OpenVPN Client Cascade
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@stephenw10 said in OpenVPN Client Cascade:
Running 3 tunnels inside each other is not the same as just having a route that goes through 3 routers.
All ip traffic goes through multiple routers, that's how the internet works.Is there a simple image diagram in Internet, like VPN-router1->VPN-router2->VPN router3->Internet to compare to a tunnel in tunnel connection for illustration?
The cannot come up in the wrong order because, for example, tunnel 1 (the inner most tunnel) cannot connect until tunnel 2 is UP because it's running on the tunnel 2 interface.
Tunnel 1 will continually try to establish as long as tunnel 2 is up.This makes sense, as you have explained. So the "protection" is already there, right?
The question is only how to configure tunnel in tunnel. The theoretical explanation usually always looks different than the practical pfSense configuration.
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Maybe this might help you:
https://www.perfect-privacy.com/en/manuals/linux_openvpn_terminal_cascading -
@Pippin said in OpenVPN Client Cascade:
Maybe this might help you:
...I already know the link, but I am looking for a pfSense solution.
stephenw10 has already written that it could work:
@stephenw10 said in OpenVPN Client Cascade:
Create the client for tunnel 3, assign it as an interface. Create the client for tunnel 2 and use the tunnel 3 interface to run it on. Assign the client 2 interface and create the tunnel 1 client on it.
Unfortunately I do not know how to configure this.
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Maybe now I understand what stephenw10 meant:
Create the client for tunnel 3, assign it as an interface. Create the client for tunnel 2 and use the tunnel 3 interface to run it on. Assign the client 2 interface and create the tunnel 1 client on it.
I would probably have to configure these interfaces in the OpenVPN client:
If I configure it like this:
VPN-Client1 - Interface (VPN-Client2)
VPN-Client2 - Interface (VPN-Client3)
VPN-Client3 - Interface (WAN)Then it does not work properly. Probably I would have to activate additional options.
For example:
If VPN-Client3 goes offline, then VPN-Client1 and 2 go offline. The connection is closed.
If VPN-Client3 is online and VPN-Client2 goes offline, then VPN-Client1 goes offline. The connection remains established via VPN-Client3.However, the connection should only work if VPN-Client 1,2 and 3 are online.
Does anyone have an idea how this can be adapted?
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That's correct behaviour for the tunnels. You are probably routing the traffic incorrectly.
All of your unencrypted should go across tunnel 1.
Only encrypted traffic from the tunnel 1 client goes across tunnel 2 and the double encrypted traffic from the tunnel 2 client goes across tunnel 3.
You should not be routing anything from any internal interface to anywhere except the tunnel 1 gateway.
Steve
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Somehow I can't get rid of the feeling that basic settings are missing.
Here is an example configuration with a VPN provider:
@stephenw10 said in OpenVPN Client Cascade:
You should not be routing anything from any internal interface to anywhere except the tunnel 1 gateway.
Can you show me an example of how the rule should look like?
I have the following behavior now:
If VPN-Client1 is online and the others are offline, then there is an internet connection, which should not be the case.
The reason is probably that the local address is almost always set to (pending).
If all 3 VPN-Clients are online and I restart them several times, then they are not set to (pending), but then the internet connection does not work either.
In short, there is a leak at (pending), and with a local address the client connections are terminated as intended, only with 3 local addresses there is no internet connection.
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That looks to be configured as I would expect. The routing from LAN is correct, all policy routed to the tunnel 1 gateway.
I agree though tunnel 1 should not be able to come up until tunnel 2 is up becasue it is running on that interface.
Maybe the interface assignments are wrong?
Steve
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@stephenw10 said in OpenVPN Client Cascade:
Maybe the interface assignments are wrong?
No, the interfaces seem to be correct.
If you have Tunnel1 up after Tunnel2 is up, then I suspect that I am missing basic settings.
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Can we see the assignments? I'm not sure how tunnel 1 can be UP when it doesn't have a local address because tunnel 2 is DOWN and that's what it's running on.
Steve
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Hmm, check the OpenVPN logs. Check the state table. What is tunnel 1 actually running on if tunnel 2 is down?
Steve
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I cannot interpret the logs. Here are the logs, if only Tunnel1 is up:
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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
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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.
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Like this:
And the same the T2 server IP. Only the T3 server IP should be seen as an outbound connection on WAN.Steve
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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?
T3 can still connect, but the others are (pending).
Only the T3 server IP should be seen as an outbound connection on WAN.
I don't know how this is meant.
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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
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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:
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?
The same is also for T3.
Does that mean that all 3 tunnels run parallel and not tunnel through tunnel?
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Edit:
Different city clients seem to work better than a group of clients from one city.
I currently have the following servers:
When I restart pfSense, I get completely different results than when I start the servers manually.
- the 2 floating rules work
- T1 and T2 shows only ICMP protocol.
- The traffic goes through T3, but there is no internet connection
When I manually restart the clients, the servers do not start again.
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Edit2:
Maybe I have to set the routes manually in the OpenVPN client under "Remote Network(s)"?
Like for example here?
But which settings would I then have to set for T3?