Haacking-Club/VPN Server

--- * **vpnserver** * **Jonathan Haack** * **Haack's Networking** * **netcmnd@jonathanhaack.com**

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//vpnserver//

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[Update: This tutorial is in need of updating. For now, find the latest tutorials on the [|Haack's Networking Repository]

Thanks to Jason Schaefer and Geoff Chesshire from [|Schaefer IT Consulting] for helping me put this all together!

In this tutorial, you will create a vpn server on a WNDR3800 router running LEDE, formerly and still partially known as OpenWrt. The tutorial will also work for any other router that is successfully flashed with LEDE. I will show folks how to build an openvpn server on a vps and or a traditional workstation in the future. For now, begin by downloading the LEDE image; links provided as a courtesy, you should always verify what image you need at LEDE's [|Table of Hardware]:

https://downloads.openwrt.org/chaos_calmer/15.05.1/ar71xx/generic/openwrt-15.05.1-ar71xx-generic-wndr3800-squashfs-factory.img http://downloads.lede-project.org/releases/17.01.4/targets/ar71xx/generic/lede-17.01.4-ar71xx-generic-wndr3800-squashfs-factory.img Add an address on the subnet of the router, and stop the network-manager from hijacking the connection. Run ip a to obtain your interface name, as it may not be eth0.

sudo systemctl stop network-manager ip a a 192.168.1.105/24 dev

Put a paperclip in the reset button while device is off. Keeping it in, turn the device on, wait for flashing green. Be patient and do not turn power off or anything else during this process. First, ping the router. ping 192.168.1.1

If you cannot successfully ping the router, then re-add your interface to the proper subnet and try again. You know you succeeded if you get an error about "taking countermeasures" while pinging the device. If you can ping the device, then the curl command below should work.

curl -T ~/Downloads/openwrt-15.05.1-ar71xx-generic-wndr3800-squashfs-factory.img tftp://192.168.1.1 curl -T ~/Downloads/lede-17.01.4-ar71xx-generic-wndr3800-squashfs-factory.img tftp://192.168.1.1

If you are flashing a router for the second or multiple times, you might need to remove the offending ssh known host entry as follows:

ssh-keygen -f "/home/username/.ssh/known_hosts" -R [192.168.1.1]:222

Now that we have openWRT on the router, we should enable https for the web admin panel before proceeding with anything else. First, verify that you completed the above steps correctly by visiting 192.168.1.1 in your web browser of choice.

opkg update opkg install luci-ssl nano nano /etc/config/uhttpd In the config file, one can see that the port 80 lines are commented out in order to reredirect the router to use TLS. Additionally, enter the parameters for the self-signed cert using the options at the bottom of the configuration file shown above. Once you are done, restart the service, which will automatically build the cert using the parameters specified above. /etc/init.d/uhttpd restart

Now that we have https, we can begin to set up the vpn server on the WNDR. Using the template files in the directory openvpnconfig, download them to the router for ease, or use scp. You can optionally configure everything without the template; the plate download link is below:

https://educationaction.biz/vpn/openvpnconfig.zip

Method 1; copying the template directory from your host to the router.

scp -r openvpnconfig root@192.168.1.1:/etc/config/ ssh root@192.168.1.1 Method 2; using wget to download the directory into your router. ssh root@192.168.1.1 opkg update opkg install wget wget https://educationaction.biz/vpn/openvpnconfig.zip

If you use this template and the key and config building script inside it, be aware of what it is doing for you; it is zipping the two keys and certificate authority together with the client config in one .zip file for easy downloading using scp. It also uses stock configuration options that can be adjusted as needed. Ok, let's set up the server now that we have our config template:

opkg update opkg install zip openvpn-easy-rsa openvpn-openssl nano wget nmap tcpdump curl luci-ssl

mv /etc/config/openvpnconfig/openvpn /etc/config/ mv /etc/easy-rsa /etc/config/openvpnconfig/ cd /etc/ ln -s config/openvpnconfig/easy-rsa ./ Specify how you want the default key pairs to be built, and specify parameters for the certificate authority; example provided below the text editor command: nano /etc/config/openvpnconfig/easy-rsa/vars Enter parameters for your openvpn configuration; example provided below the text editor command: nano /etc/config/openvpnconfig/openvpnWRT.conf Examples of this .conf file can be found [|HERE] Specify where the openvpn configuration is to be found; example provided below the text editor command. nano /etc/config/openvpn Okay ... in this file, simply link to another file as follows ... all of this is to avoid re-write from easy-rsa and openvpn upon upgrade on openwrt ... but it matters! ##/etc/config/openvpn## package openvpn config openvpn server option enabled 1 option config /etc/config/openvpnconfig/server.conf

Now, time to build the certificate authority, the diffie helman key, and the key and certificate for the vpn server. build-ca build-dh [takes a long time, see alternate method below] build-key-server server

You can alternately choose to build the dh key on the **//__host__//** machine you are administering from and then scp it to the router when it completes as follows. Do not forget to symlink easy-rsa properly so this works.

sudo openssl dhparam -out /tmp/dh2048.pem 2048 scp /tmp/dh2048.pem root@xx.xx.xx.xx:/etc/config/openvpnconfig/easy-rsa/keys/

You can now use the script contained in the template directory that you zipped earlier to create your client keys and config file; you are back on the **//__router__//** now.

/etc/config/openvpnconfig/easyrsa-user-setup-openwrt.sh [clientname] [server.com] Or, if you did not use the template directory and the script, then change the vars file each time you need a key with the parameters that you desire, and then build the key, crt, and ca manually: nano /etc/config/openvpnconfig/easy-rsa/vars pkitool [clientname]

If you chose not to use the template and script, then on each client you will need to create a config file with something like the following parameters; adjust these parameters as needed: nano /directory/to/keep/openvpn/keys/clientconfigname.ovpn nobind float comp-lzo cipher AES-256-CBC dev tun remote xx.xx.xx.xx 1194 udp client tls-exit ca ca.crt cert .crt key .key remote-cert-tls server mute 5 resolv-retry infinite #explicit-exit-notify keepalive 10 60 ping-timer-rem persist-tun persist-key #redirect-gateway def1

You are now ready to set up the interfaces and firewall zones for the router using the web panel. Before you do this, you need to start the vpn service and ensure it is working. You should get two processes, one for the openvpn grep you just ran, and another for the service running:

/etc/init.d/openvpn start ps | grep openvpn 1314 root     3896 S    /usr/sbin/openvpn --syslog openvpn(server) --status /var/run/openvpn.server.status --cd /etc/config/openvpnconfig --config /etc/config/openvpnconfig/server.conf 31296 root    1356 S    grep openvpn

If you did not get this output, then you should debug your configuration by running openvpn against your server configuration as follows, and use the output it provides to determine what you did wrong.

openvpn /etc/config/openvpnconfig/server.conf Now that the service is running and you have a client config, you can use the openWRT web page to create an interface and a firewall zone. Go to interfaces, add interface and name it VPN, select tun0 (unmanaged). Set up a fw zone at the same time or separately, and name it vpn_zone. Navigate to Network/Firewall, select the tab for traffic rules, and then add a rule that allows incoming vpn connections on udp 1194 //to device//, i.e., your router which is your vpn server. In the firewall zone, make sure to allow forwarding //to// the lan and wan, and //from// the lan.

Now that you have a client configuration file set up, and the interfaces and firewall zones set up, you can install openvpn on your host; and be aware of how to execute the client - server handshake, thus initiating the openvpn connection.

sudo apt install openvpn cd ~/directory/where/thekeys/youmade/above/are/ sudo openvpn clientconfigname.ovpn

To enable TLS and separately to enable a strong cipher, use these settings on the server configuration. The cipher setting matches the setting in the client configuration above.

/etc/config/openvpnconfig/server.conf tls-version-min 1.2 tls-cipher     TLS-DHE-RSA-WITH-AES-256-GCM-SHA384:TLS-DHE-RSA-WITH-AES-256-CBC-SHA256:TLS-DHE-RSA-WITH-AES-  128-GCM-SHA256 cipher AES-256-CBC

Key, ca, and .ovpn permissions, in case they get messed up:

sudo chmod 600 clientname.key sudo chmod 640 clientname.crt sudo chmod 640 ca.crt sudo chmod 640 clientconfigname.ovpn

Thanks!

Addenda

* dhcp-opkg. * dropbear_rsa_host_key-opkg. * dropbear-opkg.

search for /etc/easy-rsa/openssl ... change the "days" and crl to 7305

add p flag to scp when copying openvpn back to new router image

1) flash 2) opkg upgraded with vi shit and made big string 3) after that saw -opkg different files and compared, overwriting old ones with new, except be careful on dropbear with 0 kb one 4) edit not just /etc/config/uhttpd but also edit /etc/easy-rsa/openssl …

copy the etc/easy-rsa over after

common package upgrades

base-files busybox dnsmasq dropbear firewall fstools fwtool hostapd-common ip6tables iptables iw iwinfo jshn jsonfilter kernel kmod-ath kmod-ath9k kmod-ath9k-common kmod-cfg80211 kmod-gpio-button-hotplug kmod-ip6tables kmod-ipt-conntrack kmod-ipt-core kmod-ipt-nat kmod-leds-wndr3700-usb kmod-lib-crc-ccitt kmod-mac80211 kmod-nf-conntrack kmod-nf-conntrack6 kmod-nf-ipt kmod-nf-ipt6 kmod-nf-nat kmod-nls-base kmod-ppp kmod-pppoe kmod-pppox kmod-slhc kmod-usb-core kmod-usb-ledtrig-usbport kmod-usb-ohci kmod-usb2 lede-keyring libblobmsg-json libc libgcc libip4tc libip6tc libiwinfo libiwinfo-lua libjson-c libjson-script liblua libnl-tiny libpthread libubox libubus libubus-lua libuci libuci-lua libuclient libxtables logd lua luci luci-app-firewall luci-base luci-lib-ip luci-lib-jsonc luci-lib-nixio luci-mod-admin-full luci-proto-ipv6 luci-proto-ppp luci-theme-bootstrap mtd netifd odhcp6c odhcpd opkg ppp ppp-mod-pppoe procd rpcd swconfig uboot-envtools ubox ubus ubusd uci uclient-fetch uhttpd uhttpd-mod-ubus usign wpad-mini This tutorial is a designated "Invariant Section" of the "Technotronic" section of Haack's Wiki as described on the [|Start Page].

--- //oemb1905 2019/06/17 16:56//