1IPSEC_PLUTO(8) Executable programs IPSEC_PLUTO(8)
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3
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6 ipsec_pluto, ipsec_whack, pluto - ipsec whack : IPsec IKE keying daemon
7 and control interface
8
10 ipsec pluto [--help] [--version] [--leak-detective] [--efence-protect]
11 [--config filename] [--vendorid VID] [--nofork] [--stderrlog]
12 [--logfile filename] [--log-no-time] [--log-no-append]
13 [--log-no-ip] [--log-no-audit] [--use-netkey] [--use-bsdkame]
14 [--uniqueids] [--virtual-private network_list]
15 [--keep-alive delay_sec] [--force-busy] [--crl-strict]
16 [--crlcheckinterval] [--interface interfacename]
17 [--listen ipaddr] [--ikeport portnumber]
18 [--natikeport portnumber] [--rundir path]
19 [--secretsfile secrets-file] [--nhelpers number]
20 [--seedbits numbits] [--ipsecdir dirname] [--nssdir dirname]
21 [--coredir dirname] [--statsbin filename]
22 [--secctx-attr-type number]
23
24 ipsec whack [--help] [--version]
25
26 ipsec whack --name connection-name [[--ipv4] | [--ipv6]]
27 [[--tunnelipv4] | [--tunnelipv6]]
28 [--id identity] [--host ip-address] [--cert friendly_name]
29 [--ckaid CKAID] [--ca distinguished name]
30 [--groups access control groups]
31 [--sendcert yes | forced | always | ifasked | no | never]
32 [--sendca none | issuer | all] [--certtype number]
33 [--ikeport portnumber] [--nexthop ip-address] [[--client subnet]]
34 [--clientprotoport protocol/port] [--srcip ip-address]
35 [--xauthserver] [--xauthclient] [--modecfgserver]
36 [--modecfgclient] [--modecfgdns ip-address, ip-address, ...]
37 [--modecfgdomains DNS-domain, DNS-domain, ...]
38 [--modecfgbanner login-banner] [--dnskeyondemand]
39 [--updown updown]
40 --to
41 [--id identity] [--host ip-address] [--cert friendly_name]
42 [--ckaid CKAID] [--ca distinguished name]
43 [--groups access control groups]
44 [--sendcert yes | always | ifasked | no | never]
45 [--certtype number] [--ikeport port-number]
46 [--nexthop ip-address] [--client subnet]
47 [--clientprotoport protocol/port] [--srcip ip-address]
48 [--xauthserver] [--xauthclient] [--modecfgserver]
49 [--modecfgclient] [--modecfgdns ip-address, ip-address, ...]
50 [--modecfgdomains DNS-domain, DNS-domain, ...] [--dnskeyondemand]
51 [--updown updown]
52
53 [--tunnel] [--psk] [--rsasig] [--encrypt] [--authenticate]
54 [--compress] [--pfs]
55 [--pfsgroup [modp1024] | [modp1536] | [modp2048] | [modp3072] | [modp4096] | [modp6144] | [modp8192] | [dh22] | [dh23] | [dh24]]
56 [--ikelifetime seconds] [--ipseclifetime seconds]
57 [--rekeymargin seconds] [--rekeyfuzz percentage]
58 [--keyingtries count] [--esp esp-algos] [--dontrekey]
59 [--aggrmode] [--modecfgpull] [--metric metric]
60 [--nflog-group nflognum] [--conn-mark mark/mask]
61 [[--dpddelay seconds] | [--dpdtimeout seconds]]
62 [--dpdaction [clear] | [hold] | [restart]] [--forceencaps]
63 [--no-keep-alive]
64 [[--initiateontraffic] | [--pass] | [--drop] | [--reject]]
65 [[--failnone] | [--failpass] | [--faildrop] | [--failreject]]
66 [--rundir path] [--ctlsocket path/file] [--label string]
67
68 ipsec whack --keyid id [--addkey] [--pubkeyrsa key] [--rundir path]
69 [--ctlsocket path/file] [--label string]
70
71 ipsec whack --listen | --unlisten [--rundir path]
72 [--ctlsocket path/file] [--label string]
73
74 ipsec whack --ddos-auto | --ddos-busy | --ddos-unlimited
75 [--rundir path] [--ctlsocket path/file]
76
77 ipsec whack --route | --unroute --name connection-name [--rundir path]
78 [--ctlsocket path/file] [--label string]
79
80 ipsec whack --initiate | [--remote-host ip-address] | --terminate |
81 --rekey-ike | --rekey-ipsec --name connection-name
82 [--xauthuser user] [--xauthpass pass] [--asynchronous]
83 [--rundir path] [--ctlsocket path/file] [--label string]
84
85 ipsec whack --global-redirect yes|no|auto
86
87 ipsec whack --global-redirect-to ip-address(es)
88
89 ipsec whack [--name connection-name] --redirect-to ip-address(es)
90
91 ipsec whack [[--tunnelipv4] | [--tunnelipv6]] --oppohere ip-address
92 --oppothere ip-address --opposport port --oppodport port
93 --oppoproto protocol
94
95 ipsec whack --crash [ipaddress]
96
97 ipsec whack --name connection-name --delete [--ctlbase path]
98 [--label string]
99
100 ipsec whack --deletestate state-number [--rundir path]
101 [--ctlsocket path/file] [--label string]
102
103 ipsec whack --deleteuser --name username [--rundir path]
104 [--ctlsocket path/file] [--label string]
105
106 ipsec whack [--name connection-name]
107 {--debug help | none | base | cpu-usage | class} |
108 {--no-debug class} | {--impair help | none | behaviour} |
109 {--no-impair behaviour}
110
111 ipsec whack [--utc] [--listall] [--listpubkeys] [--listcerts]
112 [--listcacerts] [--listcrls]
113
114 ipsec whack [--utc] [--rereadsecrets] [--fetchcrls] [--rereadall]
115
116 ipsec whack --ddns
117
118 ipsec whack --listevents
119
120 ipsec whack --purgeocsp
121
122 ipsec whack --status --trafficstatus --shuntstatus --addresspoolstatus
123 --processstatus [--rundir path] [--ctlsocket path/file]
124 [--label string]
125
126 ipsec whack --globalstats --clearstats [--rundir path]
127 [--ctlsocket path/file] [--label string]
128
129 ipsec whack [--ike-socket-bufsize bufsize]
130 [--ike-socket-errqueue-toggle] [--rundir path]
131 [--ctlsocket path/file] [--label string]
132
133 ipsec whack --shutdown [--rundir path] [--ctlsocket path/file]
134 [--label string] [--leave-state]
135
137 pluto is an IKE ("IPsec Key Exchange") daemon. whack is an auxiliary
138 program to allow requests to be made to a running pluto.
139
140 pluto is used to automatically build shared "security associations" on
141 a system that has IPsec, the secure IP protocol. In other words, pluto
142 can eliminate much of the work of manual keying. The actual secure
143 transmission of packets is the responsibility of other parts of the
144 system - the kernel. Pluto can talk to various kernel implementations,
145 such as the Linux XFRM and BSD KAME IPsec stacks. ipsec_auto(8)
146 provides a more convenient interface to pluto and whack.
147
148 IKE's Job
149 A Security Association (SA) is an agreement between two network nodes
150 on how to process certain traffic between them. This processing
151 involves encapsulation, authentication, encryption, or compression.
152
153 IKE can be deployed on a network node to negotiate Security
154 Associations for that node. These IKE implementations can only
155 negotiate with other IKE implementations, so IKE must be on each node
156 that is to be an endpoint of an IKE-negotiated Security Association. No
157 other nodes need to be running IKE.
158
159 An IKE instance (i.e. an IKE implementation on a particular network
160 node) communicates with another IKE instance using UDP IP packets, so
161 there must be a route between the nodes in each direction.
162
163 The negotiation of Security Associations requires a number of choices
164 that involve tradeoffs between security, convenience, trust, and
165 efficiency. These are policy issues and are normally specified to the
166 IKE instance by the system administrator.
167
168 IKE deals with two kinds of Security Associations. The first part of a
169 negotiation between IKE instances is to build an ISAKMP SA. An ISAKMP
170 SA is used to protect communication between the two IKEs. IPsec SAs can
171 then be built by the IKEs - these are used to carry protected IP
172 traffic between the systems.
173
174 The negotiation of the ISAKMP SA is known as Phase 1. In theory, Phase
175 1 can be accomplished by a couple of different exchange types.
176 Currently, Main Mode and Aggressive Mode are implemented.
177
178 Any negotiation under the protection of an ISAKMP SA, including the
179 negotiation of IPsec SAs, is part of Phase 2. The exchange type that we
180 use to negotiate an IPsec SA is called Quick Mode.
181
182 IKE instances must be able to authenticate each other as part of their
183 negotiation of an ISAKMP SA. This can be done by several mechanisms
184 described in the draft standards.
185
186 IKE negotiation can be initiated by any instance with any other. If
187 both can find an agreeable set of characteristics for a Security
188 Association, and both recognize each others authenticity, they can set
189 up a Security Association. The standards do not specify what causes an
190 IKE instance to initiate a negotiation.
191
192 In summary, an IKE instance is prepared to automate the management of
193 Security Associations in an IPsec environment, but a number of issues
194 are considered policy and are left in the system administrator's hands.
195
196 Pluto
197 pluto is an implementation of IKE. It runs as a daemon on a network
198 node. Currently, this network node must be a Linux system running the
199 XFRM IPsec stack, or a FreeBSD/NetBSD/Mac OSX system running the KAME
200 IPsec stack.
201
202 pluto implements a large subset of IKEv1 and IKEv2.
203
204 The policy for acceptable characteristics for Security Associations is
205 mostly hardwired into the code of pluto (spdb.c). Eventually this will
206 be moved into a security policy database with reasonable expressive
207 power and more convenience.
208
209 pluto uses shared secrets or RSA signatures to authenticate peers with
210 whom it is negotiating. These RSA signatures can come from DNS(SEC), a
211 configuration file, or from X.509 and CA certificates.
212
213 pluto initiates negotiation of a Security Association when it is
214 manually prodded: the program whack is run to trigger this. It will
215 also initiate a negotiation when IPsec traps an outbound packet for
216 Opportunistic Encryption.
217
218 pluto implements ISAKMP SAs itself. After it has negotiated the
219 characteristics of an IPsec SA, it directs the kernel to implement it.
220 If necessary, it also invokes a script to adjust any firewall and issue
221 route(8) commands to direct IP packets.
222
223 When pluto shuts down, it closes all Security Associations.
224
225 Before Running Pluto
226 pluto runs as a daemon with userid root. Before running it, a few
227 things must be set up.
228
229 pluto requires a working IPsec stack.
230
231 pluto supports multiple public networks (that is, networks that are
232 considered insecure and thus need to have their traffic encrypted or
233 authenticated). It discovers the public interfaces to use by looking at
234 all interfaces that are configured (the --interface option can be used
235 to limit the interfaces considered). It does this only when whack tells
236 it to --listen, so the interfaces must be configured by then. The
237 --listen can be used to limit listening on only 1 IP address of a
238 certain interface. ifconfig(8) or ip(8) with the -a flag will show the
239 name and status of each network interface.
240
241 pluto requires a database of preshared secrets and RSA private keys.
242 This is described in the ipsec.secrets(5). pluto is told of RSA public
243 keys via whack commands. If the connection is Opportunistic, and no RSA
244 public key is known, pluto will attempt to fetch RSA keys using the
245 Domain Name System.
246
247 Setting up XFRM for pluto
248 No special requirements are necessary to use XFRM - it ships with all
249 modern versions of Linux 2.4 and later.
250
251 ipsec.secrets file
252 A pluto daemon and another IKE daemon (for example, another instance of
253 pluto) must convince each other that they are who they are supposed to
254 be before any negotiation can succeed. This authentication is
255 accomplished by using either secrets that have been shared beforehand
256 (manually) or by using RSA signatures. There are other techniques, but
257 they have not been implemented in pluto.
258
259 The file /etc/ipsec.secrets is used to keep preshared secret keys and
260 XAUTH passwords. RSA private keys, X.509 certificates, CRLs, OCSP and
261 smartcards are handled via NSS. For debugging, there is an argument to
262 the pluto command to use a different file. This file is described in
263 ipsec.secrets(5).
264
265 Running Pluto
266 To fire up the daemon, just type pluto (be sure to be running as the
267 superuser). The default IKE port number is 500, the UDP port assigned
268 by IANA for IKE Daemons. pluto must be run by the superuser to be able
269 to use the UDP 500 port. If pluto is told to enable NAT-Traversal, then
270 UDP port 4500 is also taken by pluto to listen on.
271
272 Pluto supports different IPstacks on different operating systems. This
273 can be configured using one of the options --use-netkey (Linux),
274 --use-bsdkame (BSD). On startup, pluto might also read the protostack=
275 option to select the IPsec stack to use if --config /etc/ipsec.conf is
276 given as argument to pluto. If both --use-XXX and --config
277 /etc/ipsec.conf are specified, the last command line argument specified
278 takes precedence.
279
280 Pluto supports RFC 3947 NAT-Traversal. The allowed range behind the NAT
281 routers is submitted using the --virtual-private option. See
282 ipsec.conf(5) for the syntax. The option --force-keepalive forces the
283 sending of the keep-alive packets, which are send to prevent the NAT
284 router from closing its port when there is not enough traffic on the
285 IPsec connection. The --keep-alive sets the delay (in seconds) of these
286 keep-alive packets. The newer NAT-T standards support port floating,
287 and Libreswan enables this per default.
288
289 Pluto supports the use of X.509 certificates and sends certificates
290 when needed. Pluto uses NSS for all X.509 related data, including
291 CAcerts, certs, CRLs and private keys. The Certificate Revocation Lists
292 can also be retrieved from an URL. The option --crlcheckinterval sets
293 the time between checking for CRL expiration and issuing new fetch
294 commands. The first attempt to update a CRL is started at
295 2*crlcheckinterval before the next update time. Pluto logs a warning if
296 no valid CRL was loaded or obtained for a connection. If --crl-strict
297 is given, the connection will be rejected until a valid CRL has been
298 loaded.
299
300 Pluto can also use helper children to off-load cryptographic
301 operations. This behavior can be fine tuned using the --nhelpers. Pluto
302 will start (n-1) of them, where n is the number of CPU's you have
303 (including hypherthreaded CPU's). A value of 0 forces pluto to do all
304 operations in the main process. A value of -1 tells pluto to perform
305 the above calculation. Any other value forces the number to that
306 amount.
307
308 Pluto uses the NSS crypto library as its random source. Some government
309 Three Letter Agency requires that pluto reads 440 bits from /dev/random
310 and feed this into the NSS RNG before drawing random from the NSS
311 library, despite the NSS library itself already seeding its internal
312 state. As this process can block pluto for an extended time, the
313 default is to not perform this redundant seeding. The --seedbits option
314 can be used to specify the number of bits that will be pulled from
315 /dev/random and seeded into the NSS RNG. This can also be accomplished
316 by specifying seedbits in the "config setup" section of ipsec.conf.
317 This option should not be used by most people.
318
319 pluto attempts to create a lockfile with the name
320 /var/run/pluto/pluto.pid. If the lockfile cannot be created, pluto
321 exits - this prevents multiple plutos from competing Any "leftover"
322 lockfile must be removed before pluto will run. pluto writes its PID
323 into this file so that scripts can find it. This lock will not function
324 properly if it is on an NFS volume (but sharing locks on multiple
325 machines doesn't make sense anyway).
326
327 pluto then forks and the parent exits. This is the conventional "daemon
328 fork". It can make debugging awkward, so there is an option to suppress
329 this fork. In certain configurations, pluto might also launch helper
330 programs to assist with DNS queries or to offload cryptographic
331 operations.
332
333 All logging, including diagnostics, is sent to syslog(3) with
334 facility=authpriv; it decides where to put these messages (possibly in
335 /var/log/secure or /var/log/auth.log). Since this too can make
336 debugging awkward, the option --stderrlog is used to steer logging to
337 stderr.
338
339 Alternatively, --logfile can be used to send all logging information to
340 a specific file.
341
342 Once pluto is started, it waits for requests from whack.
343
344 Pluto's Internal State
345 To understand how to use pluto, it is helpful to understand a little
346 about its internal state. Furthermore, the terminology is needed to
347 decipher some of the diagnostic messages.
348
349 Pluto supports food groups for Opportunistic IPsec. The policies for
350 these are located in /etc/ipsec.d/policies, or another directory as
351 specified by --ipsecdir.
352
353 Pluto supports X.509 Certificates. All certificate handling is done
354 using the NSS library and all certificate material is stored in an NSS
355 database in /var/lib/ipsec/nss or another directory as specified by
356 --nssdir.
357
358 Pluto may core dump. It will normally do so into the current working
359 directory. You can specify the --coredir option for pluto, or specify
360 the dumpdir= option in ipsec.conf.
361
362 If you are investigating a potential memory leak in pluto, start pluto
363 with the --leak-detective option. Before the leak causes the system or
364 pluto to die, shut down pluto in the regular way. pluto will display a
365 list of leaks it has detected.
366
367 If you are investigating a potential use-after-free or double-free in
368 pluto, first build pluto with USE_EFENCE=true and then start pluto with
369 --efence-protect. See efence(2) and EF_PROTECT_BELOW and
370 EF_PROTECT_FREE.
371
372 The (potential) connection database describes attributes of a
373 connection. These include the IP addresses of the hosts and client
374 subnets and the security characteristics desired. pluto requires this
375 information (simply called a connection) before it can respond to a
376 request to build an SA. Each connection is given a name when it is
377 created, and all references are made using this name.
378
379 During the IKE exchange to build an SA, the information about the
380 negotiation is represented in a state object. Each state object
381 reflects how far the negotiation has reached. Once the negotiation is
382 complete and the SA established, the state object remains to represent
383 the SA. When the SA is terminated, the state object is discarded. Each
384 State object is given a serial number and this is used to refer to the
385 state objects in logged messages.
386
387 Each state object corresponds to a connection and can be thought of as
388 an instantiation of that connection. At any particular time, there may
389 be any number of state objects corresponding to a particular
390 connection. Often there is one representing an ISAKMP SA and another
391 representing an IPsec SA.
392
393 XFRM requires no special routing.
394
395 Each connection may be routed, and must be while it has an IPsec SA.
396 The connection specifies the characteristics of the route: the
397 interface on this machine, the "gateway" (the nexthop), and the peer's
398 client subnet. Two connections may not be simultaneously routed if they
399 are for the same peer's client subnet but use different interfaces or
400 gateways (pluto's logic does not reflect any advanced routing
401 capabilities).
402
403 When pluto needs to install a route for a connection, it must make sure
404 that no conflicting route is in use. If another connection has a
405 conflicting route, that route will be taken down, as long as there is
406 no IPsec SA instantiating that connection. If there is such an IPsec
407 SA, the attempt to install a route will fail.
408
409 There is an exception. If pluto, as Responder, needs to install a route
410 to a fixed client subnet for a connection, and there is already a
411 conflicting route, then the SAs using the route are deleted to make
412 room for the new SAs. The rationale is that the new connection is
413 probably more current. The need for this usually is a product of Road
414 Warrior connections (these are explained later; they cannot be used to
415 initiate).
416
417 When pluto needs to install an eroute for an IPsec SA (for a state
418 object), first the state object's connection must be routed (if this
419 cannot be done, the eroute and SA will not be installed). If a
420 conflicting eroute is already in place for another connection, the
421 eroute and SA will not be installed (but note that the routing
422 exception mentioned above may have already deleted potentially
423 conflicting SAs). If another IPsec SA for the same connection already
424 has an eroute, all its outgoing traffic is taken over by the new
425 eroute. The incoming traffic will still be processed. This
426 characteristic is exploited during rekeying.
427
428 Using whack
429 whack is used to command a running pluto. whack uses a UNIX domain
430 socket to speak to pluto (by default, /var/pluto.ctl).
431
432 whack has an intricate argument syntax. This syntax allows many
433 different functions to be specified. The help form shows the usage or
434 version information. The connection form gives pluto a description of a
435 potential connection. The public key form informs pluto of the RSA
436 public key for a potential peer. The delete form deletes a connection
437 description and all SAs corresponding to it. The listen form tells
438 pluto to start or stop listening on the public interfaces for IKE
439 requests from peers. The route form tells pluto to set up routing for a
440 connection; the unroute form undoes this. The initiate form tells pluto
441 to negotiate an SA corresponding to a connection. The terminate form
442 tells pluto to remove all SAs corresponding to a connection, including
443 those being negotiated. The status form displays the pluto's internal
444 state. The debug form tells pluto to change the selection of debugging
445 output "on the fly". The shutdown form tells pluto to shut down,
446 deleting all SAs.
447
448 The crash option asks pluto to consider a particularly target IP to
449 have crashed, and to attempt to restart all connections with that IP
450 address as a gateway. In general, you should use Dead Peer Detection to
451 detect this kind of situation automatically, but this is not always
452 possible.
453
454 Most options are specific to one of the forms, and will be described
455 with that form. There are three options that apply to all forms.
456
457 --ctlsocket path/file
458 file is used as the UNIX domain socket for talking to pluto. Use
459 either this option or --rundir, but not both.
460
461 --rundir path
462 path where the UNIX domain socket for talking to the pluto, the
463 pluto.pid file and the pluto.lock files are found. Use either this
464 option or --ctlsocket, but not both.
465
466 --label string
467 adds the string to all error messages generated by whack.
468
469 The help form of whack is self-explanatory.
470
471 --help
472 display the usage message.
473
474 --version
475 display the version of whack.
476
477 The connection form describes a potential connection to pluto. pluto
478 needs to know what connections can and should be negotiated. When pluto
479 is the initiator, it needs to know what to propose. When pluto is the
480 responder, it needs to know enough to decide whether is is willing to
481 set up the proposed connection.
482
483 The description of a potential connection can specify a large number of
484 details. Each connection has a unique name. This name will appear in a
485 updown shell command, so it should not contain punctuation that would
486 make the command ill-formed.
487
488 --name connection-name
489 sets the name of the connection
490
491 The topology of a connection is symmetric, so to save space here is
492 half a picture:
493
494 client_subnet<-->host:ikeport<-->nexthop<---
495
496 A similar trick is used in the flags. The same flag names are used for
497 both ends. Those before the --to flag describe the left side and those
498 afterwards describe the right side. When pluto attempts to use the
499 connection, it decides whether it is the left side or the right side of
500 the connection, based on the IP numbers of its interfaces.
501
502 --id id
503 the identity of the end. Currently, this can be an IP address
504 (specified as dotted quad or as a Fully Qualified Domain Name,
505 which will be resolved immediately) or as a Fully Qualified Domain
506 Name itself (prefixed by "@" to signify that it should not be
507 resolved), or as user@FQDN, or an X.509 DN. Pluto only
508 authenticates the identity, and does not use it for addressing, so,
509 for example, an IP address need not be the one to which packets are
510 to be sent. If the option is absent, the identity defaults to the
511 IP address specified by --host.
512
513 --host ip-address, --host %any, --host %opportunistic
514 the IP address of the end (generally the public interface). If
515 pluto is to act as a responder for IKE negotiations initiated from
516 unknown IP addresses (the "Road Warrior" case), the IP address
517 should be specified as %any (currently, the obsolete notation
518 0.0.0.0 is also accepted for this). If pluto is to
519 opportunistically initiate the connection, use %opportunistic
520
521 --cert friendly_name
522 The friendly_name (or nickname) of the X.509 certificate that was
523 used when imported the certificate into the NSS database. See
524 ipsec.conf(5) on how to extract this from the PKCS#12 file.
525
526 --ckaid CKAID
527 The hex CKAID of the X.509 certificate. Certificates are stored in
528 the NSS database.
529
530 --ca distinguished name
531 the X.509 Certificate Authority's Distinguished Name (DN) used as
532 trust anchor for this connection. This is the CA certificate that
533 signed the host certificate, as well as the certificate of the
534 incoming client.
535
536 --groups access control groups
537 the access control groups used.
538
539 --sendcert yes|forced|always|ifasked|no|never
540 Whether or not to send our X.509 certificate credentials. This
541 could potentially give an attacker too much information about which
542 identities are allowed to connect to this host. The default is to
543 use ifasked when we are a Responder, and to use yes (which is the
544 same as forced and always if we are an Initiator. The values no and
545 never are equivalent. NOTE: "forced" does not seem to be actually
546 implemented - do not use it.
547
548 --sendca none|issuer|all
549 How much of our available X.509 trust chain to send with the end
550 certificate, excluding any root CAs. Specifying issuer sends just
551 the issuing intermediate CA, while
552 all will send the entire chain of intermediate CAs.none will not
553 send any CA certs. The default is none which maintains the current
554 libreswan behavior.
555
556 --certtype number
557 The X.509 certificate type number.
558
559 --ikeport port-number
560 the UDP port that IKE listens to on that host. The default is 500.
561 (pluto on this machine uses the port specified by its own command
562 line argument, so this only affects where pluto sends messages.)
563
564 --nexthop ip-address
565 where to route packets for the peer's client (presumably for the
566 peer too, but it will not be used for this). When pluto installs an
567 IPsec SA, it issues a route command. It uses the nexthop as the
568 gateway. The default is the peer's IP address (this can be
569 explicitly written as %direct; the obsolete notation 0.0.0.0 is
570 accepted). This option is necessary if pluto's host's interface
571 used for sending packets to the peer is neither point-to-point nor
572 directly connected to the peer.
573
574 --client subnet
575 the subnet for which the IPsec traffic will be destined. If not
576 specified, the host will be the client. The subnet can be specified
577 in any of the forms supported by ipsec_atosubnet(3). The general
578 form is address/mask. The address can be either a domain name or
579 four decimal numbers (specifying octets) separated by dots. The
580 most convenient form of the mask is a decimal integer, specifying
581 the number of leading one bits in the mask. So, for example,
582 10.0.0.0/8 would specify the class A network "Net 10".
583
584 --clientprotoport protocol/port
585 specify the Port Selectors (filters) to be used on this connection.
586 The general form is protocol/port. This is most commonly used to
587 limit the connection to L2TP traffic only by specifying a value of
588 17/1701 for UDP (protocol 17) and port 1701. The notation 17/%any
589 can be used to allow all UDP traffic and is needed for L2TP
590 connections with Windows XP machines before Service Pack 2.
591
592 --srcip ip-address
593 the IP address for this host to use when transmitting a packet to
594 the remote IPsec gateway itself. This option is used to make the
595 gateway itself use its internal IP, which is part of the --client
596 subnet. Otherwise it will use its nearest IP address, which is its
597 public IP address, which is not part of the subnet-subnet IPsec
598 tunnel, and would therefore not get encrypted.
599
600 --xauthserver
601 this end is an xauthserver. It will lookup the xauth user name and
602 password and verify this before allowing the connection to get
603 established.
604
605 --xauthclient
606 this end is an xauthclient. To bring this connection up with the
607 --initiate also requires the client to specify --xauthuser username
608 and --xauthpass password
609
610 --xauthuser
611 The username for the xauth authentication.This option is normally
612 passed along by ipsec_auto(8) when an xauth connection is started
613 using ipsec auto --up conn
614
615 --xauthpass
616 The password for the xauth authentication. This option is normally
617 passed along by ipsec_auto(8) when an xauth connection is started
618 using ipsec auto --up conn
619
620 --modecfgserver
621 this end is an Mode Config server
622
623 --modecfgclient
624 this end is an Mode Config client
625
626 --modecfgdns
627 A comma separated list of DNS server IP's to pass along to
628 connecting clients
629
630 --modecfgdomains
631 A comma separated list of internal DNS domains to pass along to
632 connecting clients
633
634 --dnskeyondemand
635 specifies that when an RSA public key is needed to authenticate
636 this host, and it isn't already known, fetch it from DNS.
637
638 --updown updown
639 specifies an external shell command to be run whenever pluto brings
640 up or down a connection. The script is used to build a shell
641 command, so it may contain positional parameters, but ought not to
642 have punctuation that would cause the resulting command to be
643 ill-formed. The default is ipsec _updown. Pluto passes a dozen
644 environment variables to the script about the connection involved.
645
646 --to
647 separates the specification of the left and right ends of the
648 connection. Pluto tries to decide whether it is left or right based
649 on the information provided on both sides of this option.
650
651 The potential connection description also specifies characteristics of
652 rekeying and security.
653
654 --psk
655 Propose and allow preshared secret authentication for IKE peers.
656 This authentication requires that each side use the same secret.
657 May be combined with --rsasig; at least one must be specified.
658
659 --rsasig
660 Propose and allow RSA signatures for authentication of IKE peers.
661 This authentication requires that each side have have a private key
662 of its own and know the public key of its peer. May be combined
663 with --psk; at least one must be specified.
664
665 --encrypt
666 All proposed or accepted IPsec SAs will include non-null ESP. The
667 actual choices of transforms are wired into pluto.
668
669 --authenticate
670 All proposed IPsec SAs will include AH. All accepted IPsec SAs will
671 include AH or ESP with authentication. The actual choices of
672 transforms are wired into pluto. Note that this has nothing to do
673 with IKE authentication.
674
675 --compress
676 All proposed IPsec SAs will include IPCOMP (compression).
677
678 --tunnel
679 the IPsec SA should use tunneling. Implicit if the SA is for
680 clients. Must only be used with --authenticate or --encrypt.
681
682 --ipv4
683 The host addresses will be interpreted as IPv4 addresses. This is
684 the default. Note that for a connection, all host addresses must be
685 of the same Address Family (IPv4 and IPv6 use different Address
686 Families).
687
688 --ipv6
689 The host addresses (including nexthop) will be interpreted as IPv6
690 addresses. Note that for a connection, all host addresses must be
691 of the same Address Family (IPv4 and IPv6 use different Address
692 Families).
693
694 --tunnelipv4
695 The client addresses will be interpreted as IPv4 addresses. The
696 default is to match what the host will be. This does not imply
697 --tunnel so the flag can be safely used when no tunnel is actually
698 specified. Note that for a connection, all tunnel addresses must be
699 of the same Address Family.
700
701 --tunnelipv6
702 The client addresses will be interpreted as IPv6 addresses. The
703 default is to match what the host will be. This does not imply
704 --tunnel so the flag can be safely used when no tunnel is actually
705 specified. Note that for a connection, all tunnel addresses must be
706 of the same Address Family.
707
708 --pfs
709 There should be Perfect Forward Secrecy - new keying material will
710 be generated for each IPsec SA when running Quick Mode in IKEv1 or
711 Create Child in IKEv2. Without this option, the SAKMP SA keying
712 material is used instead. pluto will propose the same group that
713 was used with the original IKE SA.
714
715 --pfsgroup modp-group
716 Sets the Diffie-Hellman group used. Currently the following values
717 are supported: modp1024 (DHgroup 2), modp1536 (DHgroup 5), modp2048
718 (DHgroup 14), modp3072 (DHgroup 15), modp4096 (DHgroup 16),
719 modp6144 (DHgroup 17), and modp8192 (DHgroup 18). It is possible to
720 support the weak and broken modp768 (DHgroup 1), but this requires
721 a manual recompile and is strongly discouraged.
722
723 --esp esp-algos
724 ESP encryption/authentication algorithm to be used for the
725 connection (phase2 aka IPsec SA). The options must be suitable as a
726 value of ipsec_spi(8). See ipsec.conf(5) for a detailed description
727 of the algorithm format.
728
729 --aggrmode
730 This tunnel is using aggressive mode ISAKMP negotiation. The
731 default is main mode. Aggressive mode is less secure than main mode
732 as it reveals your identity to an eavesdropper, but is needed to
733 support road warriors using PSK keys or to interoperate with other
734 buggy implementations insisting on using aggressive mode.
735
736 --modecfgpull
737 Pull the Mode Config network information from the peer.
738
739 --dpddelay seconds
740 Set the delay (in seconds) between Dead Peer Detection (RFC 3706)
741 keepalives (R_U_THERE, R_U_THERE_ACK) that are sent for this
742 connection (default 30 seconds).
743
744 --timeout seconds
745 Set the length of time (in seconds) we will idle without hearing
746 either an R_U_THERE poll from our peer, or an R_U_THERE_ACK reply.
747 After this period has elapsed with no response and no traffic, we
748 will declare the peer dead, and remove the SA (default 120
749 seconds).
750
751 --dpdaction action
752 When a DPD enabled peer is declared dead, what action should be
753 taken. hold(default) means the eroute will be put into %hold
754 status, while clearmeans the eroute and SA with both be cleared.
755 Clear is really only useful on the server of a Road Warrior config.
756 The action restart is used on tunnels that need to be permanently
757 up, and have static IP addresses. The action restart_by_peerhas
758 been obsoleted and its functionality has been moved into the
759 restart action.
760
761 --forceencaps
762 In some cases, for example when ESP packets are filtered or when a
763 broken IPsec peer does not properly recognise NAT, it can be useful
764 to force RFC-3948 encapsulation using this option. It causes pluto
765 lie and tell the remote peer that RFC-3948 encapsulation (ESP in
766 UDP port 4500 packets) is required.
767
768 If none of the --encrypt, --authenticate, --compress, or --pfs flags is
769 given, the initiating the connection will only build an ISAKMP SA. For
770 such a connection, client subnets have no meaning and must not be
771 specified.
772
773 Apart from initiating directly using the --initiate option, a tunnel
774 can be loaded with a different policy
775
776 --initiateontraffic
777 Only initiate the connection when we have traffic to send over the
778 connection
779
780 --pass
781 Allow unencrypted traffic to flow until the tunnel is initiated.
782
783 --drop
784 Drop unencrypted traffic silently.
785
786 --reject
787 Drop unencrypted traffic silently, but send an ICMP message
788 notifying the other end.
789
790 These options need to be documented
791
792 --failnone
793 to be documented
794
795 --failpass
796 to be documented
797
798 --faildrop
799 to be documented
800
801 --failreject
802 to be documented
803
804 pluto supports various X.509 Certificate related options.
805
806 --utc
807 display all times in UTC.
808
809 --listall
810 lists all of the X.509 information known to pluto.
811
812 --listpubkeys
813 list all the public keys that have been successfully loaded.
814
815 --listcerts
816 list all the X.509 certificates that are currently loaded.
817
818 --checkpubkeys
819 list all the loaded X.509 certificates that are about to expire or
820 have expired.
821
822 --listcacerts
823 list all the Certificate Authority X.509 certificates that are
824 currently loaded.
825
826 --listcrls
827 list all the loaded Certificate Revocation Lists (CRLs)
828
829 The corresponding options --rereadsecrets, --rereadall, and
830 --rereadcrls options reread this information from their respective
831 sources, and purge all the online obtained information. The option
832 --listevents lists all pending events, and the --ddns triggers the
833 Dynamic DNS update event that is normally scheduled to run once every
834 minute.
835
836 --ikelifetime seconds
837 how long pluto will propose that an ISAKMP SA be allowed to live.
838 The default is 3600 (one hour) and the maximum is 86400 (1 day).
839 This option will not affect what is accepted. pluto will reject
840 proposals that exceed the maximum.
841
842 --ipseclifetime seconds
843 how long pluto will propose that an IPsec SA be allowed to live.
844 The default is 28800 (eight hours) and the maximum is 86400 (one
845 day). This option will not affect what is accepted. pluto will
846 reject proposals that exceed the maximum.
847
848 --rekeymargin seconds
849 how long before an SA's expiration should pluto try to negotiate a
850 replacement SA. This will only happen if pluto was the initiator.
851 The default is 540 (nine minutes).
852
853 --rekeyfuzz percentage
854 maximum size of random component to add to rekeymargin, expressed
855 as a percentage of rekeymargin. pluto will select a delay
856 uniformly distributed within this range. By default, the percentage
857 will be 100. If greater determinism is desired, specify 0. It may
858 be appropriate for the percentage to be much larger than 100.
859
860 --keyingtries count
861 how many times pluto should try to negotiate an SA, either for the
862 first time or for rekeying. The default value of 0 means to keep
863 trying forever.
864
865 --dontrekey
866 A misnomer. Only rekey a connection if we were the Initiator and
867 there was recent traffic on the existing connection. This applies
868 to Phase 1 and Phase 2. This is currently the only automatic way
869 for a connection to terminate. It may be useful with Road Warrior
870 or Opportunistic connections. Since SA lifetime negotiation is
871 take-it-or-leave it, a Responder normally uses the shorter of the
872 negotiated or the configured lifetime. This only works because if
873 the lifetime is shorter than negotiated, the Responder will rekey
874 in time so that everything works. This interacts badly with
875 --dontrekey. In this case, the Responder will end up rekeying to
876 rectify a shortfall in an IPsec SA lifetime; for an ISAKMP SA, the
877 Responder will accept the negotiated lifetime.
878
879 --delete
880 when used in the connection form, it causes any previous connection
881 with this name to be deleted before this one is added. Unlike a
882 normal delete, no diagnostic is produced if there was no previous
883 connection to delete. Any routing in place for the connection is
884 undone.
885
886 --delete, --name connection-name
887 The delete form deletes a named connection description and any SAs
888 established or negotiations initiated using this connection. Any
889 routing in place for the connection is undone.
890
891 --deletestate state-number
892 The deletestate form deletes the state object with the specified
893 serial number. This is useful for selectively deleting instances of
894 connections.
895
896 The route form of the whack command tells pluto to set up routing for a
897 connection. Although like a traditional route, it uses an ipsec device
898 as a virtual interface. Once routing is set up, no packets will be sent
899 "in the clear" to the peer's client specified in the connection. A TRAP
900 shunt eroute will be installed; if outbound traffic is caught, Pluto
901 will initiate the connection. An explicit whack route is not always
902 needed: if it hasn't been done when an IPsec SA is being installed, one
903 will be automatically attempted.
904
905 --route, --name connection-name
906 When a routing is attempted for a connection, there must not
907 already be a routing for a different connection with the same
908 subnet but different interface or destination, or if there is, it
909 must not be being used by an IPsec SA. Otherwise the attempt will
910 fail.
911
912 --unroute, --name connection-name
913 The unroute form of the whack command tells pluto to undo a
914 routing. pluto will refuse if an IPsec SA is using the connection.
915 If another connection is sharing the same routing, it will be left
916 in place. Without a routing, packets will be sent without
917 encryption or authentication.
918
919 The initiate form tells pluto to initiate a negotiation with another
920 pluto (or other IKE daemon) according to the named connection.
921 Initiation requires a route that --route would provide; if none is in
922 place at the time an IPsec SA is being installed, pluto attempts to set
923 one up.
924
925 --initiate, --name connection-name, --asynchronous
926 The initiate form of the whack command will relay back from pluto
927 status information via the UNIX domain socket (unless
928 --asynchronous is specified). The status information is meant to
929 look a bit like that from FTP. Currently whack simply copies this
930 to stderr. When the request is finished (eg. the SAs are
931 established or pluto gives up), pluto closes the channel, causing
932 whack to terminate.
933
934 The opportunistic initiate form is mainly used for debugging.
935
936 --tunnelipv4, --tunnelipv6, --oppohere ip-address, --oppothere
937 ip-address, --opposport port, --oppodport port, --oppoproto protocol
938 This will cause pluto to attempt to opportunistically initiate a
939 connection from here to the there, even if a previous attempt had
940 been made. The whack log will show the progress of this attempt.
941
942 Rekeying a connection
943
944 --rekey-ipsec, --name connection-name
945 the rekey-ipsec form tells pluto to rekey the IPsec SA (child SA)
946 of the specified connection. It does not affect the IKE SA (parent
947 SA)
948
949 --rekey-ike, --name connection-name
950 the rekey-ike form tells pluto to rekey the IKE SA (parent SA) of
951 the specified connection. It does not affect the IPsec SAs (child
952 SAs)
953
954 Ending a connection
955
956 --terminate, --name connection-name
957 the terminate form tells pluto to delete any SAs that use the
958 specified connection and to stop any negotiations in process. it
959 does not prevent new negotiations from starting (the delete form
960 has this effect).
961
962 --crash ip-address
963 If the remote peer has crashed, and therefore did not notify us, we
964 keep sending encrypted traffic, and rejecting all plaintext
965 (non-IKE) traffic from that remote peer. The --crash brings our end
966 down as well for all the known connections to the specified
967 ip-address
968
969 ip-address
970 If the remote peer has crashed, and therefore did not notify us, we
971 keep sending encrypted traffic, and rejecting all plaintext
972 (non-IKE) traffic from that remote peer. The --crash brings our end
973 down as well for all the known connections to the specified
974 ip-address
975
976 Redirecting clients can be done using IKEv2 redirect mechanism.
977
978 --global-redirect yes|no|auto
979 The --global-redirect option controls whether pluto will instruct
980 remote peers to redirect IKE/IPsec SA's during IKE_SA_INIT. Valid
981 options are no, yes and auto, where auto means remote peers will be
982 redirected if DDoS mode is active.
983
984 --global-redirect-to ip-address(es)
985 The destination, or a list of destinations, where the peers will be
986 redirected.
987
988 --name connection_name, --redirect-to ip-address(es)
989 The destination, or a list of destinations, where the peers will be
990 redirected. Specifying the connection name is optional. If not
991 specified the mechanism will redirect all currently active peers.
992 If specified, only the peers from connection connection_name will
993 be redirected.
994
995 The public key for informs pluto of the RSA public key for a potential
996 peer. Private keys must be kept secret, so they are kept in
997 ipsec.secrets(5).
998
999 --keyid id
1000 specififies the identity of the peer for which a public key should
1001 be used. Its form is identical to the identity in the connection.
1002 If no public key is specified, pluto attempts to find KEY records
1003 from DNS for the id (if a FQDN) or through reverse lookup (if an IP
1004 address). Note that there several interesting ways in which this is
1005 not secure.
1006
1007 --addkey
1008 specifies that the new key is added to the collection; otherwise
1009 the new key replaces any old ones.
1010
1011 --pubkeyrsa key
1012 specifies the value of the RSA public key. It is a sequence of
1013 bytes as described in RFC 2537 "RSA/MD5 KEYs and SIGs in the Domain
1014 Name System (DNS)". It is denoted in a way suitable for
1015 ipsec_ttodata(3). For example, a base 64 numeral starts with 0s.
1016
1017 The listen form tells pluto to start listening for IKE requests on its
1018 public interfaces. To avoid race conditions, it is normal to load the
1019 appropriate connections into pluto before allowing it to listen. If
1020 pluto isn't listening, it is pointless to initiate negotiations, so it
1021 will refuse requests to do so. Whenever the listen form is used, pluto
1022 looks for public interfaces and will notice when new ones have been
1023 added and when old ones have been removed. This is also the trigger for
1024 pluto to read the ipsec.secrets file. So listen may useful more than
1025 once.
1026
1027 --listen
1028 start listening for IKE traffic on public interfaces.
1029
1030 --unlisten
1031 stop listening for IKE traffic on public interfaces.
1032
1033 The --ddos-auto, --ddos-busy and --ddos-unlimited options tells pluto
1034 to update the DDoS protection state. Normally, these measures are
1035 automatically activated or deactivated based on the number of states
1036 inside pluto. The busy and unlimited option tells pluto to activate or
1037 deactivate the DDoS protection mode manually. One of these DDoS
1038 protection methods is to activate IKEv2 DCOOKIEs to defend against
1039 spoofed IKE packets.
1040
1041 --ddos-busy
1042 place pluto into busy mode and activate anti-DDoS measures.
1043
1044 --ddos-unlimited
1045 pull pluto out of busy mode and deactivate anti-DDoS measures.
1046
1047 --ddos-auto
1048 activate the built-in detection mechanism for the anti-DDoS
1049 measures.
1050
1051 The status form will display information about the internal state of
1052 pluto: information about each potential connection, about each state
1053 object, and about each shunt that pluto is managing without an
1054 associated connection.
1055
1056 Statistics can be seen using ipsec whack --globalstats and reset using
1057 ipsec whack --clearstats. This can be used with the munin software to
1058 monitor VPN services.
1059
1060 --status
1061
1062 The trafficstatus form will display the xauth username, add_time and
1063 the total in and out bytes of the IPsec SA's.
1064
1065 --trafficstatus
1066
1067 The shutdown form is the proper way to shut down pluto. It will tear
1068 down the SAs on this machine that pluto has negotiated. If the
1069 --leave-state option is given, it does not delete any connections, and
1070 leaves the kernel state in the kernel. Note that the init system used
1071 might clean up the kernel state regardless.
1072
1073 --shutdown
1074
1075 Examples
1076 It would be normal to start pluto in one of the system initialization
1077 scripts. It needs to be run by the superuser. Generally, no arguments
1078 are needed. To run in manually, the superuser can simply type
1079
1080 ipsec pluto
1081
1082 The command will immediately return, but a pluto process will be left
1083 running, waiting for requests from whack or a peer.
1084
1085 Using whack, several potential connections would be described:
1086
1087 ipsec whack --name silly --host 127.0.0.1 --to --host 127.0.0.2
1088 --ikelifetime 900 --ipseclifetime 800 --keyingtries 3
1089
1090 Since this silly connection description specifies neither encryption,
1091 authentication, nor tunneling, it could only be used to establish an
1092 ISAKMP SA.
1093
1094 ipsec whack --name conn_name --host 10.0.0.1 --client 10.0.1.0/24
1095 --to --host 10.0.0.2 --client 10.0.2.0/24 --encrypt
1096
1097 This is something that must be done on both sides. If the other side is
1098 pluto, the same whack command could be used on it (the command syntax
1099 is designed to not distinguish which end is ours).
1100
1101 Now that the connections are specified, pluto is ready to handle
1102 requests and replies via the public interfaces. We must tell it to
1103 discover those interfaces and start accepting messages from peers:
1104
1105 ipsec whack --listen
1106
1107 If we don't immediately wish to bring up a secure connection between
1108 the two clients, we might wish to prevent insecure traffic. The routing
1109 form asks pluto to cause the packets sent from our client to the peer's
1110 client to be routed through the ipsec0 device; if there is no SA, they
1111 will be discarded:
1112
1113 ipsec whack --route conn_name
1114
1115 Finally, we are ready to get pluto to initiate negotiation for an IPsec
1116 SA (and implicitly, an ISAKMP SA):
1117
1118 ipsec whack --initiate --name conn_name
1119
1120 A small log of interesting events will appear on standard output (other
1121 logging is sent to syslog).
1122
1123 whack can also be used to terminate pluto cleanly, tearing down all SAs
1124 that it has negotiated.
1125
1126 ipsec whack --shutdown
1127
1128 Notification of any IPSEC SA deletion, but not ISAKMP SA deletion is
1129 sent to the peer. Unfortunately, such Notification is not reliable.
1130 Furthermore, pluto itself ignores Notifications.
1131
1132 XAUTH
1133 If pluto needs additional authentication, such as defined by the XAUTH
1134 specifications, then it may ask whack to prompt the operator for
1135 username or passwords. Typically, these will be entered interactively.
1136 A GUI that wraps around whack may look for the 041 (username) or 040
1137 (password) prompts, and display them to the user.
1138
1139 For testing purposes, the options --xauthuser user --xauthpass pass may
1140 be be given prior to the --initiate to provide responses to the
1141 username and password prompts.
1142
1143 The updown command
1144 Whenever pluto brings a connection up or down, it invokes the updown
1145 command. This command is specified using the --updown option. This
1146 allows for customized control over routing and firewall manipulation.
1147
1148 The updown is invoked for five different operations. Each of these
1149 operations can be for our client subnet or for our host itself.
1150
1151 prepare-host or prepare-client
1152 is run before bringing up a new connection if no other connection
1153 with the same clients is up. Generally, this is useful for deleting
1154 a route that might have been set up before pluto was run or perhaps
1155 by some agent not known to pluto.
1156
1157 route-host or route-client
1158 is run when bringing up a connection for a new peer client subnet
1159 (even if prepare-host or prepare-client was run). The command
1160 should install a suitable route. Routing decisions are based only
1161 on the destination (peer's client) subnet address, unlike eroutes
1162 which discriminate based on source too.
1163
1164 unroute-host or unroute-client
1165 is run when bringing down the last connection for a particular peer
1166 client subnet. It should undo what the route-host or route-client
1167 did.
1168
1169 up-host or up-client
1170 is run when bringing up a tunnel eroute with a pair of client
1171 subnets that does not already have a tunnel eroute. This command
1172 should install firewall rules as appropriate. It is generally a
1173 good idea to allow IKE messages (UDP port 500) travel between the
1174 hosts.
1175
1176 down-host or down-client
1177 is run when bringing down the eroute for a pair of client subnets.
1178 This command should delete firewall rules as appropriate. Note that
1179 there may remain some inbound IPsec SAs with these client subnets.
1180
1181 The script is passed a large number of environment variables to specify
1182 what needs to be done.
1183
1184 PLUTO_VERSION
1185 indicates what version of this interface is being used. This
1186 document describes version 1.1. This is upwardly compatible with
1187 version 1.0.
1188
1189 PLUTO_VERB
1190 specifies the name of the operation to be performed (prepare-host,r
1191 prepare-client, up-host, up-client, down-host, or down-client). If
1192 the address family for security gateway to security gateway
1193 communications is IPv6, then a suffix of -v6 is added to the verb.
1194
1195 PLUTO_CONNECTION
1196 is the name of the connection for which we are routing.
1197
1198 PLUTO_NEXT_HOP
1199 is the next hop to which packets bound for the peer must be sent.
1200
1201 PLUTO_INTERFACE
1202 is the name of the ipsec interface to be used.
1203
1204 PLUTO_ME
1205 is the IP address of our host.
1206
1207 PLUTO_MY_CLIENT
1208 is the IP address / count of our client subnet. If the client is
1209 just the host, this will be the host's own IP address / max (where
1210 max is 32 for IPv4 and 128 for IPv6).
1211
1212 PLUTO_MY_CLIENT_NET
1213 is the IP address of our client net. If the client is just the
1214 host, this will be the host's own IP address.
1215
1216 PLUTO_MY_CLIENT_MASK
1217 is the mask for our client net. If the client is just the host,
1218 this will be 255.255.255.255.
1219
1220 PLUTO_PEER
1221 is the IP address of our peer.
1222
1223 PLUTO_PEER_CLIENT
1224 is the IP address / count of the peer's client subnet. If the
1225 client is just the peer, this will be the peer's own IP address /
1226 max (where max is 32 for IPv4 and 128 for IPv6).
1227
1228 PLUTO_PEER_CLIENT_NET
1229 is the IP address of the peer's client net. If the client is just
1230 the peer, this will be the peer's own IP address.
1231
1232 PLUTO_PEER_CLIENT_MASK
1233 is the mask for the peer's client net. If the client is just the
1234 peer, this will be 255.255.255.255.
1235
1236 PLUTO_MY_PROTOCOL
1237 lists the protocols allowed over this IPsec SA.
1238
1239 PLUTO_PEER_PROTOCOL
1240 lists the protocols the peer allows over this IPsec SA.
1241
1242 PLUTO_MY_PORT
1243 lists the ports allowed over this IPsec SA.
1244
1245 PLUTO_PEER_PORT
1246 lists the ports the peer allows over this IPsec SA.
1247
1248 PLUTO_MY_ID
1249 lists our id.
1250
1251 PLUTO_PEER_ID
1252 Dlists our peer's id.
1253
1254 PLUTO_PEER_CA
1255 lists the peer's CA.
1256
1257 All output sent by the script to stderr or stdout is logged. The script
1258 should return an exit status of 0 if and only if it succeeds.
1259
1260 Pluto waits for the script to finish and will not do any other
1261 processing while it is waiting. The script may assume that pluto will
1262 not change anything while the script runs. The script should avoid
1263 doing anything that takes much time and it should not issue any command
1264 that requires processing by pluto. Either of these activities could be
1265 performed by a background subprocess of the script.
1266
1267 Rekeying
1268 When an SA that was initiated by pluto has only a bit of lifetime left,
1269 pluto will initiate the creation of a new SA. This applies to ISAKMP
1270 and IPsec SAs. The rekeying will be initiated when the SA's remaining
1271 lifetime is less than the rekeymargin plus a random percentage, between
1272 0 and rekeyfuzz, of the rekeymargin.
1273
1274 Similarly, when an SA that was initiated by the peer has only a bit of
1275 lifetime left, pluto will try to initiate the creation of a
1276 replacement. To give preference to the initiator, this rekeying will
1277 only be initiated when the SA's remaining lifetime is half of
1278 rekeymargin. If rekeying is done by the responder, the roles will be
1279 reversed: the responder for the old SA will be the initiator for the
1280 replacement. The former initiator might also initiate rekeying, so
1281 there may be redundant SAs created. To avoid these complications, make
1282 sure that rekeymargin is generous.
1283
1284 One risk of having the former responder initiate is that perhaps none
1285 of its proposals is acceptable to the former initiator (they have not
1286 been used in a successful negotiation). To reduce the chances of this
1287 happening, and to prevent loss of security, the policy settings are
1288 taken from the old SA (this is the case even if the former initiator is
1289 initiating). These may be stricter than those of the connection.
1290
1291 pluto will not rekey an SA if that SA is not the most recent of its
1292 type (IPsec or ISAKMP) for its potential connection. This avoids
1293 creating redundant SAs.
1294
1295 The random component in the rekeying time (rekeyfuzz) is intended to
1296 make certain pathological patterns of rekeying unstable. If both sides
1297 decide to rekey at the same time, twice as many SAs as necessary are
1298 created. This could become a stable pattern without the randomness.
1299
1300 Another more important case occurs when a security gateway has SAs with
1301 many other security gateways. Each of these connections might need to
1302 be rekeyed at the same time. This would cause a high peek requirement
1303 for resources (network bandwidth, CPU time, entropy for random
1304 numbers). The rekeyfuzz can be used to stagger the rekeying times.
1305
1306 Once a new set of SAs has been negotiated, pluto will never send
1307 traffic on a superseded one. Traffic will be accepted on an old SA
1308 until it expires.
1309
1310 Selecting a Connection When Responding: Road Warrior Support
1311 When pluto receives an initial Main Mode message, it needs to decide
1312 which connection this message is for. It picks based solely on the
1313 source and destination IP addresses of the message. There might be
1314 several connections with suitable IP addresses, in which case one of
1315 them is arbitrarily chosen. (The ISAKMP SA proposal contained in the
1316 message could be taken into account, but it is not.)
1317
1318 The ISAKMP SA is negotiated before the parties pass further identifying
1319 information, so all ISAKMP SA characteristics specified in the
1320 connection description should be the same for every connection with the
1321 same two host IP addresses. At the moment, the only characteristic that
1322 might differ is authentication method.
1323
1324 Up to this point, all configuring has presumed that the IP addresses
1325 are known to all parties ahead of time. This will not work when either
1326 end is mobile (or assigned a dynamic IP address for other reasons). We
1327 call this situation "Road Warrior". It is fairly tricky and has some
1328 important limitations, most of which are features of the IKE protocol.
1329
1330 Only the initiator may be mobile: the initiator may have an IP number
1331 unknown to the responder. When the responder doesn't recognize the IP
1332 address on the first Main Mode packet, it looks for a connection with
1333 itself as one end and %any as the other. If it cannot find one, it
1334 refuses to negotiate. If it does find one, it creates a temporary
1335 connection that is a duplicate except with the %any replaced by the
1336 source IP address from the packet; if there was no identity specified
1337 for the peer, the new IP address will be used.
1338
1339 When pluto is using one of these temporary connections and needs to
1340 find the preshared secret or RSA private key in ipsec.secrets, and the
1341 connection specified no identity for the peer, %any is used as its
1342 identity. After all, the real IP address was apparently unknown to the
1343 configuration, so it is unreasonable to require that it be used in this
1344 table.
1345
1346 Part way into the Phase 1 (Main Mode) negotiation using one of these
1347 temporary connection descriptions, pluto will receive an Identity
1348 Payload. At this point, pluto checks for a more appropriate connection,
1349 one with an identity for the peer that matches the payload and would
1350 use the same keys as so far used for authentication. If it finds one,
1351 it will switch to using this better connection (or a temporary one
1352 derived from this, if it has %any for the peer's IP address). It may
1353 even turn out that no connection matches the newly discovered identity,
1354 including the current connection; if so, pluto terminates negotiation.
1355
1356 Unfortunately, if preshared secret authentication is being used, the
1357 Identity Payload is encrypted using this secret, so the secret must be
1358 selected by the responder without knowing this payload. This limits
1359 there to being at most one preshared secret for all Road Warrior
1360 systems connecting to a host. RSA Signature authentication does not
1361 require that the responder knows how to select the initiator's public
1362 key until after the initiator's Identity Payload is decoded (using the
1363 responder's private key, so that must be preselected).
1364
1365 When pluto is responding to a Quick Mode negotiation via one of these
1366 temporary connection descriptions, it may well find that the subnets
1367 specified by the initiator don't match those in the temporary
1368 connection description. If so, it will look for a connection with
1369 matching subnets, its own host address, a peer address of %any and
1370 matching identities. If it finds one, a new temporary connection is
1371 derived from this one and used for the Quick Mode negotiation of IPsec
1372 SAs. If it does not find one, pluto terminates negotiation.
1373
1374 Be sure to specify an appropriate nexthop for the responder to send a
1375 message to the initiator: pluto has no way of guessing it (if
1376 forwarding isn't required, use an explicit %direct as the nexthop and
1377 the IP address of the initiator will be filled in; the obsolete
1378 notation 0.0.0.0 is still accepted).
1379
1380 pluto has no special provision for the initiator side. The current
1381 (possibly dynamic) IP address and nexthop must be used in defining
1382 connections. These must be properly configured each time the
1383 initiator's IP address changes. pluto has no mechanism to do this
1384 automatically.
1385
1386 Although we call this Road Warrior Support, it could also be used to
1387 support encrypted connections with anonymous initiators. The
1388 responder's organization could announce the preshared secret that would
1389 be used with unrecognized initiators and let anyone connect. Of course
1390 the initiator's identity would not be authenticated.
1391
1392 If any Road Warrior connections are supported, pluto cannot reject an
1393 exchange initiated by an unknown host until it has determined that the
1394 secret is not shared or the signature is invalid. This must await the
1395 third Main Mode message from the initiator. If no Road Warrior
1396 connection is supported, the first message from an unknown source would
1397 be rejected. This has implications for ease of debugging configurations
1398 and for denial of service attacks.
1399
1400 Although a Road Warrior connection must be initiated by the mobile
1401 side, the other side can and will rekey using the temporary connection
1402 it has created. If the Road Warrior wishes to be able to disconnect, it
1403 is probably wise to set --keyingtries to 1 in the connection on the
1404 non-mobile side to prevent it trying to rekey the connection.
1405 Unfortunately, there is no mechanism to unroute the connection
1406 automatically.
1407
1408 Debugging
1409 pluto accepts several optional arguments, useful mostly for debugging.
1410 Except for --interface, each should appear at most once.
1411
1412 --interface interfacename
1413 specifies that the named real public network interface should be
1414 considered. The interface name specified should not be ipsecN. If
1415 the option doesn't appear, all interfaces are considered. To
1416 specify several interfaces, use the option once for each. One use
1417 of this option is to specify which interface should be used when
1418 two or more share the same IP address.
1419
1420 --ikeport port-number
1421 changes the UDP port that pluto will use (default, specified by
1422 IANA: 500)
1423
1424 --ctlbase path
1425 basename for control files. path.ctl is the socket through which
1426 whack communicates with pluto. path.pid is the lockfile to prevent
1427 multiple pluto instances. The default is /var/run/pluto/pluto).
1428
1429 --secretsfile file
1430 specifies the file for authentication secrets (default:
1431 /etc/ipsec.secrets). This name is subject to "globbing" as in
1432 sh(1), so every file with a matching name is processed. Quoting is
1433 generally needed to prevent the shell from doing the globbing.
1434
1435 --nofork
1436 disable "daemon fork" (default is to fork). In addition, after the
1437 lock file and control socket are created, print the line "Pluto
1438 initialized" to standard out.
1439
1440 --uniqueids
1441 if this option has been selected, whenever a new ISAKMP SA is
1442 established, any connection with the same Peer ID but a different
1443 Peer IP address is unoriented (causing all its SAs to be deleted).
1444 This helps clean up dangling SAs when a connection is lost and then
1445 regained at another IP address.
1446
1447 --force-busy
1448 if this option has been selected, pluto will be forced to be
1449 "busy". In this state, which happens when there is a Denial of
1450 Service attack, will force pluto to use cookies before accepting
1451 new incoming IKE packets. Cookies are send and required in ikev1
1452 Aggressive Mode and in ikev2. This option is mostly used for
1453 testing purposes, but can be selected by paranoid administrators as
1454 well.
1455
1456 --stderrlog
1457 log goes to standard out {default is to use syslogd(8))
1458
1459 pluto is willing to produce a prodigious amount of debugging
1460 information. There are several classes of debugging output, and pluto
1461 may be directed to produce a selection of them. All lines of debugging
1462 output are prefixed with "| " to distinguish them from normal
1463 diagnostic messages.
1464
1465 When pluto is invoked, it may be given arguments to specify which debug
1466 classes to output. The current options are:
1467
1468 --debug help (whack only)
1469 list the debugging classes recognised by pluto
1470
1471 --debug none
1472 disable logging for all debugging classes
1473
1474 --debug base
1475 enable debug-logging
1476
1477 --debug cpu-usage
1478 enable cpu-usage logging
1479
1480 --debug class, --no-debug class, --debug no-class
1481 enable (disable) logging of the specified debugging class (--debug
1482 help lists debugging classes supported by this version of pluto)
1483
1484 The debug form of the whack command will change the selection in a
1485 running pluto. If a connection name is specified, the flags are added
1486 whenever pluto has identified that it is dealing with that connection.
1487 Unfortunately, this is often part way into the operation being
1488 observed.
1489
1490 For example, to start pluto with both base and cpu-usage debug-logging
1491 enabled:
1492
1493 pluto --debug base --debug cpu-usage
1494
1495
1496 To later change this pluto to disable base debug-logging use either:
1497
1498 whack --no-debug base
1499
1500
1501 or:
1502
1503 whack --debug none --debug cpu-usage
1504
1505
1506 Impairing
1507 pluto and whack accept several optional arguments that alter (impair)
1508 correct behaviour.
1509
1510 These options are solely intended for use by developers when testing
1511 pluto.
1512
1513 --impair help (whack only)
1514 list all the behaviours that can be altered (impaired)
1515
1516 --impair list (whack only)
1517 list all the behaviours that are currently altered (impaired)
1518
1519 --impair none
1520 disable all altered (impaired) behaviours
1521
1522 --impair behaviour, --impair behaviour:how, --no-impair behaviour
1523 alter (impair) pluto inducing the (possibly erroneous) behaviour
1524
1525 Pluto's Behaviour When Things Go Wrong
1526 When pluto doesn't understand or accept a message, it just ignores the
1527 message. It is not yet capable of communicating the problem to the
1528 other IKE daemon (in the future it might use Notifications to
1529 accomplish this in many cases). It does log a diagnostic.
1530
1531 When pluto gets no response from a message, it resends the same message
1532 (a message will be sent at most three times). This is appropriate: UDP
1533 is unreliable.
1534
1535 When pluto gets a message that it has already seen, there are many
1536 cases when it notices and discards it. This too is appropriate for UDP.
1537
1538 Combine these three rules, and you can explain many apparently
1539 mysterious behaviours. In a pluto log, retrying isn't usually the
1540 interesting event. The critical thing is either earlier (pluto got a
1541 message that it didn't like and so ignored, so it was still awaiting an
1542 acceptable message and got impatient) or on the other system (pluto
1543 didn't send a reply because it wasn't happy with the previous message).
1544
1545 Notes
1546 Each IPsec SA is assigned an SPI, a 32-bit number used to refer to the
1547 SA. The IKE protocol lets the destination of the SA choose the SPI. The
1548 range 0 to 0xFF is reserved for IANA. Pluto also avoids choosing an
1549 SPI in the range 0x100 to 0xFFF, leaving these SPIs free for manual
1550 keying. Remember that the peer, if not pluto, may well chose SPIs in
1551 this range.
1552
1553 Policies
1554 This catalogue of policies may be of use when trying to configure Pluto
1555 and another IKE implementation to interoperate.
1556
1557 In Phase 1, only Main Mode is supported. We are not sure that
1558 Aggressive Mode is secure. For one thing, it does not support identity
1559 protection. It may allow more severe Denial Of Service attacks.
1560
1561 No Informational Exchanges are supported. These are optional and since
1562 their delivery is not assured, they must not matter. It is the case
1563 that some IKE implementations won't interoperate without Informational
1564 Exchanges, but we feel they are broken.
1565
1566 No Informational Payloads are supported. These are optional, but
1567 useful. It is of concern that these payloads are not authenticated in
1568 Phase 1, nor in those Phase 2 messages authenticated with HASH(3).
1569
1570 ·
1571 Diffie Hellman Groups MODP 1024 and MODP 1536 (2 and 5) are
1572 supported. Group MODP768 (1) is not supported because it is too
1573 weak.
1574
1575 ·
1576 Host authentication can be done by RSA Signatures or Pre-Shared
1577 Secrets.
1578
1579 ·
1580 3DES CBC (Cypher Block Chaining mode) is the only encryption
1581 supported, both for ISAKMP SAs and IPSEC SAs.
1582
1583 ·
1584 MD5 and SHA1 hashing are supported for packet authentication in
1585 both kinds of SAs.
1586
1587 ·
1588 The ESP, AH, or AH plus ESP are supported. If, and only if, AH and
1589 ESP are combined, the ESP need not have its own authentication
1590 component. The selection is controlled by the --encrypt and
1591 --authenticate flags.
1592
1593 ·
1594 Each of these may be combined with IPCOMP Deflate compression, but
1595 only if the potential connection specifies compression.
1596
1597 ·
1598 The IPSEC SAs may be tunnel or transport mode, where appropriate.
1599 The --tunnel flag controls this when pluto is initiating.
1600
1601 ·
1602 When responding to an ISAKMP SA proposal, the maximum acceptable
1603 lifetime is eight hours. The default is one hour. There is no
1604 minimum. The --ikelifetime flag controls this when pluto is
1605 initiating.
1606
1607 ·
1608 When responding to an IPSEC SA proposal, the maximum acceptable
1609 lifetime is one day. The default is eight hours. There is no
1610 minimum. The --ipseclifetime flag controls this when pluto is
1611 initiating.
1612
1613 ·
1614 PFS is acceptable, and will be proposed if the --pfs flag was
1615 specified. The DH group proposed will be the same as negotiated for
1616 Phase 1.
1617
1619 Pluto responds to SIGHUP by issuing a suggestion that ``whack
1620 --listen'' might have been intended.
1621
1622 Pluto exits when it receives SIGTERM.
1623
1625 pluto normally forks a daemon process, so the exit status is normally a
1626 very preliminary result.
1627
1628 0
1629 means that all is OK so far.
1630
1631 1
1632 means that something was wrong.
1633
1634 10
1635 means that the lock file already exists.
1636
1637 If whack detects a problem, it will return an exit status of 1. If it
1638 received progress messages from pluto, it returns as status the value
1639 of the numeric prefix from the last such message that was not a message
1640 sent to syslog or a comment (but the prefix for success is treated as
1641 0). Otherwise, the exit status is 0.
1642
1644 /var/run/pluto/pluto.pid
1645
1646 /var/run/pluto/pluto.ctl
1647
1648 /etc/ipsec.secrets
1649
1650 /dev/urandom
1651
1653 pluto does not use any environment variables
1654
1656 The rest of the Libreswan distribution, in particular ipsec(8).
1657
1658 ipsec_auto(8) is designed to make using pluto more pleasant. Use it!
1659
1660 ipsec.secrets(5) describes the format of the secrets file.
1661
1662 ipsec_atoaddr(3), part of the Libreswan distribution, describes the
1663 forms that IP addresses may take. ipsec_atosubnet(3), part of the
1664 Libreswan distribution, describes the forms that subnet specifications.
1665
1666 For more information on IPsec, the mailing list, and the relevant
1667 documents, see:
1668
1669 https://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/ipsecme/charter/
1670
1671 At the time of writing, the latest IETF IKE RFC is:
1672
1673 RFC 7296 Internet Key Exchange Protocol Version 2 (IKEv2)
1674
1675 The Libreswan web site <https://libreswan.org> and the mailing lists
1676 described there.
1677
1678 The Libreswan wiki <https://libreswan.org/wiki> and the mailing lists
1679 described there.
1680
1681 The Libreswan list of implemented RFCs
1682 <https://libreswan.org/wiki/Implemented_Standards>
1683
1685 This code is released under the GPL terms. See the accompanying files
1686 CHANGES COPYING and CREDITS.* for more details.
1687
1688 Detailed history (including FreeS/WAN and Openswan) can be found in the
1689 docs/ directory.
1690
1692 Please see <https://bugs.libreswan.org> for a list of currently known
1693 bugs and missing features.
1694
1695 Bugs should be reported to the <swan-dev@lists.libreswan.org> mailing
1696 list.
1697
1699 Paul Wouters
1700 placeholder to suppress warning
1701
1702
1703
1704libreswan 02/21/2021 IPSEC_PLUTO(8)