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ansible-wireguard-openwisp

Build Status

Gitter

Ansible role that installs WireGuard and management scripts for OpenWISP. Once installed and configured correctly with OpenWISP, WireGuard peers are managed automatically by OpenWISP without the need of manual intervention.

This role can also configure scripts to allow OpenWISP manage VXLAN over WireGuard tunnels.

Tested on Debian and Ubuntu.

NOTE: it is highly suggested to use this procedure on clean virtual machines or linux containers.

Minimum ansible version supported: 2.10.

Install & Usage Instructions

For the sake of simplicity, the easiest thing is to install this role on your local machine via ansible-galaxy:

ansible-galaxy install openwisp.wireguard_openwisp

Refer to the example playbook in "Full Example Playbook with SSL certificate" section of this documentation to quickly get started with this role.

NOTE: This role will not configure forwarding packets nor add static or dynamic routes on your server.

Since the exact way in which packets can be routed can vary depending on different factors and needs which can differ greatly from organization to organization, it's left out to the user to configure it according to their needs. We may add a default routing/forwarding configuration in the future once we have more usage data, if you're interested in this, please let us know.

Full Example Playbook with SSL certificate

By default the playbook creates a self-signed (untrusted) SSL certificate for the VPN endpoint. If you keep the untrusted certificate, you will also need to disable SSL verification on OpenWISP, although we advice against using this kind of setup in a production environment. You can install your own trusted certificate by following steps in this section.

The first thing you have to do is to setup a valid domain for your wireguard VPN, this means your inventory file (hosts) should look like the following:

[openwisp2_wireguard]
wireguard.yourdomain.com

You must be able to add a DNS record for wireguard.yourdomain.com, you cannot use an ip address in place of wireguard.yourdomain.com.

Once your domain is set up and the DNS record is propagated, proceed by installing the ansible role geerlingguy.certbot

ansible-galaxy install geerlingguy.certbot

Then proceed to create your playbook.yml so that it will look similar to the following example:

- hosts: openwisp2_wireguard
  become: "{{ become | default('yes') }}"
  roles:
    - geerlingguy.certbot
    - openwisp.wireguard_openwisp
  vars:
    openwisp2_wireguard_controller_url: "https://openwisp.yourdomain.com"
    openwisp2_wireguard_vpn_uuid: "paste-vpn-uuid-here"
    openwisp2_wireguard_vpn_key: "paste_vpn-key-here"
    openwisp2_wireguard_flask_key: "paste-endpoint-auth-token"

    # SSL certificates
    openwisp2_wireguard_ssl_cert: "/etc/letsencrypt/live/{{ ansible_fqdn }}/fullchain.pem"
    openwisp2_wireguard_ssl_key: "/etc/letsencrypt/live/{{ ansible_fqdn }}/privkey.pem"

    # certbot configuration
    certbot_auto_renew_user: "privileged-user-to-renew-certs"
    certbot_auto_renew_minute: "20"
    certbot_auto_renew_hour: "5"
    certbot_create_if_missing: true
    certbot_create_standalone_stop_services: []
    certbot_certs:
      - email: "paste-your-email"
        domains:
          - wireguard.yourdomain.com

Read the documentation of geerlingguy.certbot to learn more about configuration of certbot role.

To learn about all ansible variables provided by openwisp.wireguard_openwisp, read the "Role Variables" section of this documentation.

Setting up multiple WireGuard Interfaces

Using this role you can set up multiple WireGuard interfaces on the same machine that are managed by OpenWISP independently. You will have to ensure that the following role variables are unique for each playbook:

  • openwisp2_wireguard_path
  • openwisp2_wireguard_flask_port

Below is an example playbook containing two plays for setting up multiple WireGuard interfaces.

- name: Setup up first WireGuard interface
  hosts:
    - wireguard
  become: "{{ become | default('yes') }}"
  roles:
    - openwisp.wireguard_openwisp
  vars:
    openwisp2_wireguard_controller_url: "https://openwisp.yourdomain.com"
    openwisp2_wireguard_path: "/opt/wireguard-openwisp/wireguard-1"
    openwisp2_wireguard_vpn_uuid: "paste-vpn1-uuid-here"
    openwisp2_wireguard_vpn_key: "paste-vpn1-key-here"
    openwisp2_wireguard_flask_key: "paste-vpn1-endpoint-auth-token"
    openwisp2_wireguard_flask_port: 8081

- name: Setup second WireGuard interface
  hosts:
    - wireguard
  become: "{{ become | default('yes') }}"
  roles:
    - openwisp.wireguard_openwisp
  vars:
    openwisp2_wireguard_controller_url: "https://openwisp.yourdomain.com"
    openwisp2_wireguard_path: "/opt/wireguard-openwisp/wireguard-2"
    openwisp2_wireguard_vpn_uuid: "paste-vpn-2-uuid-here"
    openwisp2_wireguard_vpn_key: "paste-vpn-2-key-here"
    openwisp2_wireguard_flask_key: "paste-vpn-2-endpoint-auth-token"
    openwisp2_wireguard_flask_port: 8082

Gotchas

  • While creating VPN server objects in OpenWISP, ensure that interface name and port are unique for each VPN. Otherwise, the update scripts will not work properly due to conflicts.

Role Variables

This role has many variables values that can be changed to best suit your needs.

Below are listed all the variables you can customize (you may also want to take a look at the default values of these variables).

- hosts: openwisp2_wireguard
  become: "{{ become | default('yes') }}"
  roles:
    - openwisp.wireguard_openwisp
  vars:
    # URL of OpenWISP instance, you can omit this (delete it) if wireguard
    # is being installed on the same host on which OpenWISP is running.
    # If you're using two separate hosts (one for OpenWISP and one for Wireguard),
    # which is a good idea, you will need to specify the URL of your
    # OpenWISP instance (running OpenWISP Controller >= 1.0.0) here
    openwisp2_wireguard_controller_url: "https://openwisp.yourdomain.com"
    # Directory where to install upgrader scripts
    openwisp2_wireguard_path: "/opt/wireguard-openwisp"
    # Allows to download VPN configuration by using "insecure" SSL connections.
    # It is recommended to be left as false.
    openwisp2_wireguard_curl_insecure: false
    # UUID of the VPN generated after creating VPN server object in OpenWISP
    openwisp2_wireguard_vpn_uuid: "paste-vpn-uuid-here"
    # Key of the VPN generated after creating VPN server object in OpenWISP
    openwisp2_wireguard_vpn_key: "paste_vpn-key-here"
    # Flask endpoint to be used for triggering updates
    openwisp2_wireguard_flask_endpoint: "/trigger-update"
    # Update point authorization key
    openwisp2_wireguard_flask_key: "paste-endpoint-auth-token"
    # Port where Flask endpoint is run
    openwisp2_wireguard_flask_port: 8081
    # Host where Flask endpoint is run
    openwisp2_wireguard_flask_host: 0.0.0.0
    # Set the log level for flask logging.
    # Allowed values are "INFO", "WARNING" and "ERROR"
    openwisp2_wireguard_logging_level: "WARNING"
    # Command used to run uwsgi from supervisor
    openwisp2_wireguard_uwsgi_command: "{{ openwisp2_wireguard_path }}/env/bin/uwsgi uwsgi.ini"

    # specify path to a valid SSL certificate and key
    # (a self-signed SSL cert will be generated if omitted)
    openwisp2_wireguard_ssl_cert: "/opt/wireguard-openwisp/ssl/server.crt"
    openwisp2_wireguard_ssl_key: "/opt/wireguard-openwisp/ssl/server.key"
    # customize the self-signed SSL certificate info if needed
    openwisp2_wireguard_ssl_country: "US"
    openwisp2_wireguard_ssl_state: "California"
    openwisp2_wireguard_ssl_locality: "San Francisco"
    openwisp2_wireguard_ssl_organization: "IT dep."

    # by default python3 is used, if may need to set this to python2.7 for older systems
    openwisp2_wireguard_python: python2.7
    # virtualenv command for your remote distribution, usually set automcatically
    openwisp2_wireguard_virtualenv_command: "virtualenv"

    # Sets the ipv4.method of VXLAN connection, defaults to "link-local"
    openwisp2_wireguard_vxlan_ipv4_method: disabled
    openwisp2_wireguard_vxlan_ipv6_method: disabled

Troubleshooting

Here's how to trigger the configuration check manually if needed:

sudo -u openwisp /opt/wireguard-openwisp/update_wireguard.sh check_config

Logs of the application which is responsible to update the wireguard configuration downloaded from the OpenWISP server can be found at /opt/wireguard-openwisp/vpn_updater.log.

Contributing

Please read the OpenWISP contributing guidelines.

How to run tests

If you want to contribute to ansible-wireguard-openwisp you should run tests in your development environment to ensure your changes are not breaking anything.

To do that, proceed with the following steps:

Step 1: Clone ansible-wireguard-openwisp

Clone repository by:

git clone https://github.com/<your_fork>/ansible-wireguard-openwisp.git

Step 2: Install docker

If you haven't installed docker yet, you need to install it (example for linux debian/ubuntu systems):

sudo apt-get install docker.io

Step 3: Install molecule and dependencies

pip install molecule[docker,ansible] yamllint ansible-lint docker

Step 4: Download docker images

docker pull geerlingguy/docker-ubuntu2404-ansible:latest
docker pull geerlingguy/docker-ubuntu2204-ansible:latest
docker pull geerlingguy/docker-ubuntu2004-ansible:latest
docker pull geerlingguy/docker-debian12-ansible:latest
docker pull geerlingguy/docker-debian11-ansible:latest

Step 5: Run molecule test

molecule test -s local

If you don't get any error message it means that the tests ran successfully without errors.

ProTip: Use molecule test -s local --destroy=never to speed up subsequent test runs.

License

See LICENSE.

Support

See OpenWISP Support Channels.