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diff --git a/doc/faq.html b/doc/faq.html deleted file mode 100644 index b0fed502e..000000000 --- a/doc/faq.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,2339 +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> -<A HREF="toc.html">Contents</A> -<A HREF="policygroups.html">Previous</A> -<A HREF="manpages.html">Next</A> -<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="glossary.html#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="web.html#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="trouble.html#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="politics.html#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="intro.html#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="biblio.html#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="intro.html#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="intro.html#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="intro.html#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="web.html#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="web.html#patch"> web links</A> - section. -<P>Users have also contributed heavily to documentation, both by - creating their own<A href="intro.html#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="politics.html#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="intro.html#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="intro.html#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="compat.html#otherdist"> - compatibility</A> document. Also, some distributions or products come - with<A href="intro.html#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="compat.html#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="compat.html#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="compat.html#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="glossary.html#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.html#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="glossary.html#RSA"><STRONG> - RSA</STRONG></A><STRONG> keys for</STRONG><A href="glossary.html#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="glossary.html#WEP"> WEP</A>, - is insecure.</P> -<P>There is some<A href="adv_config.html#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="glossary.html#IKE"> - IKE</A> level for negotiating connections or at the<A href="glossary.html#IPsec"> - IPsec</A> level for actually building them.</P> -<P>Single DES is<A href="politics.html#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="politics.html#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="glossary.html#AES">AES</A> is a new US government<A href="glossary.html#block"> - block cipher</A> standard to replace the obsolete<A href="glossary.html#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="web.html#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="glossary.html#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="web.html#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="policygroups.html#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="policygroups.html#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="glossary.html#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="glossary.html#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="glossary.html#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="adv_config.html#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="glossary.html#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="glossary.html#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="glossary.html#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="mail.html#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="glossary.html#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="glossary.html#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="adv_config.html#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="adv_config.html#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="glossary.html#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="adv_config.html#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="testing.html#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="glossary.html#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="adv_config.html#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="glossary.html#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="glossary.html#pathMTU"> path MTU - discovery</A>.</P> -<P>Our<A href="trouble.html#bigpacket"> troubleshooting document</A> - covers these problems. Information on the underlying mechanism is in - our<A href="background.html#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="glossary.html#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="glossary.html#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="ipsec.html#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="glossary.html#DES"> single DES</A>, which we - do not support because it is<A href="politics.html#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="glossary.html#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="glossary.html#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="trouble.html#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="adv_config.html#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="mail.html#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="mail.html#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> -<A HREF="toc.html">Contents</A> -<A HREF="policygroups.html">Previous</A> -<A HREF="manpages.html">Next</A> -</BODY> -</HTML> |