.vpnc.org/white-papers.html"> IPsec - white papers</A>.</LI> -<LI>A VPN mailing list with a<A href="http://kubarb.phsx.ukans.edu/~tbird/vpn.html"> - home page</A>, a FAQ, some product comparisons, and many links.</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.opus1.com/vpn/index.html">VPN pointer page</A></LI> -<LI>a<A href="http://www.epm.ornl.gov/~dunigan/vpn.html"> collection</A> - of VPN links, and some explanation</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="overview">IPsec overview documents or slide sets</A></H3> -<UL> -<LI>the FreeS/WAN<A href="ipsec.html"> document section</A> on these - protocols</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="otherlang">IPsec information in languages other than - English</A></H3> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.imib.med.tu-dresden.de/imib/Internet/Literatur/ipsec-docu.html"> -German</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.kame.net/index-j.html">Japanese</A></LI> -<LI>Feczak Szabolcs' thesis in<A href="http://feczo.koli.kando.hu/vpn/"> - Hungarian</A></LI> -<LI>Davide Cerri's thesis and some presentation slides<A href="http://www.linux.it/~davide/doc/"> - Italian</A></LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="RFCs1">RFCs and other reference documents</A></H3> -<UL> -<LI><A href="rfc.html">Our document</A> listing the RFCs relevant to - Linux FreeS/WAN and giving various ways of obtaining both RFCs and - Internet Drafts.</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.vpnc.org/vpn-standards.html">VPN Standards</A> - page maintained by<A href="#VPNC"> VPNC</A>. This covers both RFCs and - Drafts, and classifies them in a fairly helpful way.</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.rfc-editor.org">RFC archive</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.ietf.org/ids.by.wg/ipsec.html">Internet Drafts</A> - related to IPsec</LI> -<LI>US government<A href="http://www.itl.nist.gov/div897/pubs"> site</A> - with their<A href="#FIPS"> FIPS</A> standards</LI> -<LI>Archives of the ipsec@tis.com mailing list where discussion of - drafts takes place. -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/ipsec">Eastern Canada</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.vpnc.org/ietf-ipsec">California</A>.</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="analysis">Analysis and critiques of IPsec protocols</A></H3> -<UL> -<LI>Counterpane's<A href="http://www.counterpane.com/ipsec.pdf"> - evaluation</A> of the protocols</LI> -<LI>Simpson's<A href="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/1999/06/msg00319.html"> - IKE Considered Dangerous</A> paper. Note that this is a link to an - archive of our mailing list. There are several replies in addition to - the paper itself.</LI> -<LI>Fate Labs<A href="http://www.fatelabs.com/loki-vpn.pdf"> Virual - Private Problems: the Broken Dream</A></LI> -<LI>Catherine Meadows' paper<CITE> Analysis of the Internet Key Exchange - Protocol Using the NRL Protocol Analyzer</CITE>, in<A href="http://chacs.nrl.navy.mil/publications/CHACS/1999/1999meadows-IEEE99.pdf"> - PDF</A> or<A href="http://chacs.nrl.navy.mil/publications/CHACS/1999/1999meadows-IEEE99.ps"> - Postscript</A>.</LI> -<LI>Perlman and Kaufmnan -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://snoopy.seas.smu.edu/ee8392_summer01/week7/perlman2.pdf"> -Key Exchange in IPsec</A></LI> -<LI>a newer<A href="http://sec.femto.org/wetice-2001/papers/radia-paper.pdf"> - PDF paper</A>,<CITE> Analysis of the IPsec Key Exchange Standard</CITE> -.</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>Bellovin's<A href="http://www.research.att.com/~smb/papers/index.html"> - papers</A> page including his: -<UL> -<LI><CITE>Security Problems in the TCP/IP Protocol Suite</CITE> (1989)</LI> -<LI><CITE>Problem Areas for the IP Security Protocols</CITE> (1996)</LI> -<LI><CITE>Probable Plaintext Cryptanalysis of the IP Security Protocols</CITE> - (1997)</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>An<A href="http://www.lounge.org/ike_doi_errata.html"> errata list</A> - for the IPsec RFCs.</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="IP.background">Background information on IP</A></H3> -<UL> -<LI>An<A href="http://ipprimer.windsorcs.com/"> IP tutorial</A> that - seems to be written mainly for Netware or Microsoft LAN admins entering - a new world</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.iana.org">IANA</A>, Internet Assigned Numbers - Authority</LI> -<LI><A href="http://public.pacbell.net/dedicated/cidr.html">CIDR</A>, - Classless Inter-Domain Routing</LI> -<LI>Also see our<A href="biblio.html"> bibliography</A></LI> -</UL> -<H2><A name="implement">IPsec Implementations</A></H2> -<H3><A name="linuxprod">Linux products</A></H3> -<P>Vendors using FreeS/WAN in turnkey firewall or VPN products are - listed in our<A href="#turnkey"> introduction</A>.</P> -<P>Other vendors have Linux IPsec products which, as far as we know, do - not use FreeS/WAN</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.redcreek.com/products/shareware.html">Redcreek</A> - provide an open source Linux driver for their PCI hardware VPN card. - This card has a 100 Mbit Ethernet port, an Intel 960 CPU plus more - specialised crypto chips, and claimed encryption performance of 45 - Mbit/sec. The PC sees it as an Ethernet board.</LI> -<LI><A href="http://linuxtoday.com/stories/8428.html?nn">Paktronix</A> - offer a Linux-based VPN with hardware encryption</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.watchguard.com/">Watchguard</A> use Linux in - their Firebox product.</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.entrust.com">Entrust</A> offer a developers' - toolkit for using their<A href="#PKI"> PKI</A> for IPsec authentication</LI> -<LI>According to a report on our mailing list,<A href="http://www.axent.com"> - Axent</A> have a Linux version of their product.</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="router">IPsec in router products</A></H3> -<P>All the major router vendors support IPsec, at least in some models.</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/707/16.html">Cisco</A> - IPsec information</LI> -<LI>Ascend, now part of<A href="http://www.lucent.com/"> Lucent</A>, - have some IPsec-based products</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.nortelnetworks.com/">Bay Networks</A>, now part - of Nortel, use IPsec in their Contivity switch product line</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.3com.com/products/enterprise.html">3Com</A> have - a number of VPN products, some using IPsec</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="fw.web">IPsec in firewall products</A></H3> -<P>Many firewall vendors offer IPsec, either as a standard part of their - product, or an optional extra. A few we know about are:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.borderware.com/">Borderware</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.ashleylaurent.com/vpn/ipsec_vpn.htm">Ashley - Laurent</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.watchguard.com">Watchguard</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.fx.dk/firewall/ipsec.html">Injoy</A> for OS/2</LI> -</UL> -<P>Vendors using FreeS/WAN in turnkey firewall products are listed in - our<A href="#turnkey"> introduction</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="ipsecos">Operating systems with IPsec support</A></H3> -<P>All the major open source operating systems support IPsec. See below - for details on<A href="#BSD"> BSD-derived</A> Unix variants.</P> -<P>Among commercial OS vendors, IPsec players include:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://msdn.microsoft.com/isapi/msdnlib.idc?theURL=/library/backgrnd/html/msdn_ip_security.htm"> -Microsoft</A> have put IPsec in their Windows 2000 and XP products</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.s390.ibm.com/stories/1999/os390v2r8_pr.html">IBM</A> - announce a release of OS390 with IPsec support via a crypto - co-processor</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.sun.com/solaris/ds/ds-security/ds-security.pdf"> -Sun</A> include IPsec in Solaris 8</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.hp.com/security/products/extranet-security.html"> -Hewlett Packard</A> offer IPsec for their Unix machines</LI> -<LI>Certicom have IPsec available for the<A href="http://www.certicom.com/products/movian/movianvpn_tech.html"> - Palm</A>.</LI> -<LI>There were reports before the release that Apple's Mac OS X would - have IPsec support built in, but it did not seem to be there when we - last checked. If you find, it please let us know via the<A href="mail.html"> - mailing list</A>.</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A NAME="29_3_5">IPsec on network cards</A></H3> -<P>Network cards with built-in IPsec acceleration are available from at - least Intel, 3Com and Redcreek.</P> -<H3><A name="opensource">Open source IPsec implementations</A></H3> -<H4><A name="linuxipsec">Other Linux IPsec implementations</A></H4> -<P>We like to think of FreeS/WAN as<EM> the</EM> Linux IPsec - implementation, but it is not the only one. Others we know of are:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.enst.fr/~beyssac/pipsec/">pipsecd</A>, a - lightweight implementation of IPsec for Linux. Does not require kernel - recompilation.</LI> -<LI>Petr Novak's<A href="ftp://ftp.eunet.cz/icz/ipnsec/"> ipnsec</A>, - based on the OpenBSD IPsec code and using<A href="#photuris"> Photuris</A> - for key management</LI> -<LI>A now defunct project at<A href="http://www.cs.arizona.edu/security/hpcc-blue/linux.html"> - U of Arizona</A> (export controlled)</LI> -<LI><A href="http://snad.ncsl.nist.gov/cerberus">NIST Cerebus</A> - (export controlled)</LI> -</UL> -<H4><A name="BSD">IPsec for BSD Unix</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.kame.net/project-overview.html">KAME</A>, - several large Japanese companies co-operating on IPv6 and IPsec</LI> -<LI><A href="http://web.mit.edu/network/isakmp">US Naval Research Lab</A> - implementation of IPv6 and of IPsec for IPv4 (export controlled)</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.openbsd.org">OpenBSD</A> includes IPsec as a - standard part of the distribution</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.r4k.net/ipsec">IPsec for FreeBSD</A></LI> -<LI>a<A href="http://www.netbsd.org/Documentation/network/ipsec/"> FAQ</A> - on NetBSD's IPsec implementation</LI> -</UL> -<H4><A name="misc">IPsec for other systems</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.tcm.hut.fi/Tutkimus/IPSEC/">Helsinki U of - Technolgy</A> have implemented IPsec for Solaris, Java and Macintosh</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="interop.web">Interoperability</A></H3> -<P>The IPsec protocols are designed so that different implementations - should be able to work together. As they say "the devil is in the - details". IPsec has a lot of details, but considerable success has been - achieved.</P> -<H4><A name="result">Interoperability results</A></H4> -<P>Linux FreeS/WAN has been tested for interoperability with many other - IPsec implementations. Results to date are in our<A href="interop.html"> - interoperability</A> section.</P> -<P>Various other sites have information on interoperability between - various IPsec implementations:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.opus1.com/vpn/atl99display.html">interop results</A> - from a bakeoff in Atlanta, September 1999.</LI> -<LI>a French company, HSC's,<A href="http://www.hsc.fr/ressources/presentations/ipsec99/index.html.en"> - interoperability</A> test data covers FreeS/WAN, Open BSD, KAME, Linux - pipsecd, Checkpoint, Red Creek Ravlin, and Cisco IOS</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.icsa.net/">ICSA</A> offer certification programs - for various security-related products. See their list of<A href="http://www.icsa.net/html/communities/ipsec/certification/certified_products/index.shtml"> - certified IPsec</A> products. Linux FreeS/WAN is not currently on that - list, but several products with which we interoperate are.</LI> -<LI>VPNC have a page on why they are not yet doing<A href="http://www.vpnc.org/interop.html"> - interoperability</A> testing and a page on the<A href="http://www.vpnc.org/conformance.html"> - spec conformance</A> testing that they are doing</LI> -<LI>a<A href="http://www.commweb.com/article/COM20000912S0009"> review</A> - comparing a dozen commercial IPsec implemetations. Unfortunately, the - reviewers did not look at Open Source implementations such as FreeS/WAN - or OpenBSD.</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.tanu.org/~sakane/doc/public/report-ike-interop0007.html"> -results</A> from interoperability tests at a conference. FreeS/WAN was - not tested there.</LI> -<LI>test results from the<A href="http://www.hsc.fr/ressources/veille/ipsec/ipsec2000/"> - IPSEC 2000</A> conference</LI> -</UL> -<H4><A name="test1">Interoperability test sites</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.tahi.org/">TAHI</A>, a Japanese IPv6 testing - project with free IPsec validation software</LI> -<LI><A href="http://ipsec-wit.antd.nist.gov">National Institute of - Standards and Technology</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://isakmp-test.ssh.fi/">SSH Communications Security</A></LI> -</UL> -<H2><A name="linux.link">Linux links</A></H2> -<H3><A name="linux.basic">Basic and tutorial Linux information</A></H3> -<UL> -<LI>Linux<A href="http://linuxcentral.com/linux/LDP/LDP/gs/gs.html"> - Getting Started</A> HOWTO document</LI> -<LI>A getting started guide from the<A href="http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~cchome/linuxgettingstarted.html"> - U of Oregon</A></LI> -<LI>A large<A href="http://www.herring.org/techie.html"> link collection</A> - which includes a lot of introductory and tutorial material on Unix, - Linux, the net, . . .</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="general">General Linux sites</A></H3> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.freshmeat.net">Freshmeat</A> Linux news</LI> -<LI><A href="http://slashdot.org">Slashdot</A> "News for Nerds"</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.linux.org">Linux Online</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.linuxhq.com">Linux HQ</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.tux.org">tux.org</A></LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="docs.ldp">Documentation</A></H3> -<P>Nearly any Linux documentation you are likely to want can be found at - the<A href="http://metalab.unc.edu/LDP"> Linux Documentation Project</A> - or LDP.</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://metalab.unc.edu/LDP/HOWTO/META-FAQ.html">Meta-FAQ</A> - guide to Linux information sources</LI> -<LI>The LDP's HowTo documents are a standard Linux reference. See this<A href="http://www.linuxdoc.org/docs.html#howto"> - list</A>. Documents there most relevant to a FreeS/WAN gateway are: -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://metalab.unc.edu/LDP/HOWTO/Kernel-HOWTO.html">Kernel - HOWTO</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://metalab.unc.edu/LDP/HOWTO/Networking-Overview-HOWTO.html"> -Networking Overview HOWTO</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://metalab.unc.edu/LDP/HOWTO/Security-HOWTO.html"> -Security HOWTO</A></LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>The LDP do a series of Guides, book-sized publications with more - detail (and often more "why do it this way?") than the HowTos. See this<A -href="http://www.linuxdoc.org/guides.html"> list</A>. Documents there - most relevant to a FreeS/WAN gateway are: -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.tml.hut.fi/~viu/linux/sag/">System - Administrator's Guide</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.linuxdoc.org/LDP/nag2/index.html">Network - Adminstrator's Guide</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.seifried.org/lasg/">Linux Administrator's - Security Guide</A></LI> -</UL> -</LI> -</UL> -<P>You may not need to go to the LDP to get this material. Most Linux - distributions include the HowTos on their CDs and several include the - Guides as well. Also, most of the Guides and some collections of HowTos - are available in book form from various publishers.</P> -<P>Much of the LDP material is also available in languages other than - English. See this<A href="http://www.linuxdoc.org/links/nenglish.html"> - LDP page</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="advroute.web">Advanced routing</A></H3> -<P>The Linux IP stack has some new features in 2.4 kernels. Some HowTos - have been written:</P> -<UL> -<LI>several HowTos for the<A href="http://netfilter.samba.org/unreliable-guides/"> - netfilter</A> firewall code in newer kernels</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.ds9a.nl/2.4Networking/HOWTO//cvs/2.4routing/output/2.4networking.html"> -2.4 networking</A> HowTo</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.ds9a.nl/2.4Networking/HOWTO//cvs/2.4routing/output/2.4routing.html"> -2.4 routing</A> HowTo</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="linsec">Security for Linux</A></H3> -<P>See also the<A href="#docs.ldp"> LDP material</A> above.</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.ecst.csuchico.edu/~dranch/LINUX/index-linux.html#trinityos"> -Trinity OS guide to setting up Linux</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.deter.com/unix">Unix security</A> page</LI> -<LI><A href="http://linux01.gwdg.de/~alatham/">PPDD</A> encrypting - filesystem</LI> -<LI><A href="http://EncryptionHOWTO.sourceforge.net/">Linux Encryption - HowTo</A> (outdated when last checked, had an Oct 2000 revision date in - March 2002)</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="firewall.linux">Linux firewalls</A></H3> -<P>Our<A href="firewall.html"> FreeS/WAN and firewalls</A> document - includes links to several sets of<A href="#examplefw"> scripts</A> - known to work with FreeS/WAN.</P> -<P>Other information sources:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://ipmasq.cjb.net/">IP Masquerade resource page</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://netfilter.samba.org/unreliable-guides/">netfilter</A> - firewall code in 2.4 kernels</LI> -<LI>Our list of general<A href="#firewall.web"> firewall references</A> - on the web</LI> -<LI><A href="http://users.dhp.com/~whisper/mason/">Mason</A>, a tool for - automatically configuring Linux firewalls</LI> -<LI>the web cache software<A href="http://www.squid-cache.org/"> squid</A> - and<A href="http://www.squidguard.org/"> squidguard</A> which turns - Squid into a filtering web proxy</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="linux.misc">Miscellaneous Linux information</A></H3> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://lwn.net/current/dists.php3">Linux distribution - vendors</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.linux.org/groups/">Linux User Groups</A></LI> -</UL> -<H2><A name="crypto.link">Crypto and security links</A></H2> -<H3><A name="security">Crypto and security resources</A></H3> -<H4><A name="std.links">The standard link collections</A></H4> -<P>Two enormous collections of links, each the standard reference in its - area:</P> -<DL> -<DT>Gene Spafford's<A href="http://www.cerias.purdue.edu/coast/hotlist/"> - COAST hotlist</A></DT> -<DD>Computer and network security.</DD> -<DT>Peter Gutmann's<A href="http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/links.html"> - Encryption and Security-related Resources</A></DT> -<DD>Cryptography.</DD> -</DL> -<H4><A name="FAQ">Frequently Asked Question (FAQ) documents</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.faqs.org/faqs/cryptography-faq/">Cryptography - FAQ</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.interhack.net/pubs/fwfaq">Firewall FAQ</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.whitefang.com/sup/secure-faq.html">Secure Unix - Programming FAQ</A></LI> -<LI>FAQs for specific programs are listed in the<A href="#tools"> tools</A> - section below.</LI> -</UL> -<H4><A name="cryptover">Tutorials</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI>Gary Kessler's<A href="http://www.garykessler.net/library/crypto.html"> - Overview of Cryptography</A></LI> -<LI>Terry Ritter's<A href="http://www.ciphersbyritter.com/LEARNING.HTM"> - introduction</A></LI> -<LI>Peter Gutman's<A href="http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/tutorial/index.html"> - cryptography</A> tutorial (500 slides in PDF format)</LI> -<LI>Amir Herzberg of IBM's sildes for his course<A href="http://www.hrl.il.ibm.com/mpay/course.html"> - Introduction to Cryptography and Electronic Commerce</A></LI> -<LI>the<A href="http://www.gnupg.org/gph/en/manual/c173.html"> concepts - section</A> of the<A href="#GPG"> GNU Privacy Guard</A> documentation</LI> -<LI>Bruce Schneier's self-study<A href="http://www.counterpane.com/self-study.html"> - cryptanalysis</A> course</LI> -</UL> -<P>See also the<A href="#interesting"> interesting papers</A> section - below.</P> -<H4><A name="standards">Crypto and security standards</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://csrc.nist.gov/cc">Common Criteria</A>, new - international computer and network security standards to replace the - "Rainbow" series</LI> -<LI>AES<A href="http://csrc.nist.gov/encryption/aes/aes_home.htm"> - Advanced Encryption Standard</A> which will replace DES</LI> -<LI><A href="http://grouper.ieee.org/groups/1363">IEEE P-1363 public key - standard</A></LI> -<LI>our collection of links for the<A href="#ipsec.link"> IPsec</A> - standards</LI> -<LI>history of<A href="http://www.visi.com/crypto/evalhist/index.html"> - formal evaluation</A> of security policies and implementation</LI> -</UL> -<H4><A name="quotes">Crypto quotes</A></H4> -<P>There are several collections of cryptographic quotes on the net:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.eff.org/pub/EFF/quotes.eff">the EFF</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.samsimpson.com/cquotes.php">Sam Simpson</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.amk.ca/quotations/cryptography/page-1.html">AM - Kutchling</A></LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="policy">Cryptography law and policy</A></H3> -<H4><A name="legal">Surveys of crypto law</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI>International survey of<A href="http://cwis.kub.nl/~FRW/PEOPLE/koops/lawsurvy.htm"> - crypto law</A>.</LI> -<LI>International survey of<A href="http://rechten.kub.nl/simone/ds-lawsu.htm"> - digital signature law</A></LI> -</UL> -<H4><A name="oppose">Organisations opposing crypto restrictions</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI>The<A href="#EFF"> EFF</A>'s archives on<A href="http://www.eff.org/pub/Privacy/"> - privacy</A> and<A href="http://www.eff.org/pub/Privacy/ITAR_export/"> - export control</A>.</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.gilc.org">Global Internet Liberty Campaign</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.cdt.org/crypto">Center for Democracy and - Technology</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.privacyinternational.org/">Privacy International</A> -, who give out<A href="http://www.bigbrotherawards.org/"> Big Brother - Awards</A> to snoopy organisations</LI> -</UL> -<H4><A name="other.policy">Other information on crypto policy</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI><A href="ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc1984.txt">RFC 1984</A>, the<A href="#IAB"> - IAB</A> and<A href="#IESG"> IESG</A> Statement on Cryptographic - Technology and the Internet.</LI> -<LI>John Young's collection of<A href="http://cryptome.org/"> documents</A> - of interest to the cryptography, open government and privacy movements, - organized chronologically</LI> -<LI>AT&T researcher Matt Blaze's Encryption, Privacy and Security<A href="http://www.crypto.com"> - Resource Page</A></LI> -<LI>A good<A href="http://cryptome.org/crypto97-ne.htm"> overview</A> of - the issues from Australia.</LI> -</UL> -<P>See also our documentation section on the<A href="politics.html"> - history and politics</A> of cryptography.</P> -<H3><A name="crypto.tech">Cryptography technical information</A></H3> -<H4><A name="cryptolinks">Collections of crypto links</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.counterpane.com/hotlist.html">Counterpane</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/links.html">Peter - Gutman's links</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.pca.dfn.de/eng/team/ske/pem-dok.html">PKI links</A> -</LI> -<LI><A href="http://crypto.yashy.com/www/">Robert Guerra's links</A></LI> -</UL> -<H4><A name="papers">Lists of online cryptography papers</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.counterpane.com/biblio">Counterpane</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.cryptography.com/resources/papers"> -cryptography.com</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.cryptosoft.com/html/secpub.htm">Cryptosoft</A></LI> -</UL> -<H4><A name="interesting">Particularly interesting papers</A></H4> -<P>These papers emphasize important issues around the use of - cryptography, and the design and management of secure systems.</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.counterpane.com/keylength.html">Key length - requirements for security</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/users/rja14/wcf.html">Why - Cryptosystems Fail</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.cdt.org/crypto/risks98/">Risks of escrowed - encryption</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.counterpane.com/pitfalls.html">Security pitfalls - in cryptography</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.acm.org/classics/sep95">Reflections on Trusting - Trust</A>, Ken Thompson on Trojan horse design</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.apache-ssl.org/disclosure.pdf">Security against - Compelled Disclosure</A>, how to maintain privacy in the face of legal - or other coersion</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="compsec">Computer and network security</A></H3> -<H4><A name="seclink">Security links</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.cs.purdue.edu/coast/hotlist">COAST Hotlist</A></LI> -<LI>DMOZ open directory project<A href="http://dmoz.org/Computers/Security/"> - computer security</A> links</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www-cse.ucsd.edu/users/bsy/sec.html">Bennet Yee</A></LI> -<LI>Mike Fuhr's<A href="http://www.fuhr.org/~mfuhr/computers/security.html"> - link collection</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.networkintrusion.co.uk/">links</A> with an - emphasis on intrusion detection</LI> -</UL> -<H4><A name="firewall.web">Firewall links</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.cs.purdue.edu/coast/firewalls">COAST firewalls</A> -</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.zeuros.co.uk">Firewalls Resource page</A></LI> -</UL> -<H4><A name="vpn">VPN links</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.vpnc.org">VPN Consortium</A></LI> -<LI>First VPN's<A href="http://www.firstvpn.com/research/rhome.html"> - white paper</A> collection</LI> -</UL> -<H4><A name="tools">Security tools</A></H4> -<UL> -<LI>PGP -- mail encryption -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.pgp.com/">PGP Inc.</A> (part of NAI) for - commercial versions</LI> -<LI><A href="http://web.mit.edu/network/pgp.html">MIT</A> distributes - the NAI product for non-commercial use</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.pgpi.org/">international</A> distribution site</LI> -<LI><A href="http://gnupg.org">GNU Privacy Guard (GPG)</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.dk.pgp.net/pgpnet/pgp-faq/">PGP FAQ</A></LI> -</UL> - A message in our mailing list archive has considerable detail on<A href="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/linux-ipsec/html/2000/12/msg00029.html"> - available versions</A> of PGP and on IPsec support in them. -<P><STRONG>Note:</STRONG> A fairly nasty bug exists in all commercial - PGP versions from 5.5 through 6.5.3. If you have one of those,<STRONG> - upgrade now</STRONG>.</P> -</LI> -<LI>SSH -- secure remote login -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.ssh.fi">SSH Communications Security</A>, for the - original software. It is free for trial, academic and non-commercial - use.</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.openssh.com/">Open SSH</A>, the Open BSD team's - free replacement</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.freessh.org/">freessh.org</A>, links to free - implementations for many systems</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.uni-karlsruhe.de/~ig25/ssh-faq">SSH FAQ</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/">Putty</A> -, an SSH client for Windows</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI>Tripwire saves message digests of your system files. Re-calculate - the digests and compare to saved values to detect any file changes. - There are several versions available: -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.tripwiresecurity.com/">commercial version</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.tripwire.org/">Open Source</A></LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.snort.org">Snort</A> and<A href="http://www.lids.org"> - LIDS</A> are intrusion detection system for Linux</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.fish.com/~zen/satan/satan.html">SATAN</A> System - Administrators Tool for Analysing Networks</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.insecure.org/nmap/">NMAP</A> Network Mapper</LI> -<LI><A href="ftp://ftp.porcupine.org/pub/security/index.html">Wietse - Venema's page</A> with various tools</LI> -<LI><A href="http://ita.ee.lbl.gov/index.html">Internet Traffic Archive</A> -, various tools to analyze network traffic, mostly scripts to organise - and format tcpdump(8) output for specific purposes</LI> -<LI><A name="ssmail">ssmail -- sendmail patched to do</A><A href="#carpediem"> - opportunistic encryption</A> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.home.aone.net.au/qualcomm/">web page</A> with - links to code and to a Usenix paper describing it, in PDF</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.openca.org/">Open CA</A> project to develop a - freely distributed<A href="#CA"> Certification Authority</A> for - building a open<A href="#PKI"> Public Key Infrastructure</A>.</LI> -</UL> -<H3><A name="people">Links to home pages</A></H3> -<P>David Wagner at Berkeley provides a set of links to<A href="http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~daw/people/crypto.html"> - home pages</A> of cryptographers, cypherpunks and computer security - people.</P> -<HR> -<H1><A name="ourgloss">Glossary for the Linux FreeS/WAN project</A></H1> -<P>Entries are in alphabetical order. Some entries are only one line or - one paragraph long. Others run to several paragraphs. I have tried to - put the essential information in the first paragraph so you can skip - the other paragraphs if that seems appropriate.</P> -<HR> -<H2><A name="jump">Jump to a letter in the glossary</A></H2> -<CENTER> <BIG><B><A href="#0">numeric</A><A href="#A"> A</A><A href="#B"> - B</A><A href="#C"> C</A><A href="#D"> D</A><A href="#E"> E</A><A href="#F"> - F</A><A href="#G"> G</A><A href="#H"> H</A><A href="#I"> I</A><A href="#J"> - J</A><A href="#K"> K</A><A href="#L"> L</A><A href="#M"> M</A><A href="#N"> - N</A><A href="#O"> O</A><A href="#P"> P</A><A href="#Q"> Q</A><A href="#R"> - R</A><A href="#S"> S</A><A href="#T"> T</A><A href="#U"> U</A><A href="#V"> - V</A><A href="#W"> W</A><A href="#X"> X</A><A href="#Y"> Y</A><A href="#Z"> - Z</A></B></BIG></CENTER> -<HR> -<H2><A name="gloss">Other glossaries</A></H2> -<P>Other glossaries which overlap this one include:</P> -<UL> -<LI>The VPN Consortium's glossary of<A href="http://www.vpnc.org/terms.html"> - VPN terms</A>.</LI> -<LI>glossary portion of the<A href="http://www.rsa.com/rsalabs/faq/B.html"> - Cryptography FAQ</A></LI> -<LI>an extensive crytographic glossary on<A href="http://www.ciphersbyritter.com/GLOSSARY.HTM"> - Terry Ritter's</A> page.</LI> -<LI>The<A href="#NSA"> NSA</A>'s<A href="http://www.sans.org/newlook/resources/glossary.htm"> - glossary of computer security</A> on the<A href="http://www.sans.org"> - SANS Institute</A> site.</LI> -<LI>a small glossary for Internet Security at<A href="http://www5.zdnet.com/pcmag/pctech/content/special/glossaries/internetsecurity.html"> - PC magazine</A></LI> -<LI>The<A href="http://www.visi.com/crypto/inet-crypto/glossary.html"> - glossary</A> from Richard Smith's book<A href="#Smith"> Internet - Cryptography</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>Several Internet glossaries are available as RFCs:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc1208.txt">Glossary of - Networking Terms</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc1983.txt">Internet User's - Glossary</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2828.txt">Internet - Security Glossary</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>More general glossary or dictionary information:</P> -<UL> -<LI>Free Online Dictionary of Computing (FOLDOC) -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.nightflight.com/foldoc">North America</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://wombat.doc.ic.ac.uk/foldoc/index.html">Europe</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.nue.org/foldoc/index.html">Japan</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>There are many more mirrors of this dictionary.</P> -</LI> -<LI>The Jargon File, the definitive resource for hacker slang and - folklore -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.netmeg.net/jargon">North America</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://info.wins.uva.nl/~mes/jargon/">Holland</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.tuxedo.org/~esr/jargon">home page</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>There are also many mirrors of this. See the home page for a list.</P> -</LI> -<LI>A general<A href="http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245glosf.htm#Navigate"> - technology glossary</A></LI> -<LI>An<A href="http://www.yourdictionary.com/"> online dictionary - resource page</A> with pointers to many dictionaries for many languages</LI> -<LI>A<A href="http://www.onelook.com/"> search engine</A> that accesses - several hundred online dictionaries</LI> -<LI>O'Reilly<A href="http://www.ora.com/reference/dictionary/"> - Dictionary of PC Hardware and Data Communications Terms</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.FreeSoft.org/CIE/index.htm">Connected</A> - Internet encyclopedia</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.whatis.com/">whatis.com</A></LI> -</UL> -<HR> -<H2><A name="definitions">Definitions</A></H2> -<DL> -<DT><A name="0">0</A></DT> -<DT><A name="3DES">3DES (Triple DES)</A></DT> -<DD>Using three<A href="#DES"> DES</A> encryptions on a single data - block, with at least two different keys, to get higher security than is - available from a single DES pass. The three-key version of 3DES is the - default encryption algorithm for<A href="#FreeSWAN"> Linux FreeS/WAN</A> -. -<P><A href="#IPSEC">IPsec</A> always does 3DES with three different - keys, as required by RFC 2451. For an explanation of the two-key - variant, see<A href="#2key"> two key triple DES</A>. Both use an<A href="#EDE"> - EDE</A> encrypt-decrypt-encrpyt sequence of operations.</P> -<P>Single<A href="#DES"> DES</A> is<A href="#desnotsecure"> insecure</A> -.</P> -<P>Double DES is ineffective. Using two 56-bit keys, one might expect an - attacker to have to do 2<SUP>112</SUP> work to break it. In fact, only - 2<SUP>57</SUP> work is required with a<A href="#meet"> - meet-in-the-middle attack</A>, though a large amount of memory is also - required. Triple DES is vulnerable to a similar attack, but that just - reduces the work factor from the 2<SUP>168</SUP> one might expect to 2<SUP> -112</SUP>. That provides adequate protection against<A href="#brute"> - brute force</A> attacks, and no better attack is known.</P> -<P>3DES can be somewhat slow compared to other ciphers. It requires - three DES encryptions per block. DES was designed for hardware - implementation and includes some operations which are difficult in - software. However, the speed we get is quite acceptable for many uses. - See our<A href="performance.html"> performance</A> document for - details.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="A">A</A></DT> -<DT><A name="active">Active attack</A></DT> -<DD>An attack in which the attacker does not merely eavesdrop (see<A href="#passive"> - passive attack</A>) but takes action to change, delete, reroute, add, - forge or divert data. Perhaps the best-known active attack is<A href="#middle"> - man-in-the-middle</A>. In general,<A href="#authentication"> - authentication</A> is a useful defense against active attacks.</DD> -<DT><A name="AES">AES</A></DT> -<DD>The<B> A</B>dvanced<B> E</B>ncryption<B> S</B>tandard -- a new<A href="#block"> - block cipher</A> standard to replace<A href="#desnotsecure"> DES</A> -- - developed by<A href="#NIST"> NIST</A>, the US National Institute of - Standards and Technology. DES used 64-bit blocks and a 56-bit key. AES - ciphers use a 128-bit block and 128, 192 or 256-bit keys. The larger - block size helps resist<A href="#birthday"> birthday attacks</A> while - the large key size prevents<A href="#brute"> brute force attacks</A>. -<P>Fifteen proposals meeting NIST's basic criteria were submitted in - 1998 and subjected to intense discussion and analysis, "round one" - evaluation. In August 1999, NIST narrowed the field to five "round two" - candidates:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.research.ibm.com/security/mars.html">Mars</A> - from IBM</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.rsa.com/rsalabs/aes/">RC6</A> from RSA</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.esat.kuleuven.ac.be/~rijmen/rijndael/">Rijndael</A> - from two Belgian researchers</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~rja14/serpent.html">Serpent</A>, a - British-Norwegian-Israeli collaboration</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.counterpane.com/twofish.html">Twofish</A> from - the consulting firm<A href="http://www.counterpane.com"> Counterpane</A> -</LI> -</UL> -<P>Three of the five finalists -- Rijndael, Serpent and Twofish -- have - completely open licenses.</P> -<P>In October 2000, NIST announced the winner -- Rijndael.</P> -<P>For more information, see:</P> -<UL> -<LI>NIST's<A href="http://csrc.nist.gov/encryption/aes/aes_home.htm"> - AES home page</A></LI> -<LI>the Block Cipher Lounge<A href="http://www.ii.uib.no/~larsr/aes.html"> - AES page</A></LI> -<LI>Brian Gladman's<A href="http://fp.gladman.plus.com/cryptography_technology/index.htm"> - code and benchmarks</A></LI> -<LI>Helger Lipmaa's<A href="http://www.tcs.hut.fi/~helger/aes/"> survey - of implementations</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>AES will be added to a future release of<A href="#FreeSWAN"> Linux - FreeS/WAN</A>. Likely we will add all three of the finalists with good - licenses. User-written<A href="#patch"> AES patches</A> are already - available.</P> -<P>Adding AES may also require adding stronger hashes,<A href="#SHA-256"> - SHA-256, SHA-384 and SHA-512</A>.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="AH">AH</A></DT> -<DD>The<A href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A><B> A</B>uthentication<B> H</B>eader, - added after the IP header. For details, see our<A href="#AH.ipsec"> - IPsec</A> document and/or RFC 2402.</DD> -<DT><A name="alicebob">Alice and Bob</A></DT> -<DD>A and B, the standard example users in writing on cryptography and - coding theory. Carol and Dave join them for protocols which require - more players. -<P>Bruce Schneier extends these with many others such as Eve the - Eavesdropper and Victor the Verifier. His extensions seem to be in the - process of becoming standard as well. See page 23 of<A href="#schneier"> - Applied Cryptography</A></P> -<P>Alice and Bob have an amusing<A href="http://www.conceptlabs.co.uk/alicebob.html"> - biography</A> on the web.</P> -</DD> -<DT>ARPA</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#DARPA"> DARPA</A></DD> -<DT><A name="ASIO">ASIO</A></DT> -<DD>Australian Security Intelligence Organisation.</DD> -<DT>Asymmetric cryptography</DT> -<DD>See<A href="#public"> public key cryptography</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="authentication">Authentication</A></DT> -<DD>Ensuring that a message originated from the expected sender and has - not been altered on route.<A href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A> uses - authentication in two places: -<UL> -<LI>peer authentication, authenticating the players in<A href="#IKE"> - IKE</A>'s<A href="#DH"> Diffie-Hellman</A> key exchanges to prevent<A href="#middle"> - man-in-the-middle attacks</A>. This can be done in a number of ways. - The methods supported by FreeS/WAN are discussed in our<A href="#choose"> - advanced configuration</A> document.</LI> -<LI>packet authentication, authenticating packets on an established<A href="#SA"> - SA</A>, either with a separate<A href="#AH"> authentication header</A> - or with the optional authentication in the<A href="#ESP"> ESP</A> - protocol. In either case, packet authentication uses a<A href="#HMAC"> - hashed message athentication code</A> technique.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Outside IPsec, passwords are perhaps the most common authentication - mechanism. Their function is essentially to authenticate the person's - identity to the system. Passwords are generally only as secure as the - network they travel over. If you send a cleartext password over a - tapped phone line or over a network with a packet sniffer on it, the - security provided by that password becomes zero. Sending an encrypted - password is no better; the attacker merely records it and reuses it at - his convenience. This is called a<A href="#replay"> replay</A> attack.</P> -<P>A common solution to this problem is a<A href="#challenge"> - challenge-response</A> system. This defeats simple eavesdropping and - replay attacks. Of course an attacker might still try to break the - cryptographic algorithm used, or the<A href="#random"> random number</A> - generator.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="auto">Automatic keying</A></DT> -<DD>A mode in which keys are automatically generated at connection - establisment and new keys automaically created periodically thereafter. - Contrast with<A href="#manual"> manual keying</A> in which a single - stored key is used. -<P>IPsec uses the<A href="#DH"> Diffie-Hellman key exchange protocol</A> - to create keys. An<A href="#authentication"> authentication</A> - mechansim is required for this. FreeS/WAN normally uses<A href="#RSA"> - RSA</A> for this. Other methods supported are discussed in our<A href="#choose"> - advanced configuration</A> document.</P> -<P>Having an attacker break the authentication is emphatically not a - good idea. An attacker that breaks authentication, and manages to - subvert some other network entities (DNS, routers or gateways), can use - a<A href="#middle"> man-in-the middle attack</A> to break the security - of your IPsec connections.</P> -<P>However, having an attacker break the authentication in automatic - keying is not quite as bad as losing the key in manual keying.</P> -<UL> -<LI>An attacker who reads /etc/ipsec.conf and gets the keys for a - manually keyed connection can, without further effort, read all - messages encrypted with those keys, including any old messages he may - have archived.</LI> -<LI>Automatic keying has a property called<A href="#PFS"> perfect - forward secrecy</A>. An attacker who breaks the authentication gets - none of the automatically generated keys and cannot immediately read - any messages. He has to mount a successful<A href="#middle"> - man-in-the-middle attack</A> in real time before he can read anything. - He cannot read old archived messages at all and will not be able to - read any future messages not caught by man-in-the-middle tricks.</LI> -</UL> -<P>That said, the secrets used for authentication, stored in<A href="manpage.d/ipsec.secrets.5.html"> - ipsec.secrets(5)</A>, should still be protected as tightly as - cryptographic keys.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="B">B</A></DT> -<DT><A href="http://www.nortelnetworks.com">Bay Networks</A></DT> -<DD>A vendor of routers, hubs and related products, now a subsidiary of - Nortel. Interoperation between their IPsec products and Linux FreeS/WAN - was problematic at last report; see our<A href="interop.html#bay"> - interoperation</A> section.</DD> -<DT><A name="benchmarks">benchmarks</A></DT> -<DD>Our default block cipher,<A href="#3DES"> triple DES</A>, is slower - than many alternate ciphers that might be used. Speeds achieved, - however, seem adequate for many purposes. For example, the assembler - code from the<A href="#LIBDES"> LIBDES</A> library we use encrypts 1.6 - megabytes per second on a Pentium 200, according to the test program - supplied with the library. -<P>For more detail, see our document on<A href="performance.html"> - FreeS/WAN performance</A>.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="BIND">BIND</A></DT> -<DD><B>B</B>erkeley<B> I</B>nternet<B> N</B>ame<B> D</B>aemon, a widely - used implementation of<A href="#DNS"> DNS</A> (Domain Name Service). - See our bibliography for a<A href="#DNS"> useful reference</A>. See the<A -href="http://www.isc.org/bind.html"> BIND home page</A> for more - information and the latest version.</DD> -<DT><A name="birthday">Birthday attack</A></DT> -<DD>A cryptographic attack based on the mathematics exemplified by the<A href="#paradox"> - birthday paradox</A>. This math turns up whenever the question of two - cryptographic operations producing the same result becomes an issue: -<UL> -<LI><A href="#collision">collisions</A> in<A href="#digest"> message - digest</A> functions.</LI> -<LI>identical output blocks from a<A href="#block"> block cipher</A></LI> -<LI>repetition of a challenge in a<A href="#challenge"> - challenge-response</A> system</LI> -</UL> -<P>Resisting such attacks is part of the motivation for:</P> -<UL> -<LI>hash algorithms such as<A href="#SHA"> SHA</A> and<A href="#RIPEMD"> - RIPEMD-160</A> giving a 160-bit result rather than the 128 bits of<A href="#MD4"> - MD4</A>,<A href="#MD5"> MD5</A> and<A href="#RIPEMD"> RIPEMD-128</A>.</LI> -<LI><A href="#AES">AES</A> block ciphers using a 128-bit block instead - of the 64-bit block of most current ciphers</LI> -<LI><A href="#IPSEC">IPsec</A> using a 32-bit counter for packets sent - on an<A href="#auto"> automatically keyed</A><A href="#SA"> SA</A> and - requiring that the connection always be rekeyed before the counter - overflows.</LI> -</UL> -</DD> -<DT><A name="paradox">Birthday paradox</A></DT> -<DD>Not really a paradox, just a rather counter-intuitive mathematical - fact. In a group of 23 people, the chance of a least one pair having - the same birthday is over 50%. -<P>The second person has 1 chance in 365 (ignoring leap years) of - matching the first. If they don't match, the third person's chances of - matching one of them are 2/365. The 4th, 3/365, and so on. The total of - these chances grows more quickly than one might guess.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="block">Block cipher</A></DT> -<DD>A<A href="#symmetric"> symmetric cipher</A> which operates on - fixed-size blocks of plaintext, giving a block of ciphertext for each. - Contrast with<A href="#stream"> stream cipher</A>. Block ciphers can be - used in various<A href="#mode"> modes</A> when multiple block are to be - encrypted. -<P><A href="#DES">DES</A> is among the the best known and widely used - block ciphers, but is now obsolete. Its 56-bit key size makes it<A href="#desnotsecure"> - highly insecure</A> today.<A href="#3DES"> Triple DES</A> is the - default block cipher for<A href="#FreeSWAN"> Linux FreeS/WAN</A>.</P> -<P>The current generation of block ciphers -- such as<A href="#Blowfish"> - Blowfish</A>,<A href="#CAST128"> CAST-128</A> and<A href="#IDEA"> IDEA</A> - -- all use 64-bit blocks and 128-bit keys. The next generation,<A href="#AES"> - AES</A>, uses 128-bit blocks and supports key sizes up to 256 bits.</P> -<P>The<A href="http://www.ii.uib.no/~larsr/bc.html"> Block Cipher Lounge</A> - web site has more information.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="Blowfish">Blowfish</A></DT> -<DD>A<A href="#block"> block cipher</A> using 64-bit blocks and keys of - up to 448 bits, designed by<A href="#schneier"> Bruce Schneier</A> and - used in several products. -<P>This is not required by the<A href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A> RFCs and not - currently used in<A href="#FreeSWAN"> Linux FreeS/WAN</A>.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="brute">Brute force attack (exhaustive search)</A></DT> -<DD>Breaking a cipher by trying all possible keys. This is always - possible in theory (except against a<A href="#OTP"> one-time pad</A>), - but it becomes practical only if the key size is inadequate. For an - important example, see our document on the<A href="#desnotsecure"> - insecurity of DES</A> with its 56-bit key. For an analysis of key sizes - required to resist plausible brute force attacks, see<A href="http://www.counterpane.com/keylength.html"> - this paper</A>. -<P>Longer keys protect against brute force attacks. Each extra bit in - the key doubles the number of possible keys and therefore doubles the - work a brute force attack must do. A large enough key defeats<STRONG> - any</STRONG> brute force attack.</P> -<P>For example, the EFF's<A href="#EFF"> DES Cracker</A> searches a - 56-bit key space in an average of a few days. Let us assume an attacker - that can find a 64-bit key (256 times harder) by brute force search in - a second (a few hundred thousand times faster). For a 96-bit key, that - attacker needs 2<SUP>32</SUP> seconds, about 135 years. Against a - 128-bit key, he needs 2<SUP>32</SUP> times that, over 500,000,000,000 - years. Your data is then obviously secure against brute force attacks. - Even if our estimate of the attacker's speed is off by a factor of a - million, it still takes him over 500,000 years to crack a message.</P> -<P>This is why</P> -<UL> -<LI>single<A href="#DES"> DES</A> is now considered<A href="#desnotsecure"> - dangerously insecure</A></LI> -<LI>all of the current generation of<A href="#block"> block ciphers</A> - use a 128-bit or longer key</LI> -<LI><A href="#AES">AES</A> ciphers support keysizes 128, 192 and 256 - bits</LI> -<LI>any cipher we add to Linux FreeS/WAN will have<EM> at least</EM> a - 128-bit key</LI> -</UL> -<P><STRONG>Cautions:</STRONG> -<BR><EM> Inadequate keylength always indicates a weak cipher</EM> but it - is important to note that<EM> adequate keylength does not necessarily - indicate a strong cipher</EM>. There are many attacks other than brute - force, and adequate keylength<EM> only</EM> guarantees resistance to - brute force. Any cipher, whatever its key size, will be weak if design - or implementation flaws allow other attacks.</P> -<P>Also,<EM> once you have adequate keylength</EM> (somewhere around 90 - or 100 bits),<EM> adding more key bits make no practical difference</EM> -, even against brute force. Consider our 128-bit example above that - takes 500,000,000,000 years to break by brute force. We really don't - care how many zeroes there are on the end of that, as long as the - number remains ridiculously large. That is, we don't care exactly how - large the key is as long as it is large enough.</P> -<P>There may be reasons of convenience in the design of the cipher to - support larger keys. For example<A href="#Blowfish"> Blowfish</A> - allows up to 448 bits and<A href="#RC4"> RC4</A> up to 2048, but beyond - 100-odd bits it makes no difference to practical security.</P> -</DD> -<DT>Bureau of Export Administration</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#BXA"> BXA</A></DD> -<DT><A name="BXA">BXA</A></DT> -<DD>The US Commerce Department's<B> B</B>ureau of E<B>x</B>port<B> A</B> -dministration which administers the<A href="#EAR"> EAR</A> Export - Administration Regulations controling the export of, among other - things, cryptography.</DD> -<DT><A name="C">C</A></DT> -<DT><A name="CA">CA</A></DT> -<DD><B>C</B>ertification<B> A</B>uthority, an entity in a<A href="#PKI"> - public key infrastructure</A> that can certify keys by signing them. - Usually CAs form a hierarchy. The top of this hierarchy is called the<A href="#rootCA"> - root CA</A>. -<P>See<A href="#web"> Web of Trust</A> for an alternate model.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="CAST128">CAST-128</A></DT> -<DD>A<A href="#block"> block cipher</A> using 64-bit blocks and 128-bit - keys, described in RFC 2144 and used in products such as<A href="#Entrust"> - Entrust</A> and recent versions of<A href="#PGP"> PGP</A>. -<P>This is not required by the<A href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A> RFCs and not - currently used in<A href="#FreeSWAN"> Linux FreeS/WAN</A>.</P> -</DD> -<DT>CAST-256</DT> -<DD><A href="#Entrust">Entrust</A>'s candidate cipher for the<A href="#AES"> - AES standard</A>, largely based on the<A href="#CAST128"> CAST-128</A> - design.</DD> -<DT><A name="CBC">CBC mode</A></DT> -<DD><B>C</B>ipher<B> B</B>lock<B> C</B>haining<A href="#mode"> mode</A>, - a method of using a<A href="#block"> block cipher</A> in which for each - block except the first, the result of the previous encryption is XORed - into the new block before it is encrypted. CBC is the mode used in<A href="#IPSEC"> - IPsec</A>. -<P>An<A href="#IV"> initialisation vector</A> (IV) must be provided. It - is XORed into the first block before encryption. The IV need not be - secret but should be different for each message and unpredictable.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="CIDR">CIDR</A></DT> -<DD><B>C</B>lassless<B> I</B>nter-<B>D</B>omain<B> R</B>outing, an - addressing scheme used to describe networks not restricted to the old - Class A, B, and C sizes. A CIDR block is written<VAR> address</VAR>/<VAR> -mask</VAR>, where<VAR> address</VAR> is a 32-bit Internet address. The - first<VAR> mask</VAR> bits of<VAR> address</VAR> are part of the - gateway address, while the remaining bits designate other host - addresses. For example, the CIDR block 192.0.2.96/27 describes a - network with gateway 192.0.2.96, hosts 192.0.2.96 through 192.0.2.126 - and broadcast 192.0.2.127. -<P>FreeS/WAN policy group files accept CIDR blocks of the format<VAR> - address</VAR>/[<VAR>mask</VAR>], where<VAR> address</VAR> may take the - form<VAR> name.domain.tld</VAR>. An absent<VAR> mask</VAR> is assumed - to be /32.</P> -</DD> -<DT>Certification Authority</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#CA"> CA</A></DD> -<DT><A name="challenge">Challenge-response authentication</A></DT> -<DD>An<A href="#authentication"> authentication</A> system in which one - player generates a<A href="#random"> random number</A>, encrypts it and - sends the result as a challenge. The other player decrypts and sends - back the result. If the result is correct, that proves to the first - player that the second player knew the appropriate secret, required for - the decryption. Variations on this technique exist using<A href="#public"> - public key</A> or<A href="#symmetric"> symmetric</A> cryptography. Some - provide two-way authentication, assuring each player of the other's - identity. -<P>This is more secure than passwords against two simple attacks:</P> -<UL> -<LI>If cleartext passwords are sent across the wire (e.g. for telnet), - an eavesdropper can grab them. The attacker may even be able to break - into other systems if the user has chosen the same password for them.</LI> -<LI>If an encrypted password is sent, an attacker can record the - encrypted form and use it later. This is called a replay attack.</LI> -</UL> -<P>A challenge-response system never sends a password, either cleartext - or encrypted. An attacker cannot record the response to one challenge - and use it as a response to a later challenge. The random number is - different each time.</P> -<P>Of course an attacker might still try to break the cryptographic - algorithm used, or the<A href="#random"> random number</A> generator.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="mode">Cipher Modes</A></DT> -<DD>Different ways of using a block cipher when encrypting multiple - blocks. -<P>Four standard modes were defined for<A href="#DES"> DES</A> in<A href="#FIPS"> - FIPS</A> 81. They can actually be applied with any block cipher.</P> -<TABLE><TBODY></TBODY> -<TR><TD></TD><TD><A href="#ECB">ECB</A></TD><TD>Electronic CodeBook</TD><TD> -encrypt each block independently</TD></TR> -<TR><TD></TD><TD><A href="#CBC">CBC</A></TD><TD>Cipher Block Chaining -<BR></TD><TD>XOR previous block ciphertext into new block plaintext - before encrypting new block</TD></TR> -<TR><TD></TD><TD>CFB</TD><TD>Cipher FeedBack</TD><TD></TD></TR> -<TR><TD></TD><TD>OFB</TD><TD>Output FeedBack</TD><TD></TD></TR> -</TABLE> -<P><A href="#IPSEC">IPsec</A> uses<A href="#CBC"> CBC</A> mode since - this is only marginally slower than<A href="#ECB"> ECB</A> and is more - secure. In ECB mode the same plaintext always encrypts to the same - ciphertext, unless the key is changed. In CBC mode, this does not - occur.</P> -<P>Various other modes are also possible, but none of them are used in - IPsec.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="ciphertext">Ciphertext</A></DT> -<DD>The encrypted output of a cipher, as opposed to the unencrypted<A href="#plaintext"> - plaintext</A> input.</DD> -<DT><A href="http://www.cisco.com">Cisco</A></DT> -<DD>A vendor of routers, hubs and related products. Their IPsec products - interoperate with Linux FreeS/WAN; see our<A href="#cisco"> interop</A> - section.</DD> -<DT><A name="client">Client</A></DT> -<DD>This term has at least two distinct uses in discussing IPsec: -<UL> -<LI>The<STRONG> clients of an IPsec gateway</STRONG> are the machines it - protects, typically on one or more subnets behind the gateway. In this - usage, all the machines on an office network are clients of that - office's IPsec gateway. Laptop or home machines connecting to the - office, however, are<EM> not</EM> clients of that gateway. They are - remote gateways, running the other end of an IPsec connection. Each of - them is also its own client.</LI> -<LI><STRONG>IPsec client software</STRONG> is used to describe software - which runs on various standalone machines to let them connect to IPsec - networks. In this usage, a laptop or home machine connecting to the - office is a client, and the office gateway is the server.</LI> -</UL> -<P>We generally use the term in the first sense. Vendors of Windows - IPsec solutions often use it in the second. See this<A href="interop.html#client.server"> - discussion</A>.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="cc">Common Criteria</A></DT> -<DD>A set of international security classifications which are replacing - the old US<A href="#rainbow"> Rainbow Book</A> standards and similar - standards in other countries. -<P>Web references include this<A href="http://csrc.nist.gov/cc"> US - government site</A> and this<A href="http://www.commoncriteria.org"> - global home page</A>.</P> -</DD> -<DT>Conventional cryptography</DT> -<DD>See<A href="#symmetric"> symmetric cryptography</A></DD> -<DT><A name="collision">Collision resistance</A></DT> -<DD>The property of a<A href="#digest"> message digest</A> algorithm - which makes it hard for an attacker to find or construct two inputs - which hash to the same output.</DD> -<DT>Copyleft</DT> -<DD>see GNU<A href="#GPL"> General Public License</A></DD> -<DT><A name="CSE">CSE</A></DT> -<DD><A href="http://www.cse-cst.gc.ca/">Communications Security - Establishment</A>, the Canadian organisation for<A href="#SIGINT"> - signals intelligence</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="D">D</A></DT> -<DT><A name="DARPA">DARPA (sometimes just ARPA)</A></DT> -<DD>The US government's<B> D</B>efense<B> A</B>dvanced<B> R</B>esearch<B> - P</B>rojects<B> A</B>gency. Projects they have funded over the years - have included the Arpanet which evolved into the Internet, the TCP/IP - protocol suite (as a replacement for the original Arpanet suite), the - Berkeley 4.x BSD Unix projects, and<A href="#SDNS"> Secure DNS</A>. -<P>For current information, see their<A href="http://www.darpa.mil/ito"> - web site</A>.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="DOS">Denial of service (DoS) attack</A></DT> -<DD>An attack that aims at denying some service to legitimate users of a - system, rather than providing a service to the attacker. -<UL> -<LI>One variant is a flooding attack, overwhelming the system with too - many packets, to much email, or whatever.</LI> -<LI>A closely related variant is a resource exhaustion attack. For - example, consider a "TCP SYN flood" attack. Setting up a TCP connection - involves a three-packet exchange: -<UL> -<LI>Initiator: Connection please (SYN)</LI> -<LI>Responder: OK (ACK)</LI> -<LI>Initiator: OK here too</LI> -</UL> -<P>If the attacker puts bogus source information in the first packet, - such that the second is never delivered, the responder may wait a long - time for the third to come back. If responder has already allocated - memory for the connection data structures, and if many of these bogus - packets arrive, the responder may run out of memory.</P> -</LI> -<LI>Another variant is to feed the system undigestible data, hoping to - make it sick. For example, IP packets are limited in size to 64K bytes - and a fragment carries information on where it starts within that 64K - and how long it is. The "ping of death" delivers fragments that say, - for example, that they start at 60K and are 20K long. Attempting to - re-assemble these without checking for overflow can be fatal.</LI> -</UL> -<P>The two example attacks discussed were both quite effective when - first discovered, capable of crashing or disabling many operating - systems. They were also well-publicised, and today far fewer systems - are vulnerable to them.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="DES">DES</A></DT> -<DD>The<B> D</B>ata<B> E</B>ncryption<B> S</B>tandard, a<A href="#block"> - block cipher</A> with 64-bit blocks and a 56-bit key. Probably the most - widely used<A href="#symmetric"> symmetric cipher</A> ever devised. DES - has been a US government standard for their own use (only for - unclassified data), and for some regulated industries such as banking, - since the late 70's. It is now being replaced by<A href="#AES"> AES</A> -. -<P><A href="#desnotsecure">DES is seriously insecure against current - attacks.</A></P> -<P><A href="#FreeSWAN">Linux FreeS/WAN</A> does not include DES, even - though the RFCs specify it.<B> We strongly recommend that single DES - not be used.</B></P> -<P>See also<A href="#3DES"> 3DES</A> and<A href="#DESX"> DESX</A>, - stronger ciphers based on DES.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="DESX">DESX</A></DT> -<DD>An improved<A href="#DES"> DES</A> suggested by Ron Rivest of RSA - Data Security. It XORs extra key material into the text before and - after applying the DES cipher. -<P>This is not required by the<A href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A> RFCs and not - currently used in<A href="#FreeSWAN"> Linux FreeS/WAN</A>. DESX would - be the easiest additional transform to add; there would be very little - code to write. It would be much faster than 3DES and almost certainly - more secure than DES. However, since it is not in the RFCs other IPsec - implementations cannot be expected to have it.</P> -</DD> -<DT>DH</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#DH"> Diffie-Hellman</A></DD> -<DT><A name="DHCP">DHCP</A></DT> -<DD><STRONG>D</STRONG>ynamic<STRONG> H</STRONG>ost<STRONG> C</STRONG> -onfiguration<STRONG> P</STRONG>rotocol, a method of assigning<A href="#dynamic"> - dynamic IP addresses</A>, and providing additional information such as - addresses of DNS servers and of gateways. See this<A href="http://www.dhcp.org"> - DHCP resource page.</A></DD> -<DT><A name="DH">Diffie-Hellman (DH) key exchange protocol</A></DT> -<DD>A protocol that allows two parties without any initial shared secret - to create one in a manner immune to eavesdropping. Once they have done - this, they can communicate privately by using that shared secret as a - key for a block cipher or as the basis for key exchange. -<P>The protocol is secure against all<A href="#passive"> passive attacks</A> -, but it is not at all resistant to active<A href="#middle"> - man-in-the-middle attacks</A>. If a third party can impersonate Bob to - Alice and vice versa, then no useful secret can be created. - Authentication of the participants is a prerequisite for safe - Diffie-Hellman key exchange. IPsec can use any of several<A href="#authentication"> - authentication</A> mechanisims. Those supported by FreeS/WAN are - discussed in our<A href="#choose"> configuration</A> section.</P> -<P>The Diffie-Hellman key exchange is based on the<A href="#dlog"> - discrete logarithm</A> problem and is secure unless someone finds an - efficient solution to that problem.</P> -<P>Given a prime<VAR> p</VAR> and generator<VAR> g</VAR> (explained - under<A href="#dlog"> discrete log</A> below), Alice:</P> -<UL> -<LI>generates a random number<VAR> a</VAR></LI> -<LI>calculates<VAR> A = g^a modulo p</VAR></LI> -<LI>sends<VAR> A</VAR> to Bob</LI> -</UL> -<P>Meanwhile Bob:</P> -<UL> -<LI>generates a random number<VAR> b</VAR></LI> -<LI>calculates<VAR> B = g^b modulo p</VAR></LI> -<LI>sends<VAR> B</VAR> to Alice</LI> -</UL> -<P>Now Alice and Bob can both calculate the shared secret<VAR> s = - g^(ab)</VAR>. Alice knows<VAR> a</VAR> and<VAR> B</VAR>, so she - calculates<VAR> s = B^a</VAR>. Bob knows<VAR> A</VAR> and<VAR> b</VAR> - so he calculates<VAR> s = A^b</VAR>.</P> -<P>An eavesdropper will know<VAR> p</VAR> and<VAR> g</VAR> since these - are made public, and can intercept<VAR> A</VAR> and<VAR> B</VAR> but, - short of solving the<A href="#dlog"> discrete log</A> problem, these do - not let him or her discover the secret<VAR> s</VAR>.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="signature">Digital signature</A></DT> -<DD>Sender: -<UL> -<LI>calculates a<A href="#digest"> message digest</A> of a document</LI> -<LI>encrypts the digest with his or her private key, using some<A href="#public"> - public key cryptosystem</A>.</LI> -<LI>attaches the encrypted digest to the document as a signature</LI> -</UL> -<P>Receiver:</P> -<UL> -<LI>calculates a digest of the document (not including the signature)</LI> -<LI>decrypts the signature with the signer's public key</LI> -<LI>verifies that the two results are identical</LI> -</UL> -<P>If the public-key system is secure and the verification succeeds, - then the receiver knows</P> -<UL> -<LI>that the document was not altered between signing and verification</LI> -<LI>that the signer had access to the private key</LI> -</UL> -<P>Such an encrypted message digest can be treated as a signature since - it cannot be created without<EM> both</EM> the document<EM> and</EM> - the private key which only the sender should possess. The<A href="#legal"> - legal issues</A> are complex, but several countries are moving in the - direction of legal recognition for digital signatures.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="dlog">discrete logarithm problem</A></DT> -<DD>The problem of finding logarithms in a finite field. Given a field - defintion (such definitions always include some operation analogous to - multiplication) and two numbers, a base and a target, find the power - which the base must be raised to in order to yield the target. -<P>The discrete log problem is the basis of several cryptographic - systems, including the<A href="#DH"> Diffie-Hellman</A> key exchange - used in the<A href="#IKE"> IKE</A> protocol. The useful property is - that exponentiation is relatively easy but the inverse operation, - finding the logarithm, is hard. The cryptosystems are designed so that - the user does only easy operations (exponentiation in the field) but an - attacker must solve the hard problem (discrete log) to crack the - system.</P> -<P>There are several variants of the problem for different types of - field. The IKE/Oakley key determination protocol uses two variants, - either over a field modulo a prime or over a field defined by an - elliptic curve. We give an example modulo a prime below. For the - elliptic curve version, consult an advanced text such as<A href="#handbook"> - Handbook of Applied Cryptography</A>.</P> -<P>Given a prime<VAR> p</VAR>, a generator<VAR> g</VAR> for the field - modulo that prime, and a number<VAR> x</VAR> in the field, the problem - is to find<VAR> y</VAR> such that<VAR> g^y = x</VAR>.</P> -<P>For example, let p = 13. The field is then the integers from 0 to 12. - Any integer equals one of these modulo 13. That is, the remainder when - any integer is divided by 13 must be one of these.</P> -<P>2 is a generator for this field. That is, the powers of two modulo 13 - run through all the non-zero numbers in the field. Modulo 13 we have:</P> -<PRE> y x - 2^0 == 1 - 2^1 == 2 - 2^2 == 4 - 2^3 == 8 - 2^4 == 3 that is, the remainder from 16/13 is 3 - 2^5 == 6 the remainder from 32/13 is 6 - 2^6 == 12 and so on - 2^7 == 11 - 2^8 == 9 - 2^9 == 5 - 2^10 == 10 - 2^11 == 7 - 2^12 == 1</PRE> -<P>Exponentiation in such a field is not difficult. Given, say,<NOBR><VAR> - y = 11</VAR>,calculating<NOBR><VAR> x = 7</VAR>is straightforward. One - method is just to calculate<NOBR><VAR> 2^11 = 2048</VAR>,then<NOBR><VAR> - 2048 mod 13 == 7</VAR>.When the field is modulo a large prime (say a - few 100 digits) you need a silghtly cleverer method and even that is - moderately expensive in computer time, but the calculation is still not - problematic in any basic way.</P> -<P>The discrete log problem is the reverse. In our example, given<NOBR><VAR> - x = 7</VAR>,find the logarithm<NOBR><VAR> y = 11</VAR>.When the field - is modulo a large prime (or is based on a suitable elliptic curve), - this is indeed problematic. No solution method that is not - catastrophically expensive is known. Quite a few mathematicians have - tackled this problem. No efficient method has been found and - mathematicians do not expect that one will be. It seems likely no - efficient solution to either of the main variants the discrete log - problem exists.</P> -<P>Note, however, that no-one has proven such methods do not exist. If a - solution to either variant were found, the security of any crypto - system using that variant would be destroyed. This is one reason<A href="#IKE"> - IKE</A> supports two variants. If one is broken, we can switch to the - other.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="discretionary">discretionary access control</A></DT> -<DD>access control mechanisms controlled by the user, for example Unix - rwx file permissions. These contrast with<A href="#mandatory"> - mandatory access controls</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="DNS">DNS</A></DT> -<DD><B>D</B>omain<B> N</B>ame<B> S</B>ervice, a distributed database - through which names are associated with numeric addresses and other - information in the Internet Protocol Suite. See also the<A href="#dns.background"> - DNS background</A> section of our documentation.</DD> -<DT>DOS attack</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#DOS"> Denial Of Service</A> attack</DD> -<DT><A name="dynamic">dynamic IP address</A></DT> -<DD>an IP address which is automatically assigned, either by<A href="#DHCP"> - DHCP</A> or by some protocol such as<A href="#PPP"> PPP</A> or<A href="#PPPoE"> - PPPoE</A> which the machine uses to connect to the Internet. This is - the opposite of a<A href="#static"> static IP address</A>, pre-set on - the machine itself.</DD> -<DT><A name="E">E</A></DT> -<DT><A name="EAR">EAR</A></DT> -<DD>The US government's<B> E</B>xport<B> A</B>dministration<B> R</B> -egulations, administered by the<A href="#BXA"> Bureau of Export - Administration</A>. These have replaced the earlier<A href="#ITAR"> - ITAR</A> regulations as the controls on export of cryptography.</DD> -<DT><A name="ECB">ECB mode</A></DT> -<DD><B>E</B>lectronic<B> C</B>ode<B>B</B>ook mode, the simplest way to - use a block cipher. See<A href="#mode"> Cipher Modes</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="EDE">EDE</A></DT> -<DD>The sequence of operations normally used in either the three-key - variant of<A href="#3DES"> triple DES</A> used in<A href="#IPSEC"> - IPsec</A> or the<A href="#2key"> two-key</A> variant used in some other - systems. -<P>The sequence is:</P> -<UL> -<LI><B>E</B>ncrypt with key1</LI> -<LI><B>D</B>ecrypt with key2</LI> -<LI><B>E</B>ncrypt with key3</LI> -</UL> -<P>For the two-key version, key1=key3.</P> -<P>The "advantage" of this EDE order of operations is that it makes it - simple to interoperate with older devices offering only single DES. Set - key1=key2=key3 and you have the worst of both worlds, the overhead of - triple DES with the "security" of single DES. Since both the<A href="#desnotsecure"> - security of single DES</A> and the overheads of triple DES are - seriously inferior to many other ciphers, this is a spectacularly - dubious "advantage".</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="Entrust">Entrust</A></DT> -<DD>A Canadian company offerring enterprise<A href="#PKI"> PKI</A> - products using<A href="#CAST128"> CAST-128</A> symmetric crypto,<A href="#RSA"> - RSA</A> public key and<A href="#X509"> X.509</A> directories.<A href="http://www.entrust.com"> - Web site</A></DD> -<DT><A name="EFF">EFF</A></DT> -<DD><A href="http://www.eff.org">Electronic Frontier Foundation</A>, an - advocacy group for civil rights in cyberspace.</DD> -<DT><A name="encryption">Encryption</A></DT> -<DD>Techniques for converting a readable message (<A href="#plaintext"> -plaintext</A>) into apparently random material (<A href="#ciphertext"> -ciphertext</A>) which cannot be read if intercepted. A key is required - to read the message. -<P>Major variants include<A href="#symmetric"> symmetric</A> encryption - in which sender and receiver use the same secret key and<A href="#public"> - public key</A> methods in which the sender uses one of a matched pair - of keys and the receiver uses the other. Many current systems, - including<A href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A>, are<A href="#hybrid"> hybrids</A> - combining the two techniques.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="ESP">ESP</A></DT> -<DD><B>E</B>ncapsulated<B> S</B>ecurity<B> P</B>ayload, the<A href="#IPSEC"> - IPsec</A> protocol which provides<A href="#encryption"> encryption</A>. - It can also provide<A href="#authentication"> authentication</A> - service and may be used with null encryption (which we do not - recommend). For details see our<A href="#ESP.ipsec"> IPsec</A> document - and/or RFC 2406.</DD> -<DT><A name="#extruded">Extruded subnet</A></DT> -<DD>A situation in which something IP sees as one network is actually in - two or more places. -<P>For example, the Internet may route all traffic for a particular - company to that firm's corporate gateway. It then becomes the company's - problem to get packets to various machines on their<A href="#subnet"> - subnets</A> in various departments. They may decide to treat a branch - office like a subnet, giving it IP addresses "on" their corporate net. - This becomes an extruded subnet.</P> -<P>Packets bound for it are delivered to the corporate gateway, since as - far as the outside world is concerned, that subnet is part of the - corporate network. However, instead of going onto the corporate LAN (as - they would for, say, the accounting department) they are then - encapsulated and sent back onto the Internet for delivery to the branch - office.</P> -<P>For information on doing this with Linux FreeS/WAN, look in our<A href="#extruded.config"> - advanced configuration</A> section.</P> -</DD> -<DT>Exhaustive search</DT> -<DD>See<A href="#brute"> brute force attack</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="F">F</A></DT> -<DT><A name="FIPS">FIPS</A></DT> -<DD><B>F</B>ederal<B> I</B>nformation<B> P</B>rocessing<B> S</B>tandard, - the US government's standards for products it buys. These are issued by<A -href="#NIST"> NIST</A>. Among other things,<A href="#DES"> DES</A> and<A href="#SHA"> - SHA</A> are defined in FIPS documents. NIST have a<A href="http://www.itl.nist.gov/div897/pubs"> - FIPS home page</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="FSF">Free Software Foundation (FSF)</A></DT> -<DD>An organisation to promote free software, free in the sense of these - quotes from their web pages</DD> -<DD><BLOCKQUOTE> "Free software" is a matter of liberty, not price. To - understand the concept, you should think of "free speech", not "free - beer." -<P>"Free software" refers to the users' freedom to run, copy, - distribute, study, change and improve the software.</P> -</BLOCKQUOTE> -<P>See also<A href="#GNU"> GNU</A>,<A href="#GPL"> GNU General Public - License</A>, and<A href="http://www.fsf.org"> the FSF site</A>.</P> -</DD> -<DT>FreeS/WAN</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#FreeSWAN"> Linux FreeS/WAN</A></DD> -<DT><A name="fullnet">Fullnet</A></DT> -<DD>The CIDR block containing all IPs of its IP version. The<A HREF="#IPv4"> - IPv4</A> fullnet is written 0.0.0.0/0. Also known as "all" and - "default", fullnet may be used in a routing table to specify a default - route, and in a FreeS/WAN<A HREF="#policygroups"> policy group</A> file - to specify a default IPsec policy.</DD> -<DT>FSF</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#FSF"> Free software Foundation</A></DD> -<DT><A name="G">G</A></DT> -<DT><A name="GCHQ">GCHQ</A></DT> -<DD><A href="http://www.gchq.gov.uk">Government Communications - Headquarters</A>, the British organisation for<A href="#SIGINT"> - signals intelligence</A>.</DD> -<DT>generator of a prime field</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#dlog"> discrete logarithm problem</A></DD> -<DT><A name="GILC">GILC</A></DT> -<DD><A href="http://www.gilc.org">Global Internet Liberty Campaign</A>, - an international organisation advocating, among other things, free - availability of cryptography. They have a<A href="http://www.gilc.org/crypto/wassenaar"> - campaign</A> to remove cryptographic software from the<A href="#Wassenaar.gloss"> - Wassenaar Arrangement</A>.</DD> -<DT>Global Internet Liberty Campaign</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#GILC"> GILC</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="GTR">Global Trust Register</A></DT> -<DD>An attempt to create something like a<A href="#rootCA"> root CA</A> - for<A href="#PGP"> PGP</A> by publishing both<A href="#GTR"> as a book</A> - and<A href="http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/Research/Security/Trust-Register"> - on the web</A> the fingerprints of a set of verified keys for - well-known users and organisations.</DD> -<DT><A name="GMP">GMP</A></DT> -<DD>The<B> G</B>NU<B> M</B>ulti-<B>P</B>recision library code, used in<A href="#FreeSWAN"> - Linux FreeS/WAN</A> by<A href="#Pluto"> Pluto</A> for<A href="#public"> - public key</A> calculations. See the<A href="http://www.swox.com/gmp"> - GMP home page</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="GNU">GNU</A></DT> -<DD><B>G</B>NU's<B> N</B>ot<B> U</B>nix, the<A href="#FSF"> Free - Software Foundation's</A> project aimed at creating a free system with - at least the capabilities of Unix.<A href="#Linux"> Linux</A> uses GNU - utilities extensively.</DD> -<DT><A name="#GOST">GOST</A></DT> -<DD>a Soviet government standard<A href="#block"> block cipher</A>.<A href="#schneier"> - Applied Cryptography</A> has details.</DD> -<DT>GPG</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#GPG"> GNU Privacy Guard</A></DD> -<DT><A name="GPL">GNU General Public License</A>(GPL, copyleft)</DT> -<DD>The license developed by the<A href="#FSF"> Free Software Foundation</A> - under which<A href="#Linux"> Linux</A>,<A href="#FreeSWAN"> Linux - FreeS/WAN</A> and many other pieces of software are distributed. The - license allows anyone to redistribute and modify the code, but forbids - anyone from distributing executables without providing access to source - code. For more details see the file<A href="../COPYING"> COPYING</A> - included with GPLed source distributions, including ours, or<A href="http://www.fsf.org/copyleft/gpl.html"> - the GNU site's GPL page</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="GPG">GNU Privacy Guard</A></DT> -<DD>An open source implementation of Open<A href="#PGP"> PGP</A> as - defined in RFC 2440. See their<A href="http://www.gnupg.org"> web site</A> -</DD> -<DT>GPL</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#GPL"> GNU General Public License</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="H">H</A></DT> -<DT><A name="hash">Hash</A></DT> -<DD>see<A href="#digest"> message digest</A></DD> -<DT><A name="HMAC">Hashed Message Authentication Code (HMAC)</A></DT> -<DD>using keyed<A href="#digest"> message digest</A> functions to - authenticate a message. This differs from other uses of these - functions: -<UL> -<LI>In normal usage, the hash function's internal variable are - initialised in some standard way. Anyone can reproduce the hash to - check that the message has not been altered.</LI> -<LI>For HMAC usage, you initialise the internal variables from the key. - Only someone with the key can reproduce the hash. A successful check of - the hash indicates not only that the message is unchanged but also that - the creator knew the key.</LI> -</UL> -<P>The exact techniques used in<A href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A> are defined - in RFC 2104. They are referred to as HMAC-MD5-96 and HMAC-SHA-96 - because they output only 96 bits of the hash. This makes some attacks - on the hash functions harder.</P> -</DD> -<DT>HMAC</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#HMAC"> Hashed Message Authentication Code</A></DD> -<DT>HMAC-MD5-96</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#HMAC"> Hashed Message Authentication Code</A></DD> -<DT>HMAC-SHA-96</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#HMAC"> Hashed Message Authentication Code</A></DD> -<DT><A name="hybrid">Hybrid cryptosystem</A></DT> -<DD>A system using both<A href="#public"> public key</A> and<A href="#symmetric"> - symmetric cipher</A> techniques. This works well. Public key methods - provide key management and<A href="#signature"> digital signature</A> - facilities which are not readily available using symmetric ciphers. The - symmetric cipher, however, can do the bulk of the encryption work much - more efficiently than public key methods.</DD> -<DT><A name="I">I</A></DT> -<DT><A name="IAB">IAB</A></DT> -<DD><A href="http://www.iab.org/iab">Internet Architecture Board</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="ICMP.gloss">ICMP</A></DT> -<DD><STRONG>I</STRONG>nternet<STRONG> C</STRONG>ontrol<STRONG> M</STRONG> -essage<STRONG> P</STRONG>rotocol. This is used for various IP-connected - devices to manage the network.</DD> -<DT><A name="IDEA">IDEA</A></DT> -<DD><B>I</B>nternational<B> D</B>ata<B> E</B>ncrypion<B> A</B>lgorithm, - developed in Europe as an alternative to exportable American ciphers - such as<A href="#DES"> DES</A> which were<A href="#desnotsecure"> too - weak for serious use</A>. IDEA is a<A href="#block"> block cipher</A> - using 64-bit blocks and 128-bit keys, and is used in products such as<A href="#PGP"> - PGP</A>. -<P>IDEA is not required by the<A href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A> RFCs and not - currently used in<A href="#FreeSWAN"> Linux FreeS/WAN</A>.</P> -<P>IDEA is patented and, with strictly limited exceptions for personal - use, using it requires a license from<A href="http://www.ascom.com"> - Ascom</A>.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="IEEE">IEEE</A></DT> -<DD><A href="http://www.ieee.org">Institute of Electrical and Electronic - Engineers</A>, a professional association which, among other things, - sets some technical standards</DD> -<DT><A name="IESG">IESG</A></DT> -<DD><A href="http://www.iesg.org">Internet Engineering Steering Group</A> -.</DD> -<DT><A name="IETF">IETF</A></DT> -<DD><A href="http://www.ietf.org">Internet Engineering Task Force</A>, - the umbrella organisation whose various working groups make most of the - technical decisions for the Internet. The IETF<A href="http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/ipsec-charter.html"> - IPsec working group</A> wrote the<A href="#RFC"> RFCs</A> we are - implementing.</DD> -<DT><A name="IKE">IKE</A></DT> -<DD><B>I</B>nternet<B> K</B>ey<B> E</B>xchange, based on the<A href="#DH"> - Diffie-Hellman</A> key exchange protocol. For details, see RFC 2409 and - our<A href="ipsec.html"> IPsec</A> document. IKE is implemented in<A href="#FreeSWAN"> - Linux FreeS/WAN</A> by the<A href="#Pluto"> Pluto daemon</A>.</DD> -<DT>IKE v2</DT> -<DD>A proposed replacement for<A href="#IKE"> IKE</A>. There are other - candidates, such as<A href="#JFK"> JFK</A>, and at time of writing - (March 2002) the choice between them has not yet been made and does not - appear imminent.</DD> -<DT><A name="iOE">iOE</A></DT> -<DD>See<A HREF="#initiate-only"> Initiate-only opportunistic encryption</A> -.</DD> -<DT><A name="IP">IP</A></DT> -<DD><B>I</B>nternet<B> P</B>rotocol.</DD> -<DT><A name="masq">IP masquerade</A></DT> -<DD>A mostly obsolete term for a method of allowing multiple machines to - communicate over the Internet when only one IP address is available for - their use. The more current term is Network Address Translation or<A href="#NAT.gloss"> - NAT</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="IPng">IPng</A></DT> -<DD>"IP the Next Generation", see<A href="#ipv6.gloss"> IPv6</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="IPv4">IPv4</A></DT> -<DD>The current version of the<A href="#IP"> Internet protocol suite</A> -.</DD> -<DT><A name="ipv6.gloss">IPv6 (IPng)</A></DT> -<DD>Version six of the<A href="#IP"> Internet protocol suite</A>, - currently being developed. It will replace the current<A href="#IPv4"> - version four</A>. IPv6 has<A href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A> as a mandatory - component. -<P>See this<A href="http://playground.sun.com/pub/ipng/html/ipng-main.html"> - web site</A> for more details, and our<A href="#ipv6"> compatibility</A> - document for information on FreeS/WAN and the Linux implementation of - IPv6.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="IPSEC">IPsec</A> or IPSEC</DT> -<DD><B>I</B>nternet<B> P</B>rotocol<B> SEC</B>urity, security functions - (<A href="#authentication">authentication</A> and<A href="#encryption"> - encryption</A>) implemented at the IP level of the protocol stack. It - is optional for<A href="#IPv4"> IPv4</A> and mandatory for<A href="#ipv6.gloss"> - IPv6</A>. -<P>This is the standard<A href="#FreeSWAN"> Linux FreeS/WAN</A> is - implementing. For more details, see our<A href="ipsec.html"> IPsec - Overview</A>. For the standards, see RFCs listed in our<A href="#RFC"> - RFCs document</A>.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="IPX">IPX</A></DT> -<DD>Novell's Netware protocol tunnelled over an IP link. Our<A href="#user.scripts"> - firewalls</A> document includes an example of using this through an - IPsec tunnel.</DD> -<DT><A name="ISAKMP">ISAKMP</A></DT> -<DD><B>I</B>nternet<B> S</B>ecurity<B> A</B>ssociation and<B> K</B>ey<B> - M</B>anagement<B> P</B>rotocol, defined in RFC 2408.</DD> -<DT><A name="ITAR">ITAR</A></DT> -<DD><B>I</B>nternational<B> T</B>raffic in<B> A</B>rms<B> R</B> -egulations, US regulations administered by the State Department which - until recently limited export of, among other things, cryptographic - technology and software. ITAR still exists, but the limits on - cryptography have now been transferred to the<A href="#EAR"> Export - Administration Regulations</A> under the Commerce Department's<A href="#BXA"> - Bureau of Export Administration</A>.</DD> -<DT>IV</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#IV"> Initialisation vector</A></DD> -<DT><A name="IV">Initialisation Vector (IV)</A></DT> -<DD>Some cipher<A href="#mode"> modes</A>, including the<A href="#CBC"> - CBC</A> mode which IPsec uses, require some extra data at the - beginning. This data is called the initialisation vector. It need not - be secret, but should be different for each message. Its function is to - prevent messages which begin with the same text from encrypting to the - same ciphertext. That might give an analyst an opening, so it is best - prevented.</DD> -<DT><A name="initiate-only">Initiate-only opportunistic encryption (iOE)</A> -</DT> -<DD>A form of<A HREF="#carpediem"> opportunistic encryption</A> (OE) in - which a host proposes opportunistic connections, but lacks the reverse - DNS records necessary to support incoming opportunistic connection - requests. Common among hosts on cable or pppoe connections where the - system administrator does not have write access to the DNS reverse map - for the host's external IP. -<P>Configuring for initiate-only opportunistic encryption is described - in our<A href="#opp.client"> quickstart</A> document.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="J">J</A></DT> -<DT><A name="JFK">JFK</A></DT> -<DD><STRONG>J</STRONG>ust<STRONG> F</STRONG>ast<STRONG> K</STRONG>eying, - a proposed simpler replacement for<A href="#IKE"> IKE.</A></DD> -<DT><A name="K">K</A></DT> -<DT><A name="kernel">Kernel</A></DT> -<DD>The basic part of an operating system (e.g. Linux) which controls - the hardware and provides services to all other programs. -<P>In the Linux release numbering system, an even second digit as in 2.<STRONG> -2</STRONG>.x indicates a stable or production kernel while an odd number - as in 2.<STRONG>3</STRONG>.x indicates an experimental or development - kernel. Most users should run a recent kernel version from the - production series. The development kernels are primarily for people - doing kernel development. Others should consider using development - kernels only if they have an urgent need for some feature not yet - available in production kernels.</P> -</DD> -<DT>Keyed message digest</DT> -<DD>See<A href="#HMAC"> HMAC</A>.</DD> -<DT>Key length</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#brute"> brute force attack</A></DD> -<DT><A name="KLIPS">KLIPS</A></DT> -<DD><B>K</B>erne<B>l</B><B> IP</B><B> S</B>ecurity, the<A href="#FreeSWAN"> - Linux FreeS/WAN</A> project's changes to the<A href="#Linux"> Linux</A> - kernel to support the<A href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A> protocols.</DD> -<DT><A name="L">L</A></DT> -<DT><A name="LDAP">LDAP</A></DT> -<DD><B>L</B>ightweight<B> D</B>irectory<B> A</B>ccess<B> P</B>rotocol, - defined in RFCs 1777 and 1778, a method of accessing information stored - in directories. LDAP is used by several<A href="#PKI"> PKI</A> - implementations, often with X.501 directories and<A href="#X509"> X.509</A> - certificates. It may also be used by<A href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A> to - obtain key certifications from those PKIs. This is not yet implemented - in<A href="#FreeSWAN"> Linux FreeS/WAN</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="LIBDES">LIBDES</A></DT> -<DD>A publicly available library of<A href="#DES"> DES</A> code, written - by Eric Young, which<A href="#FreeSWAN"> Linux FreeS/WAN</A> uses in - both<A href="#KLIPS"> KLIPS</A> and<A href="#Pluto"> Pluto</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="Linux">Linux</A></DT> -<DD>A freely available Unix-like operating system based on a kernel - originally written for the Intel 386 architecture by (then) student - Linus Torvalds. Once his 32-bit kernel was available, the<A href="#GNU"> - GNU</A> utilities made it a usable system and contributions from many - others led to explosive growth. -<P>Today Linux is a complete Unix replacement available for several CPU - architectures -- Intel, DEC/Compaq Alpha, Power PC, both 32-bit SPARC - and the 64-bit UltraSPARC, SrongARM, . . . -- with support for multiple - CPUs on some architectures.</P> -<P><A href="#FreeSWAN">Linux FreeS/WAN</A> is intended to run on all - CPUs supported by Linux and is known to work on several. See our<A href="#CPUs"> - compatibility</A> section for a list.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="FreeSWAN">Linux FreeS/WAN</A></DT> -<DD>Our implementation of the<A href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A> protocols, - intended to be freely redistributable source code with<A href="#GPL"> a - GNU GPL license</A> and no constraints under US or other<A href="#exlaw"> - export laws</A>. Linux FreeS/WAN is intended to interoperate with other<A -href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A> implementations. The name is partly taken, with - permission, from the<A href="#SWAN"> S/WAN</A> multi-vendor IPsec - compatability effort. Linux FreeS/WAN has two major components,<A href="#KLIPS"> - KLIPS</A> (KerneL IPsec Support) and the<A href="#Pluto"> Pluto</A> - daemon which manages the whole thing. -<P>See our<A href="ipsec.html"> IPsec section</A> for more detail. For - the code see our<A href="http://freeswan.org"> primary site</A> or one - of the mirror sites on<A href="#mirrors"> this list</A>.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="LSM">Linux Security Modules (LSM)</A></DT> -<DD>a project to create an interface in the Linux kernel that supports - plug-in modules for various security policies. -<P>This allows multiple security projects to take different approaches - to security enhancement without tying the kernel down to one particular - approach. As I understand the history, several projects were pressing - Linus to incorporate their changes, the various sets of changes were - incompatible, and his answer was more-or-less "a plague on all your - houses; I'll give you an interface, but I won't incorporate anything".</P> -<P>It seems to be working. There is a fairly active<A href="http://mail.wirex.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-security-module"> - LSM mailing list</A>, and several projects are already using the - interface.</P> -</DD> -<DT>LSM</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#LSM"> Linux Security Modules</A></DD> -<DT><A name="M">M</A></DT> -<DT><A name="list">Mailing list</A></DT> -<DD>The<A href="#FreeSWAN"> Linux FreeS/WAN</A> project has several - public email lists for bug reports and software development - discussions. See our document on<A href="mail.html"> mailing lists</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="middle">Man-in-the-middle attack</A></DT> -<DD>An<A href="#active"> active attack</A> in which the attacker - impersonates each of the legitimate players in a protocol to the other. -<P>For example, if<A href="#alicebob"> Alice and Bob</A> are negotiating - a key via the<A href="#DH"> Diffie-Hellman</A> key agreement, and are - not using<A href="#authentication"> authentication</A> to be certain - they are talking to each other, then an attacker able to insert himself - in the communication path can deceive both players.</P> -<P>Call the attacker Mallory. For Bob, he pretends to be Alice. For - Alice, he pretends to be Bob. Two keys are then negotiated, - Alice-to-Mallory and Bob-to-Mallory. Alice and Bob each think the key - they have is Alice-to-Bob.</P> -<P>A message from Alice to Bob then goes to Mallory who decrypts it, - reads it and/or saves a copy, re-encrypts using the Bob-to-Mallory key - and sends it along to Bob. Bob decrypts successfully and sends a reply - which Mallory decrypts, reads, re-encrypts and forwards to Alice.</P> -<P>To make this attack effective, Mallory must</P> -<UL> -<LI>subvert some part of the network in some way that lets him carry out - the deception -<BR> possible targets: DNS, router, Alice or Bob's machine, mail server, - ...</LI> -<LI>beat any authentication mechanism Alice and Bob use -<BR> strong authentication defeats the attack entirely; this is why<A href="#IKE"> - IKE</A> requires authentication</LI> -<LI>work in real time, delivering messages without introducing a delay - large enough to alert the victims -<BR> not hard if Alice and Bob are using email; quite difficult in some - situations.</LI> -</UL> -<P>If he manages it, however, it is devastating. He not only gets to - read all the messages; he can alter messages, inject his own, forge - anything he likes, . . . In fact, he controls the communication - completely.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="mandatory">mandatory access control</A></DT> -<DD>access control mechanisims which are not settable by the user (see<A href="#discretionary"> - discretionary access control</A>), but are enforced by the system. -<P>For example, a document labelled "secret, zebra" might be readable - only by someone with secret clearance working on Project Zebra. - Ideally, the system will prevent any transfer outside those boundaries. - For example, even if you can read it, you should not be able to e-mail - it (unless the recipient is appropriately cleared) or print it (unless - certain printers are authorised for that classification).</P> -<P>Mandatory access control is a required feature for some levels of<A href="#rainbow"> - Rainbow Book</A> or<A href="#cc"> Common Criteria</A> classification, - but has not been widely used outside the military and government. There - is a good discussion of the issues in Anderson's<A href="#anderson"> - Security Engineering</A>.</P> -<P>The<A href="#SElinux"> Security Enhanced Linux</A> project is adding - mandatory access control to Linux.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="manual">Manual keying</A></DT> -<DD>An IPsec mode in which the keys are provided by the administrator. - In FreeS/WAN, they are stored in /etc/ipsec.conf. The alternative,<A href="#auto"> - automatic keying</A>, is preferred in most cases. See this<A href="#man-auto"> - discussion</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="MD4">MD4</A></DT> -<DD><A href="#digest">Message Digest Algorithm</A> Four from Ron Rivest - of<A href="#RSAco"> RSA</A>. MD4 was widely used a few years ago, but - is now considered obsolete. It has been replaced by its descendants<A href="#MD5"> - MD5</A> and<A href="#SHA"> SHA</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="MD5">MD5</A></DT> -<DD><A href="#digest">Message Digest Algorithm</A> Five from Ron Rivest - of<A href="#RSAco"> RSA</A>, an improved variant of his<A href="#MD4"> - MD4</A>. Like MD4, it produces a 128-bit hash. For details see RFC - 1321. -<P>MD5 is one of two message digest algorithms available in IPsec. The - other is<A href="#SHA"> SHA</A>. SHA produces a longer hash and is - therefore more resistant to<A href="#birthday"> birthday attacks</A>, - but this is not a concern for IPsec. The<A href="#HMAC"> HMAC</A> - method used in IPsec is secure even if the underlying hash is not - particularly strong against this attack.</P> -<P>Hans Dobbertin found a weakness in MD5, and people often ask whether - this means MD5 is unsafe for IPsec. It doesn't. The IPsec RFCs discuss - Dobbertin's attack and conclude that it does not affect MD5 as used for - HMAC in IPsec.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="meet">Meet-in-the-middle attack</A></DT> -<DD>A divide-and-conquer attack which breaks a cipher into two parts, - works against each separately, and compares results. Probably the best - known example is an attack on double DES. This applies in principle to - any pair of block ciphers, e.g. to an encryption system using, say, - CAST-128 and Blowfish, but we will describe it for double DES. -<P>Double DES encryption and decryption can be written:</P> -<PRE> C = E(k2,E(k1,P)) - P = D(k1,D(k2,C))</PRE> -<P>Where C is ciphertext, P is plaintext, E is encryption, D is - decryption, k1 is one key, and k2 is the other key. If we know a P, C - pair, we can try and find the keys with a brute force attack, trying - all possible k1, k2 pairs. Since each key is 56 bits, there are 2<SUP> -112</SUP> such pairs and this attack is painfully inefficient.</P> -<P>The meet-in-the middle attack re-writes the equations to calculate a - middle value M:</P> -<PRE> M = E(k1,P) - M = D(k2,C)</PRE> -<P>Now we can try some large number of D(k2,C) decryptions with various - values of k2 and store the results in a table. Then start doing E(k1,P) - encryptions, checking each result to see if it is in the table.</P> -<P>With enough table space, this breaks double DES with<NOBR> 2<SUP>56</SUP> - + 2<SUP>56</SUP> = 2<SUP>57</SUP>work. Against triple DES, you need<NOBR> - 2<SUP>56</SUP> + 2<SUP>112</SUP> ~= 2<SUP>112</SUP>.</P> -<P>The memory requirements for such attacks can be prohibitive, but - there is a whole body of research literature on methods of reducing - them.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="digest">Message Digest Algorithm</A></DT> -<DD>An algorithm which takes a message as input and produces a hash or - digest of it, a fixed-length set of bits which depend on the message - contents in some highly complex manner. Design criteria include making - it extremely difficult for anyone to counterfeit a digest or to change - a message without altering its digest. One essential property is<A href="#collision"> - collision resistance</A>. The main applications are in message<A href="#authentication"> - authentication</A> and<A href="#signature"> digital signature</A> - schemes. Widely used algorithms include<A href="#MD5"> MD5</A> and<A href="#SHA"> - SHA</A>. In IPsec, message digests are used for<A href="#HMAC"> HMAC</A> - authentication of packets.</DD> -<DT><A name="MTU">MTU</A></DT> -<DD><STRONG>M</STRONG>aximum<STRONG> T</STRONG>ransmission<STRONG> U</STRONG> -nit, the largest size of packet that can be sent over a link. This is - determined by the underlying network, but must be taken account of at - the IP level. -<P>IP packets, which can be up to 64K bytes each, must be packaged into - lower-level packets of the appropriate size for the underlying - network(s) and re-assembled on the other end. When a packet must pass - over multiple networks, each with its own MTU, and many of the MTUs are - unknown to the sender, this becomes a fairly complex problem. See<A href="#pathMTU"> - path MTU discovery</A> for details.</P> -<P>Often the MTU is a few hundred bytes on serial links and 1500 on - Ethernet. There are, however, serial link protocols which use a larger - MTU to avoid fragmentation at the ethernet/serial boundary, and newer - (especially gigabit) Ethernet networks sometimes support much larger - packets because these are more efficient in some applications.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="N">N</A></DT> -<DT><A name="NAI">NAI</A></DT> -<DD><A href="http://www.nai.com">Network Associates</A>, a conglomerate - formed from<A href="#PGPI"> PGP Inc.</A>, TIS (Trusted Information - Systems, a firewall vendor) and McAfee anti-virus products. Among other - things, they offer an IPsec-based VPN product.</DD> -<DT><A name="NAT.gloss">NAT</A></DT> -<DD><B>N</B>etwork<B> A</B>ddress<B> T</B>ranslation, a process by which - firewall machines may change the addresses on packets as they go - through. For discussion, see our<A href="#nat.background"> background</A> - section.</DD> -<DT><A name="NIST">NIST</A></DT> -<DD>The US<A href="http://www.nist.gov"> National Institute of Standards - and Technology</A>, responsible for<A href="#FIPS"> FIPS standards</A> - including<A href="#DES"> DES</A> and its replacement,<A href="#AES"> - AES</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="nonce">Nonce</A></DT> -<DD>A<A href="#random"> random</A> value used in an<A href="#authentication"> - authentication</A> protocol.</DD> -<DT></DT> -<DT><A name="non-routable">Non-routable IP address</A></DT> -<DD>An IP address not normally allowed in the "to" or "from" IP address - field header of IP packets. -<P>Almost invariably, the phrase "non-routable address" means one of the - addresses reserved by RFC 1918 for private networks:</P> -<UL> -<LI>10.anything</LI> -<LI>172.x.anything with 16 <= x <= 31</LI> -<LI>192.168.anything</LI> -</UL> -<P>These addresses are commonly used on private networks, e.g. behind a - Linux machines doing<A href="#masq"> IP masquerade</A>. Machines within - the private network can address each other with these addresses. All - packets going outside that network, however, have these addresses - replaced before they reach the Internet.</P> -<P>If any packets using these addresses do leak out, they do not go far. - Most routers automatically discard all such packets.</P> -<P>Various other addresses -- the 127.0.0.0/8 block reserved for local - use, 0.0.0.0, various broadcast and network addresses -- cannot be - routed over the Internet, but are not normally included in the meaning - when the phrase "non-routable address" is used.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="NSA">NSA</A></DT> -<DD>The US<A href="http://www.nsa.gov"> National Security Agency</A>, - the American organisation for<A href="#SIGINT"> signals intelligence</A> -, the protection of US government messages and the interception and - analysis of other messages. For details, see Bamford's<A href="#puzzle"> - "The Puzzle Palace"</A>. -<P>Some<A href="http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB23/index.html"> - history of NSA</A> documents were declassified in response to a FOIA - (Freedom of Information Act) request.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="O">O</A></DT> -<DT><A name="oakley">Oakley</A></DT> -<DD>A key determination protocol, defined in RFC 2412.</DD> -<DT>Oakley groups</DT> -<DD>The groups used as the basis of<A href="#DH"> Diffie-Hellman</A> key - exchange in the Oakley protocol, and in<A href="#IKE"> IKE</A>. Four - were defined in the original RFC, and a fifth has been<A href="http://www.lounge.org/ike_doi_errata.html"> - added since</A>. -<P>Linux FreeS/WAN currently supports the three groups based on finite - fields modulo a prime (Groups 1, 2 and 5) and does not support the - elliptic curve groups (3 and 4). For a description of the difference of - the types, see<A href="#dlog"> discrete logarithms</A>.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="OTP">One time pad</A></DT> -<DD>A cipher in which the key is: -<UL> -<LI>as long as the total set of messages to be enciphered</LI> -<LI>absolutely<A href="#random"> random</A></LI> -<LI>never re-used</LI> -</UL> -<P>Given those three conditions, it can easily be proved that the cipher - is perfectly secure, in the sense that an attacker with intercepted - message in hand has no better chance of guessing the message than an - attacker who has not intercepted the message and only knows the message - length. No such proof exists for any other cipher.</P> -<P>There are, however, several problems with this "perfect" cipher.</P> -<P>First, it is<STRONG> wildly impractical</STRONG> for most - applications. Key management is at best difficult, often completely - impossible.</P> -<P>Second, it is<STRONG> extremely fragile</STRONG>. Small changes which - violate the conditions listed above do not just weaken the cipher - liitle. Quite often they destroy its security completely.</P> -<UL> -<LI>Re-using the pad weakens the cipher to the point where it can be - broken with pencil and paper. With a computer, the attack is trivially - easy.</LI> -<LI>Using<EM> anything</EM> less than truly<A href="#random"> random</A> - numbers<EM> completely</EM> invalidates the security proof.</LI> -<LI>In particular, using computer-generated pseudo-random numbers may - give an extremely weak cipher. It might also produce a good stream - cipher, if the pseudo-random generator is both well-designed and - properely seeded.</LI> -</UL> -<P>Marketing claims about the "unbreakable" security of various products - which somewhat resemble one-time pads are common. Such claims are one - of the surest signs of cryptographic<A href="#snake"> snake oil</A>; - most systems marketed with such claims are worthless.</P> -<P>Finally, even if the system is implemented and used correctly, it is<STRONG> - highly vulnerable to a substitution attack</STRONG>. If an attacker - knows some plaintext and has an intercepted message, he can discover - the pad.</P> -<UL> -<LI>This does not matter if the attacker is just a<A href="#passive"> - passive</A> eavesdropper. It gives him no plaintext he didn't already - know and we don't care that he learns a pad which we will never re-use.</LI> -<LI>However, an<A href="#active"> active</A> attacker who knows the - plaintext can recover the pad, then use it to encode with whatever he - chooses. If he can get his version delivered instead of yours, this may - be a disaster. If you send "attack at dawn", the delivered message can - be anything the same length -- perhaps "retreat to east" or "shoot - generals".</LI> -<LI>An active attacker with only a reasonable guess at the plaintext can - try the same attack. If the guess is correct, this works and the - attacker's bogus message is delivered. If the guess is wrong, a garbled - message is delivered.</LI> -</UL> -<P>In general then, despite its theoretical perfection, the one-time-pad - has very limited practical application.</P> -<P>See also the<A href="http://pubweb.nfr.net/~mjr/pubs/otpfaq/"> one - time pad FAQ</A>.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="carpediem">Opportunistic encryption (OE)</A></DT> -<DD>A situation in which any two IPsec-aware machines can secure their - communications, without a pre-shared secret and without a common<A href="#PKI"> - PKI</A> or previous exchange of public keys. This is one of the goals - of the Linux FreeS/WAN project, discussed in our<A href="#goals"> - introduction</A> section. -<P>Setting up for opportunistic encryption is described in our<A href="#quickstart"> - quickstart</A> document.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="responder">Opportunistic responder</A></DT> -<DD>A host which accepts, but does not initiate, requests for<A HREF="#carpediem"> - opportunistic encryption</A> (OE). An opportunistic responder has - enabled OE in its<A HREF="#passive.OE"> passive</A> form (pOE) only. A - web server or file server may be usefully set up as an opportunistic - responder. -<P>Configuring passive OE is described in our<A href="#policygroups"> - policy groups</A> document.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="orange">Orange book</A></DT> -<DD>the most basic and best known of the US government's<A href="#rainbow"> - Rainbow Book</A> series of computer security standards.</DD> -<DT><A name="P">P</A></DT> -<DT><A name="P1363">P1363 standard</A></DT> -<DD>An<A href="#IEEE"> IEEE</A> standard for public key cryptography.<A href="http://grouper.ieee.org/groups/1363"> - Web page</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="pOE">pOE</A></DT> -<DD>See<A href="#passive.OE"> Passive opportunistic encryption</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="passive">Passive attack</A></DT> -<DD>An attack in which the attacker only eavesdrops and attempts to - analyse intercepted messages, as opposed to an<A href="#active"> active - attack</A> in which he diverts messages or generates his own.</DD> -<DT><A name="passive.OE">Passive opportunistic encryption (pOE)</A></DT> -<DD>A form of<A HREF="#carpediem"> opportunistic encryption</A> (OE) in - which the host will accept opportunistic connection requests, but will - not initiate such requests. A host which runs OE in its passive form - only is known as an<A HREF="#responder"> opportunistic responder</A>. -<P>Configuring passive OE is described in our<A href="#policygroups"> - policy groups</A> document.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="pathMTU">Path MTU discovery</A></DT> -<DD>The process of discovering the largest packet size which all links - on a path can handle without fragmentation -- that is, without any - router having to break the packet up into smaller pieces to match the<A href="#MTU"> - MTU</A> of its outgoing link. -<P>This is done as follows:</P> -<UL> -<LI>originator sends the largest packets allowed by<A href="#MTU"> MTU</A> - of the first link, setting the DF (<STRONG>d</STRONG>on't<STRONG> f</STRONG> -ragment) bit in the packet header</LI> -<LI>any router which cannot send the packet on (outgoing MTU is too - small for it, and DF prevents fragmenting it to match) sends back an<A href="#ICMP.gloss"> - ICMP</A> packet reporting the problem</LI> -<LI>originator looks at ICMP message and tries a smaller size</LI> -<LI>eventually, you settle on a size that can pass all routers</LI> -<LI>thereafter, originator just sends that size and no-one has to - fragment</LI> -</UL> -<P>Since this requires co-operation of many systems, and since the next - packet may travel a different path, this is one of the trickier areas - of IP programming. Bugs that have shown up over the years have - included:</P> -<UL> -<LI>malformed ICMP messages</LI> -<LI>hosts that ignore or mishandle these ICMP messages</LI> -<LI>firewalls blocking the ICMP messages so host does not see them</LI> -</UL> -<P>Since IPsec adds a header, it increases packet size and may require - fragmentation even where incoming and outgoing MTU are equal.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="PFS">Perfect forward secrecy (PFS)</A></DT> -<DD>A property of systems such as<A href="#DH"> Diffie-Hellman</A> key - exchange which use a long-term key (such as the shared secret in IKE) - and generate short-term keys as required. If an attacker who acquires - the long-term key<EM> provably</EM> can -<UL> -<LI><EM>neither</EM> read previous messages which he may have archived</LI> -<LI><EM>nor</EM> read future messages without performing additional - successful attacks</LI> -</UL> -<P>then the system has PFS. The attacker needs the short-term keys in - order to read the trafiic and merely having the long-term key does not - allow him to infer those. Of course, it may allow him to conduct - another attack (such as<A href="#middle"> man-in-the-middle</A>) which - gives him some short-term keys, but he does not automatically get them - just by acquiring the long-term key.</P> -<P>See also<A href="http://sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/ipsec/1996/08/msg00123.html"> - Phil Karn's definition</A>.</P> -</DD> -<DT>PFS</DT> -<DD>see Perfect Forward Secrecy</DD> -<DT><A name="PGP">PGP</A></DT> -<DD><B>P</B>retty<B> G</B>ood<B> P</B>rivacy, a personal encryption - system for email based on public key technology, written by Phil - Zimmerman. -<P>The 2.xx versions of PGP used the<A href="#RSA"> RSA</A> public key - algorithm and used<A href="#IDEA"> IDEA</A> as the symmetric cipher. - These versions are described in RFC 1991 and in<A href="#PGP"> - Garfinkel's book</A>. Since version 5, the products from<A href="#PGPI"> - PGP Inc</A>. have used<A href="#DH"> Diffie-Hellman</A> public key - methods and<A href="#CAST128"> CAST-128</A> symmetric encryption. These - can verify signatures from the 2.xx versions, but cannot exchange - encryted messages with them.</P> -<P>An<A href="#IETF"> IETF</A> working group has issued RFC 2440 for an - "Open PGP" standard, similar to the 5.x versions. PGP Inc. staff were - among the authors. A free<A href="#GPG"> Gnu Privacy Guard</A> based on - that standard is now available.</P> -<P>For more information on PGP, including how to obtain it, see our - cryptography<A href="#tools"> links</A>.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="PGPI">PGP Inc.</A></DT> -<DD>A company founded by Zimmerman, the author of<A href="#PGP"> PGP</A> -, now a division of<A href="#NAI"> NAI</A>. See the<A href="http://www.pgp.com"> - corporate website</A>. Zimmerman left in 2001, and early in 2002 NAI - announced that they would no longer sell PGP.. -<P>Versions 6.5 and later of the PGP product include PGPnet, an IPsec - client for Macintosh or for Windows 95/98/NT. See our<A href="interop.html#pgpnet"> - interoperation documen</A>t.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="photuris">Photuris</A></DT> -<DD>Another key negotiation protocol, an alternative to<A href="#IKE"> - IKE</A>, described in RFCs 2522 and 2523.</DD> -<DT><A name="PPP">PPP</A></DT> -<DD><B>P</B>oint-to-<B>P</B>oint<B> P</B>rotocol, originally a method of - connecting over modems or serial lines, but see also PPPoE.</DD> -<DT><A name="PPPoE">PPPoE</A></DT> -<DD><B>PPP</B><B> o</B>ver<B> E</B>thernet, a somewhat odd protocol that - makes Ethernet look like a point-to-point serial link. It is widely - used for cable or ADSL Internet services, apparently mainly because it - lets the providers use access control and address assignmment - mechanisms developed for dialup networks.<A href="http://www.roaringpenguin.com"> - Roaring Penguin</A> provide a widely used Linux implementation.</DD> -<DT><A name="PPTP">PPTP</A></DT> -<DD><B>P</B>oint-to-<B>P</B>oint<B> T</B>unneling<B> P</B>rotocol, used - in some Microsoft VPN implementations. Papers discussing weaknesses in - it are on<A href="http://www.counterpane.com/publish.html"> - counterpane.com</A>. It is now largely obsolete, replaced by L2TP.</DD> -<DT><A name="PKI">PKI</A></DT> -<DD><B>P</B>ublic<B> K</B>ey<B> I</B>nfrastructure, the things an - organisation or community needs to set up in order to make<A href="#public"> - public key</A> cryptographic technology a standard part of their - operating procedures. -<P>There are several PKI products on the market. Typically they use a - hierarchy of<A href="#CA"> Certification Authorities (CAs)</A>. Often - they use<A href="#LDAP"> LDAP</A> access to<A href="#X509"> X.509</A> - directories to implement this.</P> -<P>See<A href="#web"> Web of Trust</A> for a different sort of - infrastructure.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="PKIX">PKIX</A></DT> -<DD><B>PKI</B> e<B>X</B>change, an<A href="#IETF"> IETF</A> standard - that allows<A href="#PKI"> PKI</A>s to talk to each other. -<P>This is required, for example, when users of a corporate PKI need to - communicate with people at client, supplier or government - organisations, any of which may have a different PKI in place. I should - be able to talk to you securely whenever:</P> -<UL> -<LI>your organisation and mine each have a PKI in place</LI> -<LI>you and I are each set up to use those PKIs</LI> -<LI>the two PKIs speak PKIX</LI> -<LI>the configuration allows the conversation</LI> -</UL> -<P>At time of writing (March 1999), this is not yet widely implemented - but is under quite active development by several groups.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="plaintext">Plaintext</A></DT> -<DD>The unencrypted input to a cipher, as opposed to the encrypted<A href="#ciphertext"> - ciphertext</A> output.</DD> -<DT><A name="Pluto">Pluto</A></DT> -<DD>The<A href="#FreeSWAN"> Linux FreeS/WAN</A> daemon which handles key - exchange via the<A href="#IKE"> IKE</A> protocol, connection - negotiation, and other higher-level tasks. Pluto calls the<A href="#KLIPS"> - KLIPS</A> kernel code as required. For details, see the manual page - ipsec_pluto(8).</DD> -<DT><A name="public">Public Key Cryptography</A></DT> -<DD>In public key cryptography, keys are created in matched pairs. - Encrypt with one half of a pair and only the matching other half can - decrypt it. This contrasts with<A href="#symmetric"> symmetric or - secret key cryptography</A> in which a single key known to both parties - is used for both encryption and decryption. -<P>One half of each pair, called the public key, is made public. The - other half, called the private key, is kept secret. Messages can then - be sent by anyone who knows the public key to the holder of the private - key. Encrypt with the public key and you know that only someone with - the matching private key can decrypt.</P> -<P>Public key techniques can be used to create<A href="#signature"> - digital signatures</A> and to deal with key management issues, perhaps - the hardest part of effective deployment of<A href="#symmetric"> - symmetric ciphers</A>. The resulting<A href="#hybrid"> hybrid - cryptosystems</A> use public key methods to manage keys for symmetric - ciphers.</P> -<P>Many organisations are currently creating<A href="#PKI"> PKIs, public - key infrastructures</A> to make these benefits widely available.</P> -</DD> -<DT>Public Key Infrastructure</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#PKI"> PKI</A></DD> -<DT><A name="Q">Q</A></DT> -<DT><A name="R">R</A></DT> -<DT><A name="rainbow">Rainbow books</A></DT> -<DD>A set of US government standards for evaluation of "trusted computer - systems", of which the best known was the<A href="#orange"> Orange Book</A> -. One fairly often hears references to "C2 security" or a product - "evaluated at B1". The Rainbow books define the standards referred to - in those comments. -<P>See this<A href="http://www.fas.org/irp/nsa/rainbow.htm"> reference - page</A>.</P> -<P>The Rainbow books are now mainly obsolete, replaced by the - international<A href="#cc"> Common Criteria</A> standards.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="random">Random</A></DT> -<DD>A remarkably tricky term, far too much so for me to attempt a - definition here. Quite a few cryptosystems have been broken via attacks - on weak random number generators, even when the rest of the system was - sound. -<P>See<A href="http://nis.nsf.net/internet/documents/rfc/rfc1750.txt"> - RFC 1750</A> for the theory.</P> -<P>See the manual pages for<A href="manpage.d/ipsec_ranbits.8.html"> - ipsec_ranbits(8)</A> and ipsec_prng(3) for more on FreeS/WAN's use of - randomness. Both depend on the random(4) device driver..</P> -<P>A couple of years ago, there was extensive mailing list discussion - (archived<A href="http://www.openpgp.net/random/index.html"> here</A> -)of Linux /dev/random and FreeS/WAN. Since then, the design of the - random(4) driver has changed considerably. Linux 2.4 kernels have the - new driver..</P> -</DD> -<DT>Raptor</DT> -<DD>A firewall product for Windows NT offerring IPsec-based VPN - services. Linux FreeS/WAN interoperates with Raptor; see our<A href="#raptor"> - interop</A> document for details. Raptor have recently merged with - Axent.</DD> -<DT><A name="RC4">RC4</A></DT> -<DD><B>R</B>ivest<B> C</B>ipher four, designed by Ron Rivest of<A href="#RSAco"> - RSA</A> and widely used. Believed highly secure with adequate key - length, but often implemented with inadequate key length to comply with - export restrictions.</DD> -<DT><A name="RC6">RC6</A></DT> -<DD><B>R</B>ivest<B> C</B>ipher six,<A href="#RSAco"> RSA</A>'s<A href="#AES"> - AES</A> candidate cipher.</DD> -<DT><A name="replay">Replay attack</A></DT> -<DD>An attack in which the attacker records data and later replays it in - an attempt to deceive the recipient.</DD> -<DT><A name="reverse">Reverse map</A></DT> -<DD>In<A href="#DNS"> DNS</A>, a table where IP addresses can be used as - the key for lookups which return a system name and/or other - information.</DD> -<DT>RFC</DT> -<DD><B>R</B>equest<B> F</B>or<B> C</B>omments, an Internet document. - Some RFCs are just informative. Others are standards. -<P>Our list of<A href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A> and other security-related - RFCs is<A href="#RFC"> here</A>, along with information on methods of - obtaining them.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="rijndael">Rijndael</A></DT> -<DD>a<A href="#block"> block cipher</A> designed by two Belgian - cryptographers, winner of the US government's<A href="#AES"> AES</A> - contest to pick a replacement for<A href="#DES"> DES</A>. See the<A href="http://www.esat.kuleuven.ac.be/~rijmen/rijndael"> - Rijndael home page</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="RIPEMD">RIPEMD</A></DT> -<DD>A<A href="#digest"> message digest</A> algorithm. The current - version is RIPEMD-160 which gives a 160-bit hash.</DD> -<DT><A name="rootCA">Root CA</A></DT> -<DD>The top level<A href="#CA"> Certification Authority</A> in a - hierachy of such authorities.</DD> -<DT><A name="routable">Routable IP address</A></DT> -<DD>Most IP addresses can be used as "to" and "from" addresses in packet - headers. These are the routable addresses; we expect routing to be - possible for them. If we send a packet to one of them, we expect (in - most cases; there are various complications) that it will be delivered - if the address is in use and will cause an<A href="#ICMP.gloss"> ICMP</A> - error packet to come back to us if not. -<P>There are also several classes of<A href="#non-routable"> - non-routable</A> IP addresses.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="RSA">RSA algorithm</A></DT> -<DD><B>R</B>ivest<B> S</B>hamir<B> A</B>dleman<A href="#public"> public - key</A> algorithm, named for its three inventors. It is widely used and - likely to become moreso since it became free of patent encumbrances in - September 2000. -<P>RSA can be used to provide either<A href="#encryption"> encryption</A> - or<A href="#signature"> digital signatures</A>. In IPsec, it is used - only for signatures. These provide gateway-to-gateway<A href="#authentication"> - authentication</A> for<A href="#IKE"> IKE</A> negotiations.</P> -<P>For a full explanation of the algorithm, consult one of the standard - references such as<A href="#schneier"> Applied Cryptography</A>. A - simple explanation is:</P> -<P>The great 17th century French mathematician<A href="http://www-groups.dcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Fermat.html"> - Fermat</A> proved that,</P> -<P>for any prime p and number x, 0 <= x < p:</P> -<PRE> x^p == x modulo p - x^(p-1) == 1 modulo p, non-zero x - </PRE> -<P>From this it follows that if we have a pair of primes p, q and two - numbers e, d such that:</P> -<PRE> ed == 1 modulo lcm( p-1, q-1) - </PRE> - where lcm() is least common multiple, then -<BR> for all x, 0 <= x < pq: -<PRE> x^ed == x modulo pq - </PRE> -<P>So we construct such as set of numbers p, q, e, d and publish the - product N=pq and e as the public key. Using c for<A href="#ciphertext"> - ciphertext</A> and i for the input<A href="#plaintext"> plaintext</A>, - encryption is then:</P> -<PRE> c = i^e modulo N - </PRE> -<P>An attacker cannot deduce i from the cyphertext c, short of either - factoring N or solving the<A href="#dlog"> discrete logarithm</A> - problem for this field. If p, q are large primes (hundreds or thousands - of bits) no efficient solution to either problem is known.</P> -<P>The receiver, knowing the private key (N and d), can readily recover - the plaintext p since:</P> -<PRE> c^d == (i^e)^d modulo N - == i^ed modulo N - == i modulo N - </PRE> -<P>This gives an effective public key technique, with only a couple of - problems. It uses a good deal of computer time, since calculations with - large integers are not cheap, and there is no proof it is necessarily - secure since no-one has proven either factoring or discrete log cannot - be done efficiently. Quite a few good mathematicians have tried both - problems, and no-one has announced success, but there is no proof they - are insoluble.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="RSAco">RSA Data Security</A></DT> -<DD>A company founded by the inventors of the<A href="#RSA"> RSA</A> - public key algorithm.</DD> -<DT><A name="S">S</A></DT> -<DT><A name="SA">SA</A></DT> -<DD><B>S</B>ecurity<B> A</B>ssociation, the channel negotiated by the - higher levels of an<A href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A> implementation (<A href="#IKE"> -IKE</A>) and used by the lower (<A href="#ESP">ESP</A> and<A href="#AH"> - AH</A>). SAs are unidirectional; you need a pair of them for two-way - communication. -<P>An SA is defined by three things -- the destination, the protocol (<A href="#AH"> -AH</A> or<A href="#ESP">ESP</A>) and the<A href="SPI"> SPI</A>, security - parameters index. It is used as an index to look up other things such - as session keys and intialisation vectors.</P> -<P>For more detail, see our section on<A href="ipsec.html"> IPsec</A> - and/or RFC 2401.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="SElinux">SE Linux</A></DT> -<DD><STRONG>S</STRONG>ecurity<STRONG> E</STRONG>nhanced Linux, an<A href="#NSA"> - NSA</A>-funded project to add<A href="#mandatory"> mandatory access - control</A> to Linux. See the<A href="http://www.nsa.gov/selinux"> - project home page</A>. -<P>According to their web pages, this work will include extending - mandatory access controls to IPsec tunnels.</P> -<P>Recent versions of SE Linux code use the<A href="#LSM"> Linux - Security Module</A> interface.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="SDNS">Secure DNS</A></DT> -<DD>A version of the<A href="#DNS"> DNS or Domain Name Service</A> - enhanced with authentication services. This is being designed by the<A href="#IETF"> - IETF</A> DNS security<A href="http://www.ietf.org/ids.by.wg/dnssec.html"> - working group</A>. Check the<A href="http://www.isc.org/bind.html"> - Internet Software Consortium</A> for information on implementation - progress and for the latest version of<A href="#BIND"> BIND</A>. - Another site has<A href="http://www.toad.com/~dnssec"> more information</A> -. -<P><A href="#IPSEC">IPsec</A> can use this plus<A href="#DH"> - Diffie-Hellman key exchange</A> to bootstrap itself. This allows<A href="#carpediem"> - opportunistic encryption</A>. Any pair of machines which can - authenticate each other via DNS can communicate securely, without - either a pre-existing shared secret or a shared<A href="#PKI"> PKI</A>.</P> -</DD> -<DT>Secret key cryptography</DT> -<DD>See<A href="#symmetric"> symmetric cryptography</A></DD> -<DT>Security Association</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#SA"> SA</A></DD> -<DT>Security Enhanced Linux</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#SElinux"> SE Linux</A></DD> -<DT><A name="sequence">Sequence number</A></DT> -<DD>A number added to a packet or message which indicates its position - in a sequence of packets or messages. This provides some security - against<A href="#replay"> replay attacks</A>. -<P>For<A href="#auto"> automatic keying</A> mode, the<A href="#IPSEC"> - IPsec</A> RFCs require that the sender generate sequence numbers for - each packet, but leave it optional whether the receiver does anything - with them.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="SHA">SHA</A></DT> -<DT>SHA-1</DT> -<DD><B>S</B>ecure<B> H</B>ash<B> A</B>lgorithm, a<A href="#digest"> - message digest algorithm</A> developed by the<A href="#NSA"> NSA</A> - for use in the Digital Signature standard,<A href="#FIPS"> FIPS</A> - number 186 from<A href="#NIST"> NIST</A>. SHA is an improved variant of<A -href="#MD4"> MD4</A> producing a 160-bit hash. -<P>SHA is one of two message digest algorithms available in IPsec. The - other is<A href="#MD5"> MD5</A>. Some people do not trust SHA because - it was developed by the<A href="#NSA"> NSA</A>. There is, as far as we - know, no cryptographic evidence that SHA is untrustworthy, but this - does not prevent that view from being strongly held.</P> -<P>The NSA made one small change after the release of the original SHA. - They did not give reasons. Iit may be a defense against some attack - they found and do not wish to disclose. Technically the modified - algorithm should be called SHA-1, but since it has replaced the - original algorithm in nearly all applications, it is generally just - referred to as SHA..</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="SHA-256">SHA-256</A></DT> -<DT>SHA-384</DT> -<DT>SHA-512</DT> -<DD>Newer variants of SHA designed to match the strength of the 128, 192 - and 256-bit keys of<A href="#AES"> AES</A>. The work to break an - encryption algorithm's strength by<A href="#brute"> brute force</A> is - 2 -<!--math xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML"--> - -<!--msup--> - -<!--mi--> - keylength</(null)></(null)></(null)> operations but a<A href="birthday"> - birthday attack</A> on a hash needs only 2 -<!--math xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML"--> - -<!--msup--> - -<!--mrow--> - -<!--mi--> - hashlength</(null)> -<!--mo--> - /</(null)> -<!--mn--> - - 2</(null)></(null)></(null)></(null)> , so as a general rule you need a - hash twice the size of the key to get similar strength. SHA-256, - SHA-384 and SHA-512 are designed to match the 128, 192 and 256-bit key - sizes of AES, respectively.</DD> -<DT><A name="SIGINT">Signals intelligence (SIGINT)</A></DT> -<DD>Activities of government agencies from various nations aimed at - protecting their own communications and reading those of others. - Cryptography, cryptanalysis, wiretapping, interception and monitoring - of various sorts of signals. The players include the American<A href="#NSA"> - NSA</A>, British<A href="#GCHQ"> GCHQ</A> and Canadian<A href="#CSE"> - CSE</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="SKIP">SKIP</A></DT> -<DD><B>S</B>imple<B> K</B>ey management for<B> I</B>nternet<B> P</B> -rotocols, an alternative to<A href="#IKE"> IKE</A> developed by Sun and - being marketed by their<A href="http://skip.incog.com"> Internet - Commerce Group</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="snake">Snake oil</A></DT> -<DD>Bogus cryptography. See the<A href="http://www.interhack.net/people/cmcurtin/snake-oil-faq.html"> - Snake Oil FAQ</A> or<A href="http://www.counterpane.com/crypto-gram-9902.html#snakeoil"> - this paper</A> by Schneier.</DD> -<DT><A name="SPI">SPI</A></DT> -<DD><B>S</B>ecurity<B> P</B>arameter<B> I</B>ndex, an index used within<A -href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A> to keep connections distinct. A<A href="#SA"> - Security Association (SA)</A> is defined by destination, protocol and - SPI. Without the SPI, two connections to the same gateway using the - same protocol could not be distinguished. -<P>For more detail, see our<A href="ipsec.html"> IPsec</A> section - and/or RFC 2401.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="SSH">SSH</A></DT> -<DD><B>S</B>ecure<B> SH</B>ell, an encrypting replacement for the - insecure Berkeley commands whose names begin with "r" for "remote": - rsh, rlogin, etc. -<P>For more information on SSH, including how to obtain it, see our - cryptography<A href="#tools"> links</A>.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="SSHco">SSH Communications Security</A></DT> -<DD>A company founded by the authors of<A href="#SSH"> SSH</A>. Offices - are in<A href="http://www.ssh.fi"> Finland</A> and<A href="http://www.ipsec.com"> - California</A>. They have a toolkit for developers of IPsec - applications.</DD> -<DT><A name="SSL">SSL</A></DT> -<DD><A href="http://home.netscape.com/eng/ssl3">Secure Sockets Layer</A> -, a set of encryption and authentication services for web browsers, - developed by Netscape. Widely used in Internet commerce. Also known as<A -href="#TLS"> TLS</A>.</DD> -<DT>SSLeay</DT> -<DD>A free implementation of<A href="#SSL"> SSL</A> by Eric Young (eay) - and others. Developed in Australia; not subject to US export controls.</DD> -<DT><A name="static">static IP address</A></DT> -<DD>an IP adddress which is pre-set on the machine itself, as opposed to - a<A href="#dynamic"> dynamic address</A> which is assigned by a<A href="#DHCP"> - DHCP</A> server or obtained as part of the process of establishing a<A href="#PPP"> - PPP</A> or<A href="#PPPoE"> PPPoE</A> connection</DD> -<DT><A name="stream">Stream cipher</A></DT> -<DD>A<A href="#symmetric"> symmetric cipher</A> which produces a stream - of output which can be combined (often using XOR or bytewise addition) - with the plaintext to produce ciphertext. Contrasts with<A href="#block"> - block cipher</A>. -<P><A href="#IPSEC">IPsec</A> does not use stream ciphers. Their main - application is link-level encryption, for example of voice, video or - data streams on a wire or a radio signal.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="subnet">subnet</A></DT> -<DD>A group of IP addresses which are logically one network, typically - (but not always) assigned to a group of physically connected machines. - The range of addresses in a subnet is described using a subnet mask. - See next entry.</DD> -<DT>subnet mask</DT> -<DD>A method of indicating the addresses included in a subnet. Here are - two equivalent examples: -<UL> -<LI>101.101.101.0/24</LI> -<LI>101.101.101.0 with mask 255.255.255.0</LI> -</UL> -<P>The '24' is shorthand for a mask with the top 24 bits one and the - rest zero. This is exactly the same as 255.255.255.0 which has three - all-ones bytes and one all-zeros byte.</P> -<P>These indicate that, for this range of addresses, the top 24 bits are - to be treated as naming a network (often referred to as "the - 101.101.101.0/24 subnet") while most combinations of the low 8 bits can - be used to designate machines on that network. Two addresses are - reserved; 101.101.101.0 refers to the subnet rather than a specific - machine while 101.101.101.255 is a broadcast address. 1 to 254 are - available for machines.</P> -<P>It is common to find subnets arranged in a hierarchy. For example, a - large company might have a /16 subnet and allocate /24 subnets within - that to departments. An ISP might have a large subnet and allocate /26 - subnets (64 addresses, 62 usable) to business customers and /29 subnets - (8 addresses, 6 usable) to residential clients.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="SWAN">S/WAN</A></DT> -<DD>Secure Wide Area Network, a project involving<A href="#RSAco"> RSA - Data Security</A> and a number of other companies. The goal was to - ensure that all their<A href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A> implementations would - interoperate so that their customers can communicate with each other - securely.</DD> -<DT><A name="symmetric">Symmetric cryptography</A></DT> -<DD>Symmetric cryptography, also referred to as conventional or secret - key cryptography, relies on a<EM> shared secret key</EM>, identical for - sender and receiver. Sender encrypts with that key, receiver decrypts - with it. The idea is that an eavesdropper without the key be unable to - read the messages. There are two main types of symmetric cipher,<A href="#block"> - block ciphers</A> and<A href="#stream"> stream ciphers</A>. -<P>Symmetric cryptography contrasts with<A href="#public"> public key</A> - or asymmetric systems where the two players use different keys.</P> -<P>The great difficulty in symmetric cryptography is, of course, key - management. Sender and receiver<EM> must</EM> have identical keys and - those keys<EM> must</EM> be kept secret from everyone else. Not too - much of a problem if only two people are involved and they can - conveniently meet privately or employ a trusted courier. Quite a - problem, though, in other circumstances.</P> -<P>It gets much worse if there are many people. An application might be - written to use only one key for communication among 100 people, for - example, but there would be serious problems. Do you actually trust all - of them that much? Do they trust each other that much? Should they? - What is at risk if that key is compromised? How are you going to - distribute that key to everyone without risking its secrecy? What do - you do when one of them leaves the company? Will you even know?</P> -<P>On the other hand, if you need unique keys for every possible - connection between a group of 100, then each user must have 99 keys. - You need either 99*100/2 = 4950<EM> secure</EM> key exchanges between - users or a central authority that<EM> securely</EM> distributes 100 key - packets, each with a different set of 99 keys.</P> -<P>Either of these is possible, though tricky, for 100 users. Either - becomes an administrative nightmare for larger numbers. Moreover, keys<EM> - must</EM> be changed regularly, so the problem of key distribution - comes up again and again. If you use the same key for many messages - then an attacker has more text to work with in an attempt to crack that - key. Moreover, one successful crack will give him or her the text of - all those messages.</P> -<P>In short, the<EM> hardest part of conventional cryptography is key - management</EM>. Today the standard solution is to build a<A href="#hybrid"> - hybrid system</A> using<A href="#public"> public key</A> techniques to - manage keys.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="T">T</A></DT> -<DT><A name="TIS">TIS</A></DT> -<DD>Trusted Information Systems, a firewall vendor now part of<A href="#NAI"> - NAI</A>. Their Gauntlet product offers IPsec VPN services. TIS - implemented the first version of<A href="#SDNS"> Secure DNS</A> on a<A href="#DARPA"> - DARPA</A> contract.</DD> -<DT><A name="TLS">TLS</A></DT> -<DD><B>T</B>ransport<B> L</B>ayer<B> S</B>ecurity, a newer name for<A href="#SSL"> - SSL</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="TOS">TOS field</A></DT> -<DD>The<STRONG> T</STRONG>ype<STRONG> O</STRONG>f<STRONG> S</STRONG> -ervice field in an IP header, used to control qualkity of service - routing.</DD> -<DT><A name="traffic">Traffic analysis</A></DT> -<DD>Deducing useful intelligence from patterns of message traffic, - without breaking codes or reading the messages. In one case during - World War II, the British guessed an attack was coming because all - German radio traffic stopped. The "radio silence" order, intended to - preserve security, actually gave the game away. -<P>In an industrial espionage situation, one might deduce something - interesting just by knowing that company A and company B were talking, - especially if one were able to tell which departments were involved, or - if one already knew that A was looking for acquisitions and B was - seeking funds for expansion.</P> -<P>In general, traffic analysis by itself is not very useful. However, - in the context of a larger intelligence effort where quite a bit is - already known, it can be very useful. When you are solving a complex - puzzle, every little bit helps.</P> -<P><A href="#IPSEC">IPsec</A> itself does not defend against traffic - analysis, but carefully thought out systems using IPsec can provide at - least partial protection. In particular, one might want to encrypt more - traffic than was strictly necessary, route things in odd ways, or even - encrypt dummy packets, to confuse the analyst. We discuss this<A href="#traffic.resist"> - here</A>.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="transport">Transport mode</A></DT> -<DD>An IPsec application in which the IPsec gateway is the destination - of the protected packets, a machine acts as its own gateway. Contrast - with<A href="#tunnel"> tunnel mode</A>.</DD> -<DT>Triple DES</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#3DES"> 3DES</A></DD> -<DT><A name="TTL">TTL</A></DT> -<DD><STRONG>T</STRONG>ime<STRONG> T</STRONG>o<STRONG> L</STRONG>ive, - used to control<A href="#DNS"> DNS</A> caching. Servers discard cached - records whose TTL expires</DD> -<DT><A name="tunnel">Tunnel mode</A></DT> -<DD>An IPsec application in which an IPsec gateway provides protection - for packets to and from other systems. Contrast with<A href="#transport"> - transport mode</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="2key">Two-key Triple DES</A></DT> -<DD>A variant of<A href="#3DES"> triple DES or 3DES</A> in which only - two keys are used. As in the three-key version, the order of operations - is<A href="#EDE"> EDE</A> or encrypt-decrypt-encrypt, but in the - two-key variant the first and third keys are the same. -<P>3DES with three keys has 3*56 = 168 bits of key but has only 112-bit - strength against a<A href="#meet"> meet-in-the-middle</A> attack, so it - is possible that the two key version is just as strong. Last I looked, - this was an open question in the research literature.</P> -<P>RFC 2451 defines triple DES for<A href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A> as the - three-key variant. The two-key variant should not be used and is not - implemented directly in<A href="#FreeSWAN"> Linux FreeS/WAN</A>. It - cannot be used in automatically keyed mode without major fiddles in the - source code. For manually keyed connections, you could make Linux - FreeS/WAN talk to a two-key implementation by setting two keys the same - in /etc/ipsec.conf.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="U">U</A></DT> -<DT><A name="V">V</A></DT> -<DT><A name="virtual">Virtual Interface</A></DT> -<DD>A<A href="#Linux"> Linux</A> feature which allows one physical - network interface to have two or more IP addresses. See the<CITE> Linux - Network Administrator's Guide</CITE> in<A href="#kirch"> book form</A> - or<A href="http://metalab.unc.edu/LDP/LDP/nag/node1.html"> on the web</A> - for details.</DD> -<DT>Virtual Private Network</DT> -<DD>see<A href="#VPN"> VPN</A></DD> -<DT><A name="VPN">VPN</A></DT> -<DD><B>V</B>irtual<B> P</B>rivate<B> N</B>etwork, a network which can - safely be used as if it were private, even though some of its - communication uses insecure connections. All traffic on those - connections is encrypted. -<P><A href="#IPSEC">IPsec</A> is not the only technique available for - building VPNs, but it is the only method defined by<A href="#RFC"> RFCs</A> - and supported by many vendors. VPNs are by no means the only thing you - can do with IPsec, but they may be the most important application for - many users.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="VPNC">VPNC</A></DT> -<DD><A href="http://www.vpnc.org">Virtual Private Network Consortium</A> -, an association of vendors of VPN products.</DD> -<DT><A name="W">W</A></DT> -<DT><A name="Wassenaar.gloss">Wassenaar Arrangement</A></DT> -<DD>An international agreement restricting export of munitions and other - tools of war. Unfortunately, cryptographic software is also restricted - under the current version of the agreement.<A href="#Wassenaar"> - Discussion</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="web">Web of Trust</A></DT> -<DD><A href="#PGP">PGP</A>'s method of certifying keys. Any user can - sign a key; you decide which signatures or combinations of signatures - to accept as certification. This contrasts with the hierarchy of<A href="#CA"> - CAs (Certification Authorities)</A> used in many<A href="#PKI"> PKIs - (Public Key Infrastructures)</A>. -<P>See<A href="#GTR"> Global Trust Register</A> for an interesting - addition to the web of trust.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="WEP">WEP (Wired Equivalent Privacy)</A></DT> -<DD>The cryptographic part of the<A href="#IEEE"> IEEE</A> standard for - wireless LANs. As the name suggests, this is designed to be only as - secure as a normal wired ethernet. Anyone with a network conection can - tap it. Its advocates would claim this is good design, refusing to - build in complex features beyond the actual requirements. -<P>Critics refer to WEP as "Wire<EM>tap</EM> Equivalent Privacy", and - consider it a horribly flawed design based on bogus "requirements". You - do not control radio waves as you might control your wires, so the - metaphor in the rationale is utterly inapplicable. A security policy - that chooses not to invest resources in protecting against certain - attacks which can only be conducted by people physically plugged into - your LAN may or may not be reasonable. The same policy is completely - unreasonable when someone can "plug in" from a laptop half a block - away..</P> -<P>There has been considerable analysis indicating that WEP is seriously - flawed. A FAQ on attacks against WEP is available. Part of it reads:</P> -<BLOCKQUOTE> ... attacks are practical to mount using only inexpensive - off-the-shelf equipment. We recommend that anyone using an 802.11 - wireless network not rely on WEP for security, and employ other - security measures to protect their wireless network. Note that our - attacks apply to both 40-bit and the so-called 128-bit versions of WEP - equally well.</BLOCKQUOTE> -<P>WEP appears to be yet another instance of governments, and - unfortunately some vendors and standards bodies, deliberately promoting - hopelessly flawed "security" products, apparently mainly for the - benefit of eavesdropping agencies. See this<A href="#weak"> discussion</A> -.</P> -</DD> -<DT><A name="X">X</A></DT> -<DT><A name="X509">X.509</A></DT> -<DD>A standard from the<A href="http://www.itu.int"> ITU (International - Telecommunication Union)</A>, for hierarchical directories with - authentication services, used in many<A href="#PKI"> PKI</A> - implementations. -<P>Use of X.509 services, via the<A href="#LDAP"> LDAP protocol</A>, for - certification of keys is allowed but not required by the<A href="#IPSEC"> - IPsec</A> RFCs. It is not yet implemented in<A href="#FreeSWAN"> Linux - FreeS/WAN</A>.</P> -</DD> -<DT>Xedia</DT> -<DD>A vendor of router and Internet access products, now part of Lucent. - Their QVPN products interoperate with Linux FreeS/WAN; see our<A href="#xedia"> - interop document</A>.</DD> -<DT><A name="Y">Y</A></DT> -<DT><A name="Z">Z</A></DT> -</DL> -<HR> -<H1><A name="biblio">Bibliography for the Linux FreeS/WAN project</A></H1> -<P>For extensive bibliographic links, see the<A href="http://liinwww.ira.uka.de/bibliography/index.html"> - Collection of Computer Science Bibliographies</A></P> -<P>See our<A href="web.html"> web links</A> for material available - online.</P> -<HR><A name="adams"> Carlisle Adams and Steve Lloyd<CITE> Understanding - Public Key Infrastructure</CITE> -<BR></A> Macmillan 1999 ISBN 1-57870-166-x -<P>An overview, mainly concentrating on policy and strategic issues - rather than the technical details. Both authors work for<A href="#PKI"> - PKI</A> vendor<A href="http://www.entrust.com/"> Entrust</A>.</P> -<HR><A name="DNS.book"> Albitz, Liu & Loukides<CITE> DNS & BIND</CITE> - 3rd edition -<BR></A> O'Reilly 1998 ISBN 1-56592-512-2 -<P>The standard reference on the<A href="#DNS"> Domain Name Service</A> - and<A href="#BIND"> Berkeley Internet Name Daemon</A>.</P> -<HR><A name="anderson"> Ross Anderson</A>,<CITE> Security Engineering - - a Guide to Building Dependable Distributed Systems</CITE> -<BR> Wiley, 2001, ISBN 0471389226 -<P>Easily the best book for the security professional I have seen.<STRONG> - Highly recommended</STRONG>. See the<A href="http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~rja14/book.html"> - book web page</A>.</P> -<P>This is quite readable, but Schneier's<A href="#secrets"> Secrets and - Lies</A> might be an easier introduction.</P> -<HR><A name="puzzle"> Bamford<CITE> The Puzzle Palace, A report on NSA, - Americas's most Secret Agency</CITE> -<BR> Houghton Mifflin 1982 ISBN 0-395-31286-8</A> -<HR> Bamford<CITE> Body of Secrets</CITE> -<P>The sequel.</P> -<HR><A name="bander"> David Bander</A>,<CITE> Linux Security Toolkit</CITE> -<BR> IDG Books, 2000, ISBN: 0764546902 -<P>This book has a short section on FreeS/WAN and includes Caldera Linux - on CD.</P> -<HR><A name="CZR"> Chapman, Zwicky & Russell</A>,<CITE> Building - Internet Firewalls</CITE> -<BR> O'Reilly 1995 ISBN 1-56592-124-0 -<HR><A name="firewall.book"> Cheswick and Bellovin</A><CITE> Firewalls - and Internet Security: Repelling the Wily Hacker</CITE> -<BR> Addison-Wesley 1994 ISBN 0201633574 -<P>A fine book on firewalls in particular and security in general from - two of AT&T's system adminstrators.</P> -<P>Bellovin has also done a number of<A href="#papers"> papers</A> on - IPsec and co-authored a<A href="#applied"> paper</A> on a large - FreeS/WAN application.</P> -<HR><A name="comer"> Comer<CITE> Internetworking with TCP/IP</CITE> -<BR> Prentice Hall</A> -<UL> -<LI>Vol. I: Principles, Protocols, & Architecture, 3rd Ed. 1995 - ISBN:0-13-216987-8</LI> -<LI>Vol. II: Design, Implementation, & Internals, 2nd Ed. 1994 - ISBN:0-13-125527-4</LI> -<LI>Vol. III: Client/Server Programming & Applications -<UL> -<LI>AT&T TLI Version 1994 ISBN:0-13-474230-3</LI> -<LI>BSD Socket Version 1996 ISBN:0-13-260969-X</LI> -<LI>Windows Sockets Version 1997 ISBN:0-13-848714-6</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -</UL> -<P>If you need to deal with the details of the network protocols, read - either this series or the<A href="#stevens"> Stevens and Wright</A> - series before you start reading the RFCs.</P> -<HR><A name="diffie"> Diffie and Landau</A><CITE> Privacy on the Line: - The Politics of Wiretapping and Encryption</CITE> -<BR> MIT press 1998 ISBN 0-262-04167-7 (hardcover) or 0-262-54100-9 -<BR> -<HR><A name="d_and_hark"> Doraswamy and Harkins<CITE> IP Sec: The New - Security Standard for the Internet, Intranets and Virtual Private - Networks</CITE> -<BR> Prentice Hall 1999 ISBN: 0130118982</A> -<HR><A name="EFF"> Electronic Frontier Foundation<CITE> Cracking DES: - Secrets of Encryption Research, Wiretap Politics and Chip Design</CITE> -<BR></A> O'Reilly 1998 ISBN 1-56592-520-3 -<P>To conclusively demonstrate that DES is inadequate for continued use, - the<A href="#EFF"> EFF</A> built a machine for just over $200,000 that - breaks DES encryption in under five days on average, under nine in the - worst case.</P> -<P>The book provides details of their design and, perhaps even more - important, discusses why they felt the project was necessary. - Recommended for anyone interested in any of the three topics mentioned - in the subtitle.</P> -<P>See also the<A href="http://www.eff.org/descracker.html"> EFF page on - this project</A> and our discussion of<A href="#desnotsecure"> DES - insecurity</A>.</P> -<HR> Martin Freiss<CITE> Protecting Networks with SATAN</CITE> -<BR> O'Reilly 1998 ISBN 1-56592-425-8 -<BR> translated from a 1996 work in German -<P>SATAN is a Security Administrator's Tool for Analysing Networks. This - book is a tutorial in its use.</P> -<HR> Gaidosch and Kunzinger<CITE> A Guide to Virtual Private Networks</CITE> -<BR> Prentice Hall 1999 ISBN: 0130839647 -<HR><A name="Garfinkel"> Simson Garfinkel</A><CITE> Database Nation: the - death of privacy in the 21st century</CITE> -<BR> O'Reilly 2000 ISBN 1-56592-653-6 -<P>A thoughtful and rather scary book.</P> -<HR><A name="PGP"> Simson Garfinkel</A><CITE> PGP: Pretty Good Privacy</CITE> -<BR> O'Reilly 1995 ISBN 1-56592-098-8 -<P>An excellent introduction and user manual for the<A href="#PGP"> PGP</A> - email-encryption package. PGP is a good package with a complex and - poorly-designed user interface. This book or one like it is a must for - anyone who has to use it at length.</P> -<P>The book covers using PGP in Unix, PC and Macintosh environments, - plus considerable background material on both the technical and - political issues around cryptography.</P> -<P>The book is now seriously out of date. It does not cover recent - developments such as commercial versions since PGP 5, the Open PGP - standard or GNU PG..</P> -<HR><A name="practical"> Garfinkel and Spafford</A><CITE> Practical Unix - Security</CITE> -<BR> O'Reilly 1996 ISBN 1-56592-148-8 -<P>A standard reference.</P> -<P>Spafford's web page has an excellent collection of<A href="http://www.cs.purdue.edu/coast/hotlist"> - crypto and security links</A>.</P> -<HR><A name="Kahn"> David Kahn</A><CITE> The Codebreakers: the - Comprehensive History of Secret Communications from Ancient Times to - the Internet</CITE> -<BR> second edition Scribner 1996 ISBN 0684831309 -<P>A history of codes and code-breaking from ancient Egypt to the 20th - century. Well-written and exhaustively researched.<STRONG> Highly - recommended</STRONG>, even though it does not have much on computer - cryptography.</P> -<HR> David Kahn<CITE> Seizing the Enigma, The Race to Break the German - U-Boat codes, 1939-1943</CITE> -<BR> Houghton Mifflin 1991 ISBN 0-395-42739-8 -<HR><A name="kirch"> Olaf Kirch</A><CITE> Linux Network Administrator's - Guide</CITE> -<BR> O'Reilly 1995 ISBN 1-56592-087-2 -<P>Now becoming somewhat dated in places, but still a good introductory - book and general reference.</P> -<HR><A name="LinVPN"> Kolesnikov and Hatch</A>,<CITE> Building Linux - Virtual Private Networks (VPNs)</CITE> -<BR> New Riders 2002 -<P>This has had a number of favorable reviews, including<A href="http://www.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/02/27/0115214&mode=thread&tid=172"> - this one</A> on Slashdot. The book has a<A href="http://www.buildinglinuxvpns.net/"> - web site</A>.</P> -<HR><A name="RFCs"> Pete Loshin<CITE> Big Book of IPsec RFCs</CITE> -<BR> Morgan Kaufmann 2000 ISBN: 0-12-455839-9</A> -<HR><A name="crypto"> Steven Levy<CITE> Crypto: How the Code Rebels Beat - the Government -- Saving Privacy in the Digital Age</CITE></A> -<BR> Penguin 2001, ISBN 0-670--85950-8 -<P><STRONG>Highly recommended</STRONG>. A fine history of recent (about - 1970-2000) developments in the field, and the related political - controversies. FreeS/WAN project founder and leader John Gilmore - appears several times.</P> -<P>The book does not cover IPsec or FreeS/WAN, but this project is very - much another battle in the same war. See our discussion of the<A href="politics.html"> - politics</A>.</P> -<HR><A name="GTR"> Matyas, Anderson et al.</A><CITE> The Global Trust - Register</CITE> -<BR> Northgate Consultants Ltd 1998 ISBN: 0953239705 -<BR> hard cover edition MIT Press 1999 ISBN 0262511053 -<P>From<A href="http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/Research/Security/Trust-Register"> - their web page:</A></P> -<BLOCKQUOTE> This book is a register of the fingerprints of the world's - most important public keys; it implements a top-level certification - authority (CA) using paper and ink rather than in an electronic system.</BLOCKQUOTE> -<HR><A name="handbook"> Menezies, van Oorschot and Vanstone<CITE> - Handbook of Applied Cryptography</CITE></A> -<BR> CRC Press 1997 -<BR> ISBN 0-8493-8523-7 -<P>An excellent reference. Read<A href="#schneier"> Schneier</A> before - tackling this.</P> -<HR> Michael Padlipsky<CITE> Elements of Networking Style</CITE> -<BR> Prentice-Hall 1985 ISBN 0-13-268111-0 or 0-13-268129-3 -<P>Probably<STRONG> the funniest technical book ever written</STRONG>, - this is a vicious but well-reasoned attack on the OSI "seven layer - model" and all that went with it. Several chapters of it are also - available as RFCs 871 to 875.</P> -<HR><A name="matrix"> John S. Quarterman</A><CITE> The Matrix: Computer - Networks and Conferencing Systems Worldwide</CITE> -<BR> Digital Press 1990 ISBN 155558-033-5 -<BR> Prentice-Hall ISBN 0-13-565607-9 -<P>The best general treatment of computer-mediated communication we have - seen. It naturally has much to say about the Internet, but also covers - UUCP, Fidonet and so on.</P> -<HR><A name="ranch"> David Ranch</A><CITE> Securing Linux Step by Step</CITE> -<BR> SANS Institute, 1999 -<P><A href="http://www.sans.org/">SANS</A> is a respected organisation, - this guide is part of a well-known series, and Ranch has previously - written the useful<A href=" http://www.ecst.csuchico.edu/~dranch/LINUX/index-linux.html#trinityos"> - Trinity OS</A> guide to securing Linux, so my guess would be this is a - pretty good book. I haven't read it yet, so I'm not certain. It can be - ordered online from<A href="http://www.sans.org/"> SANS</A>.</P> -<P>Note (Mar 1, 2002): a new edition with different editors in the - works. Expect it this year.</P> -<HR><A name="schneier"> Bruce Schneier</A><CITE> Applied Cryptography, - Second Edition</CITE> -<BR> John Wiley & Sons, 1996 -<BR> ISBN 0-471-12845-7 hardcover -<BR> ISBN 0-471-11709-9 paperback -<P>A standard reference on computer cryptography. For more recent - essays, see the<A href="http://www.counterpane.com/"> author's - company's web site</A>.</P> -<HR><A name="secrets"> Bruce Schneier</A><CITE> Secrets and Lies</CITE> -<BR> Wiley 2000, ISBN 0-471-25311-1 -<P>An interesting discussion of security and privacy issues, written - with more of an "executive overview" approach rather than a narrow - focus on the technical issues.<STRONG> Highly recommended</STRONG>.</P> -<P>This is worth reading even if you already understand security issues, - or think you do. To go deeper, follow it with Anderson's<A href="#anderson"> - Security Engineering</A>.</P> -<HR><A name="VPNbook"> Scott, Wolfe and Irwin<CITE> Virtual Private - Networks</CITE></A> -<BR> 2nd edition, O'Reilly 1999 ISBN: 1-56592-529-7 -<P>This is the only O'Reilly book, out of a dozen I own, that I'm - disappointed with. It deals mainly with building VPNs with various - proprietary tools --<A href="#PPTP"> PPTP</A>,<A href="#ssh"> SSH</A>, - Cisco PIX, ... -- and touches only lightly on IPsec-based approaches.</P> -<P>That said, it appears to deal competently with what it does cover and - it has readable explanations of many basic VPN and security concepts. - It may be exactly what some readers require, even if I find the - emphasis unfortunate.</P> -<HR><A name="LASG"> Kurt Seifried<CITE> Linux Administrator's Security - Guide</CITE></A> -<P>Available online from<A href="http://www.securityportal.com/lasg/"> - Security Portal</A>. It has fairly extensive coverage of IPsec.</P> -<HR><A name="Smith"> Richard E Smith<CITE> Internet Cryptography</CITE> -<BR></A> ISBN 0-201-92480-3, Addison Wesley, 1997 -<P>See the book's<A href="http://www.visi.com/crypto/inet-crypto/index.html"> - home page</A></P> -<HR><A name="neal"> Neal Stephenson<CITE> Cryptonomicon</CITE></A> -<BR> Hardcover ISBN -380-97346-4, Avon, 1999. -<P>A novel in which cryptography and the net figure prominently.<STRONG> - Highly recommended</STRONG>: I liked it enough I immediately went out - and bought all the author's other books.</P> -<P>There is also a paperback edition. Sequels are expected.</P> -<HR><A name="stevens"> Stevens and Wright</A><CITE> TCP/IP Illustrated</CITE> -<BR> Addison-Wesley -<UL> -<LI>Vol. I: The Protocols 1994 ISBN:0-201-63346-9</LI> -<LI>Vol. II: The Implementation 1995 ISBN:0-201-63354-X</LI> -<LI>Vol. III: TCP for Transactions, HTTP, NNTP, and the UNIX Domain - Protocols 1996 ISBN: 0-201-63495-3</LI> -</UL> -<P>If you need to deal with the details of the network protocols, read - either this series or the<A href="#comer"> Comer</A> series before you - start reading the RFCs.</P> -<HR><A name="Rubini"> Rubini</A><CITE> Linux Device Drivers</CITE> -<BR> O'Reilly & Associates, Inc. 1998 ISBN 1-56592-292-1 -<HR><A name="Zeigler"> Robert Zeigler</A><CITE> Linux Firewalls</CITE> -<BR> Newriders Publishing, 2000 ISBN 0-7537-0900-9 -<P>A good book, with detailed coverage of ipchains(8) firewalls and of - many related issues.</P> -<HR> -<H1><A name="RFC">IPsec RFCs and related documents</A></H1> -<H2><A name="RFCfile">The RFCs.tar.gz Distribution File</A></H2> -<P>The Linux FreeS/WAN distribution is available from<A href="http://www.xs4all.nl/~freeswan"> - our primary distribution site</A> and various mirror sites. To give - people more control over their downloads, the RFCs that define IP - security are bundled separately in the file RFCs.tar.gz.</P> -<P>The file you are reading is included in the main distribution and is - available on the web site. It describes the RFCs included in the<A href="#RFCs.tar.gz"> - RFCs.tar.gz</A> bundle and gives some pointers to<A href="#sources"> - other ways to get them</A>.</P> -<H2><A name="sources">Other sources for RFCs & Internet drafts</A></H2> -<H3><A name="RFCdown">RFCs</A></H3> -<P>RFCs are downloadble at many places around the net such as:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.rfc-editor.org">http://www.rfc-editor.org</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://nis.nsf.net/internet/documents/rfc">NSF.net</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://sunsite.doc.ic.ac.uk/computing/internet/rfc">Sunsite - in the UK</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>browsable in HTML form at others such as:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.landfield.com/rfcs/index.html">landfield.com</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.library.ucg.ie/Connected/RFC">Connected Internet - Encyclopedia</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>and some of them are available in translation:</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.eisti.fr/eistiweb/docs/normes/">French</A></LI> -</UL> -<P>There is also a published<A href="#RFCs"> Big Book of IPSEC RFCs</A>.</P> -<H3><A name="drafts">Internet Drafts</A></H3> -<P>Internet Drafts, working documents which sometimes evolve into RFCs, - are also available.</P> -<UL> -<LI><A href="http://www.ietf.org/ID.html">Overall reference page</A></LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.ietf.org/ids.by.wg/ipsec.html">IPsec</A> working - group</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.ietf.org/ids.by.wg/ipsra.html">IPSRA (IPsec - Remote Access)</A> working group</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.ietf.org/ids.by.wg/ipsp.html">IPsec Policy</A> - working group</LI> -<LI><A href="http://www.ietf.org/ids.by.wg/kink.html">KINK (Kerberized - Internet Negotiation of Keys)</A> working group</LI> -</UL> -<P>Note: some of these may be obsolete, replaced by later drafts or by - RFCs.</P> -<H3><A name="FIPS1">FIPS standards</A></H3> -<P>Some things used by<A href="#IPSEC"> IPsec</A>, such as<A href="#DES"> - DES</A> and<A href="#SHA"> SHA</A>, are defined by US government - standards called<A href="#FIPS"> FIPS</A>. The issuing organisation,<A href="#NIST"> - NIST</A>, have a<A href="http://www.itl.nist.gov/div897/pubs"> FIPS - home page</A>.</P> -<H2><A name="RFCs.tar.gz">What's in the RFCs.tar.gz bundle?</A></H2> -<P>All filenames are of the form rfc*.txt, with the * replaced with the - RFC number.</P> -<PRE>RFC# Title</PRE> -<H3><A name="rfc.ov">Overview RFCs</A></H3> -<PRE>2401 Security Architecture for the Internet Protocol -2411 IP Security Document Roadmap</PRE> -<H3><A name="basic.prot">Basic protocols</A></H3> -<PRE>2402 IP Authentication Header -2406 IP Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP)</PRE> -<H3><A name="key.ike">Key management</A></H3> -<PRE>2367 PF_KEY Key Management API, Version 2 -2407 The Internet IP Security Domain of Interpretation for ISAKMP -2408 Internet Security Association and Key Management Protocol (ISAKMP) -2409 The Internet Key Exchange (IKE) -2412 The OAKLEY Key Determination Protocol -2528 Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure</PRE> -<H3><A name="rfc.detail">Details of various things used</A></H3> -<PRE>2085 HMAC-MD5 IP Authentication with Replay Prevention -2104 HMAC: Keyed-Hashing for Message Authentication -2202 Test Cases for HMAC-MD5 and HMAC-SHA-1 -2207 RSVP Extensions for IPSEC Data Flows -2403 The Use of HMAC-MD5-96 within ESP and AH -2404 The Use of HMAC-SHA-1-96 within ESP and AH -2405 The ESP DES-CBC Cipher Algorithm With Explicit IV -2410 The NULL Encryption Algorithm and Its Use With IPsec -2451 The ESP CBC-Mode Cipher Algorithms -2521 ICMP Security Failures Messages</PRE> -<H3><A name="rfc.ref">Older RFCs which may be referenced</A></H3> -<PRE>1321 The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm -1828 IP Authentication using Keyed MD5 -1829 The ESP DES-CBC Transform -1851 The ESP Triple DES Transform -1852 IP Authentication using Keyed SHA</PRE> -<H3><A name="rfc.dns">RFCs for secure DNS service, which IPsec may use</A> -</H3> -<PRE>2137 Secure Domain Name System Dynamic Update -2230 Key Exchange Delegation Record for the DNS -2535 Domain Name System Security Extensions -2536 DSA KEYs and SIGs in the Domain Name System (DNS) -2537 RSA/MD5 KEYs and SIGs in the Domain Name System (DNS) -2538 Storing Certificates in the Domain Name System (DNS) -2539 Storage of Diffie-Hellman Keys in the Domain Name System (DNS)</PRE> -<H3><A name="rfc.exp">RFCs labelled "experimental"</A></H3> -<PRE>2521 ICMP Security Failures Messages -2522 Photuris: Session-Key Management Protocol -2523 Photuris: Extended Schemes and Attributes</PRE> -<H3><A name="rfc.rel">Related RFCs</A></H3> -<PRE>1750 Randomness Recommendations for Security -1918 Address Allocation for Private Internets -1984 IAB and IESG Statement on Cryptographic Technology and the Internet -2144 The CAST-128 Encryption Algorithm</PRE> -<HR> -<H1><A name="roadmap">Distribution Roadmap: What's Where in Linux - FreeS/WAN</A></H1> -<P> This file is a guide to the locations of files within the FreeS/WAN - distribution. Everything described here should be on your system once - you download, gunzip, and untar the distribution.</P> -<P>This distribution contains two major subsystems</P> -<DL> -<DT><A href="#klips.roadmap">KLIPS</A></DT> -<DD>the kernel code</DD> -<DT><A href="#pluto.roadmap">Pluto</A></DT> -<DD>the user-level key-management daemon</DD> -</DL> -<P>plus assorted odds and ends.</P> -<H2><A name="top">Top directory</A></H2> -<P>The top directory has essential information in text files:</P> -<DL> -<DT>README</DT> -<DD>introduction to the software</DD> -<DT>INSTALL</DT> -<DD>short experts-only installation procedures. More detalied procedures - are in<A href="install.html"> installation</A> and<A href="config.html"> - configuration</A> HTML documents.</DD> -<DT>BUGS</DT> -<DD>major known bugs in the current release.</DD> -<DT>CHANGES</DT> -<DD>changes from previous releases</DD> -<DT>CREDITS</DT> -<DD>acknowledgement of contributors</DD> -<DT>COPYING</DT> -<DD>licensing and distribution information</DD> -</DL> -<H2><A name="doc">Documentation</A></H2> -<P> The doc directory contains the bulk of the documentation, most of it - in HTML format. See the<A href="index.html"> index file</A> for - details.</P> -<H2><A name="klips.roadmap">KLIPS: kernel IP security</A></H2> -<P><A href="#KLIPS"> KLIPS</A> is<STRONG> K</STRONG>erne<STRONG>L</STRONG><STRONG> - IP</STRONG><STRONG> S</STRONG>ecurity. It lives in the klips directory, - of course.</P> -<DL> -<DT>klips/doc</DT> -<DD>documentation</DD> -<DT>klips/patches</DT> -<DD>patches for existing kernel files</DD> -<DT>klips/test</DT> -<DD>test stuff</DD> -<DT>klips/utils</DT> -<DD>low-level user utilities</DD> -<DT>klips/net/ipsec</DT> -<DD>actual klips kernel files</DD> -<DT>klips/src</DT> -<DD>symbolic link to klips/net/ipsec -<P>The "make insert" step of installation installs the patches and makes - a symbolic link from the kernel tree to klips/net/ipsec. The odd name - of klips/net/ipsec is dictated by some annoying limitations of the - scripts which build the Linux kernel. The symbolic-link business is a - bit messy, but all the alternatives are worse.</P> -<P></P> -</DD> -<DT>klips/utils</DT> -<DD>Utility programs: -<P></P> -<DL> -<DT>eroute</DT> -<DD>manipulate IPsec extended routing tables</DD> -<DT>klipsdebug</DT> -<DD>set Klips (kernel IPsec support) debug features and level</DD> -<DT>spi</DT> -<DD>manage IPsec Security Associations</DD> -<DT>spigrp</DT> -<DD>group/ungroup IPsec Security Associations</DD> -<DT>tncfg</DT> -<DD>associate IPsec virtual interface with real interface</DD> -</DL> -<P>These are all normally invoked by ipsec(8) with commands such as</P> -<PRE> ipsec tncfg <VAR>arguments</VAR></PRE> - There are section 8 man pages for all of these; the names have "ipsec_" - as a prefix, so your man command should be something like: -<PRE> man 8 ipsec_tncfg</PRE> -</DD> -</DL> -<H2><A name="pluto.roadmap">Pluto key and connection management daemon</A> -</H2> -<P><A href="#Pluto"> Pluto</A> is our key management and negotiation - daemon. It lives in the pluto directory, along with its low-level user - utility, whack.</P> -<P> There are no subdirectories. Documentation is a man page,<A href="manpage.d/ipsec_pluto.8.html"> - pluto.8</A>. This covers whack as well.</P> -<H2><A name="utils">Utils</A></H2> -<P> The utils directory contains a growing collection of higher-level - user utilities, the commands that administer and control the software. - Most of the things that you will actually have to run yourself are in - there.</P> -<DL> -<DT>ipsec</DT> -<DD>invoke IPsec utilities -<P>ipsec(8) is normally the only program installed in a standard - directory, /usr/local/sbin. It is used to invoke the others, both those - listed below and the ones in klips/utils mentioned above.</P> -<P></P> -</DD> -<DT>auto</DT> -<DD>control automatically-keyed IPsec connections</DD> -<DT>manual</DT> -<DD>take manually-keyed IPsec connections up and down</DD> -<DT>barf</DT> -<DD>generate copious debugging output</DD> -<DT>look</DT> -<DD>generate moderate amounts of debugging output</DD> -</DL> -<P> There are .8 manual pages for these. look is covered in barf.8. The - man pages have an "ipsec_" prefix so your man command should be - something like:</P> -<PRE> - man 8 ipsec_auto -</PRE> -<P> Examples are in various files with names utils/*.eg</P> -<H2><A name="lib">Libraries</A></H2> -<H3><A name="fswanlib">FreeS/WAN Library</A></H3> -<P> The lib directory is the FreeS/WAN library, also steadily growing, - used by both user-level and kernel code. -<BR /> It includes section 3<A href="manpages.html"> man pages</A> for - the library routines.</P> -<H3><A name="otherlib">Imported Libraries</A></H3> -<H4><A NAME="33_6_2_1">LibDES</A></H4> - The libdes library, originally from SSLeay, is used by both Klips and - Pluto for<A href="#3DES"> Triple DES</A> encryption. Single DES is not - used because<A href="#desnotsecure"> it is insecure</A>. -<P> Note that this library has its own license, different from the<A href="#GPL"> - GPL</A> used for other code in FreeS/WAN.</P> -<P> The library includes its own documentation.</P> -<H4><A NAME="33_6_2_2">GMP</A></H4> - The GMP (GNU multi-precision) library is used for multi-precision - arithmetic in Pluto's key-exchange code and public key code. -<P> Older versions (up to 1.7) of FreeS/WAN included a copy of this - library in the FreeS/WAN distribution.</P> -<P> Since 1.8, we have begun to rely on the system copy of GMP.</P> -<HR> -<H1><A name="umltesting">User-Mode-Linux Testing guide</A></H1> -<P> User mode linux is a way to compile a linux kernel such that it can - run as a process in another linux system (potentially as a *BSD or - Windows process later). See<A HREF="http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/"> - http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/</A></P> -<P> UML is a good platform for testing and experimenting with FreeS/WAN. - It allows several network nodes to be simulated on a single machine. - Creating, configuring, installing, monitoring, and controling these - nodes is generally easier and easier to script with UML than real - hardware.</P> -<P> You'll need about 500Mb of disk space for a full - sunrise-east-west-sunset setup. You can possibly get this down by 130Mb - if you remove the sunrise/sunset kernel build. If you just want to run, - then you can even remove the east/west kernel build.</P> -<P> Nothing need be done as super user. In a couple of steps, we note - where super user is required to install commands in system-wide - directories, but ~/bin could be used instead. UML seems to use a - system-wide /tmp/uml directory so different users may interfere with - one another. Later UMLs use ~/.uml instead, so multiple users running - UML tests should not be a problem, but note that a single user running - the UML tests will only be able run one set. Further, UMLs sometimes - get stuck and hang around. These "zombies" (most will actually be in - the "T" state in the process table) will interfere with subsequent - tests.</P> -<H2><A NAME="34_1">Preliminary Notes on BIND</A></H2> -<P> As of 2003/3/1, the Light-Weight Resolver is used by pluto. This - requires that BIND9 be running. It also requires that BIND9 development - libraries be present in the build environment. The DNSSEC code is only - truly functional in BIND9 snapshots. The library code could be 9.2.2, - we believe. We are using BIND9 20021115 snapshot code from<A HREF="ftp://ftp.isc.org/isc/bind9/snapshots"> - ftp://ftp.isc.org/isc/bind9/snapshots</A>.</P> -<P> FreeS/WAN may well require a newer BIND than is on your system. Many - distributions have moved to BIND9.2.2 recently due to a security - advisory. BIND is five components.</P> -<OL> -<LI> named</LI> -<LI> dnssec-*</LI> -<LI> client side resolver libraries</LI> -<LI> client side utility libraries I thought there were lib and named - parts to dnsssec...</LI> -<LI> dynamic DNS update utilities</LI> -</OL> -<P> The only piece that we need for *building* is #4. That's the only - part that has to be on the build host. What is the difference between - resolver and util libs? If you want to edit - testing/baseconfigs/all/etc/bind, you'll need a snapshot version. The - resolver library contains the resolver. FreeS/WAN has its own copy of - that in lib/liblwres.</P> -<H2><A NAME="34_2">Steps to Install UML for FreeS/WAN</A></H2> -<OL> -<LI> Get the following files: -<OL type="a"> -<LI> from<A HREF="http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/freeswan/uml/"> - http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/freeswan/uml/</A> - umlfreeroot-15.1.tar.gz (or highest numbered one). This is a debian - potato root file system. You can use this even on a Redhat host, as it - has the newer GLIBC2.2 libraries as well. -<!-- If you are using - Redhat 7.2 or newer as your development machine, you can create the - image from your installation media. See <A HREF="uml-rhroot.html">Building a RedHat root"></A>. - A future document will explain how to build this from .DEB files as well. ---> - -<!-- -<LI> umlfreesharemini.tar.gz (or umlfreeshareall.tar.gz). - If you are a Debian potato user, you don't need it you can use your - native /usr/share. -</UL> ---> -</LI> -<LI> From<A HREF="ftp://ftp.xs4all.nl/pub/crypto/freeswan/"> - ftp://ftp.xs4all.nl/pub/crypto/freeswan/</A> a snapshot or release - (1.92 or better)</LI> -<LI> From a<A HREF="http://www.kernel.org/mirrors/"> - http://www.kernel.org mirror</A>, the virgin 2.4.19 kernel. Please - realize that we have defaults in our tree for kernel configuration. We - try to track the latest UML kernels. If you use a newer kernel, you may - have faults in the kernel build process. You can see what the latest - that is being regularly tested by visiting<A HREF="http://bugs.freeswan.org:81/regress/HEAD/lastgood/freeswan-regress-env.sh"> - freeswan-regress-env.sh</A>.</LI> -<LI> -<!-- Note: this step is refered to as "step 1d" below. --> - Get<A HREF="http://ftp.nl.linux.org/uml/"> - http://ftp.nl.linux.org/uml/</A> uml-patch-2.4.19-47.bz2 or the one - associated with your kernel. As of 2003/03/05, uml-patch-2.4.19-47.bz2 - works for us.<STRONG> More recent versions of the patch have not been - tested by us.</STRONG></LI> -<LI> You'll probably want to visit<A HREF="http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net"> - http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net</A> and get the UML utilities. - These are not needed for the build or interactive use (but - recommended). They are necessary for the regression testing procedures - used by "make check". We currently use uml_utilities_20020212.tar.bz2.</LI> -<LI> You need tcpdump version 3.7.1 or better. This is newer than the - version included in most LINUX distributions. You can check the version - of an installed tcpdump with the --version flag. If you need a newer - tcpdump fetch both tcpdump and libpcap source tar files from<A HREF="http://www.tcpdump.org/"> - http://www.tcpdump.org/</A> or a mirror.</LI> -</OL> -</LI> -<LI> Pick a suitable place, and extract the following files: -<OL type="a"> -<LI> -<!-- Note: this step is refered to as "step 2a" later. --> - 2.4.19 kernel. For instance: -<PRE> - <CODE> cd /c2/kernel - tar xzvf ../download/pub/linux/kernel/v2.4/linux-2.4.19.tar.gz -</CODE> -</PRE> -</LI> -<LI> extract the umlfreeroot file -<!-- (unless you <A HREF="uml-rhroot.html">built your own from RPMs</A>) --> - -<PRE> - <CODE> mkdir -p /c2/user-mode-linux/basic-root - cd /c2/user-mode-linux/basic-root - tar xzvf ../download/umlfreeroot-15.1.tar.gz -</CODE> -</PRE> -</LI> -<LI> FreeSWAN itself (or checkout "all" from CVS) -<PRE> - <CODE> mkdir -p /c2/freeswan/sandbox - cd /c2/freeswan/sandbox - tar xzvf ../download/snapshot.tar.gz -</CODE> -</PRE> -</LI> -</OL> -</LI> -<LI> If you need to build a newer tcpdump: -<UL> -<LI> Make sure you have OpenSSL installed -- it is needed for - cryptographic routines.</LI> -<LI> Unpack libpcap and tcpdump source in parallel directories (the - tcpdump build procedures look for libpcap next door).</LI> -<LI> Change directory into the libpcap source directory and then build - the library: -<PRE> - <CODE> ./configure - make -</CODE> -</PRE> -</LI> -<LI> Change into the tcpdump source directory, build tcpdump, and - install it. -<PRE> - <CODE> ./configure - make - # Need to be superuser to install in system directories. - # Installing in ~/bin would be an alternative. - su -c "make install" -</CODE> -</PRE> -</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI> If you need the uml utilities, unpack them somewhere then build and - install them: -<PRE> - <CODE> cd tools - make all - # Need to be superuser to install in system directories. - # Installing in ~/bin would be an alternative. - su -c "make install BIN_DIR=/usr/local/bin" -</CODE> -</PRE> -</LI> -<LI> set up the configuration file -<UL> -<LI> <CODE>cd /c2/freeswan/sandbox/freeswan-1.97/testing/utils</CODE></LI> -<LI> copy umlsetup-sample.sh to ../../umlsetup.sh: <CODE> cp - umlsetup-sample.sh ../../umlsetup.sh</CODE></LI> -<LI> open up ../../umlsetup.sh in your favorite editor.</LI> -<LI> change POOLSPACE= to point to the place with at least 500Mb of - disk. Best if it is on the same partition as the "umlfreeroot" - extraction, as it will attempt to use hard links if possible to save - disk space.</LI> -<LI> Set TESTINGROOT if you intend to run the script outside of the - sandbox/snapshot/release directory. Otherwise, it will configure - itself.</LI> -<LI> KERNPOOL should point to the directory with your 2.4.19 kernel - tree. This tree should be unconfigured! This is the directory you used - in step 2a.</LI> -<LI> UMLPATCH should point at the bz2 file you downloaded at 1d. If - using a kernel that already includes the patch, set this to /dev/null.</LI> -<LI> FREESWANDIR should point at the directory where you unpacked the - snapshot/release. Include the "freeswan-snap2001sep16b" or whatever in - it. If you are running from CVS, then you point at the directory where - top, klips, etc. are. The script will fix up the directory so that it - can be used.</LI> -<LI> BASICROOT should be set to the directory used in 2b, or to the - directory that you created with RPMs.</LI> -<LI> SHAREDIR should be set to the directory used in 2c, to /usr/share - for Debian potato users, or to $BASICROOT/usr/share.</LI> -</UL> -</LI> -<LI> -<PRE> <CODE>cd $TESTINGROOT/utils -sh make-uml.sh -</CODE></PRE> - It will grind for awhile. If there are errors it will bail. If so, run - it under "script" and send the output to bugs@lists.freeswan.org.</LI> -<LI> You will have a bunch of stuff under $POOLSPACE. Open four xterms: -<PRE> <CODE> for i in sunrise sunset east west - do - xterm -name $i -title $i -e $POOLSPACE/$i/start.sh done -</CODE></PRE> -</LI> -<LI> Login as root. Password is "root" (Note, these virtual machines are - networked together, but are not configured to talk to the rest of the - world.)</LI> -<LI> verify that pluto started on east/west, run "ipsec look"</LI> -<LI> login to sunrise. run "ping sunset"</LI> -<LI> login to west. run "tcpdump -p -i eth1 -n" (tcpdump must be version - 3.7.1 or newer)</LI> -<LI> Closing a console xterm will shut down that UML.</LI> -<LI> You can "make check", if you want to. It is run from - /c2/freeswan/sandbox/freeswan-1.97.</LI> -</OL> -<H1><A NAME="35">Debugging the kernel with GDB</A></H1> -<P> With User-Mode-Linux, you can debug the kernel using GDB. See -<!--HREF="http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/debugging.html"--> - - http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/debugging.html.</(null)></P> -<P> Typically, one will want to address a test case for a failing - situation. Running GDB from Emacs, or from other front ends is - possible. First start GDB.</P> -<P> Tell it to open the UMLPOOL/swan/linux program.</P> -<P> Note the PID of GDB:</P> -<PRE> -marajade-[projects/freeswan/mgmt/planning] mcr 1029 %ps ax | grep gdb - 1659 pts/9 SN 0:00 /usr/bin/gdb -fullname -cd /mara4/freeswan/kernpatch/UMLPOOL/swan/ linux -</PRE> -<P> Set the following in the environment:</P> -<PRE> -UML_east_OPT="debug gdb-pid=1659" -</PRE> -<P> Then start the user-mode-linux in the test scheme you wish:</P> -<PRE> -marajade-[kernpatch/testing/klips/east-icmp-02] mcr 1220 %../../utils/runme.sh -</PRE> - The user-mode-linux will stop on boot, giving you a chance to attach to - the process: -<PRE> -(gdb) file linux -Reading symbols from linux...done. -(gdb) attach 1 -Attaching to program: /mara4/freeswan/kernpatch/UMLPOOL/swan/linux, process 1 -0xa0118bc1 in kill () at hostfs_kern.c:770 -</PRE> -<P> At this point, break points should be created as appropriate.</P> -<H2><A NAME="35_1">Other notes about debugging</A></H2> -<P> If you are running a standard test, after all the packets are sent, - the UML will be shutdown. This can cause problems, because the UML may - get terminated while you are debugging.</P> -<P> The environment variable <CODE>NETJIGWAITUSER</CODE> can be set to - "waituser". If so, then the testing system will prompt before exiting - the test.</P> -<H1><A NAME="36">User-Mode-Linux mysteries</A></H1> -<UL> -<LI> running more than one UML of the same name (e.g. "west") can cause - problems.</LI> -<LI> running more than one UML from the same root file system is not a - good idea.</LI> -<LI> all this means that running "make check" twice on the same machine - is probably not a good idea.</LI> -<LI> occationally, UMLs will get stuck. This can happen like: -<!--BLOCK--> - 15134 ? T - 0:00 /spare/hugh/uml/uml2.4.18-sept5/umlbuild/east/linux (east) - [/bin/sh] 15138 ? T 0:00 - /spare/hugh/uml/uml2.4.18-sept5/umlbuild/east/linux (east) [halt]</(null)> - these will need to be killed. Note that they are in "T"racing mode.</LI> -<LI> UMLs can also hang, and will report "Tracing myself and I can't get - out". This is a bug in UML. There are ways to find out what is going on - and report this to the UML people, but we don't know the magic right - now.</LI> -</UL> -<H1><A NAME="37">Getting more info from uml_netjig</A></H1> -<P> uml_netjig can be compiled with a built-in tcpdump. This uses - not-yet-released code from<A HREF="http://www.tcpdump.org/"> - www.tcpdump.org</A>. Please see the instructions in <CODE> -testing/utils/uml_netjig/Makefile</CODE>.</P> -<HR> -<H1><A name="makecheck">How to configure to use "make check"</A></H1> -<H2><A NAME="38_1">What is "make check"</A></H2> -<P> "make check" is a target in the top level makefile. It takes care of - running a number of unit and system tests to confirm that FreeSWAN has - been compiled correctly, and that no new bugs have been introduced.</P> -<P> As FreeSWAN contains both kernel and userspace components, doing - testing of FreeSWAN requires that the kernel be simulated. This is - typically difficult to do as a kernel requires that it be run on bare - hardware. A technology has emerged that makes this simpler. This is<A HREF="http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net"> - User Mode Linux</A>.</P> -<P> User-Mode Linux is a way to build a Linux kernel such that it can - run as a process under another Linux (or in the future other) kernel. - Presently, this can only be done for 2.4 guest kernels. The host kernel - can be 2.2 or 2.4.</P> -<P> "make check" expects to be able to build User-Mode Linux kernels - with FreeSWAN included. To do this it needs to have some files - downloaded and extracted prior to running "make check". This is - described in the<A HREF="umltesting.html"> UML testing</A> document.</P> -<P> After having run the example in the UML testing document and - successfully brought up the four machine combination, you are ready to - use "make check"</P> -<H2><A NAME="38_2">Running "make check"</A></H2> -<P> "make check" works by walking the FreeSWAN source tree invoking the - "check" target at each node. At present there are tests defined only - for the <CODE>klips</CODE> directory. These tests will use the UML - infrastructure to test out pieces of the <CODE>klips</CODE> code.</P> -<P> The results of the tests can be recorded. If the environment - variable <CODE>$REGRESSRESULTS</CODE> is non-null, then the results of - each test will be recorded. This can be used as part of a nightly - regression testing system, see<A HREF="nightly.html"> Nightly testing</A> - for more details.</P> -<P> "make check" otherwise prints a minimal amount of output for each - test, and indicates pass/fail status of each test as they are run. - Failed tests do not cause failure of the target in the form of exit - codes.</P> -<H1><A NAME="39">How to write a "make check" test</A></H1> -<H2><A NAME="39_1">Structure of a test</A></H2> -<P> Each test consists of a set of directories under <CODE>testing/</CODE> -. There are directories for <CODE>klips</CODE>, <CODE>pluto</CODE>, <CODE> -packaging</CODE> and <CODE>libraries</CODE>. Each directory has a list - of tests to run is stored in a file called <CODE>TESTLIST</CODE> in - that directory. e.g. <CODE>testing/klips/TESTLIST</CODE>.</P> -<H2 NAME="TESTLIST"><A NAME="39_2">The TESTLIST</A></H2> -<P> This isn't actually a shell script. It just looks like one. Some - tools other than /bin/sh process it. Lines that start with # are - comments.</P> -<PRE> -# test-kind directory-containing-test expectation [PR#] -</PRE> -<P>The first word provides the test type, detailed below.</P> -<P> The second word is the name of the test to run. This the directory - in which the test case is to be found..</P> -<P>The third word may be one of:</P> -<DL> -<DT> blank/good</DT> -<DD>the test is believed to function, report failure</DD> -<DT> bad</DT> -<DD> the test is known to fail, report unexpected success</DD> -<DT> suspended</DT> -<DD> the test should not be run</DD> -</DL> -<P> The fourth word may be a number, which is a PR# if the test is - failing.</P> -<H2><A NAME="39_3">Test kinds</A></H2> - The test types are: -<DL> -<DT>skiptest</DT> -<DD>means run no test.</DD> -<DT>ctltest</DT> -<DD>means run a single system without input/output.</DD> -<DT>klipstest</DT> -<DD>means run a single system with input/output networks</DD> -<DT><A HREF="#umlplutotest">umlplutotest</A></DT> -<DD>means run a pair of systems</DD> -<DT><A HREF="#umlXhost">umlXhost</A></DT> -<DD>run an arbitrary number of systems</DD> -<DT>suntest (TBD)</DT> -<DD>means run a quad of east/west/sunrise/sunset</DD> -<DT>roadtest (TBD)</DT> -<DD>means run a trio of east-sunrise + warrior</DD> -<DT>extrudedtest (TBD)</DT> -<DD>means run a quad of east-sunrise + warriorsouth + park</DD> -<DT>mkinsttest</DT> -<DD>a test of the "make install" machinery.</DD> -<DT>kernel_test_patch</DT> -<DD>a test of the "make kernelpatch" machinery.</DD> -</DL> - Tests marked (TBD) have yet to be fully defined. -<P> Each test directory has a file in it called <CODE>testparams.sh</CODE> -. This file sets a number of environment variables to define the - parameters of the test.</P> -<H2><A NAME="39_4">Common parameters</A></H2> -<DL> -<DT>TESTNAME</DT> -<DD>the name of the test (repeated for checking purposes)</DD> -<DT>TEST_TYPE</DT> -<DD>the type of the test (repeat of type type above)</DD> -<DT>TESTHOST</DT> -<DD>the name of the UML machine to run for the test, typically "east" or - "west"</DD> -<DT>TEST_PURPOSE</DT> -<DD>The purpose of the test is one of: -<DL> -<DT>goal</DT> -<DD>The goal purpose is where a test is defined for code that is not yet - finished. The test indicates when the goals have in fact been reached.</DD> -<DT>regress</DT> -<DD>This is a test to determine that a previously existing bug has been - repaired. This test will initially be created to reproduce the bug in - isolation, and then the bug will be fixed.</DD> -<DT>exploit</DT> -<DD>This is a set of packets/programs that causes a vulnerability to be - exposed. It is a specific variation of the regress option.</DD> -</DL> -</DD> -<DT>TEST_GOAL_ITEM</DT> -<DT></DT> -<DD>in the case of a goal test, this is a reference to the requirements - document</DD> -<DT>TEST_PROB_REPORT</DT> -<DD>in the case of regression test, this the problem report number from - GNATS</DD> -<DT>TEST_EXPLOIT_URL</DT> -<DD>in the case of an exploit, this is a URL referencing the paper - explaining the origin of the test and the origin of exploit software</DD> -<DT>REF_CONSOLE_OUTPUT</DT> -<DD>a file in the test directory that contains the sanitized console - output against which to compare the output of the actual test.</DD> -<DT>REF_CONSOLE_FIXUPS</DT> -<DD>a list of scripts (found in <CODE>klips/test/fixups</CODE>) to apply - to sanitize the console output of the machine under test. These are - typically perl, awk or sed scripts that remove things in the kernel - output that change each time the test is run and/or compiled.</DD> -<DT>INIT_SCRIPT</DT> -<DD> -<P>a file of commands that is fed into the virtual machine's console in - single user mode prior to starting the tests. This file will usually - set up any eroute's and SADB entries that are required for the test.</P> -<P>Lines beginning with # are skipped. Blank lines are skipped. - Otherwise, a shell prompted is waited for each time (consisting of <CODE> -\n#</CODE>) and then the command is sent. Note that the prompt is waited - for before the command and not after, so completion of the last command - in the script is not required. This is often used to invoke a program - to monitor the system, e.g. <CODE>ipsec pf_key</CODE>.</P> -</DD> -<DT>RUN_SCRIPT</DT> -<DD> -<P>a file of commands that is fed into the virtual machine's console in - single user mode, before the packets are sent. On single machine tests, - this script doesn't provide any more power than INIT_SCRIPT, but is - implemented for consistency's sake.</P> -</DD> -<DT>FINAL_SCRIPT</DT> -<DD> -<P>a file of commands that is fed into the virtual machine's console in - single user mode after the final packet is sent. Similar to - INIT_SCRIPT, above. If not specified, then the single command "halt" is - sent. If specified, then the script should end with a halt command to - nicely shutdown the UML.</P> -</DD> -<DT>CONSOLEDIFFDEBUG</DT> -<DD>If set to "true" then the series of console fixups (see - REF_CONSOLE_FIXUPS) will be output after it is constructed. (It should - be set to "false", or unset otherwise)</DD> -<DT>NETJIGDEBUG</DT> -<DD>If set to "true" then the series of console fixups (see - REF_CONSOLE_FIXUPS) will be output after it is constructed. (It should - be set to "false", or unset otherwise)</DD> -<DT>NETJIGTESTDEBUG</DT> -<DD> If set to "netjig", then the results of talking to the <CODE> -uml_netjig</CODE> will be printed to stderr during the test. In - addition, the jig will be invoked with --debug, which causes it to log - its process ID, and wait 60 seconds before continuing. This can be used - if you are trying to debug the <CODE>uml_netjig</CODE> program itself.</DD> -<DT>HOSTTESTDEBUG</DT> -<DD> If set to "hosttest", then the results of taling to the consoles of - the UMLs will be printed to stderr during the test.</DD> -<DT>NETJIGWAITUSER</DT> -<DD> If set to "waituser", then the scripts will wait forever for user - input before they shut the tests down. Use this is if you are debugging - through the kernel.</DD> -<DT>PACKETRATE</DT> -<DD> A number, in miliseconds (default is 500ms) at which packets will - be replayed by the netjig.</DD> -</DL> -<H2><A NAME="39_5">KLIPStest paramaters</A></H2> -<P> The klipstest function starts a program (<CODE> -testing/utils/uml_netjig/uml_netjig</CODE>) to setup a bunch of I/O - sockets (that simulate network interfaces). It then exports the - references to these sockets to the environment and invokes (using - system()) a given script. It waits for the script to finish.</P> - -<!-- <IMG SRC="single_netjig.png" ALT="block diagram of uml_netjig"> --> -<P> The script invoked (<CODE>testing/utils/host-test.tcl</CODE>) is a - TCL<A HREF="http://expect.nist.gov/"> expect</A> script that arranges - to start the UML and configure it appropriately for the test. The - configuration is done with the script given above for<VAR> INIT_SCRIPT</VAR> -. The TCL script then forks, leaves the UML in the background and exits. - uml_netjig continues. It then starts listening to the simulated network - answering ARPs and inserting packets as appropriate.</P> -<P> The klipstest function invokes <CODE>uml_netjig</CODE> with - arguments to capture output from network interface(s) and insert - packets as appropriate:</P> -<DL> -<DT>PUB_INPUT</DT> -<DD>a<A HREF="http://www.tcpdump.org/"> pcap</A> file to feed in on the - public (encrypted) interface. (typically, eth1)</DD> -<DT>PRIV_INPUT</DT> -<DD>a pcap file to feed in on the private (plain-text) interface - (typically, eth0).</DD> -<DT>REF_PUB_OUTPUT</DT> -<DD>a text file containing tcpdump output. Packets on the public (eth1) - interface are captured to a<A HREF="http://www.tcpdump.org/"> pcap</A> - file by <CODE>uml_netjig</CODE>. The klipstest function then uses - tcpdump on the file to produce text output, which is compared to the - file given.</DD> -<DT>REF_PUB_FILTER</DT> -<DD>a program that will filter the TCPDUMP output to do further - processing. Defaults to "cat".</DD> -<DT>REF_PRIV_OUTPUT</DT> -<DD>a text file containing tcpdump output. Packets on the private (eth0) - interface are captured and compared after conversion by tcpdump, as - with<VAR> REFPUBOUTPUT</VAR>.</DD> -<DT>REF_PRIV_FILTER</DT> -<DD>a program that will filter the TCPDUMP output to do further - processing. Defaults to "cat".</DD> -<DT>EXITONEMPTY</DT> -<DD>a flag for <CODE>uml_netjig</CODE>. It should contain - "--exitonempty" of uml_netjig should exit when all of the input (<VAR> -PUBINPUT</VAR>,<VAR>PRIVINPUT</VAR>) packets have been injected.</DD> -<DT>ARPREPLY</DT> -<DD>a flag for <CODE>uml_netjig</CODE>. It should contain "--arpreply" - if <CODE>uml_netjig</CODE> should reply to ARP requests. One will - typically set this to avoid having to fudge the ARP cache manually.</DD> -<DT>TCPDUMPFLAGS</DT> -<DD>a set of flags for the tcpdump used when converting captured output. - Typical values will include "-n" to turn off DNS, and often "-E" to set - the decryption key (tcpdump 3.7.1 and higher only) for ESP packets. The - "-t" flag (turn off timestamps) is provided automatically</DD> -<DT>NETJIG_EXTRA</DT> -<DD>additional comments to be sent to the netjig. This may arrange to - record or create additional networks, or may toggle options.</DD> -</DL> -<H2><A NAME="39_6">mkinsttest paramaters</A></H2> -<P> The basic concept of the <CODE>mkinsttest</CODE> test type is that - it performs a "make install" to a temporary $DESTDIR. The resulting - tree can then be examined to determine if it was done properly. The - files can be uninstalled to determine if the file list was correct, or - the contents of files can be examined more precisely.</P> -<DL> -<DT>INSTALL_FLAGS</DT> -<DD>If set, then an install will be done. This provides the set of flags - to provide for the install. The target to be used (usually "install") - must be among the flags.</DD> -<DT>POSTINSTALL_SCRIPT</DT> -<DD>If set, a script to run after initial "make install". Two arguments - are provided: an absolute path to the root of the FreeSWAN src tree, - and an absolute path to the temporary installation area.</DD> -<DT>INSTALL2_FLAGS</DT> -<DD>If set, a second install will be done using these flags. Similarly - to INSTALL_FLAGS, the target must be among the flags.</DD> -<DT>UNINSTALL_FLAGS</DT> -<DD>If set, an uninstall will be done using these flags. Similarly to - INSTALL_FLAGS, the target (usually "uninstall") must be among the - flags.</DD> -<DT>REF_FIND_f_l_OUTPUT</DT> -<DD>If set, a <CODE>find $ROOT ( -type f -or -type -l )</CODE> will be - done to get a list of a real files and symlinks. The resulting file - will be compared to the file listed by this option.</DD> -<DT>REF_FILE_CONTENTS</DT> -<DD>If set, it should point to a file containing records for the form: -<PRE> - -<!--VARIABLE--> -reffile</(null)> -<!--VARIABLE--> -samplefile</(null)> -</PRE> - one record per line. A diff between the provided reference file, and - the sample file (located in the temporary installation root) will be - done for each record.</DD> -</DL> -<H2><A NAME="39_7">rpm_build_install_test paramaters</A></H2> -<P> The <CODE>rpm_build_install_test</CODE> type is to verify that the - proper packing list is produced by "make rpm", and that the mechanisms - for building the kernel modules produce consistent results.</P> -<DL> -<DT>RPM_KERNEL_SOURCE</DT> -<DD>Point to an extracted copy of the RedHat kernel source code. - Variables from the environment may be used.</DD> -<DT>REF_RPM_CONTENTS</DT> -<DD>This is a file containing one record per line. Each record consists - of a RPM name (may contain wildcards) and a filename to compare the - contents to. The RPM will be located and a file list will be produced - with rpm2cpio.</DD> -</DL> -<H2><A NAME="39_8">libtest paramaters</A></H2> -<P> The libtest test is for testing library routines. The library file - is expected to provided an <CODE>#ifdef</CODE> by the name of<VAR> - library</VAR> -<!--CODE_MAIN</CODE--> -. The libtest type invokes the C compiler to compile this - file, links it against <CODE>libfreeswan.a</CODE> (to resolve any other - dependancies) and runs the test with the <CODE>-r</CODE> argument to - invoke a regression test.</(null)></P> -<P>The library test case is expected to do a self-test, exiting with - status code 0 if everything is okay, and with non-zero otherwise. A - core dump (exit code greater than 128) is noted specifically.</P> -<P> Unlike other tests, there are no subdirectories required, or other - parameters to set.</P> -<H2 NAME="umlplutotest"><A NAME="39_9">umlplutotest paramaters</A></H2> -<P> The umlplutotest function starts a pair of user mode line processes. - This is a 2-host version of umlXhost. The "EAST" and "WEST" slots are - defined.</P> -<H2 NAME="umlXhost"><A NAME="39_10">umlXhost parameters</A></H2> -<P> The umlXtest function starts an arbitrary number of user mode line - processes.</P> - -<!-- <IMG SRC="single_netjig.png" ALT="block diagram of uml_netjig"> --> -<P> The script invoked (<CODE>testing/utils/Xhost-test.tcl</CODE>) is a - TCL<A HREF="http://expect.nist.gov/"> expect</A> script that arranges - to start each UML and configure it appropriately for the test. It then - starts listening (using uml_netjig) to the simulated network answering - ARPs and inserting packets as appropriate.</P> -<P> umlXtest has a series of slots, each of which should be filled by a - host. The list of slots is controlled by the variable, XHOST_LIST. This - variable should be set to a space seperated list of slots. The former - umlplutotest is now implemented as a variation of the umlXhost test, - with XHOST_LIST="EAST WEST".</P> -<P> For each host slot that is defined, a series of variables should be - filled in, defining what configuration scripts to use for that host.</P> -<P> The following are used to control the console input and output to - the system. Where the string ${host} is present, the host slot should - be filled in. I.e. for the two host system with XHOST_LIST="EAST WEST", - then the variables: EAST_INIT_SCRIPT and WEST_INIT_SCRIPT will exist.</P> -<DL> -<DT>${host}HOST</DT> -<DD>The name of the UML host which will fill this slot</DD> -<DT>${host}_INIT_SCRIPT</DT> -<DD> -<P>a file of commands that is fed into the virtual machine's console in - single user mode prior to starting the tests. This file will usually - set up any eroute's and SADB entries that are required for the test. - Similar to INIT_SCRIPT, above.</P> -</DD> -<DT>${host}_RUN_SCRIPT</DT> -<DD> -<P>a file of commands that is fed into the virtual machine's console in - single user mode, before the packets are sent. This set of commands is - run after all of the virtual machines are initialized. I.e. after - EAST_INIT_SCRIPT<B> AND</B> WEST_INIT_SCRIPT. This script can therefore - do things that require that all machines are properly configured.</P> -</DD> -<DT>${host}_RUN2_SCRIPT</DT> -<DD> -<P>a file of commands that is fed into the virtual machine's console in - single user mode, after the packets are sent. This set of commands is - run before any of the virtual machines have been shut down. (I.e. - before EAST_FINAL_SCRIPT<B> AND</B> WEST_FINAL_SCRIPT.) This script can - therefore catch post-activity status reports.</P> -</DD> -<DT>${host}_FINAL_SCRIPT</DT> -<DD> -<P>a file of commands that is fed into the virtual machine's console in - single user mode after the final packet is sent. Similar to - INIT_SCRIPT, above. If not specified, then the single command "halt" is - sent. Note that when this script is run, the other virtual machines may - already have been killed. If specified, then the script should end with - a halt command to nicely shutdown the UML.</P> -</DD> -<DT>REF_${host}_CONSOLE_OUTPUT</DT> -<DD>Similar to REF_CONSOLE_OUTPUT, above.</DD> -</DL> -<P>Some additional flags apply to all hosts:</P> -<DL> -<DT>REF_CONSOLE_FIXUPS</DT> -<DD>a list of scripts (found in <CODE>klips/test/fixups</CODE>) to apply - to sanitize the console output of the machine under test. These are - typically perl, awk or sed scripts that remove things in the kernel - output that change each time the test is run and/or compiled.</DD> -</DL> -<P> In addition to input to the console, the networks may have input fed - to them:</P> -<DL> -<DT>EAST_INPUT/WEST_INPUT</DT> -<DD>a<A HREF="http://www.tcpdump.org/"> pcap</A> file to feed in on the - private network side of each network. The "EAST" and "WEST" here refer - to the networks, not the hosts.</DD> -<DT>REF_PUB_FILTER</DT> -<DD>a program that will filter the TCPDUMP output to do further - processing. Defaults to "cat".</DD> -<DT>REF_EAST_FILTER/REF_WEST_FILTER</DT> -<DD>a program that will filter the TCPDUMP output to do further - processing. Defaults to "cat".</DD> -< -<DT>TCPDUMPFLAGS</DT> -<DD>a set of flags for the tcpdump used when converting captured output. - Typical values will include "-n" to turn off DNS, and often "-E" to set - the decryption key (tcpdump 3.7.1 and higher only) for ESP packets. The - "-t" flag (turn off timestamps) is provided automatically</DD> -<DT>REF_EAST_OUTPUT/REF_WEST_OUTPUT</DT> -<DD>a text file containing tcpdump output. Packets on the private (eth0) - interface are captured and compared after conversion by tcpdump, as - with<VAR> REF_PUB_OUTPUT</VAR>.</DD> -<P> There are two additional environment variables that may be set on - the command line:</P> -<DL> -<DT> NETJIGVERBOSE=verbose export NETJIGVERBOSE</DT> -<DD> If set, then the test output will be "chatty", and let you know - what commands it is running, and as packets are sent. Without it set, - the output is limited to success/failure messages.</DD> -<DT> NETJIGTESTDEBUG=netjig export NETJIGTESTDEBUG</DT> -<DD> This will enable debugging of the communication with uml_netjig, - and turn on debugging in this utility. This does not imply - NETJIGVERBOSE.</DD> -</DL> -<DT> HOSTTESTDEBUG=hosttest export HOSTTESTDEBUG</DT> -<DD> This will show all interactions with the user-mode-linux consoles</DD> -</DL> -<H2 NAME="kernelpatch"><A NAME="39_11">kernel_patch_test paramaters</A></H2> -<P> The kernel_patch_test function takes some kernel source, copies it - with lndir, and then applies the patch as produced by "make - kernelpatch".</P> -<P> The following are used to control the input and output to the - system:</P> -<DL> -<DT>KERNEL_NAME</DT> -<DD>the kernel name, typically something like "linus" or "rh"</DD> -<DT>KERNEL_VERSION</DT> -<DD>the kernel version number, as in "2.2" or "2.4".</DD> -<DT>KERNEL_${KERNEL_NAME}${KERNEL_VERSION}_SRC</DT> -<DD>This variable should set in the environment, probably in - ~/freeswan-regress-env.sh. Examples of this variables would be - KERNEL_LINUS2_0_SRC or KERNEL_RH7_3_SRC. This variable should point to - an extracted copy of the kernel source in question.</DD> -<DT>REF_PATCH_OUTPUT</DT> -<DD>a copy of the patch output to compare against</DD> -<DT>KERNEL_PATCH_LEAVE_SOURCE</DT> -<DD>If set to a non-empty string, then the patched kernel source is not - removed at the end of the test. This will typically be set in the - environment while debugging.</DD> -</DL> -<H2 NAME="modtest"><A NAME="39_12">module_compile paramaters</A></H2> -<P> The module_compile test attempts to build the KLIPS module against a - given set of kernel source. This is also done by the RPM tests, but in - a very specific manner.</P> -<P> There are two variations of this test - one where the kernel either - doesn't need to be configured, or is already done, and tests were there - is a local configuration file.</P> -<P> Where the kernel doesn't need to be configured, the kernel source - that is found is simply used. It may be a RedHat-style kernel, where - one can cause it to configure itself via rhconfig.h-style definitions. - Or, it may just be a kernel tree that has been configured.</P> -<P> If the variable KERNEL_CONFIG_FILE is set, then a new directory is - created for the kernel source. It is populated with lndir(1). The - referenced file is then copied in as .config, and "make oldconfig" is - used to configure the kernel. This resulting kernel is then used as the - reference source.</P> -<P> In all cases, the kernel source is found the same was for the - kernelpatch test, i.e. via KERNEL_VERSION/KERNEL_NAME and - KERNEL_${KERNEL_NAME}${KERNEL_VERSION}_SRC.</P> -<P> Once there is kernel source, the module is compiled using the - top-level "make module" target.</P> -<P> The test is considered successful if an executable is found in - OUTPUT/module/ipsec.o at the end of the test.</P> -<DL> -<DT>KERNEL_NAME</DT> -<DD>the kernel name, typically something like "linus" or "rh"</DD> -<DT>KERNEL_VERSION</DT> -<DD>the kernel version number, as in "2.2" or "2.4".</DD> -<DT>KERNEL_${KERNEL_NAME}${KERNEL_VERSION}_SRC</DT> -<DD>This variable should set in the environment, probably in - ~/freeswan-regress-env.sh. Examples of this variables would be - KERNEL_LINUS2_0_SRC or KERNEL_RH7_3_SRC. This variable should point to - an extracted copy of the kernel source in question.</DD> -<DT>KERNEL_CONFIG_FILE</DT> -<DD>The configuration file for the kernel.</DD> -<DT>KERNEL_PATCH_LEAVE_SOURCE</DT> -<DD>If set to a non-empty string, then the configured kernel source is - not removed at the end of the test. This will typically be set in the - environment while debugging.</DD> -<DT>MODULE_DEF_INCLUDE</DT> -<DD>The include file that will be used to configure the KLIPS module, - and possibly the kernel source.</DD> -</DL> -<H1><A NAME="40">Current pitfalls</A></H1> -<DL> -<DT> "tcpdump dissector" not available.</DT> -<DD> This is a non-fatal warning. If uml_netjig is invoked with the -t - option, then it will attempt to use tcpdump's dissector to decode each - packet that it processes. The dissector is presently not available, so - this option it normally turned off at compile time. The dissector - library will be released with tcpdump version 4.0.</DD> -</DL> -<HR> -<H1><A name="nightly">Nightly regression testing</A></H1> -<P> The nightly regression testing system consists of several shell - scripts and some perl scripts. The goal is to check out a fresh tree, - run "make check" on it, record the results and summarize the results to - the team and to the web site.</P> -<P> Output can be found on<A HREF="http://bugs.freeswan.org:81/"> adams</A> -, although the tests are actually run on another project machine.</P> -<H1><A name="nightlyhowto">How to setup the nightly build</A></H1> -<P> The best way to do nightly testing is to setup a new account. We - call the account "build" - you could call it something else, but there - may still be some references to ~build in the scripts.</P> -<H2><A NAME="42_1"> Files you need to know about</A></H2> -<P> As few files as possible need to be extracted from the source tree - - files are run from the source tree whenever possible. However, there - are some bootstrap and configuration files that are necessary.</P> -<P> There are 7 files in testing/utils that are involved:</P> -<DL> -<DT> nightly-sample.sh</DT> -<DD> This is the root of the build process. This file should be copied - out of the CVS tree, to $HOME/bin/nightly.sh of the build account. This - file should be invoked from cron.</DD> -<DT> freeswan-regress-env-sample.sh</DT> -<DD> This file should be copied to $HOME/freeswan-regress-env.sh. It - should be edited to localize the values. See below.</DD> -<DT> regress-cleanup.pl</DT> -<DD> This file needs to be copied to $HOME/bin/regress-cleanup.pl. It is - invoked by the nightly file before doing anything else. It removes - previous nights builds in order to free up disk space for the build - about to be done.</DD> -<DT> teammail-sample.sh</DT> -<DD> A script used to send results email to the "team". This sample - script could be copied to $HOME/bin/teammail.sh. This version will PGP - encrypt all the output to the team members. If this script is used, - then PGP will have to be properly setup to have the right keys.</DD> -<DT> regress-nightly.sh</DT> -<DD> This is the first stage of the nightly build. This stage will call - other scripts as appropriate, and will extract the source code from - CVS. This script should be copied to $HOME/bin/regress-nightly.sh</DD> -<DT> regress-stage2.sh</DT> -<DD> This is the second stage of the nightly build. It is called in - place. It essentially sets up the UML setup in umlsetup.sh, and calls - "make check".</DD> -<DT> regress-summarize-results.pl</DT> -<DD> This script will summarize the results from the tests to a - permanent directory set by $REGRESSRESULTS. It is invoked from the - stage2 nightly script.</DD> -<DT> regress-chart.sh</DT> -<DD> This script is called at the end of the build process, and will - summarize each night's results (as saved into $REGRESSRESULTS by - regress-summarize-results.pl) as a chart using gnuplot. Note that this - requires at least gnuplot 3.7.2.</DD> -</DL> -<H2><A NAME="42_2">Configuring freeswan-regress-env.sh</A></H2> -<P>For more info on KERNPOOL, UMLPATCH, BASICROOT and SHAREDIR, see<A HREF="umltesting.html"> - User-Mode-Linux testing guide</A>.</P> -<DL> -<DT> KERNPOOL</DT> -<DD> Extract copy of some kernel source to be used for UML builds</DD> -<DT> UMLPATCH</DT> -<DD> matching User-Mode-Linux patch.</DD> -<DT> BASICROOT</DT> -<DD> the root file system image (see<A HREF="umltesting.html"> - User-Mode-Linux testing guide</A>).</DD> -<DT> SHAREDIR=${BASICROOT}/usr/share</DT> -<DD> The /usr/share to use.</DD> -<DT> REGRESSTREE</DT> -<DD> A directory in which to store the nightly regression results. - Directories will be created by date in this tree.</DD> -<DT> TCPDUMP=tcpdump-3.7.1</DT> -<DD> The path to the<A HREF="http://www.tcpdump.org/"> tcpdump</A> to - use. This must have crypto compiled in, and must be at least 3.7.1</DD> -<DT> KERNEL_RH7_2_SRC=/a3/kernel_sources/linux-2.4.9-13/</DT> -<DD> An extracted copy of the RedHat 7.2. kernel source. If set, then - the packaging/rpm-rh72-install-01 test will be run, and an RPM will be - built as a test.</DD> -<DT> KERNEL_RH7_3_SRC=/a3/kernel_sources/rh/linux-2.4.18-5</DT> -<DD> An extracted copy of the RedHat 7.3. kernel source. If set, then - the packaging/rpm-rh73-install-01 test will be run, and an RPM will be - built as a test.</DD> -<DT> NIGHTLY_WATCHERS="userid,userid,userid"</DT> -<DD> The list of people who should receive nightly output. This is used - by teammail.sh</DD> -<DT> FAILLINES=128</DT> -<DD> How many lines of failed test output to include in the nightly - output</DD> -<DT> PATH=$PATH:/sandel/bin export PATH</DT> -<DD> You can also override the path if necessary here.</DD> -<DT> CVSROOT=:pserver:anoncvs@ip212.xs4net.freeswan.org:/freeswan/MASTER</DT> -<DD> The CVSROOT to use. This example may work for anonymous CVS, but - will be 12 hours behind the primary, and is still experimental</DD> -<DT> SNAPSHOTSIGDIR=$HOME/snapshot-sig</DT> -<DD> For the release tools, where to put the generated per-snapshot - signature keys</DD> -<DT> LASTREL=1.97</DT> -<DD> the name of the last release branch (to find the right per-snapshot - signature</DD> -<DD></DD> -</DL> -</BODY> -</HTML> |