Manual section: | 1 |
---|---|
Manual group: | OpenVPN 3 Linux |
openvpn2
[ OPTIONS ]openvpn2
-h
| --help
The openvpn2 command line wrapper to OpenVPN 3 Linux attempts to provide a similar command line interface as the classic OpenVPN 2.x releases. Since OpenVPN 3 does not support all the options available in OpenVPN 2.x, some options is not available or will be ignored.
In addition the OpenVPN 3 Linux project provides only a client at the moment, so all server side related options are not available.
-h, --help | show this help message and exit |
--auth ALG | Authenticate packets with HMAC using message digest algorithm alg (default=SHA1) |
--auth-retry MODE | |
Defines how authentication failures should be handled. Valid modes are:
Currently, the OpenVPN 3 Linux client implementation ignores this option. | |
--auth-user-pass | |
Authenticate with server using username/password | |
--ca FILE | Certificate authority file in .pem format containing root certificate |
--cd DIR | Change working directory to the given directory |
--cert FILE | Certificate authority file in .pem format by a
Certificate Authority in --ca file |
--cipher ALG | Encrypt packets with cipher algorithm alg (default=BF- CBC) |
--client | Configures client configuration mode (mandatory) |
--comp-lzo <MODE> | |
Use LZO compression | |
--compress <ALG> | |
Compress using algorithm ALG | |
--config FILE | Read configuration options from file |
--daemon | Run the VPN tunnel in the background |
--dev DEV-NAME | Virtual interface name to use for VPN tunnel.
Defaults to tun . Usually ignored, as the
interface name is created on-the-fly in OpenVPN 3. |
--dev-type DEV-TYPE | |
Defines the virtual interface type. Only
tun is supported, which is the default. | |
--dhcp-option OPTION | |
Set DHCP options which can be picked up by the OS configuring DNS, etc. | |
--extra-certs FILE | |
Specify a file containing one or more PEM certs (concatenated together) that complete the local certificate chain. | |
--float | Allow remote to change its IP address/port. |
--hand-window SEC | |
Handshake window. The TLS-based key exchange must finalize within SEC seconds handshake initiation by any peer. (Default 60 seconds) | |
--http-proxy ARGS | |
Connect to a remote host via a specified HTTP proxy. This option takes 2 mandatory options, SERVER and PORT, which defines the HTTP proxy and port to use. Optional arguments are AUTH-FLAG which can be auto-nct which enables clear-text passwords to be used. OpenVPN 2.x also adds an optional AUTH-METHOD flag as the last argument, this is auto-detected in OpenVPN 3. | |
--http-proxy-user-pass FILE | |
Fetch HTTP proxy credentials from FILE | |
--ifconfig ARGS | |
Configures the TUN/TAP device for IPv4. This option takes two mandatory arguments, the IPv4 address to use and the netmask for the network. | |
--ifconfig-ipv6 ARGS | |
Configures the TUN/TAP device for IPv6. This option takes one mandatory argument, the IPv6 address including its PREFIX. An optional REMOTE_ENDPOINT can be given at the end. | |
--ignore-unknown-options OPTION | |
If the listed OPTION(s) are not understood, the option parser in the OpenVPN 3 Core library will ignore these options instead of complaining about unknown or unused options. | |
--inactive ARGS | |
This option takes one mandatory argument, SECONDS, which defines how many seconds the tunnel can idle before disconnecting. An optional BYTES argument can be added which also takes the number of bytes passed over the tunnel within SECONDS of inactivity. The traffic must be higher than this minimum BYTES to keep the tunnel alive. | |
--keepalive ARGS | |
Instructs the client to ping the server over the OpenVPN Control Channel every PING_SECONDS. An optional argument defines, RECONNECT_SECONDS how long it should go before the client should attempt to reconnect if there is no response from the server. | |
--key FILE | Local private key in .pem format |
--key-direction DIR | |
Set key direction for static keys.
Valid values: 0 , 1 | |
--local HOST | Local host name or IP address to to bind against on local side |
--lport PORT | TCP/UDP port number for local bind (default 1194 ) |
--mode MODE | Operational mode. Only client is accepted. |
--mssfix BYTES | Set upper bound on TCP MSS (Default tun-mtu size) |
--ns-cert-type TYPE | |
(DEPRECATED) Require that peer certificate is signed
with an explicit nsCertType designation. Migrate to
--remote-cert-tls as soon as possible. Valid
values: client , server | |
--persist-tun | Keep tun/tap device open across connection restarts |
--ping SECS | Ping remote once per SECS seconds |
--ping-restart SECS | |
Restart if n seconds pass without reception of remote ping | |
--pkcs12 FILE | PKCS#12 file containing local private key, local certificate and optionally the root CA certificate |
--port PORT | TCP/UDP port number for both local and remote. |
--profile-override OVERRIDE | |
OpenVPN 3 specific feature, allowing to set some local overrides or disable some functionality. This option takes two arguments, an OVERRIDE-KEY and an OVERRIDE-VALUE. Valid keys and values are:
These overrides are described further in
| |
--proto PROTO | Use protocol PROTO for communicating with peer.
Valid values: udp , tcp |
--push-peer-info | |
Push client info to server | |
--redirect-gateway FLAGS | |
Automatically execute routing commands to redirect all
outgoing IP traffic through the VPN. Valid flags:
autolocal , def1 , bypass-dhcp ,
bypass-dns , block-local , ipv4 ,
!ipv4 , ipv6 , !ipv6 | |
--redirect-private FLAGS | |
Like --redirect-gateway , but omit actually changing
default gateway. Valid flags: autolocal ,
def1 , bypass-dhcp , bypass-dns ,
block-local , ipv4 , !ipv4 ,
ipv6 , !ipv6 | |
--remote ARGS | Defines the remote server to connect to. One
mandatory argument must be given, containing either
an IP address or an hostname to the server. An
optional PORT number can be given
(default: 1194 ) and at the end the PROTOCOL
can be specified (default: udp ). This option can
be given multiple times and the client will try all
remote entries until it is able to establish a
connection. The order of arguments are: HOST/IP,
PORT and PROTOCOL |
--remote-cert-eku OID | |
Require the peer certificate to be signed with explicit extended key usage. OID can be an object identifier or OpenSSL string representation. | |
--remote-cert-ku ID | |
Require that the peer certificate was signed with explicit key usage (ID). More than one ID can be provided. Must be hexadecimal notation of integers | |
--remote-cert-tls TYPE | |
Require that peer certificate is signed with explicit
key usage and extended key usage based RFC3280 rules.
Valid values: client , server | |
--remote-random | |
If multiple --remote options specified, choose one
randomly | |
--reneg-sec SECS | |
Renegotiate data channel key after SECS seconds.
(Default: 3600 ) | |
--route ARGS | Add route to routing table after connection is established. Multiple routes can be specified. This option takes one mandatory argument, IP-ADDRESS
to route over the VPN. The two optional arguments
are NETMASK (default: |
--route-gateway <GW|dhcp> | |
Specify a default gateway for use with --route .
See openvpn (8) man page for dhcp mode | |
--route-ipv6 ARGS | |
Add IPv6 route to routing table after connection is established. Multiple routes can be specified. This option takes one mandatory argument IP-RANGE/PREFIX. An optional GATEWAY can be set, which overrides the default server VPN IPv6 address and the second argument which sets the route METRIC value. | |
--route-metric METRIC | |
Specify a default metric for use with --route | |
--route-nopull | Do not configure routes pushed by remote server |
--server-poll-timeout SECS | |
How long to wait for a response from a remote server during connection setup (Default: 120 seconds) | |
--setenv ARGS | Set a custom environmental variable to pass to script. This takes two mandatory arguments, variable NAME and VALUE. |
--static-challenge ARGS | |
Enable static challenge/response protocol. This takes one mandatory option, MESSAGE, which will be presented to the user before the connection attempt. An optional argument, ECHO, indicates if the user input should be echoed back to the user during input entry. | |
--tcp-queue-limit NUM | |
Maximum number (NUM)of queued TCP output packets | |
--tls-auth ARGS | |
Enables an additional HMAC authentication on TLS
control channel. This takes a mandatory argument,
FILE, which must be a shared secret between server
and client. The optional KEY-DIRECTION argument
defines which sub-key pair in FILE to use for HMAC
signing and verification.
Valid values are 0 or 1 . | |
--tls-cert-profile PROFILE | |
Sets certificate profile which defines acceptable crypto algorithms. Valid profiles: legacy, preferred, suiteb | |
--tls-client | Enable TLS and assume client role during TLS
handshake. Implicitly added when using --client |
--tls-crypt FILE | |
Encrypts the TLS control channel with a shared secret
key (FILE). This CANNOT be combined with --tls-auth | |
--tls-timeout SECS | |
Packet retransmit timeout on TLS control channel if no ACK from remote within n seconds. (Default: 2 seconds) | |
--topology TYPE | |
Set tunnel topology type. Default is net30 .
Recommended: subnet , but this must match the
server setting.
Valid topologies: subnet , net30 | |
--tran-window SECS | |
Transition window -- old data channel key can live
this many seconds after new after new key renegotiation
begins. (Default: 3600 secs) | |
--tun-mtu SIZE | Set TUN/TAP device MTU to SIZE and derive TCP/UDP from it (default is 1500) |
--verb LEVEL | Set log verbosity level. Log levels are NOT compatible
with OpenVPN 2 --verb |
--verify-x509-name ARGS | |
Accept connections only with a host with a specific X509 subject or CN match string. This option takes one mandatory argument, which is a MATCH string and an optional match FLAG. FLAG can be:
|
These options are only present for testing new bleeding edge features. There are no guarantees they will work, will not change or will not change behaviour in the future. These options are NOT ready for production environments.
- --enable-dco | --disable-dco
- Enable or disabled the Data Channel Offload (DCO) kernel
acceleration module support. The default is disabled, but
this option is present for compatibility with OpenVPN 2.6.
The
--enable-dco
option is OpenVPN 3 Linux specific as this project does currently not automatically detect and enable the DCO capability of the host.
The options in this list will be silently ignored. Some of these options have not yet been implemented in the OpenVPN 3 Core library and others are not relevant any more. But none of these options will break any existing configurations.
--auth-nocache | Do not cache --askpass or --auth-user-pass in virtual memory. Not applicable with OpenVPN 3 due to different credentials storage model. |
--chroot DIR | Chroot to this directory after initialization. Not applicable with OpenVPN 3, which uses a different execution model. |
--data-ciphers CIPHERLIST | |
OpenVPN 2.5 introduced this option has a replacement
to --ncp-ciphers . This is primarily intended to
be used when migrating away from the prior default
BF-CBC cipher. With Negotiable Cipher Parameters
(NCP), this should not be needed in the future.
OpenVPN 3 also has a different way of handling this
situation and is believed to not have the same
connectivity issues as OpenVPN 2.4 and newer 2.x
releases could have against older OpenVPN 2.x
servers. | |
--data-ciphers-fallback ALG | |
This is tightly coupled to --data-ciphers and is
also not used nor supported by OpenVPN 3. | |
--dev-node NODE | |
OpenVPN 2.x will use /dev/net/tun, /dev/tun, /dev/tap,
etc by default when creating the tun/tap interface. This
is handled differently in OpenVPN 3 Linux and is not
configurable by front-ends like openvpn2 or
openvpn3 , since the virtual network interface creation
is handled by the openvpn3-service-netcfg (8) service. | |
--down | Run a script after the tunnel has been torn down. Running scripts via OpenVPN 3 is not supported, and using this option will display a warning. See the NOTES section below for details. |
--down-pre | This is related to when the --down script is being
run during the disconnection. See the NOTES section
below regarding script execution in OpenVPN 3. |
--explicit-exit-notify <ATTEMPTS> | |
On exit/restart, send exit signal to remote end. Automatically configured with OpenVPN 3 | |
--group GROUP | Run OpenVPN with GROUP group credentials. Not needed with OpenVPN 3 which uses a different privilege separation approach |
--mute-replay-warnings | |
OpenVPN 2.5 and older can hide warnings related to replayed packets. Packet replays are not reported in the same way in OpenVPN 3 Core library, so this option makes no behavioural change. | |
--ncp-ciphers CIPHERLIST | |
OpenVPN 2.4 option renamed to --data-ciphers in
OpenVPN 2.5. Ignored in OpenVPN 3. | |
--nice LEVEL | Change process priority. Not supported in OpenVPN 3 |
--nobind | Do not bind to local address and port. This is default behaviour in OpenVPN 3 |
--persist-key | Do not re-read key files across connection restarts. Not needed. OpenVPN 3 keeps keys as embedded file elements in the configuration |
--rcvbuf SIZE | Set the TCP/UDP receive buffer size. Not supported in OpenVPN 3 |
--resolv-retry SECS | |
If hostname resolve fails for --remote , retry
resolve for n seconds before failing. Not supported
by OpenVPN 3. | |
--script-security LEVEL | |
This option is ignored, as OpenVPN 3 itself does not execute any external scripts. | |
--sndbuf SIZE | Set the TCP/UDP send buffer size. Not supported in OpenVPN 3. |
--socket-flags FLAGS | |
Applies flags to the transport socket. Not supported in OpenVPN 3. | |
--up | Run a script after the tunnel has been established. Running scripts via OpenVPN 3 is not supported, and using this option will display a warning. See the NOTES section below for details. |
--user USER | Run OpenVPN with USER user credentials. Not needed with OpenVPN 3 which uses a different privilege separation approach |
OpenVPN 3 does not implement any support for running external scripts or program
during its life cycle. This is by design. Running scripts is a security risk,
and needs to be handled carefully. In classic OpenVPN 2.x setups, scripts are
run with the same privileges as the openvpn
(8) process. If the process is
started as root, the script may be run as root. Which is why the
--script-security
option is available and by default disabling running most
external programs.
This does not mean it is impossible to trigger programs to perform operations when certain OpenVPN events occur. OpenVPN 3 Linux is using D-Bus actively and it issues several signals as the state changes. It also means you can write your own front-end doing its own calls how you prefer while starting and managing the VPN session at the same time. This allows a much better flexibility and allows one to adopt VPN session management into the execution flow which is needed. And the implementation can do its own security assessments on how it will tackle these scenarios.
There are at least three ways how to adopt to the OpenVPN 3 model:
When a session is started, it is possible to subscribe to signals issued by the
VPN client process over D-Bus. It is only possible to subscribe to signals
related to the session owner's own sessions. These signals are sent by the
Session Manager (net.openvpn.v3.sessions
,
openvpn3-service-sessionmgr
(8))
Example:
$ dbus-monitor --system --monitor sender=net.openvpn.v3.sessions,interface=net.openvpn.v3.sessions,member=StatusChange
This means wrapping the starting of VPN sessions on your own. Either you wrap
openvpn3 session-start
or openvpn2
calls in your own scripts, or you can
connect directly to the Configuration Manager (net.openvpn.v3.configuration
,
openvpn3-service-configmgr
(8)) and Session Manager
(net.openvpn.v3.sessions
, openvpn3-service-sessionmgr
(8)) to import
configuration profiles and start/stop VPN sessions as needed, as well as
subscribing to D-Bus signals as well to handle various the states a VPN session
will go through. This is fairly simple to do using the already available
openvpn3 Python module. Example code can be found in the
OpenVPN 3 Linux source tree [1]
or by studying the source code of openvpn2
(1) and openvpn3-systemd
(8),
which both are Python scripts.
Configurations and sessions managed via D-Bus by your own scripts can still be
further managed by the openvpn3
(1) command line interface.
3. Subscribing to NetworkChange signals from net.openvpn.v3.netcfg [2]
This is also a scripting possibility, which is more useful for system wide script triggering. A program or script can subscribe to specific network change events caused by OpenVPN sessions. These signals contains information about virtual network interfaces which has been created or removed, IP addresses added or removed from devices, routing configuration as well as DNS resolver changes.
For an example how to do this, see the example script [3] in the OpenVPN 3 Linux source directory.
Please note that, by default, this script must be run as root
or the
openvpn
user on the system. It is possible to allow other users or groups
this privilege, by extending the D-Bus policy for the net.openvpn.v3.netcfg
service. But granting this privilege too widely may result in unwanted
information leakage related to VPN interface configurations.
openvpn
(8)
openvpn3
(1)
openvpn3-config-manage
(1)
[1] | https://github.com/OpenVPN/openvpn3-linux/tree/master/src/tests/python |
[2] | https://github.com/OpenVPN/openvpn3-linux/blob/master/docs/dbus/dbus-service-net.openvpn.v3.netcfg.md |
[3] | https://github.com/OpenVPN/openvpn3-linux/blob/master/src/tests/python/netcfg-netchg-subscription |