Difference between revisions of "EHL VPN Client Configuration in Fedora"

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(Setting up VPN via command line)
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== Setting up VPN via command line ==
 
== Setting up VPN via command line ==
 
Add a new basic vpn using nmcli:
 
Add a new basic vpn using nmcli:
  nmcli conn add con-name EHL type vpn vpn-type pptp
+
  nmcli conn add con-name EHL type vpn ifname ppp0 vpn-type pptp
  
 
Edit ''/etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/EHL'' and add following lines:
 
Edit ''/etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/EHL'' and add following lines:

Revision as of 22:28, 6 July 2015

The EHL has a PPTP VPN for remote access.

Creating a VPN User

1. Add an entry to the /etc/ppp/chap-secrets file on morocco:

# Secrets for authentication using CHAP
# client        server  secret                  IP addresses
userid          pptpd   password                *

2. Reload the pptpd server: sudo systemctl reload pptpd

Setting up Remote Access Using NetworkManager GUI Setup Tools in Fedora (Gnome)

To set up access to the VPN from a remote Fedora system graphically:

  1. Access the Network portion of the Setting application.
  2. Click the + sign to add a new network connection.
  3. Select VPN as the connection type.
  4. Select Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol (PPTP) as the VPN type.
  5. Fill in these parameters:
    • Gateway: ehl.internal.cdot.systems (currently: 10.46.52.62)
    • User name: Your VPN Username
    • Password: Your VPN Password (the system will ask you for this when you connect anyway)
    • NT Domain: leave blank
  6. In the IPv4 tab, fill in these parameters:
    • IPv4: On
    • Address: DHCP
    • DNS: Automatic OFF and all fields blank
    • Routes:
      • Address: 172.16.172.0
      • Netmask: 255.255.255.0
      • Gateway: 172.16.172.254 (currently: 172.16.172.215)
      • Metric: leave blank
    • Check the box marked "Use this connection only for resources on its network".
  7. Apply the changes.
  8. Start the VPN with the control in the Network Settings screen or at the top of the Gnome screen.

Note: If you are unable to connect to the VPN after following the above steps, it is possibly due to the firewall restricting access. To check if that is the case, turn off the firewall temporarily with sudo systemctl stop firewalld and attempt to the connect to the VPN. Turn the firewall back on afterwards with sudo systemctl start firewalld.

Setting up VPN via command line

Add a new basic vpn using nmcli:

nmcli conn add con-name EHL type vpn ifname ppp0 vpn-type pptp

Edit /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/EHL and add following lines:

[connection]
...
autoconnect=true

[vpn]
...
gateway=ehl.internal.cdot.systems
user=[Your VPN Username]
password-flags=0

[vpn-secrets]
password=[Your VPN Password]

[ipv6]
method=auto

[ipv4]
method=auto
route1=172.16.172.0/24,172.16.172.215,0
ignore-auto-dns=true
ignore-auto-routes=true
never-default=true

Reload configuration file:

nmcli conn reload

Turn on the VPN connection:

nmcli conn up EHL

Firewall Adjustment

To enable this to work through the Fedora firewall, issue these commands:

firewall-cmd --direct --add-rule ipv4 filter INPUT 0 -p gre -j ACCEPT
firewall-cmd --permanent --direct --add-rule ipv4 filter INPUT 0 -p gre -j ACCEPT
firewall-cmd --reload

(From here).

Other Configuration

For convenient access to the EHL resources:

  1. Merge /etc/hosts entries from Red (=ehl.internal.cdot.systems, which is the gateway system) into your local /etc/hosts file, commenting out or removing the line for Red/EHL itself.
  2. Copy /usr/local/bin/{serial,pingbuilders,startkojids,pdu} from Red into your local /usr/local/bin directory.
  3. Copy your SSH public key to the EHL systems using ssh-copy-id, including the ostep account on serial.
 ssh-copy-id ostep@serial
 serial x1