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- .SH LOGGER CONFIGURATION
- Options in
- .BR strongswan.conf (5)
- provide a much more flexible way to configure loggers for the IKE daemon charon
- than using the
- .B charondebug
- option in
- .BR ipsec.conf (5).
- .PP
- .BR Note :
- If any loggers are specified in strongswan.conf,
- .B charondebug
- does not have any effect.
- .PP
- There are currently two types of loggers:
- .TP
- .B File loggers
- Log directly to a file and are defined by specifying an arbitrarily named
- subsection in the
- .B charon.filelog
- section. The full path to the file is configured in the \fIpath\fR setting of
- that subsection, however, if it only contains characters permitted in section
- names, the setting may also be omitted and the path specified as name of the
- subsection. To log to the console the two special filenames
- .BR stdout " and " stderr
- may be used.
- .TP
- .B Syslog loggers
- Log into a syslog facility and are defined by specifying the facility to log to
- as the name of a subsection in the
- .B charon.syslog
- section. The following facilities are currently supported:
- .BR daemon " and " auth .
- .PP
- Multiple loggers can be defined for each type with different log verbosity for
- the different subsystems of the daemon.
- .SS Subsystems
- .TP
- .B dmn
- Main daemon setup/cleanup/signal handling
- .TP
- .B mgr
- IKE_SA manager, handling synchronization for IKE_SA access
- .TP
- .B ike
- IKE_SA
- .TP
- .B chd
- CHILD_SA
- .TP
- .B job
- Jobs queueing/processing and thread pool management
- .TP
- .B cfg
- Configuration management and plugins
- .TP
- .B knl
- IPsec/Networking kernel interface
- .TP
- .B net
- IKE network communication
- .TP
- .B asn
- Low-level encoding/decoding (ASN.1, X.509 etc.)
- .TP
- .B enc
- Packet encoding/decoding encryption/decryption operations
- .TP
- .B tls
- libtls library messages
- .TP
- .B esp
- libipsec library messages
- .TP
- .B lib
- libstrongwan library messages
- .TP
- .B tnc
- Trusted Network Connect
- .TP
- .B imc
- Integrity Measurement Collector
- .TP
- .B imv
- Integrity Measurement Verifier
- .TP
- .B pts
- Platform Trust Service
- .SS Loglevels
- .TP
- .B -1
- Absolutely silent
- .TP
- .B 0
- Very basic auditing logs, (e.g. SA up/SA down)
- .TP
- .B 1
- Generic control flow with errors, a good default to see what's going on
- .TP
- .B 2
- More detailed debugging control flow
- .TP
- .B 3
- Including RAW data dumps in Hex
- .TP
- .B 4
- Also include sensitive material in dumps, e.g. keys
- .SS Example
- .PP
- .EX
- charon {
- filelog {
- charon {
- path = /var/log/charon.log
- time_format = %b %e %T
- append = no
- default = 1
- }
- stderr {
- ike = 2
- knl = 3
- ike_name = yes
- }
- }
- syslog {
- # enable logging to LOG_DAEMON, use defaults
- daemon {
- }
- # minimalistic IKE auditing logging to LOG_AUTHPRIV
- auth {
- default = -1
- ike = 0
- }
- }
- }
- .EE
- .SH JOB PRIORITY MANAGEMENT
- Some operations in the IKEv2 daemon charon are currently implemented
- synchronously and blocking. Two examples for such operations are communication
- with a RADIUS server via EAP-RADIUS, or fetching CRL/OCSP information during
- certificate chain verification. Under high load conditions, the thread pool may
- run out of available threads, and some more important jobs, such as liveness
- checking, may not get executed in time.
- .PP
- To prevent thread starvation in such situations job priorities were introduced.
- The job processor will reserve some threads for higher priority jobs, these
- threads are not available for lower priority, locking jobs.
- .SS Implementation
- Currently 4 priorities have been defined, and they are used in charon as
- follows:
- .TP
- .B CRITICAL
- Priority for long-running dispatcher jobs.
- .TP
- .B HIGH
- INFORMATIONAL exchanges, as used by liveness checking (DPD).
- .TP
- .B MEDIUM
- Everything not HIGH/LOW, including IKE_SA_INIT processing.
- .TP
- .B LOW
- IKE_AUTH message processing. RADIUS and CRL fetching block here
- .PP
- Although IKE_SA_INIT processing is computationally expensive, it is explicitly
- assigned to the MEDIUM class. This allows charon to do the DH exchange while
- other threads are blocked in IKE_AUTH. To prevent the daemon from accepting more
- IKE_SA_INIT requests than it can handle, use IKE_SA_INIT DROPPING.
- .PP
- The thread pool processes jobs strictly by priority, meaning it will consume all
- higher priority jobs before looking for ones with lower priority. Further, it
- reserves threads for certain priorities. A priority class having reserved
- .I n
- threads will always have
- .I n
- threads available for this class (either currently processing a job, or waiting
- for one).
- .SS Configuration
- To ensure that there are always enough threads available for higher priority
- tasks, threads must be reserved for each priority class.
- .TP
- .BR charon.processor.priority_threads.critical " [0]"
- Threads reserved for CRITICAL priority class jobs
- .TP
- .BR charon.processor.priority_threads.high " [0]"
- Threads reserved for HIGH priority class jobs
- .TP
- .BR charon.processor.priority_threads.medium " [0]"
- Threads reserved for MEDIUM priority class jobs
- .TP
- .BR charon.processor.priority_threads.low " [0]"
- Threads reserved for LOW priority class jobs
- .PP
- Let's consider the following configuration:
- .PP
- .EX
- charon {
- processor {
- priority_threads {
- high = 1
- medium = 4
- }
- }
- }
- .EE
- .PP
- With this configuration, one thread is reserved for HIGH priority tasks. As
- currently only liveness checking and stroke message processing is done with
- high priority, one or two threads should be sufficient.
- .PP
- The MEDIUM class mostly processes non-blocking jobs. Unless your setup is
- experiencing many blocks in locks while accessing shared resources, threads for
- one or two times the number of CPU cores is fine.
- .PP
- It is usually not required to reserve threads for CRITICAL jobs. Jobs in this
- class rarely return and do not release their thread to the pool.
- .PP
- The remaining threads are available for LOW priority jobs. Reserving threads
- does not make sense (until we have an even lower priority).
- .SS Monitoring
- To see what the threads are actually doing, invoke
- .IR "ipsec statusall" .
- Under high load, something like this will show up:
- .PP
- .EX
- worker threads: 2 or 32 idle, 5/1/2/22 working,
- job queue: 0/0/1/149, scheduled: 198
- .EE
- .PP
- From 32 worker threads,
- .IP 2
- are currently idle.
- .IP 5
- are running CRITICAL priority jobs (dispatching from sockets, etc.).
- .IP 1
- is currently handling a HIGH priority job. This is actually the thread currently
- providing this information via stroke.
- .IP 2
- are handling MEDIUM priority jobs, likely IKE_SA_INIT or CREATE_CHILD_SA
- messages.
- .IP 22
- are handling LOW priority jobs, probably waiting for an EAP-RADIUS response
- while processing IKE_AUTH messages.
- .PP
- The job queue load shows how many jobs are queued for each priority, ready for
- execution. The single MEDIUM priority job will get executed immediately, as
- we have two spare threads reserved for MEDIUM class jobs.
- .SH IKE_SA_INIT DROPPING
- If a responder receives more connection requests per seconds than it can handle,
- it does not make sense to accept more IKE_SA_INIT messages. And if they are
- queued but can't get processed in time, an answer might be sent after the
- client has already given up and restarted its connection setup. This
- additionally increases the load on the responder.
- .PP
- To limit the responder load resulting from new connection attempts, the daemon
- can drop IKE_SA_INIT messages just after reception. There are two mechanisms to
- decide if this should happen, configured with the following options:
- .TP
- .BR charon.init_limit_half_open " [0]"
- Limit based on the number of half open IKE_SAs. Half open IKE_SAs are SAs in
- connecting state, but not yet established.
- .TP
- .BR charon.init_limit_job_load " [0]"
- Limit based on the number of jobs currently queued for processing (sum over all
- job priorities).
- .PP
- The second limit includes load from other jobs, such as rekeying. Choosing a
- good value is difficult and depends on the hardware and expected load.
- .PP
- The first limit is simpler to calculate, but includes the load from new
- connections only. If your responder is capable of negotiating 100 tunnels/s, you
- might set this limit to 1000. The daemon will then drop new connection attempts
- if generating a response would require more than 10 seconds. If you are
- allowing for a maximum response time of more than 30 seconds, consider adjusting
- the timeout for connecting IKE_SAs
- .RB ( charon.half_open_timeout ).
- A responder, by default, deletes an IKE_SA if the initiator does not establish
- it within 30 seconds. Under high load, a higher value might be required.
- .SH LOAD TESTS
- To do stability testing and performance optimizations, the IKE daemon charon
- provides the \fIload-tester\fR plugin. This plugin allows one to setup thousands
- of tunnels concurrently against the daemon itself or a remote host.
- .PP
- .B WARNING:
- Never enable the load-testing plugin on productive systems. It provides
- preconfigured credentials and allows an attacker to authenticate as any user.
- .PP
- .SS Configuration details
- For public key authentication, the responder uses the
- .B \(dqCN=srv, OU=load-test, O=strongSwan\(dq
- identity. For the initiator, each connection attempt uses a different identity
- in the form
- .BR "\(dqCN=c1-r1, OU=load-test, O=strongSwan\(dq" ,
- where the first number indicates the client number, the second the
- authentication round (if multiple authentication rounds are used).
- .PP
- For PSK authentication, FQDN identities are used. The server uses
- .BR srv.strongswan.org ,
- the client uses an identity in the form
- .BR c1-r1.strongswan.org .
- .PP
- For EAP authentication, the client uses a NAI in the form
- .BR 100000000010001@strongswan.org .
- .PP
- To configure multiple authentication rounds, concatenate multiple methods using,
- e.g.
- .EX
- initiator_auth = pubkey|psk|eap-md5|eap-aka
- .EE
- .PP
- The responder uses a hardcoded certificate based on a 1024-bit RSA key.
- This certificate additionally serves as CA certificate. A peer uses the same
- private key, but generates client certificates on demand signed by the CA
- certificate. Install the Responder/CA certificate on the remote host to
- authenticate all clients.
- .PP
- To speed up testing, the load tester plugin implements a special Diffie-Hellman
- implementation called \fImodpnull\fR. By setting
- .EX
- proposal = aes128-sha1-modpnull
- .EE
- this wicked fast DH implementation is used. It does not provide any security
- at all, but allows one to run tests without DH calculation overhead.
- .SS Examples
- .PP
- In the simplest case, the daemon initiates IKE_SAs against itself using the
- loopback interface. This will actually establish double the number of IKE_SAs,
- as the daemon is initiator and responder for each IKE_SA at the same time.
- Installation of IPsec SAs would fail, as each SA gets installed twice. To
- simulate the correct behavior, a fake kernel interface can be enabled which does
- not install the IPsec SAs at the kernel level.
- .PP
- A simple loopback configuration might look like this:
- .PP
- .EX
- charon {
- # create new IKE_SAs for each CHILD_SA to simulate
- # different clients
- reuse_ikesa = no
- # turn off denial of service protection
- dos_protection = no
- plugins {
- load-tester {
- # enable the plugin
- enable = yes
- # use 4 threads to initiate connections
- # simultaneously
- initiators = 4
- # each thread initiates 1000 connections
- iterations = 1000
- # delay each initiation in each thread by 20ms
- delay = 20
- # enable the fake kernel interface to
- # avoid SA conflicts
- fake_kernel = yes
- }
- }
- }
- .EE
- .PP
- This will initiate 4000 IKE_SAs within 20 seconds. You may increase the delay
- value if your box can not handle that much load, or decrease it to put more
- load on it. If the daemon starts retransmitting messages your box probably can
- not handle all connection attempts.
- .PP
- The plugin also allows one to test against a remote host. This might help to
- test against a real world configuration. A connection setup to do stress
- testing of a gateway might look like this:
- .PP
- .EX
- charon {
- reuse_ikesa = no
- threads = 32
- plugins {
- load-tester {
- enable = yes
- # 10000 connections, ten in parallel
- initiators = 10
- iterations = 1000
- # use a delay of 100ms, overall time is:
- # iterations * delay = 100s
- delay = 100
- # address of the gateway
- remote = 1.2.3.4
- # IKE-proposal to use
- proposal = aes128-sha1-modp1024
- # use faster PSK authentication instead
- # of 1024bit RSA
- initiator_auth = psk
- responder_auth = psk
- # request a virtual IP using configuration
- # payloads
- request_virtual_ip = yes
- # enable CHILD_SA every 60s
- child_rekey = 60
- }
- }
- }
- .EE
- .SH IKEv2 RETRANSMISSION
- Retransmission timeouts in the IKEv2 daemon charon can be configured globally
- using the three keys listed below:
- .PP
- .RS
- .nf
- .BR charon.retransmit_base " [1.8]"
- .BR charon.retransmit_timeout " [4.0]"
- .BR charon.retransmit_tries " [5]"
- .BR charon.retransmit_jitter " [0]"
- .BR charon.retransmit_limit " [0]"
- .fi
- .RE
- .PP
- The following algorithm is used to calculate the timeout:
- .PP
- .EX
- relative timeout = retransmit_timeout * retransmit_base ^ (n-1)
- .EE
- .PP
- Where
- .I n
- is the current retransmission count. The calculated timeout can't exceed the
- configured retransmit_limit (if any), which is useful if the number of retries
- is high.
- .PP
- If a jitter in percent is configured, the timeout is modified as follows:
- .PP
- .EX
- relative timeout -= random(0, retransmit_jitter * relative timeout)
- .EE
- .PP
- Using the default values, packets are retransmitted in:
- .TS
- l r r
- ---
- lB r r.
- Retransmission Relative Timeout Absolute Timeout
- 1 4s 4s
- 2 7s 11s
- 3 13s 24s
- 4 23s 47s
- 5 42s 89s
- giving up 76s 165s
- .TE
- .
- .SH VARIABLES
- .
- The variables used above are configured as follows:
- .nf
- .na
- ${piddir} /var/run
- ${prefix} /usr/local
- ${random_device} /dev/random
- ${urandom_device} /dev/urandom
- .ad
- .fi
- .
- .SH FILES
- .
- .nf
- .na
- /etc/strongswan.conf configuration file
- /etc/strongswan.d/ directory containing included config snippets
- /etc/strongswan.d/charon/ plugin specific config snippets
- .ad
- .fi
- .
- .SH SEE ALSO
- \fBipsec.conf\fR(5), \fBipsec.secrets\fR(5), \fBipsec\fR(8), \fBcharon-cmd\fR(8)
- .SH HISTORY
- Written for the
- .UR http://www.strongswan.org
- strongSwan project
- .UE
- by Tobias Brunner, Andreas Steffen and Martin Willi.
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