Hi. Please help to make friends OpenConnect VPN server and Cisco AnyConnect. uname -a Linux server 3.18.11-smp #1 SMP i686 Intel(R) XEON(TM) CPU 1.80GHz GenuineIntel GNU/Linux gnutls-3.3.17.1 ./configure \ --prefix=/usr \ --libdir=/usr/lib${LIBDIRSUFFIX} \ --sysconfdir=/etc \ --localstatedir=/var \ --infodir=/usr/info \ --mandir=/usr/man \ --enable-static=no \ --disable-rpath \ --with-included-libtasn1 \ --build=$ARCH-slackware-linux \ --host=$ARCH-slackware-linux ocserv-0.9.2 ./configure --prefix=/usr --host=$HOST LIBGNUTLS_CFLAGS="-I/usr/include" LIBGNUTLS_LIBS="-L/usr/lib -lgnutls" \ LIBREADLINE_CFLAGS="-I/usr/include/readline" LIBREADLINE_LIBS="-L/usr/lib -lreadline -lncurses" \ --enable-local-libopts=yes Cisco AnyConnect Secure Mobility Client Version 3.1.04072 Connection attempt has failed due to server communication errors. Please retry the connection. :( ocserv[26214]: main: putting process 26999 to cgroup 'cpuset:test' ocserv[26214]: main: main-misc.c:837: cannot open: /sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset/test/tasks ocserv[26999]: worker: 10.10.10.9:35625 accepted connection ocserv[26999]: TLS[<5>]: REC[0x80e9008]: Allocating epoch #0 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_constate.c:586 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<5>]: REC[0x80e9008]: Allocating epoch #1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_buffers.c:1138 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<5>]: REC[0x80e9008]: SSL 3.1 Handshake packet received. Epoch 0, length: 57 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<5>]: REC[0x80e9008]: Expected Packet Handshake(22) ocserv[26999]: TLS[<5>]: REC[0x80e9008]: Received Packet Handshake(22) with length: 57 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<5>]: REC[0x80e9008]: Decrypted Packet[0] Handshake(22) with length: 57 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: CLIENT HELLO (1) was received. Length 53[53], frag offset 0, frag length: 53, sequence: 0 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Client's version: 3.1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_db.c:263 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_extensions.c:158 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_extensions.c:158 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_extensions.c:158 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Received safe renegotiation CS ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: server_name.c:297 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Requested PK algorithm: RSA (1) -- ctype: X.509 (1) ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: certificate[0] PK algorithm: RSA (1) - ctype: X.509 (1) ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_x509.c:1403 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_x509.c:1403 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: ECDHE_ECDSA_AES_128_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: ECDHE_ECDSA_AES_128_CBC_SHA256 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: ECDHE_ECDSA_AES_256_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: ECDHE_ECDSA_AES_256_CBC_SHA384 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: ECDHE_ECDSA_CAMELLIA_128_CBC_SHA256 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: ECDHE_ECDSA_CAMELLIA_256_CBC_SHA384 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: ECDHE_ECDSA_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: ECDHE_ECDSA_ARCFOUR_128_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: ECDHE_RSA_AES_128_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: ECDHE_RSA_AES_128_CBC_SHA256 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: ECDHE_RSA_AES_256_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: ECDHE_RSA_AES_256_CBC_SHA384 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: ECDHE_RSA_CAMELLIA_128_CBC_SHA256 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: ECDHE_RSA_CAMELLIA_256_CBC_SHA384 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: ECDHE_RSA_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: ECDHE_RSA_ARCFOUR_128_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: RSA_AES_128_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: RSA_AES_128_CBC_SHA256 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: RSA_AES_256_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: RSA_AES_256_CBC_SHA256 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: RSA_CAMELLIA_128_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: RSA_CAMELLIA_128_CBC_SHA256 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: RSA_CAMELLIA_256_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: RSA_CAMELLIA_256_CBC_SHA256 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: RSA_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: RSA_ARCFOUR_128_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: RSA_ARCFOUR_128_MD5 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_handshake.c:3370 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: DHE_RSA_AES_128_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_handshake.c:3370 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: DHE_RSA_AES_128_CBC_SHA256 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_handshake.c:3370 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: DHE_RSA_AES_256_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_handshake.c:3370 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: DHE_RSA_AES_256_CBC_SHA256 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_handshake.c:3370 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: DHE_RSA_CAMELLIA_128_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_handshake.c:3370 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: DHE_RSA_CAMELLIA_128_CBC_SHA256 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_handshake.c:3370 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: DHE_RSA_CAMELLIA_256_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_handshake.c:3370 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: DHE_RSA_CAMELLIA_256_CBC_SHA256 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_handshake.c:3370 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: DHE_RSA_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: DHE_DSS_AES_128_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: DHE_DSS_AES_128_CBC_SHA256 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: DHE_DSS_AES_256_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: DHE_DSS_AES_256_CBC_SHA256 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: DHE_DSS_CAMELLIA_128_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: DHE_DSS_CAMELLIA_128_CBC_SHA256 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: DHE_DSS_CAMELLIA_256_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: DHE_DSS_CAMELLIA_256_CBC_SHA256 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: DHE_DSS_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x80e9008]: Removing ciphersuite: DHE_DSS_ARCFOUR_128_SHA1 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_handshake.c:962 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_handshake.c:667 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_handshake.c:2250 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_handshake.c:1463 ocserv[26999]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_handshake.c:3098 ocserv[26999]: GnuTLS error (at worker-vpn.c:349): Could not negotiate a supported cipher suite. ocserv[26214]: main: 10.10.10.9:35625 main-misc.c:506: command socket closed ocserv[26214]: main: 10.10.10.9:35625 removing client '' with id '26999' ocserv.conf # User authentication method. Could be set multiple times and in # that case all should succeed. To enable multiple methods use # multiple auth directives. Available options: certificate, # plain, pam, radius, gssapi. # # Note that authentication methods cannot be changed with reload. # certificate: # This indicates that all connecting users must present a certificate. # # pam[gid-min=1000]: # This enabled PAM authentication of the user. The gid-min option is used # by auto-select-group option, in order to select the minimum valid group ID. # # plain[passwd=/etc/ocserv/ocpasswd,otp=/etc/ocserv/users.otp] # The plain option requires specifying a password file which contains # entries of the following format. # "username:groupname1,groupname2:encoded-password" # One entry must be listed per line, and ?ocpasswd? should be used # to generate password entries. The ?otp? suboption allows to specify # an oath password file to be used for one time passwords; the format of # the file is described in https://code.google.com/p/mod-authn-otp/wiki/UsersFile # # radius[config=/etc/radiusclient/radiusclient.conf,groupconfig=true,nas-identifier=name]: # The radius option requires specifying freeradius-client configuration # file. If the groupconfig option is set, then config-per-user will be overriden, # and all configuration will be read from radius. That also includes the # Acct-Interim-Interval, and Session-Timeout values. # # The supported atributes for radius configuration are: # Group-Name, Framed-IPv6-Address, Framed-IPv6-Prefix, DNS-Server-IPv6-Address, # Framed-IP-Address, Framed-IP-Netmask, MS-Primary-DNS-Server, MS-Secondary-DNS-Server, # Acct-Interim-Interval. # # gssapi[keytab=/etc/key.tab,require-local-user-map=false,tgt-freshness-time=900,gid-min=1000] # The gssapi option allows to use authentication methods supported by GSSAPI, # such as Kerberos tickets with ocserv. It should be best used as an alternative # to PAM (i.e., have pam in auth and gssapi in enable-auth), to allow users with # tickets and without tickets to login. The default value for require-local-user-map # is true. The ?tgt-freshness-time? if set, it would require the TGT tickets presented # to have been issued within the provided number of seconds. That option is used to # restrict logins even if the KDC provides long time TGT tickets. # The gid-min option is used by auto-select-group option, in order to select the minimum # valid group ID. #auth = "certificate" #auth = "pam" #auth = "pam[gid-min=1000]" #auth = "plain[passwd=/etc/ocserv/ocpasswd]" #auth = "radius[config=/etc/radiusclient/radiusclient.conf,groupconfig=true]" auth = "plain[/etc/ocpasswd]" # Specify alternative authentication methods that are sufficient # for authentication. That is, if set, any of the methods enabled # will be sufficient to login. #enable-auth = "certificate" #enable-auth = "gssapi" #enable-auth = "gssapi[keytab=/etc/key.tab,require-local-user-map=true,tgt-freshness-time=900]" # Accounting methods available: # radius: can be combined with any authentication method, it provides # radius accounting to available users (see also stats-report-time). # # pam: can be combined with any authentication method, it provides # a validation of the connecting user?s name using PAM. It is # superfluous to use this method when authentication is already # PAM. # # Only one accounting method can be specified. #acct = "radius[config=/etc/radiusclient/radiusclient.conf]" # Use listen-host to limit to specific IPs or to the IPs of a provided # hostname. #listen-host = [IP|HOSTNAME] # TCP and UDP port number #tcp-port = 4443 #udp-port = 4443 tcp-port = 443 udp-port = 443 # Accept connections using a socket file. It accepts HTTP # connections (i.e., without SSL/TLS unlike its TCP counterpart), # and uses it as the primary channel. That option cannot be # combined with certificate authentication. #listen-clear-file = /var/run/ocserv-conn.socket # The user the worker processes will be run as. It should be # unique (no other services run as this user). #run-as-user = nobody run-as-user = root #run-as-group = nogroup run-as-group = root # The default server directory. Does not require any devices present. #chroot-dir = /path/to/chroot # socket file used for IPC with occtl. You only need to set that, # if you use more than a single servers. #occtl-socket-file = /var/run/occtl.socket # socket file used for server IPC (worker - sec-mod), will be appended with .PID # It must be accessible within the chroot environment (if any), so it is best # specified relatively to the chroot directory. socket-file = /var/run/ocserv-socket # The key and the certificates of the server # The key may be a file, or any URL supported by GnuTLS (e.g., # tpmkey:uuid=xxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxx;storage=user # or pkcs11:object=my-vpn-key;object-type=private) # # The server-cert file may contain a single certificate, or # a sorted certificate chain. # # There may be multiple server-cert and server-key directives, # but each key should correspond to the preceding certificate. #server-cert = /path/to/cert.pem #server-key = /path/to/key.pem #server-cert = /etc/server-cert.pem #server-key = /etc/server-key.pem server-cert = /etc/ssl/certs/server-cert.pem server-key = /etc/ssl/private/server-key.pem # Diffie-Hellman parameters. Only needed if you require support # for the DHE ciphersuites (by default this server supports ECDHE). # Can be generated using: # certtool --generate-dh-params --outfile /path/to/dh.pem #dh-params = /path/to/dh.pem # In case PKCS #11, TPM or encrypted keys are used the PINs should be available # in files. The srk-pin-file is applicable to TPM keys only, and is the # storage root key. #pin-file = /path/to/pin.txt #srk-pin-file = /path/to/srkpin.txt # The password or PIN needed to unlock the key in server-key file. # Only needed if the file is encrypted or a PKCS #11 object. This # is an alternative method to pin-file. #key-pin = 1234 # The SRK PIN for TPM. # This is an alternative method to srk-pin-file. #srk-pin = 1234 # The Certificate Authority that will be used to verify # client certificates (public keys) if certificate authentication # is set. #ca-cert = /path/to/ca.pem ca-cert = /etc/ssl/certs/ca-cert.pem ### All configuration options below this line are reloaded on a SIGHUP. ### The options above, will remain unchanged. # Whether to enable seccomp/Linux namespaces worker isolation. That restricts the number of # system calls allowed to a worker process, in order to reduce damage from a # bug in the worker process. It is available on Linux systems at a performance cost. # The performance cost is roughly 2% overhead at transfer time (tested on a Linux 3.17.8). #isolate-workers = true isolate-workers = false # A banner to be displayed on clients #banner = "Welcome" banner = "Welcome" # Limit the number of clients. Unset or set to zero for unlimited. #max-clients = 1024 max-clients = 16 # Limit the number of identical clients (i.e., users connecting # multiple times). Unset or set to zero for unlimited. max-same-clients = 3 # When the server has a dynamic DNS address (that may change), # should set that to true to ask the client to resolve again on # reconnects. #listen-host-is-dyndns = true # When the server receives connections from a proxy, like haproxy # which supports the proxy protocol, set this to obtain the correct # client addresses. The proxy protocol (v2) would then be expected in # the TCP or UNIX socket (not the UDP one). #listen-proxy-proto = true # Limit the number of client connections to one every X milliseconds # (X is the provided value). Set to zero for no limit. #rate-limit-ms = 100 # Stats report time. The number of seconds after which each # worker process will report its usage statistics (number of # bytes transferred etc). This is useful when accounting like # radius is in use. #stats-report-time = 360 # Keepalive in seconds keepalive = 32400 # Dead peer detection in seconds. # Note that when the client is behind a NAT this value # needs to be short enough to prevent the NAT disassociating # his UDP session from the port number. Otherwise the client # could have his UDP connection stalled, for several minutes. #dpd = 90 dpd = 1900 # Dead peer detection for mobile clients. That needs to # be higher to prevent such clients being awaken too # often by the DPD messages, and save battery. # The mobile clients are distinguished from the header # ?X-AnyConnect-Identifier-DeviceType?. mobile-dpd = 1800 # MTU discovery (DPD must be enabled) # If set, this forces all UDP packets to carry the don?t fragment # (DF) bit. #try-mtu-discovery = false try-mtu-discovery = true # The revocation list of the certificates issued by the ?ca-cert? above. # See the manual to generate an empty CRL initially. The CRL will be reloaded # periodically when ocserv detects a change in the file. To force a reload use # SIGHUP. #crl = /path/to/crl.pem # If you have a certificate from a CA that provides an OCSP # service you may provide a fresh OCSP status response within # the TLS handshake. That will prevent the client from connecting # independently on the OCSP server. # You can update this response periodically using: # ocsptool --ask --load-cert=your_cert --load-issuer=your_ca --outfile response # Make sure that you replace the following file in an atomic way. #ocsp-response = /path/to/ocsp.der # The object identifier that will be used to read the user ID in the client # certificate. The object identifier should be part of the certificate?s DN # Useful OIDs are: # CN = 2.5.4.3, UID = 0.9.2342.19200300.100.1.1 #cert-user-oid = 0.9.2342.19200300.100.1.1 # The object identifier that will be used to read the user group in the # client certificate. The object identifier should be part of the certificate?s # DN. Useful OIDs are: # OU (organizational unit) = 2.5.4.11 #cert-group-oid = 2.5.4.11 # Uncomment this to enable compression negotiation (LZS, LZ4). #compression = true # Set the minimum size under which a packet will not be compressed. # That is to allow low-latency for VoIP packets. The default size # is 256 bytes. Modify it if the clients typically use compression # as well of VoIP with codecs that exceed the default value. #no-compress-limit = 256 # GnuTLS priority string; note that SSL 3.0 is disabled by default # as there are no openconnect (and possibly anyconnect clients) using # that protocol. The string below does not enforce perfect forward # secrecy, in order to be compatible with legacy clients. # # Note that the most performant ciphersuites are the moment are the ones # involving AES-GCM. These are very fast in x86 and x86-64 hardware, and # in addition require no padding, thus taking full advantage of the MTU. # For that to be taken advantage of, the openconnect client must be # used, and the server must be compiled against GnuTLS 3.2.7 or later. # Use "gnutls-cli --benchmark-tls-ciphers", to see the performance # difference with AES_128_CBC_SHA1 (the default for anyconnect clients) # in your system. #tls-priorities = "NORMAL:%SERVER_PRECEDENCE:%COMPAT:-VERS-SSL3.0" tls-priorities = "NORMAL:%SERVER_PRECEDENCE:%COMPAT" # More combinations in priority strings are available, check # http://gnutls.org/manual/html_node/Priority-Strings.html # E.g., the string below enforces perfect forward secrecy (PFS) # on the main channel. #tls-priorities = "NORMAL:%SERVER_PRECEDENCE:%COMPAT:-RSA:-VERS-SSL3.0:-ARCFOUR-128" # The time (in seconds) that a client is allowed to stay connected prior # to authentication #auth-timeout = 40 auth-timeout = 4000 # The time (in seconds) that a client is allowed to stay idle (no traffic) # before being disconnected. Unset to disable. #idle-timeout = 1200 # The time (in seconds) that a client is allowed to stay connected # Unset to disable. #session-timeout = 86400 # The time (in seconds) that a mobile client is allowed to stay idle (no # traffic) before being disconnected. Unset to disable. #mobile-idle-timeout = 2400 # The time (in seconds) that a client is not allowed to reconnect after # a failed authentication attempt. min-reauth-time = 120 # Banning clients in ocserv works with a point system. IP addresses # that get a score over that configured number are banned for # min-reauth-time seconds. By default a wrong password attempt is 10 points, # a KKDCP POST is 1 point, and a connection is 1 point. Note that # due to difference processes being involved the count of points # will not be real-time precise. # # Score banning cannot be reliably used when receiving proxied connections # locally from an HTTP server (i.e., when listen-clear-file is used). # # Set to zero to disable. #max-ban-score = 50 # The time (in seconds) that all score kept for a client is reset. #ban-reset-time = 300 # In case you?d like to change the default points. #ban-points-wrong-password = 10 #ban-points-connection = 1 #ban-points-kkdcp = 1 # Cookie timeout (in seconds) # Once a client is authenticated he?s provided a cookie with # which he can reconnect. That cookie will be invalided if not # used within this timeout value. On a user disconnection, that # cookie will also be active for this time amount prior to be # invalid. That should allow a reasonable amount of time for roaming # between different networks. #cookie-timeout = 300 cookie-timeout = 86400000 # Cookie rekey time (in seconds) # The time after which the key used to encrypt cookies will be # refreshed. After this time the previous key will also be valid # for verification. It is recommended not to modify the default # value. #cookie-rekey-time = 14400 #cookie-rekey-time = 172800 # If this is enabled (not recommended) the cookies will stay # valid even after a user manually disconnects, and until they # expire. This may improve roaming with some broken clients. #persistent-cookies = true # Whether roaming is allowed, i.e., if true a cookie is # restricted to a single IP address and cannot be re-used # from a different IP. deny-roaming = false # ReKey time (in seconds) # ocserv will ask the client to refresh keys periodically once # this amount of seconds is elapsed. Set to zero to disable (note # that, some clients fail if rekey is disabled). rekey-time = 172800 # ReKey method # Valid options: ssl, new-tunnel # ssl: Will perform an efficient rehandshake on the channel allowing # a seamless connection during rekey. # new-tunnel: Will instruct the client to discard and re-establish the channel. # Use this option only if the connecting clients have issues with the ssl # option. rekey-method = ssl # Script to call when a client connects and obtains an IP. # The following parameters are passed on the environment. # REASON, USERNAME, GROUPNAME, HOSTNAME (the hostname selected by client), # DEVICE, IP_REAL (the real IP of the client), IP_REAL_LOCAL (the local # interface IP the client connected), IP_LOCAL (the local IP # in the P-t-P connection), IP_REMOTE (the VPN IP of the client), # IPV6_LOCAL (the IPv6 local address if there are both IPv4 and IPv6 # assigned), IPV6_REMOTE (the IPv6 remote address), IPV6_PREFIX, and # ID (a unique numeric ID); REASON may be "connect" or "disconnect". # In addition the following variables OCSERV_ROUTES (the applied routes for this # client), OCSERV_NO_ROUTES, OCSERV_DNS (the DNS servers for this client), # will contain a space separated list of routes or DNS servers. A version # of these variables with the 4 or 6 suffix will contain only the IPv4 or # IPv6 values. # The disconnect script will receive the additional values: STATS_BYTES_IN, # STATS_BYTES_OUT, STATS_DURATION that contain a 64-bit counter of the bytes # output from the tun device, and the duration of the session in seconds. #connect-script = /usr/bin/myscript #disconnect-script = /usr/bin/myscript # UTMP # Register the connected clients to utmp. This will allow viewing # the connected clients using the command ?who?. #use-utmp = true use-utmp = true # Whether to enable support for the occtl tool (i.e., either through D-BUS, # or via a unix socket). use-occtl = true # PID file. It can be overriden in the command line. pid-file = /var/run/ocserv.pid # Set the protocol-defined priority (SO_PRIORITY) for packets to # be sent. That is a number from 0 to 6 with 0 being the lowest # priority. Alternatively this can be used to set the IP Type- # Of-Service, by setting it to a hexadecimal number (e.g., 0x20). # This can be set per user/group or globally. #net-priority = 3 net-priority = 5 # Set the VPN worker process into a specific cgroup. This is Linux # specific and can be set per user/group or globally. #cgroup = "cpuset,cpu:test" cgroup = "cpuset,cpu:test" # # Network settings # # The name to use for the tun device device = vpns # Whether the generated IPs will be predictable, i.e., IP stays the # same for the same user when possible. predictable-ips = true # The default domain to be advertised default-domain = vpkits.vitebsk.by # The pool of addresses that leases will be given from. If the leases # are given via Radius, or via the explicit-ip? per-user config option then # these network values should contain a network with at least a single # address that will remain under the full control of ocserv (that is # to be able to assign the local part of the tun device address). # Note that, you could use addresses from a subnet of your LAN network if you # enable proxy arp in the LAN interface (see http://infradead.org/ocserv/recipes-ocserv-pseudo-bridge.html); # in that case it is recommended to set ping-leases to true. #ipv4-network = 192.168.1.0 #ipv4-netmask = 255.255.255.0 ipv4-network = 10.7.7.0 ipv4-netmask = 255.255.255.0 # An alternative way of specifying the network: #ipv4-network = 192.168.1.0/24 # The IPv6 subnet that leases will be given from. ipv6-network = fda9:4efe:7e3b:03ea::/48 # Specify the size of the network to provide to clients. It is # generally recommended to provide clients with a /64 network in # IPv6, but any subnet may be specified. To provide clients only # with a single IP use the prefix 128. #ipv6-subnet-prefix = 128 #ipv6-subnet-prefix = 64 # Whether to tunnel all DNS queries via the VPN. This is the default # when a default route is set. #tunnel-all-dns = true # The advertized DNS server. Use multiple lines for # multiple servers. # dns = fc00::4be0 #dns = 192.168.1.2 dns = 8.8.8.8 dns = 8.8.4.4 # The NBNS server (if any) #nbns = 192.168.1.3 # The domains over which the provided DNS should be used. Use # multiple lines for multiple domains. #split-dns = example.com # Prior to leasing any IP from the pool ping it to verify that # it is not in use by another (unrelated to this server) host. # Only set to true, if there can be occupied addresses in the # IP range for leases. ping-leases = false # Use this option to enforce an MTU value to the incoming # connections. Unset to use the default MTU of the TUN device. #mtu = 1420 # Unset to enable bandwidth restrictions (in bytes/sec). The # setting here is global, but can also be set per user or per group. #rx-data-per-sec = 40000 #tx-data-per-sec = 40000 # The number of packets (of MTU size) that are available in # the output buffer. The default is low to improve latency. # Setting it higher will improve throughput. #output-buffer = 10 # Routes to be forwarded to the client. If you need the # client to forward routes to the server, you may use the # config-per-user/group or even connect and disconnect scripts. # # To set the server as the default gateway for the client just # comment out all routes from the server, or use the special keyword # ?default?. ## Comment out the route of the field, which means that #all traffic is sent through the VPN route = 10.7.7.0/255.255.255.0 #route = 192.168.0.0/255.255.0.0 #route = fef4:db8:1000:1001::/64 # Subsets of the routes above that will not be routed by # the server. Note, that this may currently be not be supported # by openconnect clients. no-route = 192.168.5.0/255.255.255.0 # If set, the script /usr/bin/ocserv-fw will be called to restrict # the user to its allowed routes and prevent him from accessing # any other routes. In case of defaultroute, the no-routes are restricted. # All the routes applied by ocserv can be reverted using /usr/bin/ocserv-fw # --removeall. This option can be set globally or in the per-user configuration. #restrict-user-to-routes = true # When set to true, all client?s iroutes are made visible to all # connecting clients except for the ones offering them. This option # only makes sense if config-per-user is set. #expose-iroutes = true # Groups that a client is allowed to select from. # A client may belong in multiple groups, and in certain use-cases # it is needed to switch between them. For these cases the client can # select prior to authentication. Add multiple entries for multiple groups. # The group may be followed by a user-friendly name in brackets. #select-group = group1 #select-group = group2[My special group] # The name of the (virtual) group that if selected it would assign the user # to its default group. #default-select-group = DEFAULT # Instead of specifying manually all the allowed groups, you may instruct # ocserv to scan all available groups and include the full list. #auto-select-group = true auto-select-group = true # Configuration files that will be applied per user connection or # per group. Each file name on these directories must match the username # or the groupname. # The options allowed in the configuration files are dns, nbns, # ipv?-network, ipv4-netmask, rx/tx-per-sec, iroute, route, no-route, # explicit-ipv4, explicit-ipv6, net-priority, deny-roaming, no-udp, # keepalive, dpd, mobile-dpd, max-same-clients, tunnel-all-dns, # restrict-user-to-routes, user-profile, cgroup, stats-report-time, # and session-timeout. # # Note that the ?iroute? option allows to add routes on the server # based on a user or group. The syntax depends on the input accepted # by the commands route-add-cmd and route-del-cmd (see below). The no-udp # is a boolean option (e.g., no-udp = true), and will prevent a UDP session # for that specific user or group. Note also, that, any DNS or NBNS servers # present will overwrite the global ones, while any routes or no-routes set # will be appended to the default set. # # Also explicit addresses, are only allowed when they are odd. In that # case the next even address will be used as the remote address (in PtP). #config-per-user = /etc/ocserv/config-per-user/ #config-per-group = /etc/ocserv/config-per-group/ # When config-per-xxx is specified and there is no group or user that # matches, then utilize the following configuration. #default-user-config = /etc/ocserv/defaults/user.conf #default-group-config = /etc/ocserv/defaults/group.conf # The system command to use to setup a route. %{R} will be replaced with the # route/mask, %{RI} with the route in CIDR format, and %{D} with the (tun) device. # # The following example is from linux systems. %{R} should be something # like 192.168.2.0/255.255.255.0 and %{RI} 192.168.2.0/24 (the argument of iroute). #route-add-cmd = "ip route add %{R} dev %{D}" #route-del-cmd = "ip route delete %{R} dev %{D}" route-add-cmd = "ip route add %{R} dev %{D}" route-del-cmd = "ip route delete %{R} dev %{D}" # This option allows to forward a proxy. The special keywords ?%{U}? # and ?%{G}?, if present will be replaced by the username and group name. #proxy-url = http://example.com/ #proxy-url = http://example.com/%{U}/ # This option allows you to specify a URL location where a client can # post using MS-KKDCP, and the message will be forwarded to the provided # KDC server. That is a translation URL between HTTP and Kerberos. # You can have the same path used for multiple realms. To authenticate # in client side, in MIT kerberos you?ll need to add in krb5.conf: # EXAMPLE.COM = { # kdc = https://ocserv.example.com/KdcProxy # http_anchors = FILE:/etc/ocserv-ca.pem # } # This option is available if ocserv is compiled with GSSAPI support. #kkdcp = SERVER-PATH KERBEROS-REALM PROTOCOL at SERVER:PORT #kkdcp = /KdcProxy KERBEROS.REALM udp at 127.0.0.1:88 #kkdcp = /KdcProxy KERBEROS.REALM tcp at 127.0.0.1:88 #kkdcp = /KdcProxy KERBEROS.REALM tcp@[::1]:88 # # The following options are for (experimental) AnyConnect client # compatibility. # This option must be set to true to support legacy CISCO clients. # A side effect of this option is that it will no longer be required # for clients to present their certificate on every connection. # That is they may resume a cookie without presenting a certificate # (when certificate authentication is used). cisco-client-compat = true # Client profile xml. A sample file exists in doc/profile.xml. # It is required by some of the CISCO clients. # This file must be accessible from inside the worker?s chroot. # Note that enabling this option is not recommended as it will allow # the worker processes to open arbitrary files (when isolate-workers is # set to true). #user-profile = /path/to/file.xml user-profile = /etc/ocserv/profile.xml #Advanced options # Option to allow sending arbitrary custom headers to the client after # authentication and prior to VPN tunnel establishment. You shouldn?t # need to use this option normally; if you do and you think that # this may help others, please send your settings and reason to # the openconnect mailing list. The special keywords ?%{U}? # and ?%{G}?, if present will be replaced by the username and group name. #custom-header = "X-My-Header: hi there" custom-header = "X-DTLS-MTU: 1200" custom-header = "X-CSTP-MTU: 1200" createsectificate.sh #!/bin/bash #! /usr/bin/expect -f #Generated CA certificate certtool --generate-privkey --outfile ca-key.pem cat << _EOF_ >ca.tmpl cn = "company VPN" state = "City" country = CH organization = "ORG" serial = 1 expiration_days = 999 email = "org at gmail.com" ca signing_key encryption_key ipsec_ike_key cert_signing_key crl_signing_key _EOF_ certtool --generate-self-signed --load-privkey ca-key.pem --template ca.tmpl --outfile ca-cert.pem #Generate local server certificate certtool --generate-privkey --outfile server-key.pem cat << _EOF_ >server.tmpl cn = "www.company.org" organization = "ORG" email = "org at gmail.com" dns_name = "ns.org.com" country = CH state = "City" serial = 2 #expiration_days = -1 expiration_days = 999 signing_key encryption_key #only if the generated key is an RSA one tls_www_server ipsec_ike_key time_stamping_key _EOF_ certtool --generate-certificate --load-privkey server-key.pem --load-ca-certificate ca-cert.pem --load-ca-privkey ca-key.pem --template server.tmpl --outfile server-cert.pem #Generate a client certificate certtool --generate-privkey --outfile user-key.pem cat << _EOF_> user.tmpl cn = "org_client" o = "ORG" email = "org at gmail.com" dns_name = "ns.org.com" country = CH state = "City" unit = "admins" serial = 3 expiration_days = 999 signing_key encryption_key #only if the generated key is an RSA one tls_www_client ipsec_ike_key time_stamping_key _EOF_ certtool --generate-certificate --load-privkey user-key.pem --load-ca-certificate ca-cert.pem --load-ca-privkey ca-key.pem --template user.tmpl --outfile user-cert.pem openssl pkcs12 -export -inkey user-key.pem -in user-cert.pem -name "user VPN Client Cert" -certfile ca-cert.pem -out user.cert.p12 cp ./ca-cert.pem /etc/ssl/certs cp ./ca-key.pem /etc/ssl/private cp ./ca-cert.pem /opt/.cisco/certificates/ca cp ./ca-key.pem /opt/.cisco/certificates/ca cp ./server-cert.pem /etc/ssl/certs cp ./server-key.pem /etc/ssl/private ocpasswd root -c /etc/ocpasswd root at server:/etc/ocserv# openssl s_client -connect 10.10.10.9:443 CONNECTED(00000003) depth=0 CN = xxxxxx, O = xxxx verify error:num=20:unable to get local issuer certificate verify return:1 depth=0 CN = xxxxxx, O = xxx verify error:num=27:certificate not trusted verify return:1 depth=0 CN = xxxxxx, O = xxx verify error:num=21:unable to verify the first certificate verify return:1 ocserv -f -d 9999 --config=/etc/ocserv/ocserv.conf ... ocserv[31120]: TLS[<9>]: INT: CLIENT WRITE KEY [16]: 8a13e15928cf46222d6fc4b45d3bed07 ocserv[31120]: TLS[<9>]: INT: SERVER WRITE KEY [16]: d4ea01fd3adbc39ff44ec3f963ba7aea ocserv[31120]: TLS[<5>]: REC[0x94fd008]: Epoch #1 ready ocserv[31120]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x94fd008]: Cipher Suite: ECDHE_RSA_AES_128_GCM_SHA256 ocserv[31120]: TLS[<3>]: ASSERT: gnutls_buffers.c:1138 ocserv[31120]: TLS[<5>]: REC[0x94fd008]: SSL 3.3 Handshake packet received. Epoch 0, length: 40 ocserv[31120]: TLS[<5>]: REC[0x94fd008]: Expected Packet Handshake(22) ocserv[31120]: TLS[<5>]: REC[0x94fd008]: Received Packet Handshake(22) with length: 40 ocserv[31120]: TLS[<5>]: REC[0x94fd008]: Decrypted Packet[0] Handshake(22) with length: 16 ocserv[31120]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x94fd008]: FINISHED (20) was received. Length 12[12], frag offset 0, frag length: 12, sequence: 0 ocserv[31120]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x94fd008]: recording tls-unique CB (recv) ocserv[31120]: TLS[<4>]: REC[0x94fd008]: Sent ChangeCipherSpec ocserv[31120]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x94fd008]: Cipher Suite: ECDHE_RSA_AES_128_GCM_SHA256 ocserv[31120]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x94fd008]: Initializing internal [write] cipher sessions ocserv[31120]: TLS[<4>]: HSK[0x94fd008]: FINISHED was queued [16 bytes] ocserv[31120]: TLS[<5>]: REC[0x94fd008]: Preparing Packet ChangeCipherSpec(20) with length: 1 and min pad: 0 ocserv[31120]: TLS[<9>]: ENC[0x94fd008]: cipher: NULL, MAC: MAC-NULL, Epoch: 0 ocserv[31120]: TLS[<5>]: REC[0x94fd008]: Sent Packet[5] ChangeCipherSpec(20) in epoch 0 and length: 6 ocserv[31120]: TLS[<5>]: REC[0x94fd008]: Preparing Packet Handshake(22) with length: 16 and min pad: 0 ocserv[31120]: TLS[<9>]: ENC[0x94fd008]: cipher: AES-128-GCM, MAC: AEAD, Epoch: 1 ocserv[31120]: TLS[<5>]: REC[0x94fd008]: Sent Packet[1] Handshake(22) in epoch 1 and length: 45 ocserv[31120]: worker: 10.10.10.9:35633 sending message 'resume data store request' to main ocserv[31120]: TLS[<5>]: REC[0x94fd008]: Start of epoch cleanup ocserv[31120]: TLS[<5>]: REC[0x94fd008]: Epoch #0 freed ocserv[31120]: TLS[<5>]: REC[0x94fd008]: End of epoch cleanup ocserv[31120]: worker: 10.10.10.9:35633 TLS handshake completed ocserv[31058]: main: 10.10.10.9:35633 main received message 'resume data store request' of 337 bytes ocserv[31058]: main: 10.10.10.9:35633 TLS session DB storing cee0f3c16d0a6f3c0536f7009afcdc4b6aad149258310b24a5dedaaca0294191 Yours faithfully Sergio.