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server/, keys/: Add bulk crypto transform based on NaCl `crypto_secretbox'.
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1.\" -*-nroff-*-
2.\".
3.\" Manual for the server
4.\"
5.\" (c) 2008 Straylight/Edgeware
6.\"
7.
8.\"----- Licensing notice ---------------------------------------------------
9.\"
10.\" This file is part of Trivial IP Encryption (TrIPE).
11.\"
12.\" TrIPE is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
13.\" it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
14.\" the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
15.\" (at your option) any later version.
16.\"
17.\" TrIPE is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
18.\" but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
19.\" MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
20.\" GNU General Public License for more details.
21.\"
22.\" You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
23.\" along with TrIPE; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
24.\" Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
25.
26.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
27.so ../common/defs.man \" @@@PRE@@@
28.
29.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
30.TH tripe 8tripe "10 February 2001" "Straylight/Edgeware" "TrIPE: Trivial IP Encryption"
31.
32.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
33.SH "NAME"
34.
35tripe \- a simple VPN daemon
36.
37.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
38.SH "SYNOPSIS"
39.
40.B tripe
41.RB [ \-DF ]
42.RB [ \-d
43.IR dir ]
44.RB [ \-b
45.IR addr ]
46.RB [ \-p
47.IR port ]
48.RB [ \-n
49.IR tunnel ]
50.br
51 \c
52.RB [ \-U
53.IR user ]
54.RB [ \-G
55.IR group ]
56.RB [ \-a
57.IR socket ]
58.RB [ \-m
59.IR mode ]
60.RB [ \-T
61.IR trace-opts ]
62.br
63 \c
64.RB [ \-k
65.IR priv-keyring ]
66.RB [ \-K
67.IR pub-keyring ]
68.RB [ \-t
69.IR key-tag ]
70.
71.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
72.SH "DESCRIPTION"
73.
74The
75.B tripe
76program is a server which can provide strong IP-level encryption and
77authentication between co-operating hosts. The program and its protocol
78are deliberately very simple, to make analysing them easy and to help
79build trust rapidly in the system.
80.SS "Overview"
81The
82.B tripe
83server manages a number of secure connections to other `peer' hosts.
84Each daemon is given a private key of its own, and a file of public keys
85for the peers with which it is meant to communicate. It is responsible
86for negotiating sets of symmetric keys with its peers, and for
87encrypting, encapsulating and sending IP packets to its peers, and
88decrypting, checking and de-encapsulating packets it receives from
89them.
90.PP
91When the server starts, it creates a Unix-domain socket on which it
92listens for administration commands. It also logs warnings and
93diagnostic information to the programs connected to its admin socket.
94Clients connected to the socket can add new peers, and remove or find
95out about existing peers. The textual protocol used to give the
96.B tripe
97server admin commands is described in
98.BR tripe\-admin (5).
99A client program
100.BR tripectl (1)
101is provided to allow commands to be sent to the server either
102interactively or by simple scripts.
103.SS "Command-line arguments"
104If not given any command-line arguments,
105.B tripe
106will initialize by following these steps:
107.hP 1.
108It sets the directory named by the
109.B TRIPEDIR
110environment variable (or
111.B "\*(/c"
112if the variable is unset) as the current directory.
113.hP 2.
114It acquires a UDP socket with an arbitrary kernel-selected port number.
115It will use this socket to send and receive all communications with its
116peer servers. The port chosen may be discovered by means of the
117.B PORT
118admin command (see
119.BR tripe\-admin (5)).
120.hP 3.
121It loads the private key with the tag or type name
122.B tripe
123(or, failing that,
124.B tripe\-dh
125for backwards compatibility reasons) from the Catacomb-format file
126.BR keyring ,
127and loads the file
128.B keyring.pub
129ready for extracting the public keys of peers as they're introduced.
130(The format of these files is described in
131.BR keyring (5).
132They are maintained using the program
133.BR key (1)
134provided with the Catacomb distribution.)
135.hP 4.
136It creates and listens to the Unix-domain socket
137.BR tripesock .
138.PP
139Following this, the server enters its main loop, accepting admin
140connections and obeying any administrative commands, and communicating
141with peers. It also treats its standard input and standard output
142streams as an admin connection, reading commands from standard input and
143writing responses and diagnostics messages to standard output. Finally,
144it will reload keys from its keyring files if it notices that they've
145changed (it checks inode number and modification time) \- there's no
146need to send a signal.
147.PP
148Much of this behaviour may be altered by giving
149.B tripe
150suitable command-line options:
151.TP
152.B "\-h, \-\-help"
153Writes a brief description of the command-line options available to
154standard output and exits with status 0.
155.TP
156.B "\-v, \-\-version"
157Writes
158.BR tripe 's
159version number to standard output and exits with status 0.
160.TP
161.B "\-u, \-\-usage"
162Writes a brief usage summary to standard output and exits with status 0.
163.TP
164.B "\-\-tunnels"
165Writes to standard output a list of the configured tunnel drivers, one
166per line, and exits with status 0. This is intended for the use of the
167start-up script, so that it can check that it will actually work.
168.TP
169.B "\-D, \-\-daemon"
170Dissociates from its terminal and starts running in the background after
171completing the initialization procedure described above. If running as
172a daemon,
173.B tripe
174will not read commands from standard input or write diagnostics to
175standard output. A better way to start
176.B tripe
177in the background is with
178.BR tripectl (1).
179.TP
180.B "\-F, \-\-foreground"
181Runs the server in the `foreground'; i.e.,
182.B tripe
183will quit if it sees end-of-file on its standard input. This is
184incompatible with
185.BR \-D .
186.TP
187.BI "\-d, \-\-directory=" dir
188Makes
189.I dir
190the current directory. The default directory to change to is given by
191the environment variable
192.BR TRIPEDIR ;
193if that's not specified, a default default of
194.B "\*(/c"
195is used. Give a current directory of
196.B .
197if you don't want it to change directory at all.
198.TP
199.BI "\-b, \-\-bind-address="addr
200Bind the UDP socket to IP address
201.I addr
202rather than the default of
203.BR INADDR_ANY .
204This is useful if your main globally-routable IP address is one you want
205to tunnel through the VPN.
206.TP
207.BI "\-p, \-\-port=" port
208Use the specified UDP port for all communications with peers, rather
209than an arbitarary kernel-assigned port.
210.TP
211.BI "\-n, \-\-tunnel=" tunnel
212Use the specified tunnel driver for new peers by default.
213.TP
214.BI "\-U, \-\-setuid=" user
215Set uid to that of
216.I user
217(either a user name or integer uid) after initialization. Also set gid
218to
219.IR user 's
220primary group, unless overridden by a
221.B \-G
222option. The selected user (and group) will also be the owner of the
223administration socket.
224.TP
225.BI "\-G, \-\-setgid=" group
226If the current effective uid is zero (i.e., the daemon was invoked as
227.BR root )
228then set gid to that of
229.I group
230(either a group name or integer gid) after initialization. In any
231event, arrange hat the administration socket be owned by the given
232.IR group .
233.TP
234.BI "\-k, \-\-priv\-keyring=" file
235Reads the private key from
236.I file
237rather than the default
238.BR keyring .
239.TP
240.BI "\-K, \-\-pub\-keyring=" file
241Reads public keys from
242.I file
243rather than the default
244.BR keyring.pub .
245This can be the same as the private keyring, but that's not recommended.
246.TP
247.BI "\-t, \-\-tag=" tag
248Uses the private key whose tag or type is
249.I tag
250rather than the default
251.B tripe
252or
253.BR tripe\-dh .
254.TP
255.BI "\-a, \-\-admin\-socket=" socket
256Accept admin connections to a Unix-domain socket named
257.IR socket .
258The default socket, if this option isn't specified, is given by the
259environment variable
260.BR TRIPESOCK ;
261if that's not set either, then a default default of
262.B "\*(/s/tripesock"
263is used instead.
264.TP
265.BI "\-m, \-\-admin\-perms=" mode
266Permissions (as an octal number) to set on the administration socket. The
267default is 600, which allows only the socket owner. Setting 660 allows
268members of the
269.I group
270configured through the
271.B \-G
272option to connect to the socket, which may be useful. Allowing world access
273is a terrible idea.
274.TP
275.BI "\-T, \-\-trace=" trace-opts
276Allows the enabling or disabling of various internal diagnostics. See
277below for the list of options.
278.SS "Key exchange group types"
279The
280.B tripe
281server uses Diffie\(en\&Hellman key exchange to agree the symmetric keys
282used for bulk data transfer.
283.PP
284The server works out which it should be doing based on the key's
285.B kx-group
286attribute.
287If this attribute isn't present, then the key's type is examined: if
288it's of the form
289.BI tripe\- group
290then the
291.I group
292is used. If no group is specified,
293.B dh
294is used as a fallback.
295The following groups are defined.
296.TP
297.B dh
298.RS
299Use traditional Diffie\(enHellman in a
300.IR "Schnorr group" :
301a prime-order subgroup of the multiplicative group of
302a finite field; this is the usual
303.I g\*(ssx\*(se
304mod
305.I p
306kind of Diffie\(en\&Hellman.
307.PP
308To create usual Schnorr-group keys, say something like
309.VS
310key add \-adh-param \-LS \-b3072 \-B256 \e
311 \-eforever \-tparam tripe\-param kx-group=dh
312.VE
313to construct a parameters key; and create the private keys by
314.VS
315key add \-adh \-pparam \-talice \e
316 \-e"now + 1 year" tripe
317.VE
318.RE
319.sv -1
320.TP
321.B ec
322.RS
323Use elliptic curve Diffie\(enHellman.
324An elliptic curve group is a prime-order
325subgroup of the abelian group of
326.BR K -rational
327points on an elliptic curve defined over a finite field
328.BR K .
329.PP
330Given current public knowledge, elliptic curves can provide similar or
331better security to systems based on integer discrete log problems,
332faster, and with less transmitted data. It's a matter of controversy
333whether this will continue to be the case. The author uses elliptic
334curves.
335.PP
336To create elliptic curve keys, say something like
337.VS
338key add \-aec\-param \-Cnist-p256 \-eforever \e
339 \-tparam tripe\-param kx-group=ec
340.VE
341to construct a parameters key, using your preferred elliptic curve in
342the
343.B \-C
344option (see
345.BR key (1)
346for details); and create the private keys by
347.VS
348key add \-aec \-pparam \-talice \e
349 \-e"now + 1 year" tripe
350.VE
351.RE
352Note that the
353.BR tripe-keys (8)
354program provides a rather more convenient means for generating and
355managing keys for
356.BR tripe .
357.SS "Using other symmetric algorithms"
358The default symmetric algorithms
359.B tripe
360uses are Blowfish (by Schneier) for symmetric encryption, and RIPEMD-160
361(by Dobbertin, Bosselaers and Preneel) for hashing and as a MAC (in HMAC
362mode, designed by Bellare, Canetti and Krawczyk). These can all be
363overridden by setting attributes on your private key, as follows.
364.TP
365.B bulk
366Names the bulk-crypto transform to use. See below.
367.TP
368.B blkc
369Names a block cipher, used by some bulk-crypto transforms (e.g.,
370.BR iiv ).
371The default is to use the block cipher underlying the chosen
372.BR cipher ,
373if any.
374.TP
375.B cipher
376Names the symmetric encryption scheme to use. The default is
377.BR blowfish\-cbc .
378.TP
379.B hash
380Names the hash function to use. The default is
381.BR rmd160 .
382.TP
383.B mac
384Names the message authentication code to use. The name of the MAC may
385be followed by a
386.RB ` / '
387and the desired tag length in bits. The default is
388.IB hash \-hmac
389at half the underlying hash function's output length.
390.TP
391.B mgf
392A `mask-generation function', used in the key-exchange. The default is
393.IB hash \-mgf
394and there's no good reason to change it.
395.PP
396The available bulk-crypto transforms are as follows.
397.TP
398.B v0
399Originally this was the only transform available. It's a standard
400generic composition of a CPA-secure symmetric encryption scheme with a
401MAC; initialization vectors for symmetric encryption are chosen at
402random and included explicitly in the cryptogram.
403.TP
404.B iiv
405A newer `implicit-IV' transform. Rather than having an explicit random
406IV, the IV is computed from the sequence number using a block cipher.
407This has two advantages over the
408.B v0
409transform. Firstly, it adds less overhead to encrypted messages
410(because the IV no longer needs to be sent explicitly). Secondly, and
411more significantly, the transform is entirely deterministic, so (a) it
412doesn't need the (possibly slow) random number generator, and (b) it
413closes a kleptographic channel, over which a compromised implementation
414could leak secret information to a third party.
415.TP
416.B naclbox
417A transform based on the NaCl
418.B crypto_secretbox
419transformation.
420The main difference is that NaCl uses XSalsa20,
421while TrIPE uses plain Salsa20 or ChaCha,
422because it doesn't need the larger nonce space.
423You can set the
424.B cipher
425key attribute to one of
426.BR salsa20 ,
427.BR salsa20/12 ,
428.BR salsa20/8 ,
429.BR chacha20 ,
430.BR chacha12 ,
431or
432.B chacha8
433to select the main cipher.
434You can set the
435.B mac
436key attribute to
437.B poly1305
438or
439.B poly1305/128
440but these are the default and no other choice is permitted.
441(This is for forward compatibility,
442in case other MACs and/or tag sizes are allowed later.)
443.SS "Other key attributes"
444The following attributes can also be set on keys.
445.TP
446.B serialization
447Selects group-element serialization formats.
448The recommended setting is
449.BR constlen ,
450which selects a constant-length encoding when hashing group elements.
451The default,
452for backwards compatibility, is
453.BR v0 ;
454but this is deprecated.
455(The old format uses a variable length format for hashing,
456which can leak information through timing.)
457.SS "Using SLIP interfaces"
458Though not for the faint of heart, it is possible to get
459.B tripe
460to read and write network packets to a pair of file descriptors using
461SLIP encapsulation. No fancy header compression of any kind is
462supported.
463.PP
464Two usage modes are supported: a preallocation system, whereby SLIP
465interfaces are created and passed to the
466.B tripe
467server at startup; and a dynamic system, where the server runs a script
468to allocate a new SLIP interface when it needs one. It is possible to
469use a mixture of these two modes, starting
470.B tripe
471with a few preallocated interfaces and having it allocate more
472dynamically as it needs them.
473.PP
474The behaviour of
475.BR tripe 's
476SLIP driver is controlled by the
477.B TRIPE_SLIPIF
478environment variable. The server will not create SLIP tunnels if this
479variable is not defined. The variable's value is a colon-delimited list
480of preallocated interfaces, followed optionally by the filename of a
481script to run to dynamically allocate more interfaces.
482.PP
483A static allocation entry has the form
484.IR infd [ \c
485.BI , outfd \c
486.RB ] \c
487.BI = \c
488.IR ifname ,
489If the
490.I outfd
491is omitted, the same file descriptor is used for input and output.
492.PP
493The dynamic allocation script must be named by an absolute or relative
494pathname, beginning with
495.RB ` / '
496or
497.RB ` . '.
498The server will pass the script an argument, which is the name of the
499peer for which the interface is being created. The script should
500allocate a new SLIP interface (presumably by creating a pty pair),
501configure it appropriately, and write the interface's name to its
502standard output, followed by a newline. It should then read and write
503SLIP packets on its stdin and stdout. The script's stdin will be closed
504when the interface is no longer needed, and the server will attempt to
505send it a
506.B SIGTERM
507signal (though this may fail if the script runs with higher privileges
508than the server).
509.PP
510The output file descriptor should not block unless it really needs to:
511the
512.B tripe
513daemon assumes that it won't, and will get wedged waiting for it to
514accept output.
515.SS "About the name"
516The program's name is
517.BR tripe ,
518all in lower-case. The name of the protocol it uses is `TrIPE', with
519four capital letters and one lower-case. The name stands for `Trivial
520IP Encryption'.
521.
522.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
523.SH "BUGS"
524.
525The code hasn't been audited. It may contain security bugs. If you
526find one, please inform the author
527.IR immediately .
528.
529.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
530.SH "SEE ALSO"
531.
532.BR key (1),
533.BR tripectl (1),
534.BR tripe\-admin (5),
535.BR tripe\-keys (8).
536.PP
537.IR "The Trivial IP Encryption Protocol" ,
538.IR "The Wrestlers Protocol" .
539.
540.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
541.SH "AUTHOR"
542.
543Mark Wooding, <mdw@distorted.org.uk>
544.
545.\"----- That's all, folks --------------------------------------------------