Skip to content

iflowfor8hours/vedetta

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

fl8s fork of vedetta (alpha)

OpenBSD Router Boilerplate

Vedetta Logo

About

an opinionated, best practice, vanilla OpenBSD base configuration for bare-metal, or cloud routers

What would an OpenBSD router configured using examples from the OpenBSD FAQ and Manual pages look like?

fl8s Changelog

Add some find and replace scripts to automate and customize vedetta for your environment/hostname/whatever. A more structured (config managed) approach would likely have taken the same amount of time, but where's the fun in that?

Added test scripts and some infrastructure to run inside Vagrant with some other hosts attached, to observe your changes. I'm hoping to figure out how to use it as an intermedieary between your box and the rest of the network.

Features

Share what you've got, keep what you need:

Sysadmin:

Hardware

OpenBSD likes small form factor, low-power, lots of ECC memory, AES-NI support, open source boot, and the fastest supported network cards. This configuration has been tested on APU2.

Install

Encryption is the easiest method for media sanitization and disposal. OpenBSD supports full disk encryption using a keydisk (e.g. a USB stick).

Partitions are important for security, stability, and integrity. A minimum partition layout example for router with (upgrade itself) binary base, and no packages (comfortable fit on flash memory cards/drives):

Filesystem Mount Size
a / 512M
b /swap 1024M
d /var 512M
e /var/log 128M
f /tmp 1024M
g /usr 1024M
h /usr/local 64M
i /home 16M
Total 4304M

SSL

It's best practice to create CAs on a single purpose secure machine, with no network access.

Specify which certificate authorities (CAs) are allowed to issue certificates for your domain, by adding DNS Certification Authority Authorization (CAA) Resource Record (RR) to var/nsd/zones/master/vedetta.lan.zone

Revoke certificates as often as possible.

SSH

SSH fingerprints verified by DNS is done by adding Secure Shell (Key) Fingerprint (SSHFP) Resource Record (RR) to var/nsd/zones/master/vedetta.lan.zone: ssh-keygen -r vedetta.lan.
Verify: dig -t SSHFP vedetta.lan
Usage: ssh -o "VerifyHostKeyDNS ask" child.foil.lan

Manage keys with ssh-agent.

Detect tampered keyfiles or man in the middle attacks with ssh-keyscan.

Control access to local users with principals.

Firewall

Guests can use the DNS nameserver to access the ad-free web, while authenticated users gain desired permissions. It's best to authenticate an IP after connecting to VPN. There are three users in this one person scenario: one for wheel, one for sftp, and one for authpf.

Performance

Consider using mount_mfs in order to reduce wear and tear, as well as to speed up the system. Remember to set the sticky bit on mfs /tmp, see etc/fstab.

Caveats

  • VPN with IKEv2 or IKEv1, not both. While there are many tecnologies for VPN, only IKEv2 and IKEv1 are standard (considerable effort was put into testing and securing)
  • relayd does not support CRL, SNI, nor OCSP (yet)
  • httpd without custom error pages (can be patched)
  • 11n is max WiFi mode, is this enough?

Support

Via issues and #vedetta:matrix.org

Contribute

Want to help out? ⭐ Fork this repo

About

OpenBSD Router Boilerplate

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Shell 98.1%
  • HTML 1.7%
  • R 0.2%