Out of the box, FreeS/WAN 2.x will attempt to encrypt all your IP traffic. It will try to establish IPsec connections for:
FreeS/WAN 2.x uses hidden, automatically enabled ipsec.conf connections to do this.
This behaviour is part of our campaign to get Opportunistic Encryption (OE) widespread in the Linux world, so that any two Linux boxes can encrypt to one another without prearrangement. There's one catch, however: you must set up a few DNS records to distribute RSA public keys and (if applicable) IPsec gateway information.
If you start FreeS/WAN before you have set up these DNS records, your connectivity will be slow, and messages relating to the built in connections will clutter your logs. If you are unable to set up DNS for OE, you will wish to disable the hidden connections.
We want to make it easy for you to declare security policy as it applies to IPsec connections.
Policy Groups make it simple to say:
FreeS/WAN then implements these policies, creating OE connections if and when needed. You can use Policy Groups along with connections you explicitly define in ipsec.conf.
For more information, see our Policy Group HOWTO.
Free/SWAN 2.x ships with the automatically enabled, hidden connection packetdefault. This configures a FreeS/WAN box as an OE gateway for any hosts located behind it. As mentioned above, you must configure some DNS records for OE to work.
As the name implies, this connection functions as a default. If you have more specific connections, such as policy groups which configure your FreeS/WAN box as an OE gateway for a local subnet, these will apply before packetdefault. You can view packetdefault 's specifics in man ipsec.conf .
FreeS/WAN often doesn't work with reverse path filtering. At start time, FreeS/WAN now turns rp_filter off, and logs a warning.
FreeS/WAN does not turn it back on again. You can do this yourself with a command like:
echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/eth0/rp_filter
For eth0, substitute the interface which FreeS/WAN was affecting.
The FreeS/WAN team promised config-file compatibility throughout the 1.x series. That means a 1.5 config file can be directly imported into a fresh 1.99 install with no problems.
With FreeS/WAN 2.x, we've given ourselves permission to make the config file easier to use. The cost: some FreeS/WAN 1.x configurations will not work properly. Many of the new features are, however, backward compatible.
... so long as you paste this line, with no preceding whitespace, at the top of your config file:
version 2
If the new defaults bite you, use this ipsec.conf fragment to simulate the old default values.
We've obsoleted various directives which almost no one was using:
dump plutobackgroundload no_eroute_pass lifetime rekeystart rekeytries
For most of these, there is some other way to elicit the desired behaviour. See this post.
We've made some settings, which almost everyone was using, defaults. For example:
interfaces=%defaultroute plutoload=%search plutostart=%search uniqueids=yes
We've also changed some default values to help with OE and Policy Groups:
authby=rsasig ## not secret!!! leftrsasigkey=%dnsondemand ## looks up missing keys in DNS when needed. rightrsasigkey=%dnsondemand
Of course, you can still override any defaults by explictly declaring something else in your connection.
A post with a list of many ipsec.conf changes.
Current ipsec.conf manual.
Note: When upgrading from 1-series to 2-series RPMs, rpm -U will not work.
You must instead erase the 1.x RPMs, then install the 2.x set:
rpm -e freeswan
rpm -e freeswan-module
On erasing, your old ipsec.conf should be moved to ipsec.conf.rpmsave. Keep this. You will probably want to copy your existing connections to the end of your new 2.x file.
Install the RPMs suitable for your kernel version, such as:
rpm -ivh freeswan-module-2.02_2.4.20_19.9-0.i386.rpm
rpm -ivh freeswan-userland-2.02_2.4.20_19.9-0.i386.rpm
Or, to splice the files:
cat /etc/ipsec.conf /etc/ipsec.conf.rpmsave > /etc/ipsec.conf.tmp mv /etc/ipsec.conf.tmp /etc/ipsec.conf
Then, remove the redundant conn %default and config setup sections. Unless you have done any special configuring here, you'll likely want to remove the 1.x versions. Remove conn OEself, if present.