Pluto internals: Difference between revisions
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* lib/ | * lib/libswan/secrets.c | ||
Revision as of 06:21, 9 October 2017
The pluto daemon handles the IKE protocol layer and instructs the kernel about IPsec SA's.
- pluto implements the IKEv1 and IKEv2 protocols
- pluto communicates via the whack interface
- pluto performs IKE packet processing
The pluto main binary can call pluto helpers:
- sub-process adns helper (the libisc lwdnsq helper has been obsoleted)
- sub-process crypto helper
- thread authentication helper
- thread X.509 CRL helper (being obsoleted)
- sub-process addconn helper
pluto files
The filenames should be fairly self-explanatory. The important files are:
- include/ietf_constants.h contains the names and values of the IKE and IPsec protocol IANA registries.
- programs/pluto/ikev1* contains IKEv1 specific processing functions
- programs/pluto/ikev2* contains IKEv2 specific processing functions
- include/pluto_constants.h contains the names and values of our own options
- programs/pluto/packet.c contains the structs representing the IKE/IPsec registries
- lib/libswan/constants.c contains the enum_names of IETF and pluto constants
- programs/pluto/connections.h contains struct connection
- programs/pluto/state.h contains struct state
pluto concepts
Pluto is event driven. The design tries to avoid threads. Some of the scheduling currently done using select() will be replaced with a libevent structure.
Pluto has a concept of connections and states. A connection is what you define in a configuration file. There are a few types of connections, differentiated by c->kind:
- CK_PERMANENT: static single connection which can be up or down
- CK_TEMPLATE: a connection that can have multiple instantiations. The template itself is never "up"
- CK_INSTANCE: An instance of a template
The reason for instantiating a template is that some parts of the connection are variable and the template connection should not be modified. For example:
- right=%any Roadwarriors who have different right= IP addresses
- rightprotoport=17/%any These connections can ask for any 1 port (usually depends on the NAT)
- rightsubnet=vnet:%priv These connections allow various subnets from the RFC1918 (or virtual_network=) space to be used.
- narrowing=yes (IKEv2) These connections can be dynamically narrowed on demand.
States represent the state of an connection or instance of of a connection. There can be multiple states per connection in various different states. States are described and defined in the state machines (in ikev1.c and ikev2.c) which list a state processing function that will be called. These functions return an stf_status code.
Pluto uses marshalling to convert the packet data to internal structs and back. The functions used for this are in_struct() and out_struct() which use the definitions from packet.h and packet.c
core structs
- struct state - describes the state properties
- struct connection - describes the connection properties
- struct end - describes "this" and "that" end, which are filled in from "left" and "right" after orienting the connection
- struct hostpair - describes the pair of IP addresses of gateways to look through in connection/state matching.
pluto contains an ipsec.conf and an ipsec.secrets parser
- lib/libipsecconf/
- lib/libswan/secrets.c
pluto consists several parts
- programs/pluto (main program)
- libswan (internal low level functions)
- libwhack (the whack interface)
- libcrypto (glue code to NSS functions)
- libipsecconf (configuration file parser)
- libbsdpfkey (BSD/OSX glue code)