On Tue, Feb 14, 2017 at 1:46 PM, Guus Sliepen <guus at tinc-vpn.org> wrote:> On Tue, Feb 14, 2017 at 11:21:34AM -0500, James Hartig wrote: > >> Those 2 boxes are in the same subnet and have addresses of 10.240.0.4 and >> 10.240.0.5, respectively, on their eth0 interface. Port 655 on tcp and udp >> is open to the world. The tinc_test_2 box has a ConnectTo of tinc_test_1. >> When tinc_test_2 is started, it prints out: >> UDP address of tinc_test_1 set to 104.154.59.151 port 655 >> UDP address of tinc_test_1 set to 10.240.0.4 port 655 >> UDP address of tinc_test_1 set to 104.154.59.151 port 655 >> UDP address of tinc_test_1 set to 10.240.0.4 port 655 >> repeatedly for a minute or so before finally settling on 10.240.0.4. >> >> Is there a reason it's flip flopping? Is that expected? Am I doing >> something wrong? > > No, you are not doing anything wrong. Although I've not seen this kind > of flip-flopping behavior myself, it is possible this behaviour occurs, > although it should only happen in the first 10 seconds or so. When > LocalDiscovery is enabled, tinc tries to send probe packets to both the > address it learned from its TCP connections and to the local network. > When receiving a valid packet, it notes the source address of that > packet. If it is different from the source address of the previous valid > UDP packet, a log message is printed about it.When you say "and to the local network" what IP does it try to send to on the local network? The subnet address? Is this configurable with the LocalDiscoveryAddress? For instance if I have a host: /etc/tinc/test/tinc_test_5 Subnet = 10.80.0.6/32 Address = 104.154.59.152 Will it try to contact 10.80.0.6 over the local network, or if I specify a LocalDiscoveryAddress on tinc_test_5 of 10.240.0.6, will it use 10.240.0.6 instead? Apologizes for my confusion. Since I'm setting Subnet to be the internal IP, is there any difference in that versus LocalDiscoveryAddress?>> Additionally, we have multiple Google Compute regions with their own >> subnets and external DCs with their own subnets and we'd like to install >> tinc on all servers but keep inner-Google traffic to the internal IPs and >> not over external IPs since it's an order of magnitude cheaper. My first >> thinking is a hub and spoke model. We have 2 boxes in each subnet that have >> port 655 open to the world, and all the other servers have 655 open to >> internal ips only. With LocalDiscovery (as well as IndirectData = yes on >> "non-public" servers) this works work pretty well, as far as I can tell. >> But it wouldn't solve the inner-Google traffic between subnets since Google >> Subnet0 would talk over public to Google Subnet1. What's the best way of >> doing something like this? I was thinking maybe 2 instances of tinc on the >> "public" boxes, but Google servers only have a single interface, eth0, that >> has the internal IP, so I couldn't listen on the external and internal IPs >> separately. > > You can use BindToAddress to have tinc bind to a specific IP address. So > you can have two tinc daemons, one binding to the internal IP address, > and another to the external IP address, even if they are residing on the > same network interface. Would that help?I can't use BindToAddress as far as I know because there isn't an interface on the box with the external IP. The servers only have 1 interface, eth0, that has a single IP, eg 10.240.0.4, and Google forwards packets to their public IP, eg 104.154.59.151, to the internal IP, eg 10.240.0.4, so the server itself doesn't actually know its public IP. I think if my understanding above of the local network stuff is correct, and since it's unicast in 1.1, then it should work fine. Google Subnet0 and Google Subnet1 can talk to each other's private IPs, so theoretically discovery should work and it should use their private IPs.> -- > Met vriendelijke groet / with kind regards, > Guus Sliepen <guus at tinc-vpn.org> > > _______________________________________________ > tinc mailing list > tinc at tinc-vpn.org > https://www.tinc-vpn.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tinc
Etienne Dechamps
2017-Feb-14 20:36 UTC
LocalDiscovery flip flopping and network design tips
On 14 February 2017 at 18:59, James Hartig <james at levenlabs.com> wrote:> When you say "and to the local network" what IP does it try to send to > on the local network? The subnet address?No. The Subnet option deals with routing *inside* the VPN, not the underlying "real" network. In tinc 1.1, the address that local discovery probes are sent to is the local address of the recipient node, as determined by the socket local address of its metaconnection. That's the address shown next to "local" in the dump edges output. In your case the local address is advertised correctly - there is no problem there.
Etienne Dechamps
2017-Feb-14 20:43 UTC
LocalDiscovery flip flopping and network design tips
Hang on a second. I've just re-read your original message and I believe you are confused about what the "Subnet" option does. Again, it deals with addresses *inside* the VPN. In the configuration you posted you seem to be using 10.240.0.4 and 10.240.0.5 as internal addresses, but then your other statements (and especially your dump edges output) seem to indicate that 10.240.0.4 and 10.240.0.5 are *also* the physical addresses of the machines on their physical network interfaces. That's not going to work: as soon as tinc manages to establish the VPN, 10.240.0.4 and 10.240.0.5 become routable on *both* the virtual and physical interfaces, resulting in conflicts, and it all goes downhill from there. That would completely explain the weird phenomena you're reporting. If you make sure to use different IP subnets for VPN addresses and physical addresses, your problems should go away. On 14 February 2017 at 20:36, Etienne Dechamps <etienne at edechamps.fr> wrote:> On 14 February 2017 at 18:59, James Hartig <james at levenlabs.com> wrote: >> When you say "and to the local network" what IP does it try to send to >> on the local network? The subnet address? > > No. The Subnet option deals with routing *inside* the VPN, not the > underlying "real" network. > > In tinc 1.1, the address that local discovery probes are sent to is > the local address of the recipient node, as determined by the socket > local address of its metaconnection. That's the address shown next to > "local" in the dump edges output. In your case the local address is > advertised correctly - there is no problem there.
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