OpenVPN Tunnels
Tom
Eastep
Simon
Mater
2003-02-04
2003
Thomas M. Eastep
Simon Mater
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version
1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with
no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover, and with no Back-Cover
Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled
GNU Free Documentation License
.
OpenVPN is a robust and highly configurable VPN (Virtual Private
Network) daemon which can be used to securely link two or more private
networks using an encrypted tunnel over the internet. OpenVPN is an Open
Source project and is licensed under the GPL.
OpenVPN can be downloaded from http://openvpn.sourceforge.net/.
OpenVPN support was added to Shorewall in version 1.3.14.
Bridging two Masqueraded Networks
Suppose that we have the following situation:
We want systems in the 192.168.1.0/24 subnetwork to be able to
communicate with the systems in the 10.0.0.0/8 network. This is
accomplished through use of the /etc/shorewall/tunnels file and the
/etc/shorewall/policy file and OpenVPN.
While it was possible to use the Shorewall start and stop script to
start and stop OpenVPN, I decided to use the init script of OpenVPN to
start and stop it.
On each firewall, you will need to declare a zone to represent the
remote subnet. We'll assume that this zone is called vpn
and declare it in /etc/shorewall/zones on both systems as follows.
/etc/shorewall/zones system A & B
ZONE
DISPLAY
COMMENTS
vpn
VPN
Remote Subnet
On system A, the 10.0.0.0/8 will comprise the vpn
zone. In /etc/shorewall/interfaces:
etc/shorewall/interfaces system A
ZONE
INTERFACE
BROADCAST
OPTIONS
vpn
tun0
In /etc/shorewall/tunnels on system A, we need the following:
/etc/shorewall/tunnels system A
TYPE
ZONE
GATEWAY
GATEWAY ZONE
openvpn
net
134.28.54.2
This entry in /etc/shorewall/tunnels opens the firewall so that
OpenVPN traffic on the default port 5000/udp will be accepted to/from the
remote gateway. If you change the port used by OpenVPN to 7777, you can
define /etc/shorewall/tunnels like this:
/etc/shorewall/tunnels port 7777
TYPE
ZONE
GATEWAY
GATEWAY ZONE
openvpn:7777
net
134.28.54.2
This is the OpenVPN config on system A:
dev tun
local 206.162.148.9
remote 134.28.54.2
ifconfig 192.168.99.1 192.168.99.2
up ./route-a.up
tls-server
dh dh1024.pem
ca ca.crt
cert my-a.crt
key my-a.key
comp-lzo
verb 5
Similarly, On system B the 192.168.1.0/24 subnet will comprise the
vpn zone. In /etc/shorewall/interfaces:
/etc/shorewall/interfaces system B
ZONE
INTERFACE
BROADCAST
OPTIONS
vpn
tun0
192.168.1.255
In /etc/shorewall/tunnels on system B, we have:
/etc/shorewall/tunnels system B
TYPE
ZONE
GATEWAY
GATEWAY ZONE
openvpn
net
206.191.148.9
And in the OpenVPN config on system B:
dev tun
local 134.28.54.2
remote 206.162.148.9
ifconfig 192.168.99.2 192.168.99.1
up ./route-b.up
tls-client
ca ca.crt
cert my-b.crt
key my-b.key
comp-lzo
verb 5
You will need to allow traffic between the vpn
zone
and the loc
zone on both systems -- if you simply want to
admit all traffic in both directions, you can use the policy file:
/etc/shorewall/policy system A & B
SOURCE
DEST
POLICY
LOG LEVEL
loc
vpn
ACCEPT
vpn
loc
ACCEPT
On both systems, restart Shorewall and start OpenVPN. The systems in
the two masqueraded subnetworks can now talk to each other.