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09df8bf66e
Adds `ZEROTIER_ONE_GATEWAY_MODE` variable. Supported values are `inbound` (forward traffic from ZeroTier cloud to local interfaces), `outbound` (forward traffic from local interfaces to ZeroTier cloud) and `both` (bi-directional). Defaults to `inbound`. Also checks for `net.ipv4.ip_forward=1`. If not enabled, falls back to standard client mode. Signed-off-by: Phill Kelley <34226495+Paraphraser@users.noreply.github.com>
200 lines
6.1 KiB
Markdown
200 lines
6.1 KiB
Markdown
## zerotier router
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### Description
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This is a variation built on top of the zyclonite/zerotier container which implements a local network router. It is based upon the ZeroTier Knowledge Base article:
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* [Route between ZeroTier and Physical Networks](https://zerotier.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/SD/pages/224395274/Route+between+ZeroTier+and+Physical+Networks)
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Technically, this could be described as a *half-router*:
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* You can initiate connections *from* a remote client *to* devices on the LAN; but
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* You can't initiate connections *to* the remote client *from* devices on the LAN.
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### Command line example
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``` console
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$ docker run --name zerotier-one --device=/dev/net/tun \
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--cap-add=NET_ADMIN --cap-add=NET_RAW --cap-add=SYS_ADMIN \
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--env TZ=Etc/UTC --env PUID=999 -env PGID=994 \
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--env ZEROTIER_ONE_LOCAL_PHYS=eth0 \
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--env ZEROTIER_ONE_USE_IPTABLES_NFT=false \
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--env ZEROTIER_ONE_GATEWAY_MODE=inbound \
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--env ZEROTIER_ONE_NETWORK_IDS=«yourDefaultNetworkID(s)» \
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-v /var/lib/zerotier-one:/var/lib/zerotier-one zyclonite/zerotier:router
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```
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Note:
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* Environment variables that can contain multiple values should be enclosed in quotes with the components separated by spaces. Example:
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``` console
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--env ZEROTIER_ONE_LOCAL_PHYS="eth0 wlan0"
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```
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### Compose file example
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``` yaml
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version: '3'
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services:
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zerotier:
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image: "zyclonite/zerotier:router"
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container_name: zerotier-one
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devices:
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- /dev/net/tun
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network_mode: host
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volumes:
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- '/var/lib/zerotier-one:/var/lib/zerotier-one'
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cap_add:
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- NET_ADMIN
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- SYS_ADMIN
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- NET_RAW
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restart: unless-stopped
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environment:
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- TZ=Etc/UTC
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- PUID=999
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- PGID=994
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- ZEROTIER_ONE_LOCAL_PHYS=eth0
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- ZEROTIER_ONE_USE_IPTABLES_NFT=false
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- ZEROTIER_ONE_GATEWAY_MODE=inbound
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# - ZEROTIER_ONE_NETWORK_IDS=«yourDefaultNetworkID(s)»
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```
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Note:
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* The right hand sides of environment variables should *never* be enclosed in quotes. If you need to pass multiple values, separate them with spaces. Example:
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``` yaml
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environment:
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- ZEROTIER_ONE_LOCAL_PHYS=eth0 wlan0
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```
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### Environment variables
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* `TZ` – timezone support. Example:
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``` yaml
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environment:
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- TZ=Australia/Sydney
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```
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Defaults to `Etc/UTC` if omitted.
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* `PUID` + `PGID` – user and group IDs for ownership of persistent store. Example:
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``` yaml
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environment:
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- PUID=1000
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- PGID=1000
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```
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If omitted, `PUID` defaults to user ID 999, while `PGID` defaults to group ID 994.
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These variables are only used to ensure consistent ownership of persistent storage on each launch. They do not affect how the container *runs.* Absent a `user:` directive, the container runs as root and does not downgrade its privileges.
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* `ZEROTIER_ONE_LOCAL_PHYS` - a space-separated list of physical interfaces that should be configured to participate in NAT-based routing. Examples:
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- Use only the physical Ethernet interface (this is also the default of the variable is omitted):
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``` yaml
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environment:
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- ZEROTIER_ONE_LOCAL_PHYS=eth0
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```
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- If your computer only has WiFi active (eg Raspberry Pi Zero W2):
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``` yaml
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environment:
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- ZEROTIER_ONE_LOCAL_PHYS=wlan0
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```
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- If your computer has both Ethernet and WiFi interfaces active and you wish to be able to route through each interface:
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``` yaml
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environment:
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- ZEROTIER_ONE_LOCAL_PHYS=eth0 wlan0
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```
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This scheme could be appropriate where the physical interfaces were:
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1. In the same broadcast domain (subnet). Disconnecting Ethernet would fail-over to WiFi.
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2. In different broadcast domains, such as if you allocated different subnets for Ethernet and WiFi.
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* `ZEROTIER_ONE_USE_IPTABLES_NFT` - controls the command the container uses to set up NAT forwarding. Example:
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``` yaml
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environment:
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- ZEROTIER_ONE_USE_IPTABLES_NFT=true
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```
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- `false` means the container uses `iptables`. This is the default.
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- `true` means the container uses `iptables-nft`.
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Try `true` if NAT does not seem to be working. This is needed on Raspberry Pi Bullseye.
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* `ZEROTIER_ONE_GATEWAY_MODE` - controls the traffic direction. Examples:
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- Only permit traffic *from* the ZeroTier cloud *to* the local physical interfaces:
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``` yaml
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environment:
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- ZEROTIER_ONE_GATEWAY_MODE=inbound
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```
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- Only permit traffic *from* the local physical interfaces *to* the ZeroTier cloud:
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``` yaml
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environment:
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- ZEROTIER_ONE_GATEWAY_MODE=outbound
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```
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- Permit bi-directional traffic between the local physical interfaces and the ZeroTier cloud:
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``` yaml
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environment:
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- ZEROTIER_ONE_GATEWAY_MODE=both
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```
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Defaults to `inbound` if omitted. Note that you will probably need one or more static routes configured in your local LAN router so that traffic originating in a local host which is not running the ZeroTier client can be directed to the gateway host.
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* `ZEROTIER_ONE_NETWORK_IDS` – a space-separated list of ZeroTier network IDs.
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This variable is *only* effective on first launch. There is no default if it is omitted. Examples:
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- to join a single network:
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``` yaml
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environment:
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- ZEROTIER_ONE_NETWORK_IDS=aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
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```
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Equivalent of running the following command after the container first starts:
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```
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$ docker exec zerotier zerotier-cli join aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
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```
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- to join a multiple networks:
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``` yaml
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environment:
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- ZEROTIER_ONE_NETWORK_IDS=aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb
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```
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Equivalent of running the following commands after the container first starts:
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```
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$ docker exec zerotier zerotier-cli join aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
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$ docker exec zerotier zerotier-cli join bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb
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```
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It does not matter whether you use this environment variable or the `join` command, you still need to use ZeroTier Central to approve the computer for each network it joins.
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### Managed route(s)
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For each ZeroTier container that is configured as a router, ZeroTier needs at least one *Managed Route*.
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The [ZeroTier Wiki](https://zerotier.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/SD/pages/224395274/Route+between+ZeroTier+and+Physical+Networks#Configure-the-ZeroTier-managed-route) explains how to design managed routes.
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You configure Managed Routes in ZeroTier Central.
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