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Serveraliveinterval 30
Serveraliveinterval 30
</pre>
</pre>


Note: ls ~/.ssh to know what is filename for the Identityfile(private ssh key)
Note: ls ~/.ssh to know what is filename for the Identityfile(private ssh key)
===enable to ssh jump to RPI on XVM==
XPUB Staff:
use <code>jumpuser</code> script to enable to ssh jump to RPI
If user's username and its ssh publickey is XVM's /home/
jumpuser add_ip username 10.0.0.XYZ
If not, also add the user with
jumpuser create <USERNAME> <PI-INTERNAL_IP> <USER-PUBKEY> [COMMENT]


'''XPUB Staff''' will need to send gnd, for each node:
log you changes with:
* Tinc node IP
rtlg
* username
* user Public key
So that he can allow ssh of that user to the new Tinc node


==Enable HTTP to tinc node==
==Enable HTTP to tinc node==

Revision as of 13:03, 10 July 2020

tinclogo.png

tinc is a Virtual Private Network (VPN) daemon that uses tunnelling and encryption to create a secure private network between hosts on the Internet.

And is used in XPUB to create the HUB VPN - aelectronic learning enviroment, server playground, web publishing platform, consisting of local machines (mainly raspberry pis) that sit behind firewalls, but through tinc are accessible from outside the firewall.


Install tinc Client

On RaspberryPi / machine that will be joining HUB

Install dependencies

sudo apt install build-essential automake libssl-dev liblzo2-dev libbz2-dev zlib1g-dev libncurses5-dev libreadline-dev 


Compile Tinc 1.1pre :

cd ~
wget https://www.tinc-vpn.org/packages/tinc-1.1pre17.tar.gz
tar xvf tinc-1.1pre17.tar.gz
cd tinc-1.1pre17
./configure
make
 sudo make install

Once installed create configuration dir:

sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/etc/tinc/

And tinc is installed in

/usr/local/sbin/tinc

Add new tinc Node to HUB network

In the Pi

In your Pi's create a user with same username as in the sandbox. Keeping it the same as in the sandbox - will make things easier for us and gnd

Add your public ssh key to your username in the Pi (same as mentioned) to ~/.ssh/authorized_keys There is a trick to do this with

cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub | ssh local.pi.IP.addr "cat >> ~/.ssh/authorized_keys"

Install Tinc on the Pis Instructions can be found here Tinc, until the creation creation of the configuration dir:

sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/etc/tinc/
  • Add your chosen Node name and IP to HUB#IP_allocation
  • Student project IPs last number should have 3 digits, last one is Simon's 10.0.1.103, so you can start from there

Disable ssh to your pi with password (allow ssh key only), by:

  • ensuring you laptops ssh public key is in your pi ~/.ssh/authorized_keys:
cat  ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
  • ensuring you can login to the Pi with ssh key:
ssh username@pi.ip.add -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa
  • edit /etc/ssh/sshd_config:
sudo nano /etc/ssh/sshd_config
  • and uncomment the line:
#PasswordAuthentication no

to:

PasswordAuthentication no
  • reload ssh:

sudo systemctl reload ssh

You up with the following info:

username: nameoftheuser
Node IP: 10.0.0.???
Node name: nameofnode 
ssh public key:
ssh-ed25519 ... ... nameoftheuser@laptop

Staff: In the XVM (xpub server)

As root:

create an invitation node the node as described in HUB#Adding_a_new_thing

tinc -n hub invite $NAMEOFNODE

Which will generate an invitation address


Back In the Pi

User invitation to join the network ($INVITE_ADDRES)

  sudo tinc join $INVITE_ADDRES

Add the pi to the hub network under the chosen Node IP ($NODE.IP.ADDRS):

 sudo tinc -n hub add subnet $NODE.IP.ADDRS

edit the tinc-up file in /usr/local/etc/tinc/hub/tinc-up: commenting the echo line and adding the line:

  • Note: $INTERFACE should remain as is; $NODE.IP.ADDRS should be replace with the Node IP
  ifconfig $INTERFACE $NODE.IP.ADDRS netmask 255.255.255.0
  • Example tinc-up file:
#!/bin/sh
# echo 'Unconfigured tinc-up script, please edit '$0'!'
ifconfig $INTERFACE 10.0.0.105 netmask 255.255.255.0

Start tincd daemon:

tincd -n hub -D -d3

In new window, ssh again to the pi and see if you can ping other tinc nodes:

ping 10.0.0.1

If so Tinc is running :) yahh


tincd service file

According to tinc documentation

Tinc ships with systemd service files that allow you to start and stop tinc using systemd. There are two service files:

  • tinc.service is used to globally enable or disable all tinc daemons managed by systemd
  • tinc@netname.service is used to enable or disable specific tinc daemons.

These are located in the source directory, in the sub-directory systemd/

However this files, seem to give some issues, as metioned in the tinc github: issue 133, issue 168

Hence we'll us the ones bellow that so far have worked fine.

/etc/systemd/system/tinc.service

# This is a mostly empty service, but allows commands like stop, start, reload
# to propagate to all tinc@ service instances.

[Unit]
Description=Tinc VPN
Documentation=info:tinc
Documentation=man:tinc(8) man:tinc.conf(5)
Documentation=http://tinc-vpn.org/docs/
After=network.target
Wants=network.target

[Service]
Type=oneshot
RemainAfterExit=yes
ExecStart=/usr/local/sbin/true
ExecReload= /usr/local/sbin/true
WorkingDirectory=/usr/local/etc/tinc

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

/etc/systemd/system/tinc@hub.service

[Unit]
Description=Tinc net %i
Documentation=info:tinc
Documentation=man:tinc(8) man:tinc.conf(5)
Documentation=http://tinc-vpn.org/docs/
PartOf=tinc.service
ReloadPropagatedFrom=tinc.service

[Service]
Type=simple
WorkingDirectory=/usr/local/etc/tinc/%i
ExecStart=/usr/local/sbin/tincd -n %i -D
ExecReload=/usr/local/sbin/tincd -n %i -kHUP
TimeoutStopSec=5
Restart=always
RestartSec=60

[Install]
WantedBy=tinc.service

Note: in my system tinc was installed inside /usr/local/bin/tinc, /usr/local/bin/tincd and its configuration is in /usr/local/etc/tinc. But this is system specific. Ensure you know where these directories are in your system.

  • Enable
    • sudo systemctl enable tinc
    • sudo systemctl enable tinc@hub
  • Start sudo systemctl start tinc@hub
  • Check status sudo systemctl status tinc@hub

Note that because tinc@testvpn.service requests tinc.service we don’t need to start that one, as it is started by tinc@testvpn.service

If all is good. We can test by rebooting the system and seeing that if after a while tinc@testvpn is up. You can check that by keeping starting a by pinging the ping 10.1.0.2 and checking the status of tinc@hubsudo systemctl status tinc@hub

Enable SSH to tinc node

Add a new entry to your laptop ~/.ssh/config by following this template

Host hub.PI_NAME 
User yourname
Hostname  10.0.0.10?
ProxyJump yourname@xpub.nl:2501
Identityfile ~/.ssh/id_rsa
Serveraliveinterval 30


Note: ls ~/.ssh to know what is filename for the Identityfile(private ssh key)

=enable to ssh jump to RPI on XVM

XPUB Staff: use jumpuser script to enable to ssh jump to RPI

If user's username and its ssh publickey is XVM's /home/

jumpuser add_ip username 10.0.0.XYZ 

If not, also add the user with

jumpuser create <USERNAME> <PI-INTERNAL_IP> <USER-PUBKEY> [COMMENT] 

log you changes with:

rtlg

Enable HTTP to tinc node

  • The pi needs to be running a webserver

XPUB Staff on XVM will need to as root:

  • edit /etc/nginx/sites-available/hub.xpub.nl
  • adding to it a new location to the hub.xpub.nl server block
        location /nodename {
                proxy_pass http://tinc.node.ip.addr/;
                client_max_body_size 200M;
        }
* test the configuration
 nginx -t
* if all good restart nginx
 systemctl restart nginx
* visit url https://hub.xpub.nl/nodename