tinc.conf
— tinc
daemon configuration
The files in the /etc/tinc/ directory
contain runtime and security information for the tinc daemon.
It is perfectly ok for you to run more than one tinc daemon.
However, in its default form, you will soon notice that you can't use two
different configuration files without the -c
option.
We have thought of another way of dealing with this: network
names. This means that you call tinc.conf
with the
-n
option, which will assign a name to this
daemon.
The effect of this is that the daemon will set its configuration
root to
/etc/tinc/NETNAME/,
where NETNAME is your argument to the
-n
option. You'll notice that messages appear in
syslog as coming from
tincd.
NETNAME.
However, it is not strictly necessary that you call tinc with the
-n
option. In this case, the network name would just
be empty, and it will be used as such. tinc
now
looks for files in /etc/tinc/, instead of
/etc/tinc/NETNAME/;
the configuration file should be
/etc/tinc/tinc.conf, and the host configuration
files are now expected to be in
/etc/tinc/hosts/.
But it is highly recommended that you use this feature of
tinc
, because it will be so much clearer whom your
daemon talks to. Hence, we will assume that you use it.
Each tinc daemon must have a name that is unique in the network
which it will be part of. The name will be used by other tinc daemons for
identification. The name has to be declared in the
/etc/tinc/NETNAME/tinc.conf
file.
To make things easy, choose something that will give unique and
easy to remember names to your tinc daemon(s). You could try things like
hostnames, owner surnames or location names.
You should use tincd -K
to generate
public/private keypairs. It will generate two keys. The private key should
be stored in a separate file
/etc/tinc/NETNAME/rsa_key.priv
-- where NETNAME stands for the network (see
NETWORKS) above. The public key should be
stored in the host configuration file
/etc/tinc/NETNAME/hosts/NAME
-- where NAME stands for the name of the local tinc
daemon (see NAMES).
The server configuration of the daemon is done in the file
/etc/tinc/NETNAME/tinc.conf.
This file consists of comments (lines started with a
#
) or assignments in the form of:
Variable =
Value.
The variable names are case insensitive, and any spaces, tabs,
newlines and carriage returns are ignored. Note: it is not required that you
put in the =
sign, but doing so improves
readability. If you leave it out, remember to replace it with at least one
space character.
The server configuration is complemented with host specific
configuration (see the next section). Although all configuration options for
the local host listed in this document can also be put in
/etc/tinc/NETNAME/tinc.conf,
it is recommended to put host specific configuration options in the host
configuration file, as this makes it easy to exchange with other nodes.
Here are all valid variables, listed in alphabetical order. The
default value is given between parentheses.
- AddressFamily
=
ipv4
|
ipv6
| any
(any)
- This option affects the address family of listening and outgoing sockets.
If "any" is selected, then depending on the operating system
both IPv4 and IPv6 or just IPv6 listening sockets will be created.
- BindToAddress
=
address
[port] [experimental]
- If your computer has more than one IPv4 or IPv6 address,
tinc
will by default listen on all of them for
incoming connections. Multiple BindToAddress
variables may be specified, in which case listening sockets for each
specified address are made.
If no port is specified, the socket will
be bound to the port specified by the Port option,
or to port 655 if neither is given. To only bind to a specific port but
not to a specific address, use *
for the
address.
This option may not work on all platforms.
- BindToInterface
=
interface
[experimental]
- If your computer has more than one network interface,
tinc
will by default listen on all of them for
incoming connections. It is possible to bind only to a single interface
with this variable.
This option may not work on all platforms. Also, on some
platforms it will not actually bind to an interface, but rather to the
address that the interface has at the moment a socket is created.
- Broadcast
=
no
|
mst
|
direct
(mst) [experimental]
- This option selects the way broadcast packets are sent to other daemons.
NOTE: all nodes in a VPN must use the same Broadcast
mode, otherwise routing loops can form.
- no
- Broadcast packets are never sent to other nodes.
- mst
- Broadcast packets are sent and forwarded via the VPN's Minimum
Spanning Tree. This ensures broadcast packets reach all nodes.
- direct
- Broadcast packets are sent directly to all nodes that can be reached
directly. Broadcast packets received from other nodes are never
forwarded. If the IndirectData option is also set, broadcast packets
will only be sent to nodes which we have a meta connection to.
- ConnectTo
=
name
- Specifies which other tinc daemon to connect to on startup. Multiple
ConnectTo variables may be specified, in which case
outgoing connections to each specified tinc daemon are made. The names
should be known to this tinc daemon (i.e., there should be a host
configuration file for the name on the ConnectTo
line).
If you don't specify a host with
ConnectTo, tinc
won't try
to connect to other daemons at all, and will instead just listen for
incoming connections.
- DecrementTTL
=
yes
|
no
(no)
[experimental]
- When enabled,
tinc
will decrement the Time To Live
field in IPv4 packets, or the Hop Limit field in IPv6 packets, before
forwarding a received packet to the virtual network device or to another
node, and will drop packets that have a TTL value of zero, in which case
it will send an ICMP Time Exceeded packet back.
Do not use this option if you use switch mode and want to use
IPv6.
- Device
=
device (/dev/tap0,
/dev/net/tun or other depending on
platform)
- The virtual network device to use.
tinc
will
automatically detect what kind of device it is. Note that you can only use
one device per daemon. Under Windows, use Interface
instead of Device. The info pages of the tinc
package contain more information about configuring the virtual network
device.
- DeviceType
=
type (platform dependent)
- The type of the virtual network device. Tinc will normally automatically
select the right type of tun/tap interface, and this option should not be
used. However, this option can be used to select one of the special
interface types, if support for them is compiled in.
- dummy
- Use a dummy interface. No packets are ever read or written to a
virtual network device. Useful for testing, or when setting up a node
that only forwards packets for other nodes.
- raw_socket
- Open a raw socket, and bind it to a pre-existing
Interface (eth0 by default). All packets are
read from this interface. Packets received for the local node are
written to the raw socket. However, at least on Linux, the operating
system does not process IP packets destined for the local host.
- multicast
- Open a multicast UDP socket and bind it to the address and port
(separated by spaces) and optionally a TTL value specified using
Device. Packets are read from and written to
this multicast socket. This can be used to connect to UML, QEMU or KVM
instances listening on the same multicast address. Do NOT connect
multiple
tinc
daemons to the same multicast
address, this will very likely cause routing loops. Also note that
this can cause decrypted VPN packets to be sent out on a real network
if misconfigured.
- uml (not compiled in by default)
- Create a UNIX socket with the filename specified by
Device, or
/run/NETNAME.umlsocket
if not specified.
tinc
will wait for a User
Mode Linux instance to connect to this socket.
- vde (not compiled in by default)
- Uses the libvdeplug library to connect to a Virtual Distributed
Ethernet switch, using the UNIX socket specified by
Device, or /run/vde.ctl
if not specified.
Also, in case tinc does not seem to correctly interpret packets received
from the virtual network device, it can be used to change the way packets
are interpreted:
- tun (BSD and Linux)
- Set type to tun. Depending on the platform, this can either be with or
without an address family header (see below).
- tunnohead (BSD)
- Set type to tun without an address family header. Tinc will expect
packets read from the virtual network device to start with an IP
header. On some platforms IPv6 packets cannot be read from or written
to the device in this mode.
- tunifhead (BSD)
- Set type to tun with an address family header. Tinc will expect
packets read from the virtual network device to start with a four byte
header containing the address family, followed by an IP header. This
mode should support both IPv4 and IPv6 packets.
- utun (OS X)
- Set type to utun. This is only supported on OS X version 10.6.8 and
higher, but doesn't require the tuntaposx module. This mode should
support both IPv4 and IPv6 packets.
- tap (BSD and Linux)
- Set type to tap. Tinc will expect packets read from the virtual
network device to start with an Ethernet header.
- DirectOnly
=
yes
|
no
(no) [experimental]
- When this option is enabled, packets that cannot be sent directly to the
destination node, but which would have to be forwarded by an intermediate
node, are dropped instead. When combined with the IndirectData option,
packets for nodes for which we do not have a meta connection with are also
dropped.
- Forwarding
=
off
|
internal
|
kernel
(internal) [experimental]
- This option selects the way indirect packets are forwarded.
- off
- Incoming packets that are not meant for the local node, but which
should be forwarded to another node, are dropped.
- internal
- Incoming packets that are meant for another node are forwarded by tinc
internally.
This is the default mode, and unless you really know you
need another forwarding mode, don't change it.
- kernel
- Incoming packets are always sent to the TUN/TAP device, even if the
packets are not for the local node. This is less efficient, but allows
the kernel to apply its routing and firewall rules on them, and can
also help debugging.
- GraphDumpFile
=
filename [experimental]
- If this option is present,
tinc
will dump the
current network graph to the file filename every
minute, unless there were no changes to the graph. The file is in a format
that can be read by graphviz tools. If filename
starts with a pipe symbol |, then the rest of the filename is interpreted
as a shell command that is executed, the graph is then sent to stdin.
- Hostnames
=
yes
|
no
(no)
- This option selects whether IP addresses (both real and on the VPN) should
be resolved. Since DNS lookups are blocking, it might affect tinc's
efficiency, even stopping the daemon for a few seconds every time it does
a lookup if your DNS server is not responding.
This does not affect resolving hostnames to IP addresses from
the host configuration files, but whether hostnames should be resolved
while logging.
- IffOneQueue
=
yes
|
no
(no) [experimental]
- (Linux only) Set IFF_ONE_QUEUE flag on TUN/TAP devices.
- Interface
=
interface
- Defines the name of the interface corresponding to the virtual network
device. Depending on the operating system and the type of device this may
or may not actually set the name of the interface. Under Windows, this
variable is used to select which network interface will be used. If you
specified a Device, this variable is almost always
already correctly set.
- KeyExpire
=
seconds (3600)
- This option controls the period the encryption keys used to encrypt the
data are valid. It is common practice to change keys at regular intervals
to make it even harder for crackers, even though it is thought to be
nearly impossible to crack a single key.
- LocalDiscovery
= yes
|
no
(no) [experimental]
- When enabled,
tinc
will try to detect peers that
are on the same local network. This will allow direct communication using
LAN addresses, even if both peers are behind a NAT and they only ConnectTo
a third node outside the NAT, which normally would prevent the peers from
learning each other's LAN address.
Currently, local discovery is implemented by sending broadcast
packets to the LAN during path MTU discovery. This feature may not work
in all possible situations.
- MACExpire
=
seconds (600)
- This option controls the amount of time MAC addresses are kept before they
are removed. This only has effect when Mode is set
to "switch".
- MaxTimeout
=
seconds (900)
- This is the maximum delay before trying to reconnect to other tinc
daemons.
- Mode
= router
|
switch
| hub
(router)
- This option selects the way packets are routed to other daemons.
- router
- In this mode Subnet variables in the host
configuration files will be used to form a routing table. Only unicast
packets of routable protocols (IPv4 and IPv6) are supported in this
mode.
This is the default mode, and unless you really know you
need another mode, don't change it.
- switch
- In this mode the MAC addresses of the packets on the VPN will be used
to dynamically create a routing table just like an Ethernet switch
does. Unicast, multicast and broadcast packets of every protocol that
runs over Ethernet are supported in this mode at the cost of frequent
broadcast ARP requests and routing table updates.
This mode is primarily useful if you want to bridge
Ethernet segments.
- hub
- This mode is almost the same as the switch mode, but instead every
packet will be broadcast to the other daemons while no routing table
is managed.
- Name
=
name [required]
- This is the name which identifies this tinc daemon. It must be unique for
the virtual private network this daemon will connect to. The Name may only
consist of alphanumeric and underscore characters. If
Name starts with a
$
, then
the contents of the environment variable that follows will be used. In
that case, invalid characters will be converted to underscores. If
Name is $HOST
, but no such
environment variable exist, the hostname will be read using the
gethostname() system call.
- PingInterval
=
seconds (60)
- The number of seconds of inactivity that
tinc
will
wait before sending a probe to the other end.
- PingTimeout
=
seconds (5)
- The number of seconds to wait for a response to pings or to allow meta
connections to block. If the other end doesn't respond within this time,
the connection is terminated, and the others will be notified of
this.
- PriorityInheritance
= yes
|
no
(no) [experimental]
- When this option is enabled the value of the TOS field of tunneled IPv4
packets will be inherited by the UDP packets that are sent out.
- PrivateKey
=
key [obsolete]
- The private RSA key of this tinc daemon. It will allow this tinc daemon to
authenticate itself to other daemons.
- PrivateKeyFile
=
filename
(/etc/tinc/NETNAME/rsa_key.priv)
- The file in which the private RSA key of this tinc daemon resides.
- ProcessPriority
= low
|
normal
|
high
- When this option is used the priority of the tincd process will be
adjusted. Increasing the priority may help to reduce latency and packet
loss on the VPN.
- Proxy
= socks4
|
socks5
|
http
|
exec
... [experimental]
- Use a proxy when making outgoing connections. The following proxy types
are currently supported:
- socks4 address port
[username]
- Connects to the proxy using the SOCKS version 4 protocol. Optionally,
a username can be supplied which will be passed
on to the proxy server. Only IPv4 connections can be proxied using
SOCKS 4.
- socks5 address port
[username password]
- Connect to the proxy using the SOCKS version 5 protocol. If a
username and password are
given, basic username/password authentication will be used, otherwise
no authentication will be used.
- http address port
- Connects to the proxy and sends a HTTP CONNECT request.
- exec command
- Executes the given command which should set up
the outgoing connection. The environment variables
NAME
, NODE
,
REMOTEADDRES
and
REMOTEPORT
are available.
- ReplayWindow
=
bytes (16)
- This is the size of the replay tracking window for each remote node, in
bytes. The window is a bitfield which tracks 1 packet per bit, so for
example the default setting of 16 will track up to 128 packets in the
window. In high bandwidth scenarios, setting this to a higher value can
reduce packet loss from the interaction of replay tracking with underlying
real packet loss and/or reordering. Setting this to zero will disable
replay tracking completely and pass all traffic, but leaves tinc
vulnerable to replay-based attacks on your traffic.
- StrictSubnets
=
yes
|
no
(no) [experimental]
- When this option is enabled tinc will only use Subnet statements which are
present in the host config files in the local
/etc/tinc/NETNAME/hosts/
directory. Subnets learned via connections to other nodes and which are
not present in the local host config files are ignored.
- TunnelServer
=
yes
|
no
(no) [experimental]
- When this option is enabled tinc will no longer forward information
between other tinc daemons, and will only allow connections with nodes for
which host config files are present in the local
/etc/tinc/NETNAME/hosts/
directory. Setting this options also implicitly sets StrictSubnets.
- UDPRcvBuf
=
bytes (OS default)
- Sets the socket receive buffer size for the UDP socket, in bytes. If
unset, the default buffer size will be used by the operating system.
- UDPSndBuf
=
bytes (OS default)
- Sets the socket send buffer size for the UDP socket, in bytes. If unset,
the default buffer size will be used by the operating system.
The host configuration files contain all information needed to
establish a connection to those hosts. A host configuration file is also
required for the local tinc daemon, it will use it to read in it's listen
port, public key and subnets.
The idea is that these files are portable. You can safely mail
your own host configuration file to someone else. That other person can then
copy it to his own hosts directory, and now his tinc daemon will be able to
connect to your tinc daemon. Since host configuration files only contain
public keys, no secrets are revealed by sending out this information.
- Address
=
address [port]
[recommended]
- The IP address or hostname of this tinc daemon on the real network. This
will only be used when trying to make an outgoing connection to this tinc
daemon. Optionally, a port can be specified to use for this address.
Multiple Address variables can be specified, in
which case each address will be tried until a working connection has been
established.
- Cipher
=
cipher (aes-256-cbc)
- The symmetric cipher algorithm used to encrypt UDP packets. Any cipher
supported by LibreSSL or OpenSSL is recognised. Furthermore, specifying
"none" will turn off packet encryption. It is best to use only
those ciphers which support CBC mode.
- ClampMSS
= yes
| no
(yes)
- This option specifies whether tinc should clamp the maximum segment size
(MSS) of TCP packets to the path MTU. This helps in situations where ICMP
Fragmentation Needed or Packet too Big messages are dropped by
firewalls.
- Compression
=
level (0)
- This option sets the level of compression used for UDP packets. Possible
values are 0 (off), 1 (fast zlib) and any integer up to 9 (best zlib), 10
(fast lzo) and 11 (best lzo).
- Digest
=
digest (sha256)
- The digest algorithm used to authenticate UDP packets. Any digest
supported by LibreSSL or OpenSSL is recognised. Furthermore, specifying
"none" will turn off packet authentication.
- IndirectData
=
yes
|
no
(no)
- When set to yes, only nodes which already have a meta connection to you
will try to establish direct communication with you. It is best to leave
this option out or set it to no.
- MACLength
=
length (4)
- The length of the message authentication code used to authenticate UDP
packets. Can be anything from "0" up to the length of the digest
produced by the digest algorithm.
- PMTU
=
mtu (1514)
- This option controls the initial path MTU to this node.
- PMTUDiscovery
=
yes
|
no
(yes)
- When this option is enabled, tinc will try to discover the path MTU to
this node. After the path MTU has been discovered, it will be enforced on
the VPN.
- Port
=
port (655)
- The port number on which this tinc daemon is listening for incoming
connections, which is used if no port number is specified in an
Address statement.
- PublicKey
=
key [obsolete]
- The public RSA key of this tinc daemon. It will be used to
cryptographically verify it's identity and to set up a secure
connection.
- PublicKeyFile
=
filename [obsolete]
- The file in which the public RSA key of this tinc daemon resides.
From version 1.0pre4 on tinc
will
store the public key directly into the host configuration file in PEM
format, the above two options then are not necessary. Either the PEM
format is used, or exactly one of the above two options must be
specified in each host configuration file, if you want to be able to
establish a connection with that host.
- Subnet
=
address[/
prefixlength[#
weight]]
- The subnet which this tinc daemon will serve.
tinc
tries to look up which other daemon it should send a packet to by
searching the appropriate subnet. If the packet matches a subnet, it will
be sent to the daemon who has this subnet in his host configuration file.
Multiple Subnet variables can be specified.
Subnets can either be single MAC, IPv4 or IPv6 addresses, in
which case a subnet consisting of only that single address is assumed,
or they can be a IPv4 or IPv6 network address with a prefixlength. For
example, IPv4 subnets must be in a form like 192.168.1.0/24, where
192.168.1.0 is the network address and 24 is the number of bits set in
the netmask. Note that subnets like 192.168.1.1/24 are invalid! Read a
networking HOWTO/FAQ/guide if you don't understand this. IPv6 subnets
are notated like fec0:0:0:1::/64. MAC addresses are notated like
0:1a:2b:3c:4d:5e.
A Subnet can be given a weight to indicate its priority over
identical Subnets owned by different nodes. The default weight is 10.
Lower values indicate higher priority. Packets will be sent to the node
with the highest priority, unless that node is not reachable, in which
case the node with the next highest priority will be tried, and so
on.
- TCPOnly
= yes
|
no
(no [obsolete])
- If this variable is set to yes, then the packets are tunnelled over the
TCP connection instead of a UDP connection. This is especially useful for
those who want to run a tinc daemon from behind a masquerading firewall,
or if UDP packet routing is disabled somehow. Setting this options also
implicitly sets IndirectData.
Since version 1.0.10, tinc will automatically detect whether
communication via UDP is possible or not.
Apart from reading the server and host configuration files, tinc
can also run scripts at certain moments. Below is a list of filenames of
scripts and a description of when they are run. A script is only run if it
exists and if it is executable.
Scripts are run synchronously; this means that tinc will
temporarily stop processing packets until the called script finishes
executing. This guarantees that scripts will execute in the exact same order
as the events that trigger them. If you need to run commands asynchronously,
you have to ensure yourself that they are being run in the background.
Under Windows (not Cygwin), the scripts must have the extension
.bat.
- /etc/tinc/NETNAME/tinc-up
- This is the most important script. If it is present it will be executed
right after the tinc daemon has been started and has connected to the
virtual network device. It should be used to set up the corresponding
network interface, but can also be used to start other things.
Under Windows you can use the Network Connections control
panel instead of creating this script.
- /etc/tinc/NETNAME/tinc-down
- This script is started right before the tinc daemon quits.
- /etc/tinc/NETNAME/hosts/HOST-up
- This script is started when the tinc daemon with name
HOST becomes reachable.
- /etc/tinc/NETNAME/hosts/HOST-down
- This script is started when the tinc daemon with name
HOST becomes unreachable.
- /etc/tinc/NETNAME/host-up
- This script is started when any host becomes reachable.
- /etc/tinc/NETNAME/host-down
- This script is started when any host becomes unreachable.
- /etc/tinc/NETNAME/subnet-up
- This script is started when a Subnet becomes reachable. The Subnet and the
node it belongs to are passed in environment variables.
- /etc/tinc/NETNAME/subnet-down
- This script is started when a Subnet becomes unreachable.
The scripts are started without command line arguments, but can
make use of certain environment variables. Under UNIX like operating systems
the names of environment variables must be preceded by a
$
in scripts. Under Windows, in
.bat files, they have to be put between
%
signs.
NETNAME
- If a netname was specified, this environment variable contains it.
NAME
- Contains the name of this tinc daemon.
DEVICE
- Contains the name of the virtual network device that tinc uses.
INTERFACE
- Contains the name of the virtual network interface that tinc uses. This
should be used for commands like ifconfig.
NODE
- When a host becomes (un)reachable, this is set to its name. If a subnet
becomes (un)reachable, this is set to the owner of that subnet.
REMOTEADDRESS
- When a host becomes (un)reachable, this is set to its real address.
REMOTEPORT
- When a host becomes (un)reachable, this is set to the port number it uses
for communication with other tinc daemons.
SUBNET
- When a subnet becomes (un)reachable, this is set to the subnet.
WEIGHT
- When a subnet becomes (un)reachable, this is set to the subnet
weight.
Do not forget that under UNIX operating systems, you have to make
the scripts executable, using the command chmod
a+x
script.
The most important files are:
- /etc/tinc/
- The top directory for configuration files.
- /etc/tinc/NETNAME/tinc.conf
- The default name of the server configuration file for net
NETNAME.
- /etc/tinc/NETNAME/conf.d/
- Optional directory from which any *.conf file will be loaded
- /etc/tinc/NETNAME/hosts/
- Host configuration files are kept in this directory.
- /etc/tinc/NETNAME/tinc-up
- If an executable file with this name exists, it will be executed right
after the tinc daemon has connected to the virtual network device. It can
be used to set up the corresponding network interface.
- /etc/tinc/NETNAME/tinc-down
- If an executable file with this name exists, it will be executed right
before the tinc daemon is going to close its connection to the virtual
network device.
tincd(8),
https://www.tinc-vpn.org/,
http://www.tldp.org/LDP/nag2/.
The full documentation for tinc
is
maintained as a Texinfo manual. If the info and tinc programs are properly
installed at your site, the command info tinc
should
give you access to the complete manual.
tinc
comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY.
This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it under certain
conditions; see the file COPYING for details.