ISAKMPD(8) OpenBSD System Manager's Manual ISAKMPD(8) NAME isakmpd - ISAKMP/Oakley a.k.a. IKE key management daemon SYNOPSIS isakmpd [-4] [-6] [-c config-file] [-d] [-D class=level] [-f fifo] [-i pid-file] [-n] [-p listen-port] [-P local-port] [-L] [-l packetlog-file] [-r seed] [-R report-file] DESCRIPTION The isakmpd daemon establishes security associations for encrypted and/or authenticated network traffic. At this moment, and probably forever, this means ipsec(4) traffic. The way isakmpd goes about its work is by maintaining an internal config- uration as well as a policy database which describes what kinds of SAs to negotiate, and by listening for different events that trigger these nego- tiations. The events that control isakmpd consist of negotiation initia- tions from a remote party, user input via a FIFO or by signals, upcalls from the kernel via a PF_KEY socket, and lastly by scheduled events trig- gered by timers running out. Most uses of isakmpd will be to implement so called "virtual private net- works" or VPNs for short. The vpn(8) manual page describes how to set up isakmpd for a simple VPN. For other uses, some more knowledge of IKE as a protocol is required. One source of information are the RFCs mentioned below. The options are as follows: -4 | -6 These options control what address family (AF_INET and/or AF_IN- ET6) isakmpd will use. The default is to use both IPv4 and IPv6. -c config-file If given, the -c option specifies an alternate configuration file instead of /etc/isakmpd/isakmpd.conf. As this file may contain sensitive information, it must be readable only by the user run- ning the daemon. isakmpd will reread the configuration file when sent a SIGHUP signal. -d The -d option is used to make the daemon run in the foreground, logging to stderr. -D class=level Debugging class. It's possible to specify this argument many times. It takes a parameter of the form class=level, where both class and level are numbers. class denotes a debugging class, and level the level you want that debugging class to limit debug printouts at (i.e., all debug printouts above the level specified will not output anything). If class is set to `A', then all de- bugging classes are set to the specified level. Valid values for class are as follows: 0 Misc 1 Transport 2 Message 3 Crypto 4 Timer 5 Sysdep 6 SA 7 Exchange 8 Negotiation 9 Policy A All Currently used values for level are 0 to 99. -f fifo The -f option specifies the FIFO (a.k.a. named pipe) where the daemon listens for user requests. If the path given is a dash (`-'), isakmpd will listen to stdin instead. -i pid-file By default the PID of the daemon process will be written to /var/run/isakmpd.pid. This path can be overridden by specifying another one as the argument to the -i option. -n When the -n option is given, the kernel will not take part in the negotiations. This is a non-destructive mode, so to speak, in that it won't alter any SAs in the IPsec stack. -p listen-port The -p option specifies the listen port the daemon will bind to. -P local-port On the other hand, the port specified to capital -P will be what the daemon binds its local end to when acting as initiator. -L Enable IKE packet capture. When this option is given, isakmpd will capture to file an unencrypted copy of the negotiation pack- ets it is sending and receiveing. This file can later be read by tcpdump(8) and other utilities using pcap(3). -l packetlog-file As option -L above, but capture to a specified file. -r seed If given, a deterministic random number sequence will be used in- ternally. This is useful for setting up regression tests. -R report-file When you signal isakmpd a SIGUSR1, it will report its internal state to a report file, normally /var/run/isakmpd.report, but this can be changed by feeding the file name as an argument to the -R flag. Setting up an IKE public key infrastructure (a.k.a. PKI) In order to use public key based authentication, there has to be an in- frastructure managing the key signing. Either there is an already exist- ing PKI isakmpd should take part in, or there will be a need to set one up. In the former case, what is needed to be done varies depending on the actual Certificate Authority used, and is therefore not covered here, other than mentioning that openssl(1) needs to be used to create a cer- tificate signing request that the CA understands. The latter case, how- ever, is described here: 1. Create your own CA as root. # openssl genrsa -out /etc/ssl/private/ca.key 1024 # openssl req -new -key /etc/ssl/private/ca.key \ -out /etc/ssl/private/ca.csr You are then asked to enter information that will be incorporated into your certificate request. What you are about to enter is what is called a Distinguished Name (DN). There are quite a few fields but you can leave some blank. For some fields there will be a de- fault value; if you enter `.', the field will be left blank. # openssl x509 -req -days 365 -in /etc/ssl/private/ca.csr \ -signkey /etc/ssl/private/ca.key \ -extfile /etc/ssl/x509v3.cnf -extensions x509v3_CA \ -out /etc/ssl/ca.crt 2. Create keys and certificates for your IKE peers. This step as well as the next one, needs to be done for every peer. Furthermore the last step will need to be done once for each ID you want the peer to have. The 10.0.0.1 below symbolizes that ID, in this case an IPv4 ID, and should be changed for each invocation. You will be asked for a DN for each run. Encoding the ID in the common name is recom- mended, as it should be unique. # openssl genrsa -out /etc/isakmpd/private/local.key 1024 # openssl req -new -key /etc/isakmpd/private/local.key \ -out /etc/isakmpd/private/10.0.0.1.csr Now take these certificate signing requests to your CA and process them like below. You have to add a subjectAltName extension field to the certificate in order to make it usable by isakmpd. There are two possible ways to add the extensions to the certificate. Either you have to run certpatch(8) or you have to make use of an OpenSSL configuration file, for example /etc/ssl/x509v3.cnf. Replace 10.0.0.1 with the IP-address which isakmpd will use as the certifi- cate identity. To use certpatch(8), do the following # openssl x509 -req -days 365 -in 10.0.0.1.csr -CA /etc/ssl/ca.crt \ -CAkey /etc/ssl/private/ca.key -CAcreateserial \ -out 10.0.0.1.crt # certpatch -i 10.0.0.1 -k /etc/ssl/private/ca.key \ 10.0.0.1.crt 10.0.0.1.crt Otherwise do # setenv CERTIP 10.0.0.1 # openssl x509 -req -days 365 -in 10.0.0.1.csr -CA /etc/ssl/ca.crt \ -CAkey /etc/ssl/private/ca.key -CAcreateserial \ -extfile /etc/ssl/x509v3.cnf -extensions x509v3_IPAddr \ -out 10.0.0.1.crt For a FQDN certificate, do # setenv CERTFQDN somehost.somedomain # openssl x509 -req -days 365 -in somehost.somedomain.csr \ -CA /etc/ssl/ca.crt -CAkey /etc/ssl/private/ca.key \ -CAcreateserial \ -extfile /etc/ssl/x509v3.cnf -extensions x509v3_FQDN \ -out somehost.somedomain.crt or with certpatch(8) # certpatch -t fqdn -i somehost.somedomain \ -k /etc/ssl/private/ca.key \ somehost.somedomain.crt somehost.somedomain.crt (This assumes the previous steps were used to create a request for somehost.somedomain instead of 10.0.0.1) Put the certificate (the file ending in .crt) in /etc/isakmpd/certs/ on your local system. Also carry over the CA cert /etc/ssl/ca.crt and put it in /etc/isakmpd/ca/. To revoke certificates, create a Certificate Revocation List (CRL) file and install it in the /etc/isakmpd/crls/ directory. See openssl(1) and the `crl' subcommand for more info. It is also possible to store trusted public keys to make them directly usable by isakmpd. The keys should be saved in PEM format (see openssl(1)) and named and stored after this easy formula: For IPv4 identities /etc/isakmpd/pubkeys/ipv4/A.B.C.D For IPv6 identities /etc/isakmpd/pubkeys/ipv6/abcd:abcd::ab:bc For FQDN identities /etc/isakmpd/pubkeys/fqdn/foo.bar.org For UFQDN identities /etc/isakmpd/pubkeys/ufqdn/user@foo.bar.org The FIFO user interface When isakmpd starts, it creates a FIFO (named pipe) where it listens for user requests. All commands start with a single letter, followed by com- mand-specific options. Available commands are: c <name> Start the named connection, if stopped or inactive. C set [section]:tag=value C set [section]:tag=value force C rm [section]:tag C rms [section] Update the running isakmpd configuration atomically. `set' sets a configuration value consisting of a section, tag and value triplet. `set' will fail if the configuration already contains a section with the named tag; use the `force' option to change this behaviour. `rm' removes a tag in a section. `rms' removes an entire section. d <cookies> <msgid> Delete the specified SA from the system. Specify <msgid> as "-" to match a Phase 1 SA. D <class> <level> D A <level> D T Set debug class <class> to level <level>. If <class> is speci- fied as "A", the level applies to all debug classes. "D T" tog- gles all debug classes to level zero. Another "D T" command will toggle them back to the earlier levels. p on[=<path>] p off Enable or disable cleartext IKE packet capture. When enabling, optionally specify which file isakmpd should capture the packets to. Q Cleanly shutdown the daemon, as when sent a SIGTERM signal. r Report isakmpd internal state to a file. See -R option. Same as when sent a SIGUSR1 signal. R Reinitialize isakmpd, as when sent a SIGHUP signal. S Report information on all known SAs to the /var/run/isakmpd_sa file. t <name> Tear down the named connection, if active. T Tear down all active connections. FILES /etc/isakmpd/ca/ The directory where CA certificates can be found. /etc/isakmpd/certs/ The directory where IKE certificates can be found, both the local certificate(s) and those of the peers, if a choice to have them kept permanently has been made. /etc/isakmpd/crls/ The directory where CRLs can be found. /etc/isakmpd/isakmpd.conf The configuration file. As this file can contain sensitive information it must not be readable by anyone but the user running isakmpd. /etc/isakmpd/isakmpd.policy The keynote policy configuration file. The same mode requirements as isakmpd.conf. /etc/isakmpd/private/local.key A local private key for certificate based authentication. There has to be a certifi- cate for this key in the certificate direc- tory mentioned above. The same mode re- quirements as isakmpd.conf. /etc/isakmpd/pubkeys/ Directory in which trusted public keys can be kept. The keys must be named in the fashion described above. /var/run/isakmpd.pid The PID of the current daemon. /var/run/isakmpd.fifo The FIFO used to manually control isakmpd. /var/run/isakmpd.pcap The default IKE packet capture file. /var/run/isakmpd.report The report file written when SIGUSR1 is re- ceived. /var/run/isakmpd_sa The report file written when the `S' command is issued in the command FIFO. /usr/share/ipsec/isakmpd/ A directory containing some sample isakmpd and keynote policy configuration files. SEE ALSO openssl(1), getnameinfo(3), pcap(3), ipsec(4), isakmpd.conf(5), isakmpd.policy(5), ssl(8), tcpdump(8), vpn(8) HISTORY The ISAKMP/Oakley key management protocol is described in the RFCs RFC 2407, RFC 2408 and RFC 2409. This implementation was done 1998 by Niklas Hallqvist and Niels Provos, sponsored by Ericsson Radio Systems. CAVEATS When storing a trusted public key for an IPv6 identity, the most efficient form of address representation, i.e "::" instead of ":0:0:0:", must be used or the matching will fail. isakmpd uses the output from getnameinfo(3) for the address-to-name translation. BUGS The -P flag does not do what we document, rather it does nothing. OpenBSD 3.4 August 07, 2002 5