Automated scripts for Private Internet Access port forwarding
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Turns out I had my cron entry set up wrong. I fixed that and now the log is showing what's going on.
Mar 1 09:12:19 php: /index.php: New alert found: pfSense is restoring the configuration /conf/backup/config-1393680553.xml Mar 1 09:12:19 php: /index.php: pfSense is restoring the configuration /conf/backup/config-1393680553.xml Mar 1 09:12:19 php: /index.php: New alert found: No config.xml found, attempting last known config restore. Mar 1 09:12:19 php: /index.php: No config.xml found, attempting last known config restore. Mar 1 09:02:00 root: pia-port: New port number () inserted into config file. Mar 1 09:02:00 root: pia-port: Created new PIA Client ID.
When I run the script in a terminal, here's what I get:
[2.1-RELEASE][admin@pfsense.localdomain]/usr/local/bin(51): ./pia-port % Total % Received % Xferd Average Speed Time Time Time Current Dload Upload Total Spent Left Speed 100 149 0 57 100 92 245 395 --:--:-- --:--:-- --:--:-- 519 expr: syntax error [: -gt: unexpected operator I/O warning : failed to load external entity "/rule[descr="Torrent"]/local-port" [2.1-RELEASE][admin@pfsense.localdomain]/usr/local/bin(52):
I think curl isn't working or installed correctly, because this happens:
[2.1-RELEASE][admin@pfsense.localdomain]/var/log(46): pkg_add -r curl Fetching ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/amd64/packages-8.3-release/Latest/curl.tbz... Done. pkg_add: package 'curl-7.24.0' or its older version already installed [2.1-RELEASE][admin@pfsense.localdomain]/var/log(47): curl curl: Command not found.
I don't know how to fix that.
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Hello,
Thanks a lot for this script.
I'm getting the following:
cron: login_getclass: unknown class 'pia-port # #'
I should not, I created the pia-port using the Diagnostics-Edit File from within pfsense and not by ssh-ing it ont the machine…
Don't know if that makes a difference.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
THANKS!
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Nice script.
Juste an edge case that I've encounter. I've got this reply :
{"error":"port forwarding not available for this region"}
Ewrything was fine, but in my setup I haven't setup the VPN as default route (only one IP go through it).
So I had to add this to your script :
curl [b]--interface [/b]"$LOCAL_IP" ...
And everything went smooth. It seem IPA need to get the port request from his own network.
Maybe you should add it to your post. In case someone would try a similar setup. -
To clarify this. Change the "PORT" line in the the script with this:
PORT=
curl –interface $LOCAL_IP -d "user=$USERNAME&pass=$PASSWORD&client_id=$(cat $PIACLIENTID)&local_ip=$LOCAL_IP" https://www.privateinternetaccess.com/vpninfo/port_forward_assignment
This should be put into V1.02 of this script. For setups with multiple gateways you need this to ensure the request goes out via the proper PIA VPN connection. With this change the script will try and use the default gateway which may not be the correct gateway.
Hats off to Bagpuss the creator of this script! This is awesome.
Hats off to ppierre for adding that important last catch with the script.
Nice script.
Juste an edge case that I've encounter. I've got this reply :
{"error":"port forwarding not available for this region"}
Ewrything was fine, but in my setup I haven't setup the VPN as default route (only one IP go through it).
So I had to add this to your script :
curl [b]--interface [/b]"$LOCAL_IP" ...
And everything went smooth. It seem IPA need to get the port request from his own network.
Maybe you should add it to your post. In case someone would try a similar setup. -
To clarify this. Change the "PORT" line in the the script with this:
PORT=
curl –interface $LOCAL_IP -d "user=$USERNAME&pass=$PASSWORD&client_id=$(cat $PIACLIENTID)&local_ip=$LOCAL_IP" https://www.privateinternetaccess.com/vpninfo/port_forward_assignment
This should be put into V1.02 of this script. For setups with multiple gateways you need this to ensure the request goes out via the proper PIA VPN connection. With this change the script will try and use the default gateway which may not be the correct gateway.
Hats off to Bagpuss the creator of this script! This is awesome.
Hats off to ppierre for adding that important last catch with the script.
Not checked this thread for a while, and I've just realised that I hadn't posted v1.02 where I did indeed catch this bug. My apologies.
My fix is slightly different, but it achieves the same thing.Attached to this post is v1.03, where I've caught another issue.
I kept seeing entries in my syslog which said 'pfSense is restoring the configuration /conf/backup/config-1393680553.xml' or similar.
Further debugging revealed that the PIA address wasn't resolving for curl, and hence the script returned a NULL for the port number.
I wasn't catching this error, and so the script was copying an empty /tmp/config.pia over the config.xml.The new script fixes this, and also provides the return code from curl, so you can try and work out what went wrong.
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Hi Andy,
I'm also a PIA customer and I'm trying your script for port forwarding.So far, it's not working. Where do I find the log file so I can troubleshoot this? Your post says to check the /var/log/messages file, but there isn't one.
Sorry. That should have been /var/log/system.log
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As an aside, my original instructions contain details for managing cron from the command line.
Whilst this works, there is a cron GUI package available, and this works just as well.I'm pretty sure that anyone who is okay with installing this stuff in the first place can use cron,
but the pfSense preferred way is to use the GUI package. I'm told that changes to the underlying
pfSense OS going forward might mean that command line cron entries are lost across reboots.
The GUI package stores the cron entries in your config.xml, thereby ensuring their survival. -
Amazing post. I was in the middle of reinventing this wheel (moving away from openvpn client on specific hosts) but this saved me a bunch of time. Had to make some minor changes to account for nanoBSD which I have PM'd you about. May be worth checking if the filesystem is ro and remounting before continuing to make your script pfsense distribution agnostic.
Also, instead of force deleting config.cache (doesn't that seem a little messy?), would it not be better to just run:
/etc/rc.reload_all? Scratch that, running that manually seems to kill everything and requires a reboot.
After I started running this script I've been seeing inetd complaining in the logs about connection aborts and I wonder if it has something to do with the unexpected blowing away of config.cache.
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So these two commands are causing an interesting problem:
pkg_add -r curl pkg_add -r xmlstarlet
They both reach out to ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/amd64/packages-8.3-release/Latest/… and both generate the following error.
Error: Unable to get ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/amd64/packages-8.3-release/Latest/xmlstarlet.tbz: File unavailable (e.g., file not found, no access) pkg_add: unable to fetch 'ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/amd64/packages-8.3-release/Latest/xmlstarlet.tbz' by URL
A brief investigation reveals that the error is correct and that file path does not exist. There is a packages-8-stable, 8.4-release, 9-stable and others, but not an 8.3 flavor.
You can see the directory here http://ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/amd64/.
I'm at a loss of how to proceed and my kung fu with this is 30 years old and not potent enough to figure it out.
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So these two commands are causing an interesting problem:
pkg_add -r curl pkg_add -r xmlstarlet
They both reach out to ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/amd64/packages-8.3-release/Latest/… and both generate the following error.
Error: Unable to get ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/amd64/packages-8.3-release/Latest/xmlstarlet.tbz: File unavailable (e.g., file not found, no access) pkg_add: unable to fetch 'ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/amd64/packages-8.3-release/Latest/xmlstarlet.tbz' by URL
A brief investigation reveals that the error is correct and that file path does not exist. There is a packages-8-stable, 8.4-release, 9-stable and others, but not an 8.3 flavor.
You can see the directory here http://ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/amd64/.
I'm at a loss of how to proceed and my kung fu with this is 30 years old and not potent enough to figure it out.
searching with help your kung fu
https://forum.pfsense.org/index.php?topic=78935.0
AMD64
setenv PACKAGESITE http://ftp-archive.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD-Archive/ports/amd64/packages-8.3-release/I386
setenv PACKAGESITE http://ftp-archive.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD-Archive/ports/i386/packages-8.3-release/ -
So these two commands are causing an interesting problem:
pkg_add -r curl pkg_add -r xmlstarlet
They both reach out to ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/amd64/packages-8.3-release/Latest/… and both generate the following error.
Error: Unable to get ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/amd64/packages-8.3-release/Latest/xmlstarlet.tbz: File unavailable (e.g., file not found, no access) pkg_add: unable to fetch 'ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/amd64/packages-8.3-release/Latest/xmlstarlet.tbz' by URL
A brief investigation reveals that the error is correct and that file path does not exist. There is a packages-8-stable, 8.4-release, 9-stable and others, but not an 8.3 flavor.
You can see the directory here http://ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/amd64/.
I'm at a loss of how to proceed and my kung fu with this is 30 years old and not potent enough to figure it out.
searching with help your kung fu
https://forum.pfsense.org/index.php?topic=78935.0
AMD64
setenv PACKAGESITE http://ftp-archive.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD-Archive/ports/amd64/packages-8.3-release/I386
setenv PACKAGESITE http://ftp-archive.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD-Archive/ports/i386/packages-8.3-release/I used:
setenv PACKAGESITE http://ftp-archive.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD-Archive/ports/amd64/packages-8.3-release/Latest/Then I could install curl.
But quite the output for xmlstarlet
pkg_add -r xmlstarlet
Fetching http://ftp-archive.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD-Archive/ports/amd64/packages-8.3-release/Latest/xmlstarlet.tbz… Done.
Fetching http://ftp-archive.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD-Archive/ports/amd64/packages-8.3-release/All/pkg-config-0.25_1.tbz... Done.
Fetching http://ftp-archive.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD-Archive/ports/amd64/packages-8.3-release/All/libxml2-2.7.8_2.tbz... Done.
pkg_add: warning: package 'libxml2-2.7.8_2' requires 'libiconv-1.13.1_2', but 'libiconv-1.14_1' is installed
Fetching http://ftp-archive.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD-Archive/ports/amd64/packages-8.3-release/All/libgpg-error-1.10.tbz... Done.
pkg_add: warning: package 'libgpg-error-1.10' requires 'libiconv-1.13.1_2', but 'libiconv-1.14_1' is installed
pkg_add: warning: package 'libgpg-error-1.10' requires 'gettext-0.18.1.1', but 'gettext-0.18.3.1' is installed
Fetching http://ftp-archive.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD-Archive/ports/amd64/packages-8.3-release/All/libgcrypt-1.5.0.tbz... Done.
pkg_add: warning: package 'libgcrypt-1.5.0' requires 'libiconv-1.13.1_2', but 'libiconv-1.14_1' is installed
pkg_add: warning: package 'libgcrypt-1.5.0' requires 'gettext-0.18.1.1', but 'gettext-0.18.3.1' is installed
Fetching http://ftp-archive.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD-Archive/ports/amd64/packages-8.3-release/All/libxslt-1.1.26_3.tbz... Done.
pkg_add: warning: package 'libxslt-1.1.26_3' requires 'libiconv-1.13.1_2', but 'libiconv-1.14_1' is installed
pkg_add: warning: package 'libxslt-1.1.26_3' requires 'gettext-0.18.1.1', but 'gettext-0.18.3.1' is installed
pkg_add: warning: package 'xmlstarlet-1.0.5' requires 'libiconv-1.13.1_2', but 'libiconv-1.14_1' is installed
pkg_add: warning: package 'xmlstarlet-1.0.5' requires 'gettext-0.18.1.1', but 'gettext-0.18.3.1' is installedIt seems to have installed xmlstarlet despite the warnings. But I'm new to this package manager so I'm not sure if this is asking for trouble or if it just installs and hopes that everything runs with different versions of the dependencies.
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Nice script.
Juste an edge case that I've encounter. I've got this reply :
{"error":"port forwarding not available for this region"}
Ewrything was fine, but in my setup I haven't setup the VPN as default route (only one IP go through it).
So I had to add this to your script :
curl [b]--interface [/b]"$LOCAL_IP" ...
And everything went smooth. It seem IPA need to get the port request from his own network.
Maybe you should add it to your post. In case someone would try a similar setup.Hello, I'm having the same error
{"error":"port forwarding not available for this region"}
All runs well, the pia_port.txt is created but in the log I get that error.
Can any one help me? Using last version of the script.
Best Regards
Soloam -
Not sure I can help as I don't have My VPN back up yet since my box crashed and I had to reflash and set it backup,,,But before the crash I did have PIA up and working on Pfsense 2.1.3.
I didn't have any trouble with it changing IP's when they switched around…my logs showed Pfsense detecting the change and just remaking the tunnel.....and I never noticed it............until I happened to check the logs.....
Their is a how to on line somewhere I went by to set it up. The setup was for ONLY the Client setup. I think maybe everyone is Making the Issue More complex than needed.
Check this link. http://www.bodenzord.com/archives/324
Maybe it will helpChow
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OMG This post is the Holy Grail I had to revive it! (And because I have a question)
Thanks a lot! I only changed
PORT=curl -d "user=$USERNAME&pass=$PASSWORD&client_id=$(cat $PIACLIENTID)&local_ip=$LOCAL_IP" https://www.privateinternetaccess.com/vpninfo/port_forward_assignment
to
PORT=
curl -k -d "user=$USERNAME&pass=$PASSWORD&client_id=$(cat $PIACLIENTID)&local_ip=$LOCAL_IP" https://www.privateinternetaccess.com/vpninfo/port_forward_assignment
Because I was getting an error… Now it's fine!
BUT...
Would anyone have an idea on how to go about reading the pia_port.txt file from a remote windows machine running utorrent client???
Thanks again!
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Hello, yes I had to make that change to, something regarding certificates on the SSH.
Also I made a small change to Bagpuss pfsense script, to make it use a Alias with a port, instead of changing the rules. That way I can use the torrent port in other rules.
It assumes a port alias with the name "TorrentBoxPortPIA".
#!/bin/sh export PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/root/bin # Private Internet Access Advanced Port Forward Script for pfSense # v1.0 (21st January 2014) # Pre-requisites for this script: # pfSense v2.1 (Port forward NAT return destination broken in earlier versions) # curl - pkg_add -r curl # xmlstarlet - pkg_add -r xmlstarlet # Add your PIA username and password USERNAME=USER PASSWORD=PASSWORD PIACLIENTID=/cf/conf/pia_client_id CONFFILE=/cf/conf/config.xml # Check to see if we have a valid PIA Client ID file. # If not, create one. Linux is included for illustration only. if [ ! -e $PIACLIENTID ]; then # OSX/FreeBSD (pfSense) head -n 100 /dev/urandom | md5 > $PIACLIENTID # Linux #head -n 100 /dev/urandom | md5sum | tr -d " -" > $PIACLIENTID logger "pia-port: Created new PIA Client ID." fi # Find out the tunnelling device for your VPN and get your IP address. # There are several options presented here. Personally, I prefer to use # the interface which I know relates to my VPN tunnel for forwarding. #DEVICE=`ifconfig | grep -o "tun[0-9]"` #LOCAL_IP=`ifconfig $DEVICE | grep -Po "(?<=addr.)[0-9]*\.[0-9]*\.[0-9]*\.[0-9]*"` LOCAL_IP=`ifconfig ovpnc1 | grep "inet " | cut -d\ -f2` # Get the port number for the forwarded port PORT=`curl -d "user=$USERNAME&pass=$PASSWORD&client_id=$(cat $PIACLIENTID)&local_ip=$LOCAL_IP" -k https://www.privateinternetaccess.com/vpninfo/port_forward_assignment` PORTNUM=`echo $PORT | grep -oE "[0-9]+"` # Some error detection. If PORTNUM is longer than 5 characters, we know that # an error has been returned. We log it to syslog, and exit. len=`expr $PORTNUM : '.*'` echo $len if [ $len -gt 5 ]; then logger "pia-port: $PORTNUM" exit 0 fi logger "pia-port: Port number acquired: $PORTNUM" # Get current NAT port number using xmlstarlet to parse the config file. CURPORT=`xml sel -t -v '//alias[name="TorrentBoxPortPIA"]/address' $CONFFILE` logger "pia-port: Current port forward: $CURPORT" # The port mapping doesn't always change. # We don't want to force pfSense to re-read it's config if we don't need to. if [ "$CURPORT" = "$PORTNUM" ]; then logger "pia-port: Port not changed. Exiting." exit 0 fi # Port forward has changed, so we update the rules in the config file. xml ed -u '//alias[name="TorrentBoxPortPIA"]/address' -v $PORTNUM $CONFFILE > /tmp/config.pia # Put the config file in the correct location. cp /tmp/config.pia $CONFFILE # Create a file in the pfSense web server root that contains the current port. # This can then be read by other hosts in order to update the open port in # whatever torrent client is in use. echo $PORTNUM > /usr/local/www/pia_port.txt # Force pfSense to re-read it's config rm /tmp/config.cache logger "pia-port: New port number ($PORTNUM) inserted into config file."
Best Regards
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Sorry for resurrecting an old post but I just found it and I have it 90% working. The problem I am having is with the transmission script, I am using an Ubuntu server instead of a Synology system for transmission, and apparently I wasn't lucky enough for this script to work out of the box for me. Can someone please point me in the right direction so I can convert this to a linux script so I can get it to work?
Error I am getting is:
jeff@behemuth:/usr/local/bin$ sh transmission-port transmission-port: 40: transmission-port: Syntax error: end of file unexpected ( expecting "then") jeff@behemuth:/usr/local/bin$
Thank you
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First,
Thank everyone for their hard work on this thread, it was exactly what i needed to get my tunnel working. Since it took me some work to get this operational I thought I would share the final files I am running with. -
Thank you for the information! And the script/instructions.
I managed to make the PFSense side work by adding "-k" to this line in pia-port script Line 46 as someone suggested here:PORT=
curl –interface $INTERFACE -k -d "user=$USERNAME&pass=$PASSWORD&client_id=$(cat $PIACLIENTID)&local_ip=$LOCAL_IP" https://www.privateinternetaccess.com/vpninfo/port_forward_assignment
PIA was not allowing port forwarding on the original server I was connected to, and did not see that error message till after I changed this line. After I changed servers to one that allowed port forwarding, it was working.
Instead of a second script running to change the port on the application side, can we hard code the port on the destination side to match the application? PIA assigned me 27494, and I thought I would try it, but failed. Tried changing the destination port to 29493 and hard coding the application to this, but the connection would not work unless all the port numbers were the same right to the application. Would an outbound rule need to be created then added to the script as well? Figured if this was possible, it would keep the config in one spot, cleaner for me.
Line 90:
xml ed -u '//rule[descr="Torrent"]/destination/port' -v $PORTNUM -u '//rule[descr="Torrent"]/local-port' -v 29493 -u '//rule[descr="NAT Torrent"]/destination/port' -v $PORTNUM $CONFFILE > /tmp/config.pia -
Thank you for the information! And the script/instructions.
I managed to make the PFSense side work by adding "-k" to this line in pia-port script Line 46 as someone suggested here:PORT=
curl –interface $INTERFACE -k -d "user=$USERNAME&pass=$PASSWORD&client_id=$(cat $PIACLIENTID)&local_ip=$LOCAL_IP" https://www.privateinternetaccess.com/vpninfo/port_forward_assignment
PIA was not allowing port forwarding on the original server I was connected to, and did not see that error message till after I changed this line. After I changed servers to one that allowed port forwarding, it was working.
Instead of a second script running to change the port on the application side, can we hard code the port on the destination side to match the application? PIA assigned me 27494, and I thought I would try it, but failed. Tried changing the destination port to 29493 and hard coding the application to this, but the connection would not work unless all the port numbers were the same right to the application. Would an outbound rule need to be created then added to the script as well? Figured if this was possible, it would keep the config in one spot, cleaner for me.
Line 90:
xml ed -u '//rule[descr="Torrent"]/destination/port' -v $PORTNUM -u '//rule[descr="Torrent"]/local-port' -v 29493 -u '//rule[descr="NAT Torrent"]/destination/port' -v $PORTNUM $CONFFILE > /tmp/config.piaYou want to keep the NAT Torrent destination port as the static port as well.
What I did is a little different;
I do the port verification against the Torrent rule's destination port;
CURPORT=
xml sel -t -v '//rule[descr="Torrent"]/destination/port' $CONFFILE
and only write it again if it changed
xml ed -u '//rule[descr="Torrent"]/destination/port' -v $PORTNUM $CONFFILE > /tmp/config.pia
I also added /etc/rc.filter_configure at the end of the script pfsense didn't really seem to reload the config properly.
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I know this is an old thread, but it is the first one to come up in google when searching "pfSense PIA Portforward". So I just wanted to add a few things on how I got port-forwarding using PIA setup with pfSense and a separate torrent download box running Deluge. I've attached two txt files to this post (pia-port.txt and deluge-port.txt), both of these are edited versions of soloam's and Bagpuss' scripts.
soloam's script I only edited slightly in order to get working (added a -k to the curl command and tweaked a few names). In pfSense 2.3.1 you also only need to run the below command to install xmlstarlet and don't need to worry about installing curl.
pkg install xmlstarlet
Once that's done you just need to edit the pia-port script, put it somewhere on the pfSense box (/usr/local/bin is the path recommended by Bagpuss) and use chmod 755 so you can run it. You will also need to configure the Cron plugin to run it every hour. Lastly make sure you have an port alias setup called PIAPort in pfSense and port forwards as necessary setup.
#!/bin/sh export PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/root/bin # Private Internet Access Advanced Port Forward Script for pfSense # v1.0 (21st January 2014) # v1.1 (24th June 2016) # Pre-requisites for this script: # pfSense v2.1 (Port forward NAT return destination broken in earlier versions) # curl - pkg_add -r curl # xmlstarlet - pkg_add -r xmlstarlet # Add your PIA username and password USERNAME=USERNAME PASSWORD=PASSWORD PIACLIENTID=/cf/conf/pia_client_id CONFFILE=/cf/conf/config.xml # Check to see if we have a valid PIA Client ID file. # If not, create one. Linux is included for illustration only. if [ ! -e $PIACLIENTID ]; then # OSX/FreeBSD (pfSense) head -n 100 /dev/urandom | md5 > $PIACLIENTID # Linux #head -n 100 /dev/urandom | md5sum | tr -d " -" > $PIACLIENTID logger "pia-port: Created new PIA Client ID." fi # Find out the tunnelling device for your VPN and get your IP address. # There are several options presented here. Personally, I prefer to use # the interface which I know relates to my VPN tunnel for forwarding. #DEVICE=`ifconfig | grep -o "tun[0-9]"` #LOCAL_IP=`ifconfig $DEVICE | grep -Po "(?<=addr.)[0-9]*\.[0-9]*\.[0-9]*\.[0-9]*"` LOCAL_IP=`ifconfig ovpnc1 | grep "inet " | cut -d\ -f2` # Get the port number for the forwarded port PORT=`curl -k -d "user=$USERNAME&pass=$PASSWORD&client_id=$(cat $PIACLIENTID)&local_ip=$LOCAL_IP" -k https://www.privateinternetaccess.com/vpninfo/port_forward_assignment` PORTNUM=`echo $PORT | grep -oE "[0-9]+"` # Some error detection. If PORTNUM is longer than 5 characters, we know that # an error has been returned. We log it to syslog, and exit. len=`expr $PORTNUM : '.*'` echo $len if [ $len -gt 5 ]; then logger "pia-port: $PORTNUM" exit 0 fi logger "pia-port - Port number acquired: $PORTNUM" # Get current NAT port number using xmlstarlet to parse the config file. CURPORT=`xml sel -t -v '//alias[name="PIAPort"]/address' $CONFFILE` logger "pia-port - Current Port Forward: $CURPORT" # The port mapping doesn't always change. # We don't want to force pfSense to re-read it's config if we don't need to. if [ "$CURPORT" = "$PORTNUM" ]; then logger "pia-port - Port Not Changed. Exiting." exit 0 fi # Port forward has changed, so we update the rules in the config file. xml ed -u '//alias[name="PIAPort"]/address' -v $PORTNUM $CONFFILE > /tmp/config.pia # Put the config file in the correct location. cp /tmp/config.pia $CONFFILE # Create a file in the pfSense web server root that contains the current port. # This can then be read by other hosts in order to update the open port in # whatever torrent client is in use. echo $PORTNUM > /usr/local/www/pia-port.txt # Force pfSense to re-read it's config rm /tmp/config.cache logger "pia-port - New port number ($PORTNUM) inserted into config file."
Once the pia-port script is running on pfSense then on whatever box is running Deluge you simply need to copy the below script, edit it with credentials as necessary, run chmod 755 on it and then configure Cron to run it shortly after the pia-port script runs.
#!/bin/sh export PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/syno/sbin:/usr/syno/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin # Script to update port used by Deluge torrent client # Developed for use on FreeNAS 9.10\. Should work on other platforms. # v1.0 (24th June 2016) # This script is configured to work with Deluge that has password # protection on the daemon. You can remove this stuff if you don't use it. USERNAME="USERNAME" PASSWORD="PASSWORD" if [ ! -e /tmp/pia-port.txt ]; then logger -p user.crit "deluge-port: Setting up port forward for first time." cd /tmp && curl -O -k https://192.168.200.254/pia-port.txt read -r NEWPORT < /tmp/pia-port.txt deluge-console "connect 127.0.0.1:58846 $USERNAME $PASSWORD; config --set listen_ports ($NEWPORT,$NEWPORT)" else read -r CURPORT < /tmp/pia-port.txt cd /tmp && curl -o pia-new.txt -k https://192.168.200.254/pia-port.txt read -r NEWPORT < /tmp/pia-new.txt logger -p user.crit "deluge-port: Current port: $CURPORT" logger -p user.crit "deluge-port: New Port: $NEWPORT" if [ "$CURPORT" = "$NEWPORT" ]; then logger -p user.crit "deluge-port: Port not changed. Exiting." exit 0 fi logger -p user.crit "deluge-port: Updating port. Port: $NEWPORT" mv /tmp/pia_new.txt /tmp/pia-port.txt deluge-console "connect 127.0.0.1:58846 $USERNAME $PASSWORD; config --set listen_ports ($NEWPORT,$NEWPORT)" fi exit 0
The credentials that need to be used are the Deluge daemon login credentials. If you haven't configured any should be able to remove the bits of code for connections and the rest of the script should run fine.
connect 127.0.0.1:58846 $USERNAME $PASSWORD;
Hopefully this information/these scripts prove useful to someone else that stumbles onto this page.