config.yml 18 KB

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  1. # This is the nebula example configuration file. You must edit, at a minimum, the static_host_map, lighthouse, and firewall sections
  2. # Some options in this file are HUPable, including the pki section. (A HUP will reload credentials from disk without affecting existing tunnels)
  3. # PKI defines the location of credentials for this node. Each of these can also be inlined by using the yaml ": |" syntax.
  4. pki:
  5. # The CAs that are accepted by this node. Must contain one or more certificates created by 'nebula-cert ca'
  6. ca: /etc/nebula/ca.crt
  7. cert: /etc/nebula/host.crt
  8. key: /etc/nebula/host.key
  9. # blocklist is a list of certificate fingerprints that we will refuse to talk to
  10. #blocklist:
  11. # - c99d4e650533b92061b09918e838a5a0a6aaee21eed1d12fd937682865936c72
  12. # disconnect_invalid is a toggle to force a client to be disconnected if the certificate is expired or invalid.
  13. #disconnect_invalid: true
  14. # default_version controls which certificate version is used in handshakes.
  15. # This setting only applies if both a v1 and a v2 certificate are configured, in which case it will default to `1`.
  16. # Once all hosts in the mesh are configured with both a v1 and v2 certificate then this should be changed to `2`.
  17. # After all hosts in the mesh are using a v2 certificate then v1 certificates are no longer needed.
  18. # default_version: 1
  19. # The static host map defines a set of hosts with fixed IP addresses on the internet (or any network).
  20. # A host can have multiple fixed IP addresses defined here, and nebula will try each when establishing a tunnel.
  21. # The syntax is:
  22. # "{nebula ip}": ["{routable ip/dns name}:{routable port}"]
  23. # Example, if your lighthouse has the nebula IP of 192.168.100.1 and has the real ip address of 100.64.22.11 and runs on port 4242:
  24. static_host_map:
  25. "192.168.100.1": ["100.64.22.11:4242"]
  26. # The static_map config stanza can be used to configure how the static_host_map behaves.
  27. #static_map:
  28. # cadence determines how frequently DNS is re-queried for updated IP addresses when a static_host_map entry contains
  29. # a DNS name.
  30. #cadence: 30s
  31. # network determines the type of IP addresses to ask the DNS server for. The default is "ip4" because nodes typically
  32. # do not know their public IPv4 address. Connecting to the Lighthouse via IPv4 allows the Lighthouse to detect the
  33. # public address. Other valid options are "ip6" and "ip" (returns both.)
  34. #network: ip4
  35. # lookup_timeout is the DNS query timeout.
  36. #lookup_timeout: 250ms
  37. lighthouse:
  38. # am_lighthouse is used to enable lighthouse functionality for a node. This should ONLY be true on nodes
  39. # you have configured to be lighthouses in your network
  40. am_lighthouse: false
  41. # serve_dns optionally starts a dns listener that responds to various queries and can even be
  42. # delegated to for resolution
  43. #serve_dns: false
  44. #dns:
  45. # The DNS host defines the IP to bind the dns listener to. This also allows binding to the nebula node IP.
  46. #host: 0.0.0.0
  47. #port: 53
  48. # interval is the number of seconds between updates from this node to a lighthouse.
  49. # during updates, a node sends information about its current IP addresses to each node.
  50. interval: 60
  51. # hosts is a list of lighthouse hosts this node should report to and query from
  52. # IMPORTANT: THIS SHOULD BE EMPTY ON LIGHTHOUSE NODES
  53. # IMPORTANT2: THIS SHOULD BE LIGHTHOUSES' NEBULA IPs, NOT LIGHTHOUSES' REAL ROUTABLE IPs
  54. hosts:
  55. - "192.168.100.1"
  56. # remote_allow_list allows you to control ip ranges that this node will
  57. # consider when handshaking to another node. By default, any remote IPs are
  58. # allowed. You can provide CIDRs here with `true` to allow and `false` to
  59. # deny. The most specific CIDR rule applies to each remote. If all rules are
  60. # "allow", the default will be "deny", and vice-versa. If both "allow" and
  61. # "deny" IPv4 rules are present, then you MUST set a rule for "0.0.0.0/0" as
  62. # the default. Similarly if both "allow" and "deny" IPv6 rules are present,
  63. # then you MUST set a rule for "::/0" as the default.
  64. #remote_allow_list:
  65. # Example to block IPs from this subnet from being used for remote IPs.
  66. #"172.16.0.0/12": false
  67. # A more complicated example, allow public IPs but only private IPs from a specific subnet
  68. #"0.0.0.0/0": true
  69. #"10.0.0.0/8": false
  70. #"10.42.42.0/24": true
  71. # EXPERIMENTAL: This option may change or disappear in the future.
  72. # Optionally allows the definition of remote_allow_list blocks
  73. # specific to an inside VPN IP CIDR.
  74. #remote_allow_ranges:
  75. # This rule would only allow only private IPs for this VPN range
  76. #"10.42.42.0/24":
  77. #"192.168.0.0/16": true
  78. # local_allow_list allows you to filter which local IP addresses we advertise
  79. # to the lighthouses. This uses the same logic as `remote_allow_list`, but
  80. # additionally, you can specify an `interfaces` map of regular expressions
  81. # to match against interface names. The regexp must match the entire name.
  82. # All interface rules must be either true or false (and the default will be
  83. # the inverse). CIDR rules are matched after interface name rules.
  84. # Default is all local IP addresses.
  85. #local_allow_list:
  86. # Example to block tun0 and all docker interfaces.
  87. #interfaces:
  88. #tun0: false
  89. #'docker.*': false
  90. # Example to only advertise this subnet to the lighthouse.
  91. #"10.0.0.0/8": true
  92. # advertise_addrs are routable addresses that will be included along with discovered addresses to report to the
  93. # lighthouse, the format is "ip:port". `port` can be `0`, in which case the actual listening port will be used in its
  94. # place, useful if `listen.port` is set to 0.
  95. # This option is mainly useful when there are static ip addresses the host can be reached at that nebula can not
  96. # typically discover on its own. Examples being port forwarding or multiple paths to the internet.
  97. #advertise_addrs:
  98. #- "1.1.1.1:4242"
  99. #- "1.2.3.4:0" # port will be replaced with the real listening port
  100. # EXPERIMENTAL: This option may change or disappear in the future.
  101. # This setting allows us to "guess" what the remote might be for a host
  102. # while we wait for the lighthouse response.
  103. #calculated_remotes:
  104. # For any Nebula IPs in 10.0.10.0/24, this will apply the mask and add
  105. # the calculated IP as an initial remote (while we wait for the response
  106. # from the lighthouse). Both CIDRs must have the same mask size.
  107. # For example, Nebula IP 10.0.10.123 will have a calculated remote of
  108. # 192.168.1.123
  109. #10.0.10.0/24:
  110. #- mask: 192.168.1.0/24
  111. # port: 4242
  112. # Port Nebula will be listening on. The default here is 4242. For a lighthouse node, the port should be defined,
  113. # however using port 0 will dynamically assign a port and is recommended for roaming nodes.
  114. listen:
  115. # To listen on both any ipv4 and ipv6 use "::"
  116. host: 0.0.0.0
  117. port: 4242
  118. # Sets the max number of packets to pull from the kernel for each syscall (under systems that support recvmmsg)
  119. # default is 64, does not support reload
  120. #batch: 64
  121. # Configure socket buffers for the udp side (outside), leave unset to use the system defaults. Values will be doubled by the kernel
  122. # Default is net.core.rmem_default and net.core.wmem_default (/proc/sys/net/core/rmem_default and /proc/sys/net/core/rmem_default)
  123. # Maximum is limited by memory in the system, SO_RCVBUFFORCE and SO_SNDBUFFORCE is used to avoid having to raise the system wide
  124. # max, net.core.rmem_max and net.core.wmem_max
  125. #read_buffer: 10485760
  126. #write_buffer: 10485760
  127. # By default, Nebula replies to packets it has no tunnel for with a "recv_error" packet. This packet helps speed up reconnection
  128. # in the case that Nebula on either side did not shut down cleanly. This response can be abused as a way to discover if Nebula is running
  129. # on a host though. This option lets you configure if you want to send "recv_error" packets always, never, or only to private network remotes.
  130. # valid values: always, never, private
  131. # This setting is reloadable.
  132. #send_recv_error: always
  133. # Routines is the number of thread pairs to run that consume from the tun and UDP queues.
  134. # Currently, this defaults to 1 which means we have 1 tun queue reader and 1
  135. # UDP queue reader. Setting this above one will set IFF_MULTI_QUEUE on the tun
  136. # device and SO_REUSEPORT on the UDP socket to allow multiple queues.
  137. # This option is only supported on Linux.
  138. #routines: 1
  139. punchy:
  140. # Continues to punch inbound/outbound at a regular interval to avoid expiration of firewall nat mappings
  141. punch: true
  142. # respond means that a node you are trying to reach will connect back out to you if your hole punching fails
  143. # this is extremely useful if one node is behind a difficult nat, such as a symmetric NAT
  144. # Default is false
  145. #respond: true
  146. # delays a punch response for misbehaving NATs, default is 1 second.
  147. #delay: 1s
  148. # set the delay before attempting punchy.respond. Default is 5 seconds. respond must be true to take effect.
  149. #respond_delay: 5s
  150. # Cipher allows you to choose between the available ciphers for your network. Options are chachapoly or aes
  151. # IMPORTANT: this value must be identical on ALL NODES/LIGHTHOUSES. We do not/will not support use of different ciphers simultaneously!
  152. #cipher: aes
  153. # Preferred ranges is used to define a hint about the local network ranges, which speeds up discovering the fastest
  154. # path to a network adjacent nebula node.
  155. # This setting is reloadable.
  156. #preferred_ranges: ["172.16.0.0/24"]
  157. # sshd can expose informational and administrative functions via ssh. This can expose informational and administrative
  158. # functions, and allows manual tweaking of various network settings when debugging or testing.
  159. #sshd:
  160. # Toggles the feature
  161. #enabled: true
  162. # Host and port to listen on, port 22 is not allowed for your safety
  163. #listen: 127.0.0.1:2222
  164. # A file containing the ssh host private key to use
  165. # A decent way to generate one: ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -f ssh_host_ed25519_key -N "" < /dev/null
  166. #host_key: ./ssh_host_ed25519_key
  167. # Authorized users and their public keys
  168. #authorized_users:
  169. #- user: steeeeve
  170. # keys can be an array of strings or single string
  171. #keys:
  172. #- "ssh public key string"
  173. # Trusted SSH CA public keys. These are the public keys of the CAs that are allowed to sign SSH keys for access.
  174. #trusted_cas:
  175. #- "ssh public key string"
  176. # EXPERIMENTAL: relay support for networks that can't establish direct connections.
  177. relay:
  178. # Relays are a list of Nebula IP's that peers can use to relay packets to me.
  179. # IPs in this list must have am_relay set to true in their configs, otherwise
  180. # they will reject relay requests.
  181. #relays:
  182. #- 192.168.100.1
  183. #- <other Nebula VPN IPs of hosts used as relays to access me>
  184. # Set am_relay to true to permit other hosts to list my IP in their relays config. Default false.
  185. am_relay: false
  186. # Set use_relays to false to prevent this instance from attempting to establish connections through relays.
  187. # default true
  188. use_relays: true
  189. # Configure the private interface. Note: addr is baked into the nebula certificate
  190. tun:
  191. # When tun is disabled, a lighthouse can be started without a local tun interface (and therefore without root)
  192. disabled: false
  193. # Name of the device. If not set, a default will be chosen by the OS.
  194. # For macOS: if set, must be in the form `utun[0-9]+`.
  195. # For NetBSD: Required to be set, must be in the form `tun[0-9]+`
  196. dev: nebula1
  197. # Toggles forwarding of local broadcast packets, the address of which depends on the ip/mask encoded in pki.cert
  198. drop_local_broadcast: false
  199. # Toggles forwarding of multicast packets
  200. drop_multicast: false
  201. # Sets the transmit queue length, if you notice lots of transmit drops on the tun it may help to raise this number. Default is 500
  202. tx_queue: 500
  203. # Default MTU for every packet, safe setting is (and the default) 1300 for internet based traffic
  204. mtu: 1300
  205. # Route based MTU overrides, you have known vpn ip paths that can support larger MTUs you can increase/decrease them here
  206. routes:
  207. #- mtu: 8800
  208. # route: 10.0.0.0/16
  209. # Unsafe routes allows you to route traffic over nebula to non-nebula nodes
  210. # Unsafe routes should be avoided unless you have hosts/services that cannot run nebula
  211. # NOTE: The nebula certificate of the "via" node *MUST* have the "route" defined as a subnet in its certificate
  212. # `mtu`: will default to tun mtu if this option is not specified
  213. # `metric`: will default to 0 if this option is not specified
  214. # `install`: will default to true, controls whether this route is installed in the systems routing table.
  215. # This setting is reloadable.
  216. unsafe_routes:
  217. #- route: 172.16.1.0/24
  218. # via: 192.168.100.99
  219. # mtu: 1300
  220. # metric: 100
  221. # install: true
  222. # On linux only, set to true to manage unsafe routes directly on the system route table with gateway routes instead of
  223. # in nebula configuration files. Default false, not reloadable.
  224. #use_system_route_table: false
  225. # Configure logging level
  226. logging:
  227. # panic, fatal, error, warning, info, or debug. Default is info and is reloadable.
  228. #NOTE: Debug mode can log remotely controlled/untrusted data which can quickly fill a disk in some
  229. # scenarios. Debug logging is also CPU intensive and will decrease performance overall.
  230. # Only enable debug logging while actively investigating an issue.
  231. level: info
  232. # json or text formats currently available. Default is text
  233. format: text
  234. # Disable timestamp logging. useful when output is redirected to logging system that already adds timestamps. Default is false
  235. #disable_timestamp: true
  236. # timestamp format is specified in Go time format, see:
  237. # https://golang.org/pkg/time/#pkg-constants
  238. # default when `format: json`: "2006-01-02T15:04:05Z07:00" (RFC3339)
  239. # default when `format: text`:
  240. # when TTY attached: seconds since beginning of execution
  241. # otherwise: "2006-01-02T15:04:05Z07:00" (RFC3339)
  242. # As an example, to log as RFC3339 with millisecond precision, set to:
  243. #timestamp_format: "2006-01-02T15:04:05.000Z07:00"
  244. #stats:
  245. #type: graphite
  246. #prefix: nebula
  247. #protocol: tcp
  248. #host: 127.0.0.1:9999
  249. #interval: 10s
  250. #type: prometheus
  251. #listen: 127.0.0.1:8080
  252. #path: /metrics
  253. #namespace: prometheusns
  254. #subsystem: nebula
  255. #interval: 10s
  256. # enables counter metrics for meta packets
  257. # e.g.: `messages.tx.handshake`
  258. # NOTE: `message.{tx,rx}.recv_error` is always emitted
  259. #message_metrics: false
  260. # enables detailed counter metrics for lighthouse packets
  261. # e.g.: `lighthouse.rx.HostQuery`
  262. #lighthouse_metrics: false
  263. # Handshake Manager Settings
  264. #handshakes:
  265. # Handshakes are sent to all known addresses at each interval with a linear backoff,
  266. # Wait try_interval after the 1st attempt, 2 * try_interval after the 2nd, etc, until the handshake is older than timeout
  267. # A 100ms interval with the default 10 retries will give a handshake 5.5 seconds to resolve before timing out
  268. #try_interval: 100ms
  269. #retries: 20
  270. # query_buffer is the size of the buffer channel for querying lighthouses
  271. #query_buffer: 64
  272. # trigger_buffer is the size of the buffer channel for quickly sending handshakes
  273. # after receiving the response for lighthouse queries
  274. #trigger_buffer: 64
  275. # Nebula security group configuration
  276. firewall:
  277. # Action to take when a packet is not allowed by the firewall rules.
  278. # Can be one of:
  279. # `drop` (default): silently drop the packet.
  280. # `reject`: send a reject reply.
  281. # - For TCP, this will be a RST "Connection Reset" packet.
  282. # - For other protocols, this will be an ICMP port unreachable packet.
  283. outbound_action: drop
  284. inbound_action: drop
  285. # Controls the default value for local_cidr. Default is true, will be deprecated after v1.9 and defaulted to false.
  286. # This setting only affects nebula hosts with subnets encoded in their certificate. A nebula host acting as an
  287. # unsafe router with `default_local_cidr_any: true` will expose their unsafe routes to every inbound rule regardless
  288. # of the actual destination for the packet. Setting this to false requires each inbound rule to contain a `local_cidr`
  289. # if the intention is to allow traffic to flow to an unsafe route.
  290. #default_local_cidr_any: false
  291. conntrack:
  292. tcp_timeout: 12m
  293. udp_timeout: 3m
  294. default_timeout: 10m
  295. # The firewall is default deny. There is no way to write a deny rule.
  296. # Rules are comprised of a protocol, port, and one or more of host, group, or CIDR
  297. # Logical evaluation is roughly: port AND proto AND (ca_sha OR ca_name) AND (host OR group OR groups OR cidr) AND (local cidr)
  298. # - port: Takes `0` or `any` as any, a single number `80`, a range `200-901`, or `fragment` to match second and further fragments of fragmented packets (since there is no port available).
  299. # code: same as port but makes more sense when talking about ICMP, TODO: this is not currently implemented in a way that works, use `any`
  300. # proto: `any`, `tcp`, `udp`, or `icmp`
  301. # host: `any` or a literal hostname, ie `test-host`
  302. # group: `any` or a literal group name, ie `default-group`
  303. # groups: Same as group but accepts a list of values. Multiple values are AND'd together and a certificate would have to contain all groups to pass
  304. # cidr: a remote CIDR, `0.0.0.0/0` is any ipv4 and `::/0` is any ipv6.
  305. # local_cidr: a local CIDR, `0.0.0.0/0` is any ipv4 and `::/0` is any ipv6. This could be used to filter destinations when using unsafe_routes.
  306. # If no unsafe networks are present in the certificate(s) or `default_local_cidr_any` is true then the default is any ipv4 or ipv6 network.
  307. # Otherwise the default is any vpn network assigned to via the certificate.
  308. # `default_local_cidr_any` defaults to false and is deprecated, it will be removed in a future release.
  309. # If there are unsafe routes present its best to set `local_cidr` to whatever best fits the situation.
  310. # ca_name: An issuing CA name
  311. # ca_sha: An issuing CA shasum
  312. outbound:
  313. # Allow all outbound traffic from this node
  314. - port: any
  315. proto: any
  316. host: any
  317. inbound:
  318. # Allow icmp between any nebula hosts
  319. - port: any
  320. proto: icmp
  321. host: any
  322. # Allow tcp/443 from any host with BOTH laptop and home group
  323. - port: 443
  324. proto: tcp
  325. groups:
  326. - laptop
  327. - home
  328. # Expose a subnet (unsafe route) to hosts with the group remote_client
  329. # This example assume you have a subnet of 192.168.100.1/24 or larger encoded in the certificate
  330. - port: 8080
  331. proto: tcp
  332. group: remote_client
  333. local_cidr: 192.168.100.1/24