I just finished setting up my Wireguard VPN “server”. In this post I want to spread some information, I could’ve found useful but which didn’t come up in most of the Wireguard tutorials.

If you aren’t interested in VPN or self hosting, this post is not for you. If you haven’t gotten around yet to try it out, I can only recommend doing it. Feels great being able to “phone home” from all over the world.

Alright, tricks and tips:

tcpdump

Wireguard will definitely not work first try. As Wireguard is a silent protocol, you won’t see too many error messages. Dropped packets are how you know that something’s off. tcpdump is a great command line tool, that, despite it’s name, can also dump the precious UDP Wireguard packets. The tool will make you see how far your wireguard connection gets before the packets are dropped. Great for running on “server” and on clients.

ping

A classic tool. Helped me debugging some issues with DNS and Maximum Transfer Unit (MTU) size.

AllowedIPs

In a classic server-client situation, your clients should have AllowedIPs set to 0.0.0.0/0, ::/0 in their repecive configuration file. I found this pretty counterintuitive, but that seemingly is how it works.

IP Forwarding in sysctl

This one was by far the nastiest one to find out. Mainly because I’m not a linux or Debian expert. You need to tell sysctl to forward IP traffic, which ususally tutorials around the web will tell you to do like this: sysctl -w net.ipv4.ip_forward=1; sysctl -w net.ipv6.conf.all.forwarding=1. What I foolishly assumed, that this write operation was permanent. It’s not. You need to edit /etc/sysctl.conf for making it permanent. Else, after a reboot you won’t be able to connect to the internet. This took me a good amount of reconfigurations from scratch before I eventually found out these vars will reset on boot.

Maybe this helps some of you fellow Lemmings. If I stumble across further tips and tricks, I might update this post in the future. For now though, I think I’m done with my setup (philosophical question: are you ever done with setting up things?).

  • just_another_person@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    22
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    edit-2
    6 months ago

    Good lawd, these are the basic tenants of networking. I’m so sad people are unfamiliar. Let me throw a few more tricks your way:

    • telnet or netcat (nc on CLI): check if a port is listening and available
    • wget or curl: find out if an HTTP server is listening (or whatever, really)
    • netstat: kind of phased out on modern *nix distros, but useful for checking connections from hosts (you can still install it, but has been superceded by…)
    • ‘ss’ : same deal, different name
    • ‘ip route’: check your routing tables to make sure traffic goes where you think it should

    Check the docs, or search around for your particular usage, but these are all the barebones tools you need to figure out networking issues quickly.