Title: Full WireGuard setup with OpenBSD
Author: Solène
Date: 09 October 2021
Tags: openbsd wireguard vpn
Description: 

# Introduction

We want all our network traffic to go through a WireGuard VPN tunnel
automatically, both WireGuard client and server are running OpenBSD,
how to do that?  While I thought it was simple at first, it soon became
clear that the "default" part of the problem was not easy to solve,
fortunately there are solutions.

This guide should work from OpenBSD 6.9.
pf.conf man page about NAT
WireGuard interface man page
ifconfig man page, WireGuard section
# Setup

For this setup I assume we have a server running OpenBSD with a public
IP address (1.2.3.4 for the example) and an OpenBSD computer with
Internet connectivity.

Because you want to use the WireGuard tunnel as the default route, you
can't define a default route through WireGuard as this, that would
prevent our interface to reach the WireGuard endpoint to make the
tunnel working.  We could play with the routing table by deleting the
default route found on the interface, create a new route to reach the
WireGuard server and then create a default route through WireGuard, but
the whole process is fragile and there is no right place to trigger a
script doing this.

Instead, you can assign the network interface used to access the
Internet to the rdomain 1, configure WireGuard to reach its remote peer
through rdomain 1 and create a default route through WireGuard on the
rdomain 0.  Quick explanation about rdomain: they are different routing
tables, default is rdomain 0 but you can create new routing tables and
run commands using a specific routing table with "route -T 1 exec ping
perso.pw" to make a ping through rdomain 1.


```network diagram in text

    +-------------+
    |   server    | wg0: 192.168.10.1
    |             |---------------+
    +-------------+               |
           | public IP            |
           | 1.2.3.4              |
           |                      |
           |                      |
    /\/\/\/\/\/\/\                |WireGuard
    |  internet  |                |VPN
    \/\/\/\/\/\/\/                |
           |                      |
           |                      |
           |rdomain 1             |
    +-------------+               |
    |   computer  |---------------+
    +-------------+ wg0: 192.168.10.2
                    rdomain 0 (default)

```

# Configuration

The configuration process will be done in this order:

1. create the WireGuard interface on your computer to get its public
key
2. create the WireGuard interface on the server to get its public key
3. configure PF to enable NAT and enable IP forwarding
4. reconfigure computer's WireGuard tunnel using server's public key
5. time to test the tunnel
6. make it default route

Our WireGuard server will accept connections on address 1.2.3.4 at the
UDP port 4433, we will use the network 192.168.10.0/24 for the VPN, the
server IP on WireGuard will be 192.168.10.1 and this will be our future
default route.

## On your computer

We will make a simple script to generate the configuration file, you
can easily understand what is being done.  Replace "1.2.3.4 4433" by
your IP and UDP port to match your setup.

```shell script
PRIVKEY=$(openssl rand -base64 32)
cat < /etc/hostname.wg0
wgkey $PRIVKEY
wgpeer wgendpoint 1.2.3.4 4433 wgaip 0.0.0.0/0
inet 192.168.10.2/24
up
EOF

# start interface so you can get the public key
# we should have an error here, this is normal
sh /etc/netstart wg0

PUBKEY=$(ifconfig wg0 | grep 'wgpubkey' | cut -d ' ' -f 2)
echo "You need $PUBKEY to setup the remote peer"
```

## On the server

### WireGuard

Like we did on the computer, we will use a script to configure the
server.  It's important to get the PUBKEY displayed in the previous
step.

```shell script
PUBKEY=PASTE_PUBKEY_HERE
PRIVKEY=$(openssl rand -base64 32)

cat < /etc/hostname.wg0
wgkey $PRIVKEY
wgpeer $PUBKEY wgaip 192.168.10.0/24
inet 192.168.10.1/24
wgport 4433
up
EOF

# start interface so you can get the public key
# we should have an error here, this is normal
sh /etc/netstart wg0

PUBKEY=$(ifconfig wg0 | grep 'wgpubkey' | cut -d ' ' -f 2)
echo "You need $PUBKEY to setup the local peer"
```

Keep the public key for next step.

## Firewall

You want to enable NAT so you can reach the Internet through the server
using WireGuard, edit /etc/pf.conf to add the following line (after the
skip lines):

```pf.conf configuration line
pass out quick on egress from wg0:network to any nat-to (egress)
```

Reload with "pfctl -f /etc/pf.conf".

NOTE: if you block all incoming traffic by default, you need to open
UDP port 4433.  You will also need to either skip firewall on wg0 or
configure PF to open what you need.  This is beyond the scope of this
guide.

## IP forwarding

We need to enable IP forwarding because we will pass packets from an
interface to another, this is done with "sysctl
net.inet.ip.forwarding=1" as root.  To make it persistent across
reboot, add "net.inet.ip.forwarding=1" to /etc/sysctl.conf (you may
have to create the file).

From now, the server should be ready.

## On your computer

Edit /etc/hostname.wg0 and paste the public key between "wgpeer" and
"wgaip", the public key is wgpeer's parameter.  Then run "sh
/etc/netstart wg0" to reconfigure your wg0 tunnel.

After this step, you should be able to ping 192.168.10.1 from your
computer (and 192.168.10.2 from the server).  If not, please double
check the WireGuard and PF configurations on both side.

## Default route

This simple setup for the default route will truly make WireGuard your
default route.  You have to understand services listening on all
interfaces will only attach to WireGuard interface because it's the
only address in rdomain 0, if needed you can use a specific routing
table for a service as explained in rc.d man page.

Replace the line "up" with the following:

```hostname.if configuration
wgrtable 1
up
!route add -net default 192.168.10.1
```

Your configuration file should look like this:

```hostname.if configuration example
wgkey YOUR_KEY
wgpeer YOUR_PUBKEY wgendpoint REMOTE_IP 4433 wgaip 0.0.0.0/0
inet 192.168.10.2/24
wgrtable 1
up
!route add -net default 192.168.10.1
```

Now, add "rdomain 1" to your network interface used to reach the
Internet, in my setup it's /etc/hostname.iwn0 and it looks like this.

```hostname.if example
join network wpakey superprivatekey
join home wpakey notsuperprivatekey
rdomain 1
up
autoconf
```

Now, you can restart network with "sh /etc/netstart" and all the
network should pass through the WireGuard tunnel.

# Handling DNS

Because you may use a nameserver in /etc/resolv.conf that was provided
by your local network, it's not reachable anymore.  I highly recommend
to use unwind (in every case anyway) to have a local resolver, or
modify /etc/resolv.conf to use a public resolver.

unwind can be enabled with "rcctl enable unwind" and "rcctl start
unwind", from OpenBSD 7.0 you should have resolvd running by default
that will rewrite /etc/resolv.conf if unwind is started, otherwise you
need to write "nameserver 127.0.0.1" in /etc/resolv.conf

# Bypass VPN

If you need for some reason to run a program and not route its traffic
through the VPN, it is possible.  The following command will run
firefox using the routing table 1, however depending on the content of
your /etc/resolv.conf you may have issues resolving names (because
127.0.0.1 is only reachable on rdomain 0!).  So a simple fix would be
to use a public resolver if you really need to do so often.

```command
route -T 1 exec firefox
```
route man page about exec command
# WireGuard behind a NAT

If you are behind a NAT you may need to use the KeepAlive option on
your WireGuard tunnel to keep it working.  Just add "wgpka 20" to
enable a KeepAlive packet every 20 seconds in /etc/hostname.wg0 like
this:

```hostname.if example
wgpeer YOUR_PUBKEY wgendpoint REMOTE_IP 4433 wgaip 0.0.0.0/0 wgpka 20
[....]
```
ifconfig man page explaining wgpka parameter

# Conclusion

WireGuard is easy to deploy but making it a default network interface
adds some complexity.  This is usually simpler for protocols like
OpenVPN because the OpenVPN daemon can automatically do the magic to
rewrite the routes (and it doesn't do it very well) and won't prevent
non-VPN access until the VPN is connected.