Working on getting OpenVPN server bridging to fly.
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Hmm. I've had to resort to turning off bridging in the webui, and create the bridge /etc/rc. So I now have this:
ifconfig bridge0 create
ifconfig bridge0 addm sis0 addm tap0 up
#echo "pass in quick on sis0 dup-to tap0 inet proto udp from any to 224.0.0.251 port = 5353" | pfctl -mf -
#echo "pass in quick on tap0 dup-to sis0 inet proto udp from any to 224.0.0.251 port = 5353" | pfctl -mf -(commented out the dup-to rules until I figure out why they kill things)
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1 Edit /tmp/rules.debug
2 Add your custom items
3 pfctl -f /tmp/rules.debug -
Hmm.
It appears that bridge0 needs to be an interface that pfSense recognizes for rules creation. The moment I enable the bridge and connect to openvpn, no one on either the openvpn or the opt interface I've bridged to can go anywhere, and I'm getting blocks on bridge0 showing up in the filter logs. Yay.
interfaces.inc looks a lot different from back in December, btw. Can't figure out where to hack in a quick allowance for bridge0 so I can add it as an opt.
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/etc/inc/filter.inc … Search for "outgoing".
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Here we go. The problem I have right now appears to be that since I'm running carp on the same interface I'm bridging to, it is causing hiccups. Wonder if I can bridge to teh carp interface instead?
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It's more than hiccups. It's a packet storm kids.
I think I'm creating a loop on the LAN that causes a storm. As soon as a turn off the bridge, life is well again.
Not sure precisely how it's happening. Someone want to try this on a pfsense box without CARP and tell me what kind of luck you have?
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If you are briding there is no need for the dup-to portions. Simply allow the traffic.
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Yeah, I think you're right. The problem is actually that the mDNSResponder and tap driver on OSX need to be patched. In case anyone stumbles onto this later, here's a link:
http://tunnelblick.net/alpha/Tunnelblick-Tiger-3.0a2-bonjour-patched.dmg
Still slowly wading through this mess, as CARP+Bridged OpenVPN don't appear to like one another much.
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I'd really like to see someone without a carp setup try this to see what kind of success they have. Any volunteers? I just want to narrow down the cause.
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Some quick observations about all of this:
1. We really need OpenVPN to not assign an IP at all to tap0, and just do an ifconfig tap0 up. Assigning an IP futzes things up, but the current pfSense code insists on an IP address assignment in the webui.
2. Bridging works really really well….for all of about 5 minutes at a time. Then it all goes straight to hell. Routing just utterly and completely dies. If you don't connect to the vpn, things stay up marginally longer, then (at least my system does) the system crashes. The system will attempt to shut down (ACPI) if I do a ctrl-alt-del, but it never does. It has to be hard rebooted. It won't take console input, all interfaces stop answering, etc. ???
3. Despite not setting up bridging from the webui, the interface detection code still picks up bridge0, and "knows" that sis0 and tap0 are on the bridge, as when I look at rules.debug. they are included in those script variables at the top.
4. Finally, per many OpenBSD docs, you really should only filter on one interface on a bridge, not both. That said, I take that to mean we shouldn't have a "block all" rule at all on tap0. Just an allow all statement, and any filter rules place on sis0 would then apply to tap0 as well. Sound correct?
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I think I've made a breakthrough here. We need to add this to sysctl.conf:
net.link.bridge.pfil_onlyip=0
Apparently without this set, it doesn't want to pass non-IP packets from interface to interface, and this totally hoses up our bridged environment with a tap interface, given that tap is a layer2 thing, and not a layer3. It looks like carp is now working, and tap works. Bridge works. Life seems to be good. We'll see how it holds up after a reboot though. ;)
Here's where I got a clue about it. Note that this was in regards to a wireless interface and layer-2 traffic, but it seems to have cleared things up here.
http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-net/2006-April/010375.html
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Alright, I commited the net.link.bridge.pfil_onlyip=0 change.
What do you mean by CARP works correctly with the bridge?
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Well….
My config is like this:
Two pfsense boxes, identical hardware. sis0 on each is running carp. So we have 172.16.10.2 on the first, and 172.16.10.3 on the second one. They share 172.16.10.1. This is our internal lan (although it is really an opt interface, I need to change that "someday real soon"), and I want to bridge that to tap0.
Originally when I set this up (and it just happened again...grrr), it would work for about 5 mins, bridge tap0 and sis0, all of a sudden 172.16.10.1 would just stop answering. CARP wouldn't fail over, as sis0 was still up and still had it's IP, but it would stop replying to ICMP's. I get to about icmp_seq=288, then nothing. No mention in tcpdump -i bridge0, sis0, or tap0. Nothing. It was really weird.
What's bizarre is that it's almost EXACTLY 4 minutes. I would get a ping reponse about once per second. It's almost as if there is some sort of scheduled task that is killing the bridge. If I do ifconfig bridge0 deletem sis0, it immediately comes back, then I can do ifconfig bridge0 addm sis0, things work for ~4-5 minutes, then we're back to square 1.
Is there something here that rings a bell that perhaps wouldn't be immediately obvious to me? Something that runs as a background agent? I suppose it's possible that something odd happens in the state table that times out, or maybe a buffer is consistently filling up, but I'm having a hard time placing my finger on what would cause this kind of behavior.
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Is there something here that rings a bell that perhaps wouldn't be immediately obvious to me? Something that runs as a background agent? I suppose it's possible that something odd happens in the state table that times out, or maybe a buffer is consistently filling up, but I'm having a hard time placing my finger on what would cause this kind of behavior.
Strange, I cannot think of anything that runs in the background that would change anything.
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I just timed it. 5 minutes on the dot. I can cron an ifconfig bridge0 deletem sis0/addm sis0 once every 4 mins to mitigate the problem, but sorta kill any kind of long-term constant-state communications. :P
Really have to ponder this. Doesn't appear to be a pf thing though.
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Do a killall cron just to make sure its nothing in there stepping on it.
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Okay, done. did a addm/deletem sis0 at 4:59:10 central time per my nice little mobile phone here. It's on the clock. We'll see how long it lasts. :D
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Died at 5:04:20 pm central with no crons. Hmm….
addm/deletem sis0 of course revived it.
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I'm out of time to work on this for now. I added a crontab to run the deletem/addm every 4 mins. It's a terrible, awful, dirty hack, but I'm hoping that the robustness of tcp/ip and associated apps will be able to resend and life will go on until I can figure out what is actually causing the issue to begin with. Any thoughts on debugging please post up! ;)
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Couple things.
When it drops again, check ifconfig and look at the bridge status. Does it show blocking?
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ifconfig bridge0 says - UP,BROADCAST,RUNNING,MULTICAST
To be fair, I'm not sure what causes an interface to go into BLOCKING mode, because I never (intentionally) use it. :\
I'm looking in the right place, right? Did my deletem/addm, came back. Shows the same thing.