554 lines
22 KiB
Markdown
554 lines
22 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: "(Ab)using mesh networks for easy remote support"
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author: ["Amolith"]
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cover: ./cover.png
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date: 2021-11-01T02:51:00-04:00
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lastmod: 2023-01-18T09:33:39-05:00
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tags: ["Mesh networking", "Open source", "Remote support"]
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categories: ["Technology"]
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draft: false
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toc: true
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---
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One of the things many of us struggle with when setting friends and
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family up with Linux is remote support. Commercial solutions like
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[RealVNC](https://www.realvnc.com/) and [RustDesk](https://rustdesk.com/) do exist and function very well, but are often more
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expensive than we would like for answering the odd "I can't get Facebook
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open!" support call. I've been on the lookout for suitable alternatives
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for a couple years but nothing has been satisfying. Because of this, I
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have held off on setting others up with any Linux distribution, even the
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particularly user-friendly options such as [Linux Mint](https://linuxmint.com/) and [elementary OS;](https://elementary.io/)
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if I'm going drop someone in an unfamiliar environment, I want to be
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able to help with any issue within a couple hours, not days and
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_certainly_ not weeks.
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[Episode 421 of LINUX Unplugged](https://linuxunplugged.com/421) gave me an awesome idea to use [Nebula,](https://github.com/slackhq/nebula) a
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networking tool created by Slack, [X11vnc,](https://libvnc.github.io/) a very minimal VNC server, and
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[Remmina,](https://remmina.org/) a libre remote access tool available in pretty much every Linux
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distribution, to set up a scalable, secure, and simple setup reminiscent
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of products like RealVNC.
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## Nebula {#nebula}
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The first part of our stack is Nebula, the tool that creates a network
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between all of our devices. With traditional VPNs, you have a client
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with a persistent connection to a central VPN server and other clients
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can communicate with the first by going through that central server.
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This works wonderfully in most situations, but there are a lot of
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latency and bandwidth restrictions that would make remote support an
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unpleasant experience. Instead of this model, what we want is a _mesh_
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network, where each client can connect directly to one another _without_
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going through a central system and slowing things down. This is where
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Nebula comes in.
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In Nebula's terminology, clients are referred to as _nodes_ and central
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servers are referred to as _lighthouses_, so those are the terms I'll use
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going forward.
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Mesh networks are usually only possible when dealing with devices that
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have static IP addresses. Each node has to know _how_ to connect with the
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other nodes; John can't meet up with Bob when Bob moves every other day
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without notifying anyone of his new address. This wouldn't be a problem
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if Bob phoned Jill and told her where he was moving; John would call
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Jill, Jill would tell him where Bob is, and the two would be able to
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find each other
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With Nebula, nodes are Bob and John and Jill is a lighthouse. Each node
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connects to a lighthouse and the lighthouse tells the nodes how to
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connect with one another when they ask. It _facilitates_ the P2P
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connection then _backs out of the way_ so the two nodes can communicate
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directly with each other.
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It allows any node to connect with any other node on any network from
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anywhere in the world, as long as one lighthouse is accessible that
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knows the connection details for both peers.
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### Getting started {#getting-started}
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The _best_ resource is [the official documentation,](https://github.com/slackhq/nebula) but I'll describe the
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process here as well.
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After [installing the required packages,](https://github.com/slackhq/nebula#1-the-nebula-binaries-or-distribution-packages-for-your-specific-platform-specifically-youll-need-nebula-cert-and-the-specific-nebula-binary-for-each-platform-you-use) make sure you have a VPS with a
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static IP address to use as a lighthouse. If you want something dirt
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cheap, I would recommend one of the small plans from [BuyVM.](https://buyvm.net) I do have a
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[referral link](https://my.frantech.ca/aff.php?aff=3783) if you want them to kick me a few dollars for your
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purchase. [Hetzner](https://www.hetzner.com/cloud) (referral: `ckGrk4J45WdN`) or [netcup](https://www.netcup.eu/) (referral:
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`36nc15758387844`) would also be very good options; I've used them all and
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am very comfortable recommending them.
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### Creating a Certificate Authority {#creating-a-certificate-authority}
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After picking a device with a static IP address, it needs to be set up
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as a lighthouse. This is done by first creating a Certificate Authority
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(CA) that will be used for signing keys and certificates that allow our
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other devices into the network. The `.key` file produced by the following
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command is incredibly sensitive; with it, anyone can authorise a new
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device and give it access to your network. Store it in a safe,
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preferably encrypted location.
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```bash
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nebula-cert ca -name "nebula.example.com"
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```
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I'll explain why we used a Fully-Qualified Domain Name (FQDN) as the
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CA's name in a later section. If you have your own domain, feel free to
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use that instead; it doesn't really matter what domain is used as long
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as the format is valid.
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### Generating lighthouse credentials {#generating-lighthouse-credentials}
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Now that we have the CA's `.crt` and `.key` files, we can create and sign
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keys and certificates for the lighthouse.
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```bash
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nebula-cert sign -name "buyvm.lh.nebula.example.com" -ip "192.168.100.1/24"
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```
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Here, we're using a FQDN for the same reason as we did in the CA. You
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can use whatever naming scheme you like, I just prefer
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`<vps-host>.lh.nebula...` for my lighthouses. The IP address can be on any
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of the following private IP ranges, I just happened to use `192.168.100.X`
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for my network.
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| IP Range | Number of addresses |
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| ----------------------------- | ------------------- |
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| 10.0.0.0 – 10.255.255.255 | 16 777 216 |
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| 172.16.0.0 – 172.31.255.255 | 10 48 576 |
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| 192.168.0.0 – 192.168.255.255 | 65 536 |
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### Creating a config file {#creating-a-config-file}
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The next step is creating our lighthouse's config file. The reference
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config can be found in [Nebula's repo.](https://github.com/slackhq/nebula/blob/master/examples/config.yml) We only need to change a few of
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the lines for the lighthouse to work properly. If I don't mention a
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specific section here, I've left the default values.
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The section below is where we'll define certificates and keys. `ca.crt`
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will remain `ca.crt` when we copy it over but I like to leave the node's
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cert and key files named as they were when generated; this makes it easy
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to identify nodes by their configs. Once we copy everything over to the
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server, we'll add the proper paths to the `cert` and `key` fields.
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```yaml
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pki:
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ca: /etc/nebula/ca.crt
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cert: /etc/nebula/
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key: /etc/nebula/
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```
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The next section is for identifying and mapping your lighthouses. This
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needs to be present in _all_ of the configs on _all_ nodes, otherwise they
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won't know how to reach the lighthouses and will never actually join the
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network. Make sure you replace `XX.XX.XX.XX` with whatever your VPS's
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public IP address is. If you've used a different private network range,
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those changes need to be reflected here as well.
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```yaml
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static_host_map:
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"192.168.100.1": ["XX.XX.XX.XX:4242"]
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```
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Below, we're specifying how the node should behave. It is a lighthouse,
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it should answer DNS requests, the DNS server should listen on all
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interfaces on port 53, it sends its IP address to lighthouses every 60
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seconds (this option doesn't actually have any effect when `am_lighthouse`
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is set to `true` though), and this lighthouse should not send reports to
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other lighthouses. The bit about DNS will be discussed later.
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```yaml
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lighthouse:
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am_lighthouse: true
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serve_dns: true
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dns:
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host: 0.0.0.0
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port: 53
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interval: 60
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hosts:
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```
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The next bit is about [hole punching](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hole_punching_%28networking%29), also called _NAT punching_, _NAT
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busting_, and a few other variations. Make sure you read the comments for
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better explanations than I'll give here. `punch: true` enables hole
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punching. I also like to enable `respond` just in case nodes are on
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particularly troublesome networks; because we're using this as a support
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system, we have no idea what networks our nodes will actually be
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connected to. We want to make sure devices are available no matter where
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they are.
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```yaml
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punchy:
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punch: true
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respond: true
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delay: 1s
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```
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`cipher` is a big one. The value _must_ be identical on _all_ nodes _and_
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lighthouses. `chachapoly` is more compatible so it's used by default. The
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devices _I_ want to connect to are all x86 Linux, so I can switch to `aes`
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and benefit from [a small performance boost.](https://www.reddit.com/r/networking/comments/iksyuu/comment/g3ra5cv/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3) Unless you know _for sure_
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that you won't need to work with _anything_ else, I recommend leaving it
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set to `chachapoly`.
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```yaml
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cipher: chachapoly
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```
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The last bit I modify is the firewall section. I leave most everything
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default but _remove_ the bits after `port: 443`. I don't _need_ the `laptop` and
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`home` groups (groups will be explained later) to access port `443` on this
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node, so I shouldn't include the statement. If you have different needs,
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take a look at the comment explaining how the firewall portion works and
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make those changes.
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Again, I _remove_ the following bit from the config.
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```yaml
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- port: 443
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proto: tcp
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groups:
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- laptop
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- home
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```
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### Setting the lighthouse up {#setting-the-lighthouse-up}
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We've got the config, the certificates, and the keys. Now we're ready to
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actually set it up. After SSHing into the server, grab the [latest
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release of Nebula for your platform,](https://github.com/slackhq/nebula/releases/latest) unpack it, make the `nebula` binary
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executable, then move it to `/usr/local/bin` (or some other location
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fitting for your platform).
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```bash
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wget https://github.com/slackhq/nebula/releases/download/vX.X.X/nebula-PLATFORM-ARCH.tar.gz
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tar -xvf nebula-*
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chmod +x nebula
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mv nebula /usr/local/bin/
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rm nebula-*
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```
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Now we need a place to store our config file, keys, and certificates.
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```bash
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mkdir /etc/nebula/
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```
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The next step is copying the config, keys, and certificates to the
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server. I use `rsync` but you can use whatever you're comfortable with.
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The following four files need to be uploaded to the server.
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- `config.yml`
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- `ca.crt`
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- `buyvm.lh.nebula.example.com.crt`
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- `buyvm.lh.nebula.example.com.key`
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With `rsync`, that would look something like this. Make sure `rsync` is also
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installed on the VPS before attempting to run the commands though;
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you'll get an error otherwise.
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```bash
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rsync -avmzz ca.crt user@example.com:
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rsync -avmzz config.yml user@example.com:
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rsync -avmzz buyvm.lh.* user@example.com:
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```
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SSH back into the server and move everything to `/etc/nebula/`.
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```bash
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mv ca.crt /etc/nebula/
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mv config.yml /etc/nebula/
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mv buyvm.lh* /etc/nebula/
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```
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Edit the config file and ensure the `pki:` section looks something like
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this, modified to match your hostnames of course.
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```yaml
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pki:
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ca: /etc/nebula/ca.crt
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cert: /etc/nebula/buyvm.lh.nebula.example.com.crt
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key: /etc/nebula/buyvm.lh.nebula.example.com.key
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```
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Run the following command to make sure everything works properly.
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```bash
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nebula -config /etc/nebula/config.yml
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```
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The last step is daemonizing Nebula so it runs every time the server
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boots. If you're on a machine using systemd, dropping the following
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snippet into `/etc/systemd/system/nebula.service` should be sufficient. If
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you're using something else, check the [the examples directory](https://github.com/slackhq/nebula/tree/master/examples/) for more
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options.
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```text
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[Unit]
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Description=nebula
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Wants=basic.target
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After=basic.target network.target
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Before=sshd.service
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[Service]
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SyslogIdentifier=nebula
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ExecReload=/bin/kill -HUP $MAINPID
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ExecStart=/usr/local/bin/nebula -config /etc/nebula/config.yml
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Restart=always
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[Install]
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WantedBy=multi-user.target
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```
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We're almost done!
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### Setting individual nodes up {#setting-individual-nodes-up}
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This process is almost exactly the same as setting lighthouses up. All
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you'll need to do is generate a couple of certs and keys then tweak the
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configs a bit.
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The following command creates a new cert/key for USER's node with the IP
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address `192.168.100.2`. The resulting files would go on the _remote_ node
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not yours. Replace `HOST` and `USER` with fitting values.
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```bash
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nebula-cert sign -name "HOST.USER.nebula.example.com" -ip "192.168.100.2/24"
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```
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The following command will create a _similar_ cert/key but it will be part
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of the `support` group. The files resulting from this should go on _your_
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nodes. With the config we'll create next, nodes in the `support` group
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will be able to VNC and SSH into other nodes. Your nodes need to be in
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the `support` group so you'll have access to the others.
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```bash
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nebula-cert sign -name "HOST.USER.nebula.example.com" -ip "192.168.100.2/24" -groups "support"
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```
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On to the config now. This tells the node that it is _not_ a lighthouse,
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it should _not_ resolve DNS requests, it _should_ ping the lighthouses and
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tell them its IP address every 60 seconds, and the node at `192.168.100.1`
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is one of the lighthouses it should report to and query from. If you
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have more than one lighthouse, add them to the list as well.
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```yaml
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lighthouse:
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am_lighthouse: false
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#serve_dns: false
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#dns:
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#host: 0.0.0.0
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#port: 53
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interval: 60
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hosts:
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- "192.168.100.1"
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```
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The other bit that should be modified is the `firewall:` section and this
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is where the groups we created earlier are important. Review its
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comments and make sure you understand how it works before proceeding.
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We want to allow inbound connections on ports 5900, the standard port
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for VNC, and 22, the standard for SSH. Additionally, we _only_ want to
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allow connections from nodes in the `support` group. Any _other_ nodes
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should be denied access.
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Note that including this section is not necessary on _your_ nodes, those
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in the `support` group. It's only necessary on the remote nodes that
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you'll be connecting to. As long as the `outbound:` section in the config
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on _your_ node allows any outbound connection, you'll be able to access
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other nodes.
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```yaml
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- port: 5900
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proto: tcp
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groups:
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- support
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- port: 22
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proto: tcp
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groups:
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- support
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```
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The certs, key, config, binary, and systemd service should all be copied
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to the same places on all of these nodes as on the lighthouse.
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## X11vnc {#x11vnc}
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_Alright._ The hardest part is finished. Now on to setting `x11vnc` up on
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the nodes you'll be supporting.
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All you should need to do is install `x11vnc` using the package manager
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your distro ships with, generate a 20 character password with `pwgen -s
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20 1`, run the following command, paste the password, wait for `x11vnc` to
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start up, make sure it's running correctly, press `Ctrl` + `C`, then add the
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command to the DE's startup applications!
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```bash
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x11vnc --loop -usepw -listen <nebula-ip> -display :0
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```
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`--loop` tells `x11vnc` to restart once you disconnect from the session.
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`-usepw` is pretty self-explanatory. `-listen <nebula-ip>` is important; it
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tells `x11vnc` to only listen on the node's Nebula IP address. This
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prevents randos in a coffee shop from seeing an open VNC port and trying
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to brute-force the credentials. `-display :0` just defines which X11
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server display to connect to.
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Some distributions like elementaryOS and those that use KDE and GNOME
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will surface a dialogue for managing startup applications if you just
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press the Windows (Super) key and type `startup`. If that doesn't work,
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you'll have to root around in the settings menus, consult the
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distribution's documentation, or ask someone else that might know.
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After adding it to the startup application, log out and back in to make
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sure it's running in the background.
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## Remmina {#remmina}
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Now that our network is functioning properly and the VNC server is set
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up, we need something that connects to the VNC server over the fancy
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mesh network. Enter [Remmina.](https://remmina.org/) This one goes on _your_ nodes.
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Remmina is a multi-protocol remote access tool available in pretty much
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ever distribution's package archive as `remmina`. Install it, launch it,
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add a new connection profile in the top left, give the profile a
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friendly name (I like to use the name of the person I'll be supporting),
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assign it to a group, such as `Family` or `Friends`, set the Protocol to
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`Remmina VNC Plugin`, enter the node's Nebula IP address in the Server
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field, then enter their username and the 20 character password you
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generated earlier. I recommend setting the quality to Poor, but Nebula
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is generally performant enough that any of the options are suitable. I
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just don't want to have to disconnect and reconnect with a lower quality
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if the other person happens to be on a slow network.
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Save and test the connection!
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If all goes well and you see the other device's desktop, you're done
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with the VNC section! Now on to SSH.
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## SSH {#ssh}
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First off, make sure `openssh-server` is installed on the remote node;
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`openssh-client` would also be good to have, but from what I can tell,
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it's not strictly necessary. You _will_ need `openssh-client` on _your_ node,
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however. If you already have an SSH key, copy it over to
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`~/.ssh/authorized_keys` on the remote node. If you don't, generate one
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with `ssh-keygen -t ed25519`. This will create an Ed25519 SSH key pair.
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Ed25519 keys are shorter and faster than RSA and more secure than ECDSA
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or DSA. If that means nothing to you, don't worry about it. Just note
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than this key might not interact well with older SSH servers; you'll
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know if you need to stick with the default RSA. Otherwise, Ed25519 is
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the better option. After key generation has finished, copy
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`~/.ssh/id_ed25519.pub` (note the `.pub` extension) from your node to
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`~/.ssh/authorized_keys` on the remote node. The file _without_ `.pub` is your
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_private_ key. Like the Nebula CA certificate we generated earlier, this
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is extremely sensitive and should never be shared with anyone else.
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Next is configuring SSH to only listen on Nebula's interface; as with
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`x11vnc`, this prevents randos in a coffee shop from seeing an open SSH
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port and trying to brute-force their way in. Set the `ListenAddress`
|
||
option in `/etc/ssh/sshd_config` to the remote node's Nebula IP address.
|
||
If you want to take security a step further, search for
|
||
`PasswordAuthentication` and set it to `no`. This means your SSH key is
|
||
_required_ for gaining access via SSH. If you mess up Nebula's firewall
|
||
rules and accidentally give other Nebula devices access to this machine,
|
||
they still won't be able to get in unless they have your SSH key. I
|
||
_personally_ recommend disabling password authentication, but it's not
|
||
absolutely necessary. After making these changes, run `systemctl restart
|
||
sshd` to apply them.
|
||
|
||
Now that the SSH server is listening on Nebula's interface, it will
|
||
actually fail to start when the machine (re)boots. The SSH server starts
|
||
faster than Nebula does, so it will look for the interface before Nebula
|
||
has even had a chance to connect. We need to make sure systemd waits for
|
||
Nebula to start up and connect before it tells SSH to start; run
|
||
`systemctl edit --full sshd` and add the following line in the `[Unit]`
|
||
section, above `[Service]`.
|
||
|
||
```text
|
||
After=nebula.service
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
Even now, there's still a bit of a hiccup. Systemd won't start SSH until
|
||
Nebula is up and running, which is good. Unfortunately, even after
|
||
Nebula has started, it still takes a minute to bring the interface up,
|
||
causing SSH to crash. To fix _this_, add the following line directly below
|
||
`[Service]`.
|
||
|
||
```text
|
||
ExecStartPre=/usr/bin/sleep 30
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
If the `sleep` executable is stored in a different location, make sure you
|
||
use that path instead. You can check by running `which sleep`.
|
||
|
||
When the SSH _service_ starts up, it will now wait an additional 30
|
||
seconds before actually starting the SSH _daemon_. It's a bit of a hacky
|
||
solution but it works™. If you come up with something better, please
|
||
send it to me and I'll include it in the post! My contact information is
|
||
at the bottom of [this site's home page.](/)
|
||
|
||
After you've made these changes, run `systemctl daemon-reload` to make
|
||
sure systemd picks up on the modified service file, then run `systemctl
|
||
restart sshd`. You should be able to connect to the remote node from your
|
||
node using the following command.
|
||
|
||
```bash
|
||
ssh USER@<nebula-ip>
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
If you want to make the command a little simpler so you don't have to
|
||
remember the IP every time, create `~/.ssh/config` on your node and add
|
||
these lines to it.
|
||
|
||
```text
|
||
Host USER
|
||
Hostname <nebula-ip>
|
||
User USER
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
Now you can just run `ssh USER` to get in. If you duplicate the above
|
||
block for all of the remote nodes you need to support, you'll only have
|
||
to remember the person's username to SSH into their machine.
|
||
|
||
## Going further with Nebula {#going-further-with-nebula}
|
||
|
||
This section explains why we used FQDNs in the certs and why the DNS
|
||
resolver is enabled on the lighthouse.
|
||
|
||
Nebula ships with a built-in resolver meant specifically for mapping
|
||
Nebula node hostnames to their Nebula IP addresses. Running a public DNS
|
||
resolver is very much discouraged because it can be abused in terrible
|
||
ways. However, the Nebula resolver mitigates this risk because it _only_
|
||
answers queries for Nebula nodes. It doesn't forward requests to any
|
||
other servers nor does it attempt to resolve any domain other than what
|
||
was defined in its certificate. If you use the example I gave above,
|
||
that would be `nebula.example.com`; the lighthouse will attempt to resolve
|
||
any subdomain of `nebula.example.com` but it will just ignore `example.com`,
|
||
`nebula.duckduckgo.com`, `live.secluded.site`, etc.
|
||
|
||
Taking advantage of this resolver requires setting it as your secondary
|
||
resolver on any device you want to be able to resolve hostnames from.
|
||
If you were to add the lighthouse's IP address as your secondary
|
||
resolver on your PC, you could enter `host.user.nebula.example.com` in
|
||
Remmina's server settings _instead of_ `192.168.1.2`.
|
||
|
||
But how you do so is beyond the scope of this post!
|
||
|
||
If you're up for some _more_ shenanigans later on down the line, you could
|
||
set up a Pi-Hole instance backed by Unbound and configure Nebula as
|
||
Unbound's secondary resolver. With this setup, you'd get DNS-level ad
|
||
blocking _and_ the ability to resolve Nebula hostname. Pi-Hole would query
|
||
Unbound for `host.user.nebula.example.com`, Unbound would receive no
|
||
answer from the root servers because the domain doesn't exist outside of
|
||
your VPN, Unbound would fall back to Nebula, Nebula would give it an
|
||
answer, Unbound would cache the answer, tell Pi-Hole, Pi-Hole would
|
||
cache the answer, tell your device, then your device would cache the
|
||
answer, and you can now resolve any Nebula host!
|
||
|
||
Exactly how you do _that_ is **_definitely_** beyond the scope of this post :P
|
||
|
||
If you set any of this up, I would be interested to hear how it goes! As
|
||
stated earlier, my contact information is at the bottom of the site's
|
||
home page :)
|