Netgate Discussion Forum
    • Categories
    • Recent
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Search
    • Register
    • Login

    OpenVPN Client Cascade

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved OpenVPN
    48 Posts 3 Posters 6.3k Views
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • J
      John2893ax
      last edited by

      I cannot interpret the logs. Here are the logs, if only Tunnel1 is up:

      f6270601-f953-4fc1-be4e-e54d980cf13c-grafik.png
      5bf1c82a-1d7b-462a-9fa6-6bca2cebdc11-grafik.png
      c2cdf4de-5d20-484f-9b5a-8d4f6dc8f2aa-grafik.png

      4370b63c-83d6-4e08-8e52-63f67a269414-grafik.png

      49eb4748-e751-47f6-8d2b-9780c64c6899-grafik.png

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • stephenw10S
        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
        last edited by stephenw10

        It looks like you have the OpenVPN logging options set waaay too high. All of that is just the config it's using not the actual connection process. Set it logging level back to the defaults ot just get the logs covering the connection process.

        Though what I am seeing there is that the local side of the connection shows as not bound to an IP. That's probably what allows it to connect when T2 is down. Without a T2 address it probably omits the local statement from the config. You could check that in /var/etc/openvpn/client1.conf

        I'm not sure you can force that in pfSense. What you could do would be to add floating outbound block rules on WAN for the T1 and T2 server IPs so only T3 can connect directly.

        I still expect T2 and T3 to be trying to connect in that situation though and it appears they are not.

        If you can copy/paste the actual logs into replies using he code tags it's much, much easier to search than pictures on the logs.

        Steve

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • J
          John2893ax
          last edited by

          I have now set verbosity level "default" for all 3 servers.

          Though what I am seeing there is that the local side of the connection shows as not bound to an IP. That's probably what allows it to connect when T2 is down.

          Just for information.
          All 3 servers use the same "CA" and "Cert" certificate. With "Server host or address" I can also use amsterdam.vpn.com, then a server from Amsterdam1-5 is automatically selected.
          Instead of amsterdam.vpn.com, I can also specify the following:
          amsterdam1.vpn.com
          amsterdam2.vpn.com
          amsterdam3.vpn.com
          amsterdam4.vpn.com
          amsterdam5.vpn.com
          I'm not sure if this is the reason for conflicts.

          I will try to add other servers. For example, Basel, London or Paris and see if there are still conflicts.

          You could check that in /var/etc/openvpn/client1.conf

          Here is client1.conf:

          dev ovpnc1
          verb 1
          dev-type tun
          dev-node /dev/tun1
          writepid /var/run/openvpn_client1.pid
          #user nobody
          #group nobody
          script-security 3
          daemon
          inactive 604800
          ping 5
          ping-restart 120
          ping-timer-rem
          persist-tun
          persist-key
          proto udp4
          cipher AES-128-GCM
          auth SHA512
          up /usr/local/sbin/ovpn-linkup
          down /usr/local/sbin/ovpn-linkdown
          tls-client
          client
          nobind
          management /var/etc/openvpn/client1/sock unix
          remote 85.17.28.145 1149 udp4
          auth-user-pass /var/etc/openvpn/client1/up
          auth-retry nointeract
          capath /var/etc/openvpn/client1/ca
          cert /var/etc/openvpn/client1/cert 
          key /var/etc/openvpn/client1/key 
          tls-auth /var/etc/openvpn/client1/tls-auth 1
          ncp-disable
          comp-noadapt
          resolv-retry infinite
          route-nopull
          hand-window 120
          mute-replay-warnings
          persist-remote-ip
          reneg-sec 3600
          resolv-retry 60
          tls-cipher TLS-DHE-RSA-WITH-AES-256-GCM-SHA384:TLS-DHE-RSA-WITH-AES-256-CBC-SHA256:TLS-DHE-RSA-WITH-CAMELLIA-256-CBC-SHA:TLS-DHE-RSA-WITH-AES-256-CBC-SHA:TLS-RSA-WITH-CAMELLIA-256-CBC-SHA:TLS-RSA-WITH-AES-256-CBC-SHA
          tls-timeout 5
          tun-mtu  1500
          fragment 1300
          mssfix
          remote-cert-tls server
          

          I'm not sure you can force that in pfSense. What you could do would be to add floating outbound block rules on WAN for the T1 and T2 server IPs so only T3 can connect directly.

          Let's assume for now that pfSense cannot force this. How exactly do I create the rules?

          If you can copy/paste the actual logs into replies using he code tags it's much, much easier to search than pictures on the logs.

          I can't add logs because the VPN provider is reported as spam.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • stephenw10S
            stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
            last edited by

            Like this:

            Screenshot_2020-10-25 2220 stevew lan - Firewall Rules Floating Edit.png
            And the same the T2 server IP. Only the T3 server IP should be seen as an outbound connection on WAN.

            Steve

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • J
              John2893ax
              last edited by

              What you could do would be to add floating outbound block rules on WAN for the T1 and T2 server IPs so only T3 can connect directly.

              And the same the T2 server IP.

              Okay. I understood that I should only create two rules.

              Like these?

              Screenshot_2020-10-25 pfSense localdomain - Firewall Rules Floating.png

              T3 can still connect, but the others are (pending).

              Screenshot_2020-10-25 pfSense localdomain - Status OpenVPN.png

              Only the T3 server IP should be seen as an outbound connection on WAN.

              I don't know how this is meant.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • stephenw10S
                stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                last edited by stephenw10

                I mean if you look at the states for port 1149 (:1149) on WAN you should only see the T3 client.

                Check the logs to see what the T2 client is doing. It should be trying to connect on the T3 client interface. If it isn't what is it doing? Did it error out trying to connect before T3 had connected and stop?

                Steve

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • J
                  John2893ax
                  last edited by

                  Sorry for the stupid questions, but are floating rules for t1 and t2 correct?

                  Only the T3 server IP should be seen as an outbound connection on WAN.

                  Does this refer to floating t2 rule or to a new one with t3?

                  I mean if you look at the states for port 1149 (:1149) on WAN you should only see the T3 client.

                  Here is the output:

                  3dba7c21-6206-4c70-ada4-2288e24ecd8b-grafik.png

                  556d22d9-48e9-489c-a370-181c71989fb6-grafik.png

                  Check the logs to see what the T2 client is doing. It should be trying to connect on the T3 client interface.

                  At Diagnostics-> States?

                  95b8dcea-f476-4c15-a01c-ff0e44da7a4e-grafik.png

                  The same is also for T3.

                  Does that mean that all 3 tunnels run parallel and not tunnel through tunnel?

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • J
                    John2893ax
                    last edited by John2893ax

                    Edit:

                    Different city clients seem to work better than a group of clients from one city.

                    I currently have the following servers:

                    Screenshot_2020-10-29 pfSense localdomain - VPN OpenVPN Clients.png

                    When I restart pfSense, I get completely different results than when I start the servers manually.

                    1. the 2 floating rules work

                    Screenshot_2020-10-29 pfSense localdomain - Firewall Rules Floating.png

                    1. T1 and T2 shows only ICMP protocol.

                    Screenshot_2020-10-29 pfSense localdomain - Diagnostics States States.png

                    Screenshot_2020-10-29 pfSense localdomain - Diagnostics States States(1).png

                    1. The traffic goes through T3, but there is no internet connection

                    When I manually restart the clients, the servers do not start again.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • J
                      John2893ax
                      last edited by

                      Edit2:

                      Maybe I have to set the routes manually in the OpenVPN client under "Remote Network(s)"?

                      Like for example here?

                      53c77d11-aa12-433b-91fb-15f4c08e5b25-grafik.png

                      Screenshot_2020-10-29 pfSense localdomain - Diagnostics Routes.png

                      But which settings would I then have to set for T3?

                      677121fc-7c4f-449b-9f7a-dac83972f660-grafik.png

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • stephenw10S
                        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                        last edited by

                        Did you set the direction as OUT on those floating rules?

                        Did you reset the state table or reboot since you added them?

                        You have at least one state on WAN that should have been rejected by that outbound floating rule.

                        You should not see any states on WAN foe OpenVPN tunnels except tunnel 3.

                        The fact they are up means they are not running tunnel-in-tunnel as you say.

                        Steve

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • J
                          John2893ax
                          last edited by John2893ax

                          Did you set the direction as OUT on those floating rules?

                          Yes.

                          Did you reset the state table or reboot since you added them?

                          I always enabled "Reset the firewall state table" under Diagnostics/States/Reset States and pressed [Reset]. In any case I assumed that it would work. Only with a reboot the floating rules and the start of the tunnel sequence worked simultaneously.

                          You should not see any states on WAN foe OpenVPN tunnels except tunnel 3.

                          Without remote network(s) entries in the OpenVPN client I see all 3 servers under States/WAN. So they are not running tunnel in tunnel.

                          But I have to test again if with remote network(s) only the third server is visible.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • J
                            John2893ax
                            last edited by

                            OK. Whether with or without remote network(s) makes no difference.

                            b3e92805-a2b8-4fd5-b461-43d9a72c9744-grafik.png

                            The rules in the image currently do the following after a reboot:

                            1. Under States/WAN I only see T3.

                            Screenshot_2020-10-29 pfSense localdomain - Diagnostics States States.png

                            1. Under States/T2 I see nothing.

                            2. Under States/T3 I see T1 and T2. I do not know if this is correct.

                            Screenshot_2020-10-29 pfSense localdomain - Diagnostics States States(1).png

                            1. There is no internet connection with floating rules.

                            Do I understand correctly that the rules must look like this?

                            • Under States/WAN I should see T3.
                            • Under States/T1 I should see T2.
                            • Under States/T2 I should see T3.
                            • Under States/T3 I should see WAN.

                            Would that be correct?

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • stephenw10S
                              stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                              last edited by

                              No. You should see~:

                              States on WAN - T3
                              States on T3 - T2
                              States on T2 - T1

                              So you need a floating outbound reject rule on T3 to reject the T1 destination. It should only be able to create states on T2.

                              Steve

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • J
                                John2893ax
                                last edited by

                                @stephenw10 said in OpenVPN Client Cascade:

                                So you need a floating outbound reject rule on T3 to reject the T1 destination

                                Unfortunately I do not know how to configure this.
                                Also I don't know which rule should be at the top and which at the bottom.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • stephenw10S
                                  stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                  last edited by

                                  The ordering is not important since this will be the only floating rule applied to the T3 interface.

                                  Thinking about it you could just edit your existing floating rule for the T1 server destination and make it apply to WAN an T3 so can only ever open on T2.

                                  Steve

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • J
                                    John2893ax
                                    last edited by

                                    It makes no difference whether with these rules

                                    Screenshot_2020-10-30 pfSense localdomain - Firewall Rules Floating(1).png

                                    or with these rules

                                    Screenshot_2020-10-30 pfSense localdomain - Firewall Rules Floating.png

                                    In both cases the T1 client is down and I have no internet connection.

                                    Screenshot_2020-10-30 pfSense localdomain - Status OpenVPN.png

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • stephenw10S
                                      stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                      last edited by

                                      But it does prevent the T1 connection coming up in the wrong place?

                                      It just fails entirely?

                                      Steve

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • J
                                        John2893ax
                                        last edited by

                                        @stephenw10 said in OpenVPN Client Cascade:

                                        But it does prevent the T1 connection coming up in the wrong place?

                                        Yes.

                                        It just fails entirely?

                                        I do not know how to check it.

                                        Under OpenVPN Log always says after reboot:

                                        Oct 31 18:29:10 	openvpn 	28024 	write UDPv4: Permission denied (code=13)
                                        Oct 31 18:29:10 	openvpn 	28024 	write UDPv4: Permission denied (code=13)
                                        Oct 31 18:29:11 	openvpn 	28024 	write UDPv4: Permission denied (code=13)
                                        Oct 31 18:29:11 	openvpn 	28024 	write UDPv4: Permission denied (code=13)
                                        Oct 31 18:29:12 	openvpn 	28024 	write UDPv4: Permission denied (code=13)
                                        Oct 31 18:29:12 	openvpn 	28024 	write UDPv4: Permission denied (code=13)
                                        Oct 31 18:29:13 	openvpn 	28024 	write UDPv4: Permission denied (code=13) 
                                        

                                        I have:
                                        States on WAN-T3
                                        States on T3-T2
                                        States on T2-nothing

                                        T3-T1 is no longer present.

                                        I can T1 no longer restart manually.

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • stephenw10S
                                          stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                          last edited by

                                          Permission denied like that usually means the firewall is preventing it. Which either means it's trying to start on WAN or T3 and getting blocked or the rules are incorrectly blocking it on T2.

                                          If it's the former I'm not really sure what we can do from there. There doesn't appear to be any way to set a specific outbound interface for it to use when that interface is dynamic.

                                          Since you know the destination IPs here you could set a route to each on the correct client.
                                          So try adding it as a remote network (/32). I.e. add the T1 server IP as a remote network on the T2 client. That should add a route to it and the T1 client should then use it.

                                          Steve

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • J
                                            John2893ax
                                            last edited by

                                            When I add T1 server IP as a remote network on the T2 client, the following happens:

                                            • After reboot T1 stays down.

                                            Screenshot_2020-11-01 pfSense localdomain - Status OpenVPN.png

                                            • The message "write UDPv4: Permission denied (code=13)" remains.

                                            But I can manually restart the OpenVPN client order T3->T2->T1. The internet connection is available after that.

                                            If I add T1 server IP as remote network on the T2 client and if I add T2 server IP as remote network on the T3 client, the following happens:

                                            • After reboot all 3 OpenVPN clients are online, but "Local Address" of T1 and T2 is set to (pending).

                                            Screenshot_2020-11-01 pfSense localdomain - Status OpenVPN(1).png

                                            • The message "write UDPv4: Permission denied (code=13)" remains.

                                            But the internet connection is not available. I have to restart the sequence T3->T2->T1 manually.

                                            In both cases (after reboot and after manual restart) I see~:

                                            States on WAN - T3
                                            States on T3 - T2
                                            States on T2 - T1

                                            Also in both cases, I had to deactivate "Don't pull routes" in the OpenVPN client to make it work.

                                            What else can I do?

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                            • First post
                                              Last post
                                            Copyright 2025 Rubicon Communications LLC (Netgate). All rights reserved.