Project

General

Profile

Setting Up a VPN into Amazon's Public Cloud VPC » History » Version 13

« Previous - Version 13/29 (diff) - Next » - Current version
Adam Feuer, 18.05.2012 00:35


Setting Up a VPN into Amazon's Public Cloud VPC

Amazon Web Services' VPC (Virtual Private Cloud) is somewhat inconvenient for developers. The standard way to access it is through an IPsec "hardware VPN". In practice this means having to deal not just with IPsec, but also with BGP. This document simplifies things by using strongSwan to access the VPC instances. Neither hardware nor BGP are required.

Scenario

We assume a single VPC subnet with Internet access (i.e., located behind an Internet Gateway). We have a small number of clients accessing the VPC remotely, all running on Linux machines. I believe the solution can be tweaked to allow for larger deployments. For example, you will want to replace preshared key authentication by certificate-based authentication to support a large number of clients.

Solution Overview

We create a new, dedicated instance serving as a VPN gateway for the whole VPC. The solution uses tunnel-mode IPsec with IKEv2 and a virtual IP pool. For simplicity, we use preshared keys rather than certificates. strongSwan is deployed on both client and gateway.

General Warnings

  • Debugging IPsec is hard. Debugging networking on public cloud virtual machines is hard. Please follow these instructions carefully.
  • Amazon's cloud is constantly changing, mostly for the better. This document has been validated with the current feature set, as of today (May 2012). It may not be valid tomorrow.

Solution Steps

  1. Create a new VPC instance (the minimal instance type in VPC is m1.small). This will become your VPN Gateway. We have used a standard Ubuntu Oneiric image, ami-a562a9cc. Instead of launching a new, dedicated instance, you can reuse an existing instance but that would be much less secure. Note that the VPN Gateway instance can be stopped when not in use, and later restarted.
  2. Disable source/destination check on the VPN Gateway instance.
  3. Assign an Elastic IP for the instance. This will be the gateway's address, but first we will use it to access the gateway and install it.
  4. Install strongSwan on the gateway (and on your client, too). We have used the version available in the repository, 4.5.2. Modify the configuration files per the next section.
  5. Enable IP forwarding on the gateway (you need to do both of the following):
    • For the current session, run echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
    • To ensure this setting persists after a reboot: edit /etc/sysctl.conf and uncomment the line net.ipv4.ip_forward=1.
  6. Define the gateway's security group(s) to allow incoming TCP/22, UDP/500 and UDP/4500.
    • Once the gateway is fully set up, you will be able to disable TCP/22 in the security group and tunnel SSH through IPsec instead of directly.
  7. Define a subnet for the virtual IP pool. It doesn't need to be inside the VPC. In our example the VPC encompasses 10.10.0.0/16, and the virtual IP pool will be drawn from 10.100.0.0/16.
  8. The strongSwan Gateway will assign addresses for IPsec clients from the virtual address pool. But it needs a bit of routing help: First, note the instance ID of the VPN gateway. Then locate the routing table associated with the subnet of protected instances (this may or may not be the main routing table), and add a routing rule that routes all traffic destined to the pool's subnet (10.100.0.0/16) through the gateway.
  9. Allow any incoming traffic from the pool's subnet into all VPC instances. For example, by adding an "all traffic" rule to the default security group of your VPC.
  10. For each instance that is in the VPC, disable the instance's Source/Dest. check (from the EC2 Instances page).
  11. Finally, sudo ipsec restart on the gateway and the client, and you are good to go!

Bonus

The only job of Amazon's NAT instance is to run a single iptables rule. You can deploy that rule on your VPN gateway and save the price of a dedicated NAT instance.

  1. Add the "masquerade" NAT rule for the entire VPC: sudo iptables --table nat --append POSTROUTING --source 10.10.0.0/16 -j MASQUERADE
  2. Add the same line into /etc/rc.local so that it will survive a reboot.
  3. Change the EC2 routing table so that the VPN gateway (rather than the NAT instance) becomes the default route of your private subnet. Alternatively, update the /etc/network/interfaces file on your non-accessible VPC instances to use the VPN gateway as their default route:
    # static routes
    up route del -net 0.0.0.0/0 gw 192.168.254.1 dev eth0
    up route add -net 0.0.0.0/0 gw 192.168.254.4 dev eth0 
    

Configuration Files

/etc/ipsec.conf on the Client

# ipsec.conf - strongSwan IPsec configuration file

# basic configuration

config setup
    # nat_traversal=yes
    charonstart=yes
    plutostart=no
    # charondebug="ike 2, knl 2, cfg 2, mgr 2, chd 2, net 2" 

# Connections into AWS VPC
conn %default
    ikelifetime=60m
    keylife=20m
    rekeymargin=3m
    keyingtries=1
    keyexchange=ikev2
    authby=secret

conn us-east-1-vpc
    left=%any
    leftsourceip=%config
    leftid=<my-email-address>
    leftfirewall=yes
    right=<gateway's elastic IP>
    rightsubnet=10.10.0.0/16
    rightid=@us-east-gw.example.com
    auto=start

# Add connections here.

# include /var/lib/strongswan/ipsec.conf.inc

/etc/ipsec.secrets on the Client

us-east-gw.example.com : PSK "aa82c7a776e2175114213acc02dda9951a6bc25deb433e6d5d6ef7058626c589" 

/etc/ipsec.conf on the Gateway

# ipsec.conf - strongSwan IPsec configuration file

# basic configuration

config setup
    # nat_traversal=yes
    charonstart=yes
    plutostart=no
    # charondebug="ike 2, knl 2, cfg 2, mgr 3, chd 2, net 2" 

# /etc/ipsec.conf - strongSwan IPsec configuration file

conn %default
    ikelifetime=60m
    keylife=20m
    rekeymargin=3m
    keyingtries=1
    keyexchange=ikev2
    authby=secret

conn client
    # The leftid parameter is not a real DNS name
    leftid=us-east-gw.example.com
    # The "left" parameter is the gateway's private IP 
    left=10.10.0.10
    # We are protecting the entire VPC, not just this subnet
    leftsubnet=10.10.0.0/16
    leftfirewall=yes
    right=%any
    # The virtual IP pool is outside the VPC!
    rightsourceip=10.100.255.0/28
    auto=add

# Add connections here.

# include /var/lib/strongswan/ipsec.conf.inc

/etc/ipsec.secrets on the Gateway

<my-email-address> : PSK "aa82c7a776e2175114213acc02dda9951a6bc25deb433e6d5d6ef7058626c589"