jedisct1 / dsvpn

A Dead Simple VPN.
MIT License
5.17k stars 395 forks source link
privacy reallysimple simple vpn

DSVPN

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DSVPN is a Dead Simple VPN, designed to address the most common use case for using a VPN:

[client device] ---- (untrusted/restricted network) ---- [vpn server] ---- [the Internet]

Features:

Installation

make

On Raspberry Pi 3 and 4, use the following command instead to enable NEON optimizations:

env OPTFLAGS=-mfpu=neon make

Alternatively, if you have zig installed, it can be used to compile DSVPN:

zig build -Drelease

On macOS, DSVPN can be installed using Homebrew: brew install dsvpn.

Secret key

DSVPN uses a shared secret. Create it with the following command:

dd if=/dev/urandom of=vpn.key count=1 bs=32

And copy it on the server and the client.

If required, keys can be exported and imported in printable form:

base64 < vpn.key
echo 'HK940OkWcFqSmZXnCQ1w6jhQMZm0fZoEhQOOpzJ/l3w=' | base64 --decode > vpn.key

Example usage on the server

sudo ./dsvpn server vpn.key auto 1959

Here, I use port 1959. Everything else is set to the default values. If you want to use the default port (443), it doesn't even have to be specified, so the parameters can just be server vpn.key

Example usage on the client

sudo ./dsvpn client vpn.key 34.216.127.34 1959

This is a macOS client, connecting to the VPN server 34.216.127.34 on port 1959. The port number is optional here as well. And the IP can be replaced by a host name.

That's it

You are connected. Just hit Ctrl-C to disconnect.

Evaggelos Balaskas wrote a great blog post walking through the whole procedure: A Dead Simple VPN.

He also maintains systemd service files for DSVPN. Thank you Evaggelos!

A note on DNS

If you were previously using a DNS resolver only accessible from the local network, it won't be accessible through the VPN. That might be the only thing you may have to change. Use a public resolver, a local resolver, or DNSCrypt.

Or send a pull request implementing the required commands to change and revert the DNS settings, or redirect DNS queries to another resolver, for all supported operating systems.

Advanced configuration

dsvpn   "server"
        <key file>
        <vpn server ip or name>|"auto"
        <vpn server port>|"auto"
        <tun interface>|"auto"
        <local tun ip>|"auto"
        <remote tun ip>"auto"
        <external ip>|"auto"

dsvpn   "client"
        <key file>
        <vpn server ip or name>
        <vpn server port>|"auto"
        <tun interface>|"auto"
        <local tun ip>|"auto"
        <remote tun ip>|"auto"
        <gateway ip>|"auto"

If all the remaining parameters of a command would be auto, they don't have to be specified.

Related projects

Why

I needed a VPN that works in an environment where only TCP/80 and TCP/443 are open.

WireGuard doesn't work over TCP.

GloryTun is excellent, but requires post-configuration and the maintained branch uses UDP.

I forgot about VTUN-libsodium. But it would have been too much complexity and attack surface for a simple use case.

OpenVPN is horribly difficult to set up.

Sshuttle is very nice and I've been using it a lot in the past, but it's not a VPN. It doesn't tunnel non-TCP traffic. It also requires a full Python install, which I'd rather avoid on my router.

Everything else I looked at was either too difficult to use, slow, bloated, didn't work on macOS, didn't work on small devices, was complicated to cross-compile due to dependencies, wasn't maintained, or didn't feel secure.

TCP-over-TCP is not as bad as some documents describe. It works surprisingly well in practice, especially with modern congestion control algorithms (BBR). For traditional algorithms that rely on packet loss, DSVPN couples the inner and outer congestion controllers by lowering TCP_NOTSENT_LOWAT and dropping packets when congestion is detected at the outer layer.

Cryptography

The cryptographic primitives used in DSVPN are available as a standalone project: Charm.

Guarantees, support, feature additions

None.

This is not intended to be a replacement for GloryTun or WireGuard. This is what I use, because it solves a problem I had. Extending it to solve different problems is not planned, but feel free to fork it and tailor it to your needs!