Introduction
Internet Protocol Security (IPsec) is a set of protocols defined by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) to secure packet exchange over unprotected IP/IPv6 networks such as the Internet.
IPsec protocol suite can be divided into the following groups:
- Internet Key Exchange (IKE) protocols. Dynamically generates and distributes cryptographic keys for AH and ESP.
- Authentication Header (AH) RFC 4302
- Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) RFC 4303
Internet Key Exchange Protocol (IKE)
The Internet Key Exchange (IKE) is a protocol that provides authenticated keying material for the Internet Security Association and Key Management Protocol (ISAKMP) framework. There are other key exchange schemes that work with ISAKMP, but IKE is the most widely used one. Together they provide means for authentication of hosts and automatic management of security associations (SA).
Most of the time IKE daemon is doing nothing. There are two possible situations when it is activated:
There is some traffic caught by a policy rule which needs to become encrypted or authenticated, but the policy doesn't have any SAs. The policy notifies IKE daemon about that, and IKE daemon initiates a connection to a remote host. IKE daemon responds to remote connection. In both cases, peers establish a connection and execute 2 phases:
- Phase 1 - The peers agree upon algorithms they will use in the following IKE messages and authenticate. The keying material used to derive keys for all SAs and to protect following ISAKMP exchanges between hosts is generated also. This phase should match the following settings:
- authentication method
- DH group
- encryption algorithm
- exchange mode
- hash algorithm
- NAT-T
- DPD and lifetime (optional)
- Phase 2 - The peers establish one or more SAs that will be used by IPsec to encrypt data. All SAs established by IKE daemon will have lifetime values (either limiting time, after which SA will become invalid, or amount of data that can be encrypted by this SA, or both). This phase should match the following settings:
- IPsec protocol
- mode (tunnel or transport)
- authentication method
- PFS (DH) group
- lifetime
There are two lifetime values - soft and hard. When SA reaches it's soft lifetime treshold, the IKE daemon receives a notice and starts another phase 2 exchange to replace this SA with fresh one. If SA reaches hard lifetime, it is discarded.
Phase 1 is not re-keyed if DPD is disabled when the lifetime expires, only phase 2 is re-keyed. To force phase 1 re-key, enable DPD.
PSK authentication was known to be vulnerable against Offline attacks in "aggressive" mode, however recent discoveries indicate that offline attack is possible also in case of "main" and "ike2" exchange modes. A general recommendation is to avoid using the PSK authentication method.
IKE can optionally provide a Perfect Forward Secrecy (PFS), which is a property of key exchanges, that, in turn, means for IKE that compromising the long term phase 1 key will not allow to easily gain access to all IPsec data that is protected by SAs established through this phase 1. It means an additional keying material is generated for each phase 2.
The generation of keying material is computationally very expensive. Exempli Gratia, the use of the modp8192 group can take several seconds even on a very fast computer. It usually takes place once per phase 1 exchange, which happens only once between any host pair and then is kept for a long time. PFS adds this expensive operation also to each phase 2 exchange.
Diffie-Hellman Groups
Diffie-Hellman (DH) key exchange protocol allows two parties without any initial shared secret to create one securely. The following Modular Exponential (MODP) and Elliptic Curve (EC2N) Diffie-Hellman (also known as "Oakley") Groups are supported:
Diffie-Hellman Group | Name | Reference |
---|---|---|
Group 1 | 768 bit MODP group | RFC 2409 |
Group 2 | 1024 bits MODP group | RFC 2409 |
Group 3 | EC2N group on GP(2^155) | RFC 2409 |
Group 4 | EC2N group on GP(2^185) | RFC 2409 |
Group 5 | 1536 bits MODP group | RFC 3526 |
Group 14 | 2048 bits MODP group | RFC 3526 |
Group 15 | 3072 bits MODP group | RFC 3526 |
Group 16 | 4096 bits MODP group | RFC 3526 |
Group 17 | 6144 bits MODP group | RFC 3526 |
Group 18 | 8192 bits MODP group | RFC 3526 |
Group 19 | 256 bits random ECP group | RFC 5903 |
Group 20 | 384 bits random ECP group | RFC 5903 |
Group 21 | 521 bits random ECP group | RFC 5903 |
More on standards can be found here.
IKE Traffic
To avoid problems with IKE packets hit some SPD rule and require to encrypt it with not yet established SA (that this packet perhaps is trying to establish), locally originated packets with UDP source port 500 are not processed with SPD. The same way packets with UDP destination port 500 that are to be delivered locally are not processed in incoming policy checks.
Setup Procedure
To get IPsec to work with automatic keying using IKE-ISAKMP you will have to configure policy, peer, and proposal (optional) entries.
IPsec is very sensitive to time changes. If both ends of the IPsec tunnel are not synchronizing time equally(for example, different NTP servers not updating time with the same timestamp), tunnels will break and will have to be established again.
EAP Authentication methods
Outer Auth | Inner Auth |
---|---|
EAP-GTC | |
EAP-MD5 | |
EAP-MSCHAPv2 | |
EAP-PEAPv0 | EAP-MSCHAPv2 |
EAP-SIM | |
EAP-TLS | |
EAP-TTLS | PAP |
Authentication Header (AH)
AH is a protocol that provides authentication of either all or part of the contents of a datagram through the addition of a header that is calculated based on the values in the datagram. What parts of the datagram are used for the calculation, and the placement of the header depends on whether tunnel or transport mode is used.
The presence of the AH header allows to verify the integrity of the message but doesn't encrypt it. Thus, AH provides authentication but not privacy. Another protocol (ESP) is considered superior, it provides data privacy and also its own authentication method.
RouterOS supports the following authentication algorithms for AH:
- SHA2 (256, 512)
- SHA1
- MD5
Transport mode
In transport mode, AH header is inserted after the IP header. IP data and header is used to calculate authentication value. IP fields that might change during transit, like TTL and hop count, are set to zero values before authentication.
Tunnel mode
In tunnel mode, the original IP packet is encapsulated within a new IP packet. All of the original IP packets is authenticated.
Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP)
Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) uses shared key encryption to provide data privacy. ESP also supports its own authentication scheme like that used in AH.
ESP packages its fields in a very different way than AH. Instead of having just a header, it divides its fields into three components:
- ESP Header - Comes before the encrypted data and its placement depends on whether ESP is used in transport mode or tunnel mode.
- ESP Trailer - This section is placed after the encrypted data. It contains padding that is used to align the encrypted data.
- ESP Authentication Data - This field contains an Integrity Check Value (ICV), computed in a manner similar to how the AH protocol works, for when ESP's optional authentication feature is used.
Transport mode
In transport mode, the ESP header is inserted after the original IP header. ESP trailer and authentication value are added to the end of the packet. In this mode only IP payload is encrypted and authenticated, the IP header is not secured.
Tunnel mode
In tunnel mode, an original IP packet is encapsulated within a new IP packet thus securing IP payload and IP header.
Encryption algorithms
RouterOS ESP supports various encryption and authentication algorithms.
Authentication:
- MD5
- SHA1
- SHA2 (256-bit, 512-bit)
Encryption:
- AES - 128-bit, 192-bit, and 256-bit key AES-CBC, AES-CTR and AES-GCM algorithms;
- Blowfish - added since v4.5
- Twofish - added since v4.5
- Camellia - 128-bit, 192-bit and 256-bit key Camellia encryption algorithm added since v4.5
- DES - 56-bit DES-CBC encryption algorithm;
- 3DES - 168-bit DES encryption algorithm;
Hardware acceleration
Hardware acceleration allows doing a faster encryption process by using a built-in encryption engine inside the CPU.
RouterBoard | DES and 3DES | AES-CBC | AES-CTR | AES-GCM | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
MD5 | SHA1 | SHA256 | SHA512 | MD5 | SHA1 | SHA256 | SHA512 | MD5 | SHA1 | SHA256 | SHA512 | MD5 | SHA1 | SHA256 | SHA512 | |
RBcAPGi-5acD2nD (cAP ac) * | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
RBD23UGS-5HPacD2HnD-NM * | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
RBD25G-5HPacQD2HPnD (Audience) * | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
RBD25GR-5HPacQD2HPnD&R11e-LTE6 (Audience LTE6 kit) * | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
RBD52G-5HacD2HnD (hAP ac2) * | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
RBDiscG-5acD (DISC Lite5 ac) * | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
RBLDFG-5acD (LDF 5 ac) * | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
RBLHGG-5acD (LHG 5 ac) * | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
RBLHGG-5HPacD2HPnD-XL (LHG XL 52 ac) * | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
RBLHGG-5acD-XL (LHG XL 5 ac) * | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
RBLHGG-60ad (Wireless Wire Dish) * | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
RBLtAP-2HnD (LtAP) **** | yes | yes | yes | no | yes | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no | no | no | no | no |
RBLtAP-2HnD&R11e-LTE (LtAP LTE kit) **** | yes | yes | yes | no | yes | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no | no | no | no | no |
RBLtAP-2HnD&R11e-4G (LtAP 4G kit) **** | yes | yes | yes | no | yes | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no | no | no | no | no |
RBLtAP-2HnD&R11e-LTE6 (LtAP LTE6 kit) **** | yes | yes | yes | no | yes | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no | no | no | no | no |
RBM11G **** | yes | yes | yes | no | yes | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no | no | no | no | no |
RBM33G **** | yes | yes | yes | no | yes | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no | no | no | no | no |
RBSXTsqG-5acD (SXTsq 5 ac) * | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
RBwAPG-60ad (wAP 60G) * | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
RBwAPG-60ad-A (wAP 60G AP) * | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
RBwAPGR-5HacD2HnD (wAP R ac) * | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
RBwAPGR-5HacD2HnD&R11e-LTE (wAP ac LTE kit) * | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
RBwAPGR-5HacD2HnD&R11e-4G (wAP ac 4G kit) * | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
RBwAPGR-5HacD2HnD&R11e-LTE6 (wAP ac LTE6 kit) * | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
RB450Gx4 * | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
RB750Gr3 (hEX) **** | yes | yes | yes | no | yes | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no | no | no | no | no |
RB760iGS (hEX S) **** | yes | yes | yes | no | yes | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no | no | no | no | no |
RB850Gx2 ** | no | no | no | no | yes | yes | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no | no | no | no |
RB1100AHx2 | yes | yes | yes | no | yes | yes | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no | no | no | no |
RB1100AHx4 and RB1100AHx4 Dude Edition | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes |
RB1200 *** | no | no | no | no | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | no | no | no | no |
RB3011UiAS-RM * | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
RB4011iGS+RM and RB4011iGS+5HacQ2HnD-IN | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes |
Cloud Core Router series | yes | yes | yes | no | yes | yes | yes | no | yes | yes | yes | no | no | no | no | no |
x86 (AES-NI) *** | no | no | no | no | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes |
* supported only 128 bit and 256 bit key sizes
** only manufactured since 2016, serial numbers that begin with number 5 and 7
*** AES-CBC and AES-CTR only encryption is accelerated, hashing done in software
**** DES is not supported, only 3DES and AES-CBC
IPsec throughput results of various encryption and hash algorithm combinations are published on MikroTik products page.
Policies
The policy table is used to determine whether security settings should be applied to a packet.
Properties
Property | Description |
---|---|
action (discard | encrypt | none; Default: encrypt) | Specifies what to do with the packet matched by the policy.
|
comment (string; Default: ) | Short description of the policy. |
disabled (yes | no; Default: no) | Whether a policy is used to match packets. |
dst-address (IP/IPv6 prefix; Default: 0.0.0.0/32) | Destination address to be matched in packets. Applicable when tunnel mode (tunnel=yes) or template (template=yes) is used. |
dst-port (integer:0..65535 | any; Default: any) | Destination port to be matched in packets. If set to any all ports will be matched. |
group (string; Default: default) | Name of the policy group to which this template is assigned. |
ipsec-protocols (ah | esp; Default: esp) | Specifies what combination of Authentication Header and Encapsulating Security Payload protocols you want to apply to matched traffic. |
level (require | unique | use; Default: require) | Specifies what to do if some of the SAs for this policy cannot be found:
|
peer (string; Default: ) | Name of the peer on which the policy applies. |
proposal (string; Default: default) | Name of the proposal template that will be sent by IKE daemon to establish SAs for this policy. |
protocol (all | egp | ggp| icmp | igmp | ...; Default: all) | IP packet protocol to match. |
src-address (ip/ipv6 prefix; Default: 0.0.0.0/32) | Source address to be matched in packets. Applicable when tunnel mode (tunnel=yes) or template (template=yes) is used. |
src-port (any | integer:0..65535; Default: any) | Source port to be matched in packets. If set to any all ports will be matched. |
template (yes | no; Default: no) | Creates a template and assigns it to a specified policy group. Following parameters are used by template:
|
tunnel (yes | no; Default: no) | Specifies whether to use tunnel mode. |
Read only properties
Property | Description |
---|---|
active (yes | no) | Whether this policy is currently in use. |
default (yes | no) | Whether this is a default system entry. |
dynamic (yes | no) | Whether this is a dynamically added or generated entry. |
invalid (yes | no) | Whether this policy is invalid - the possible cause is a duplicate policy with the same src-address and dst-address. |
ph2-count (integer) | A number of active phase 2 sessions associated with the policy. |
ph2-state (expired | no-phase2 | established) | Indication of the progress of key establishing. |
sa-dst-address (ip/ipv6 address; Default: ::) | SA destination IP/IPv6 address (remote peer). |
sa-src-address (ip/ipv6 address; Default: ::) | SA source IP/IPv6 address (local peer). |
Policy order is important starting from v6.40. Now it works similarly to firewall filters where policies are executed from top to bottom (priority parameter is removed).
All packets are IPIP encapsulated in tunnel mode, and their new IP header's src-address and dst-address are set to sa-src-address and sa-dst-address values of this policy. If you do not use tunnel mode (id est you use transport mode), then only packets whose source and destination addresses are the same as sa-src-address and sa-dst-address can be processed by this policy. Transport mode can only work with packets that originate at and are destined for IPsec peers (hosts that established security associations). To encrypt traffic between networks (or a network and a host) you have to use tunnel mode.
Statistics
This menu shows various IPsec statistics and errors.
Read only properties
Property | Description |
---|---|
in-errors (integer) | All inbound errors that are not matched by other counters. |
in-buffer-errors (integer) | No free buffer. |
in-header-errors (integer) | Header error. |
in-no-states (integer) | No state is found i.e. either inbound SPI, address, or IPsec protocol at SA is wrong. |
in-state-protocol-errors (integer) | Transformation protocol specific error, for example, SA key is wrong or hardware accelerator is unable to handle the amount of packets. |
in-state-mode-errors (integer) | Transformation mode-specific error. |
in-state-sequence-errors (integer) | A sequence number is out of window. |
in-state-expired (integer) | The state is expired. |
in-state-mismatches (integer) | The state has mismatched option, for example, UDP encapsulation type is mismatched. |
in-state-invalid (integer) | The state is invalid. |
in-template-mismatches (integer) | No matching template for states, e.g. inbound SAs are correct but SP rule is wrong. A possible cause is mismatched sa-source or sa-destination address. |
in-no-policies (integer) | No policy is found for states, e.g. inbound SAs are correct but no SP is found. |
in-policy-blocked (integer) | Policy discards. |
in-policy-errors (integer) | Policy errors. |
out-errors (integer) | All outbound errors that are not matched by other counters. |
out-bundle-errors (integer) | Bundle generation error. |
out-bundle-check-errors (integer) | Bundle check error. |
out-no-states (integer) | No state is found. |
out-state-protocol-errors (integer) | Transformation protocol specific error. |
out-state-mode-errors (integer) | Transformation mode-specific error. |
out-state-sequence-errors (integer) | Sequence errors, for example, sequence number overflow. |
out-state-expired (integer) | The state is expired. |
out-policy-blocked (integer) | Policy discards. |
out-policy-dead (integer) | The policy is dead. |
out-policy-errors (integer) | Policy error. |
Proposals
Proposal information that will be sent by IKE daemons to establish SAs for certain policies.
Properties
Property | Description |
---|---|
auth-algorithms (md5|null|sha1|sha256|sha512; Default: sha1) | Allowed algorithms for authorization. SHA (Secure Hash Algorithm) is stronger, but slower. MD5 uses 128-bit key, sha1-160bit key. |
comment (string; Default: ) | |
disabled (yes | no; Default: no) | Whether item is disabled. |
enc-algorithms (null|des|3des|aes-128-cbc|aes-128-cbc|aes-128gcm|aes-192-cbc|aes-192-ctr|aes-192-gcm|aes-256-cbc|aes-256-ctr|aes-256-gcm|blowfish|camellia-128|camellia-192|camellia-256|twofish; Default: aes-256-cbc,aes-192-cbc,aes-128-cbc) | Allowed algorithms and key lengths to use for SAs. |
lifetime (time; Default: 30m) | How long to use SA before throwing it out. |
name (string; Default: ) | |
pfs-group (ec2n155 | ec2n185 | ecp256 | ecp384 | ecp521 | modp768 | modp1024 | modp1536 | modp2048 | modp3072 | modp4096 | modp6144 | modp8192 | none; Default: modp1024) | Diffie-Helman group used for Perfect Forward Secrecy. |
Read only properties
Property | Description |
---|---|
default (yes | no) | Whether this is a default system entry. |
Groups
In this menu, it is possible to create additional policy groups used by policy templates.
Properties
Property | Description |
---|---|
name (string; Default: ) | |
comment (string; Default: ) |
Peers
Peer configuration settings are used to establish connections between IKE daemons. This connection then will be used to negotiate keys and algorithms for SAs. Exchange mode is the only unique identifier between the peers, meaning that there can be multiple peer configurations with the same remote-address as long as different exchange-mode is used.
Properties
Property | Description |
---|---|
address (IP/IPv6 Prefix; Default: 0.0.0.0/0) | If remote peer's address matches this prefix, then the peer configuration is used in authentication and establishment of Phase 1. If several peer's addresses match several configuration entries, the most specific one (i.e. the one with largest netmask) will be used. |
comment (string; Default: ) | Short description of the peer. |
disabled (yes | no; Default: no) | Whether peer is used to match remote peer's prefix. |
exchange-mode (aggressive | base | main | ike2; Default: main) | Different ISAKMP phase 1 exchange modes according to RFC 2408. main mode relaxes rfc2409 section 5.4, to allow pre-shared-key authentication in main mode. ike2 mode enables Ikev2 RFC 7296. Parameters that are ignored by IKEv2 proposal-check, compatibility-options, lifebytes, dpd-maximum-failures, nat-traversal. |
local-address (IP/IPv6 Address; Default: ) | Routers local address on which Phase 1 should be bounded to. |
name (string; Default: ) | |
passive (yes | no; Default: no) | When passive mode is enabled will wait for remote peer to initiate IKE connection. Enabled passive mode also indicates that peer is xauth responder, and disabled passive mode - xauth initiator. When passive mode is disabled peer will try to establish not only phase1, but also phase2 automatically, if policies are configured or created during phase1. |
port (integer:0..65535; Default: 500) | Communication port used (when router is initiator) to connect to remote peer in cases if remote peer uses non-default port. |
profile (string; Default: default) | Name of the profile template that will be used during IKE negotiation. |
send-initial-contact (yes | no; Default: yes) | Specifies whether to send "initial contact" IKE packet or wait for remote side, this packet should trigger removal of old peer SAs for current source address. Usually in road warrior setups clients are initiators and this parameter should be set to no. Initial contact is not sent if modecfg or xauth is enabled for ikev1. |
Read only properties
Property | Description |
---|---|
dynamic (yes | no) | Whether this is a dynamically added entry by different service (e.g L2TP). |
responder (yes | no) | Whether this peer will act as a responder only (listen to incoming requests) and not initiate a connection. |
Identities
Identities are configuration parameters that are specific to the remote peer. Main purpose of an identity is to handle authentication and verify peer's integrity.
Properties
Property | Description |
---|---|
auth-method (digital-signature | eap | eap-radius | pre-shared-key | pre-shared-key-xauth | rsa-key | rsa-signature-hybrid; Default: pre-shared-key) | Authentication method:
|
certificate (string; Default: ) | Name of a certificate listed in System/Certificates (signing packets; the certificate must have private key). Applicable if digital signature authentication method (auth-method=digital-signature) or EAP (auth-method=eap) is used. |
comment (string; Default: ) | Short description of the identity. |
disabled (yes | no; Default: no) | Whether identity is used to match remote peer. |
eap-methods (eap-mschapv2 | eap-peap | eap-tls | eap-ttls; Default: eap-tls) | All EAP methods requires whole certificate chain including intermediate and root CA certificates to be present in System/Certificates menu. Also username and password (if required by authentication server) must be specified. Multiple EAP methods may be specified and will be used in specified order. Currently supported EAP methods:
|
generate-policy (no | port-override | port-strict; Default: no) | Allow this peer to establish SA for non-existing policies. Such policies are created dynamically for the lifetime of SA. Automatic policies allows, for example, to create IPsec secured L2TP tunnels, or any other setup where remote peer's IP address is not known at the configuration time.
|
key (string; Default: ) | Name of the private key from keys menu. Applicable if RSA key authentication method (auth-method=rsa-key) is used. |
match-by (remote-id | certificate; Default: remote-id) | Defines the logic used for peer's identity validation.
|
mode-config (none | *request-only | string; Default: none) | Name of the configuration parameters from mode-config menu. When parameter is set mode-config is enabled. |
my-id (auto | address | fqdn | user-fqdn | key-id; Default: auto) | On initiator, this controls what ID_i is sent to the responder. On responder, this controls what ID_r is sent to the initiator. In IKEv2, responder also expects this ID in received ID_r from initiator.
|
notrack-chain (string; Default: ) | Adds IP/Firewall/Raw rules matching IPsec policy to specified chain. Use together with generate-policy. |
password (string; Default: ) | XAuth or EAP password. Applicable if pre-shared key with XAuth authentication method (auth-method=pre-shared-key-xauth) or EAP (auth-method=eap) is used. |
peer (string; Default: ) | Name of the peer on which the identity applies. |
policy-template-group (none | string; Default: default) | If generate-policy is enabled, traffic selectors are checked against templates from the same group. If none of the templates match, Phase 2 SA will not be established. |
remote-certificate (string; Default: ) | Name of a certificate (listed in System/Certificates) for authenticating the remote side (validating packets; no private key required). If remote-certificate is not specified then received certificate from remote peer is used and checked against CA in certificate menu. Proper CA must be imported in certificate store. If remote-certificate and match-by=certificate is specified, only the specific client certificate will be matched. Applicable if digital signature authentication method (auth-method=digital-signature) is used. |
remote-id (auto | fqdn | user-fqdn | key-id | ignore; Default: auto) | This parameter controls what ID value to expect from the remote peer. Note that all types except for ignore will verify remote peer's ID with received certificate. In case when the peer sends certificate name as its ID, it is checked against the certificate, else the ID is checked against Subject Alt. Name.
|
remote-key (string; Default: ) | Name of the public key from keys menu. Applicable if RSA key authentication method (auth-method=rsa-key) is used. |
secret (string; Default: ) | Secret string. If it starts with '0x', it is parsed as a hexadecimal value. Applicable if pre-shared key authentication method (auth-method=pre-shared-key and auth-method=pre-shared-key-xauth) is used. |
username (string; Default: ) | XAuth or EAP username. Applicable if pre-shared key with XAuth authentication method (auth-method=pre-shared-key-xauth) or EAP (auth-method=eap) is used. |
Read only properties
Property | Description |
---|---|
dynamic (yes | no) | Whether this is a dynamically added entry by different service (e.g L2TP). |
Profiles
Profiles define a set of parameters that will be used for IKE negotiation during Phase 1. These parameters may be common with other peer configurations.
Properties
Property | Description |
---|---|
dh-group (modp768 | modp1024 | ec2n155 | ec2n185 | modp1536 | modp2048 | modp3072 | modp4096 | modp6144 | modp8192 | ecp256 | ecp384 | ecp521; Default: modp1024,modp2048) | Diffie-Hellman group (cipher strength) |
dpd-interval (time | disable-dpd; Default: 2m) | Dead peer detection interval. If set to disable-dpd, dead peer detection will not be used. |
dpd-maximum-failures (integer: 1..100; Default: 5) | Maximum count of failures until peer is considered to be dead. Applicable if DPD is enabled. |
enc-algorithm (3des | aes-128 | aes-192 | aes-256 | blowfish | camellia-128 | camellia-192 | camellia-256 | des; Default: aes-128) | List of encryption algorithms that will be used by the peer. |
hash-algorithm (md5 | sha1 | sha256 | sha512; Default: sha1) | Hashing algorithm. SHA (Secure Hash Algorithm) is stronger, but slower. MD5 uses 128-bit key, sha1-160bit key. |
lifebytes (Integer: 0..4294967295; Default: 0) | Phase 1 lifebytes is used only as administrative value which is added to proposal. Used in cases if remote peer requires specific lifebytes value to establish phase 1. |
lifetime (time; Default: 1d) | Phase 1 lifetime: specifies how long the SA will be valid. |
name (string; Default: ) | |
nat-traversal (yes | no; Default: yes) | Use Linux NAT-T mechanism to solve IPsec incompatibility with NAT routers inbetween IPsec peers. This can only be used with ESP protocol (AH is not supported by design, as it signs the complete packet, including IP header, which is changed by NAT, rendering AH signature invalid). The method encapsulates IPsec ESP traffic into UDP streams in order to overcome some minor issues that made ESP incompatible with NAT. |
proposal-check (claim | exact | obey | strict; Default: obey) | Phase 2 lifetime check logic:
|
Active Peers
Sub-menu: /ip ipsec active-peers
This menu provides various statistics about remote peers that currently have established phase 1 connection.
Read only properties
Property | Description |
---|---|
dynamic-address (ip/ipv6 address) | Dynamically assigned IP address by mode config |
last-seen (time) | Duration since last message received by this peer. |
local-address (ip/ipv6 address) | Local address on the router used by this peer. |
natt-peer (yes | no) | Whether NAT-T is used for this peer. |
ph2-total (integer) | Total amount of active IPsec security associations. |
remote-address (ip/ipv6 address) | Remote peer's ip/ipv6 address. |
responder (yes | no) | Whether the connection is initiated by remote peer. |
rx-bytes (integer) | Total amount of bytes received from this peer. |
rx-packets (integer) | Total amount of packets received from this peer. |
side (initiator | responder) | Shows which side initiated the Phase1 negotiation. |
state (string) | State of phase 1 negotiation with the peer. For example when phase1 and phase 2 are negotiated it will show state "established". |
tx-bytes (integer) | Total amount of bytes transmitted to this peer. |
tx-packets (integer) | Total amount of packets transmitted to this peer. |
uptime (time) | How long peers are in established state. |
Commands
Property | Description |
---|---|
kill-connections () | Manually disconnects all remote peers. |
Mode configs
ISAKMP and IKEv2 configuration attributes are configured in this menu.
Properties
Property | Description |
---|---|
address-pool (none | string; Default: ) | Name of the address pool from which responder will try to assign address if mode-config is enabled. |
address-prefix-length (integer [1..32]; Default: ) | Prefix length (netmask) of the assigned address from the pool. |
comment (string; Default: ) | |
name (string; Default: ) | |
responder (yes | no; Default: no) | Specifies whether the configuration will work as an initiator (client) or responder (server). Initiator will request for mode-config parameters from responder. |
split-include (list of IP prefix; Default: ) | List of subnets in CIDR format, which to tunnel. Subnets will be sent to the peer using CISCO UNITY extension, remote peer will create specific dynamic policies. |
src-address-list (address list; Default: ) | Specifying an address list will generate dynamic source NAT rules. This parameter is only available with responder=no. RoadWarrior client with NAT |
static-dns (list of IP; Default: ) | Manually specified DNS server's IP address to be sent to the client. |
system-dns (yes | no; Default: ) | When this option is enabled DNS addresses will be taken from /ip dns . |
Read only properties
Property | Description |
---|---|
default (yes | no) | Whether this is a default system entry. |
Not all IKE implementations support multiple split networks provided by the split-include option.
If RouterOS client is initiator, it will always send CISCO UNITY extension, and RouterOS supports only split-include from this extension.
It is not possible to use system-dns and static-dns at the same time.
Installed SAs
This menu provides information about installed security associations including the keys.
Read only properties
Property | Description |
---|---|
AH (yes | no) | Whether AH protocol is used by this SA. |
ESP (yes | no) | Whether ESP protocol is used by this SA. |
add-lifetime (time/time) | Added lifetime for the SA in format soft/hard:
|
addtime (time) | Date and time when this SA was added. |
auth-algorithm (md5 | null | sha1 | ...) | Currently used authentication algorithm. |
auth-key (string) | Used authentication key. |
current-bytes (64-bit integer) | Number of bytes seen by this SA. |
dst-address (IP) | Destination address of this SA. |
enc-algorithm (des | 3des | aes-cbc | ...) | Currently used encryption algorithm. |
enc-key (string) | Used encryption key. |
enc-key-size (number) | Used encryption key length. |
expires-in (yes | no) | Time left until rekeying. |
hw-aead (yes | no) | Whether this SA is hardware accelerated. |
replay (integer) | Size of replay window in bytes. |
spi (string) | Security Parameter Index identification tag |
src-address (IP) | Source address of this SA. |
state (string) | Shows the current state of the SA ("mature", "dying" etc) |
Commands
Property | Description |
---|---|
flush () | Manually removes all installed security associations. |
Keys
This menu lists all imported public andprivate keys, that can be used for peer authentication. Menu has several commands to work with keys.
Properties
Property | Description |
---|---|
name (string; Default: ) |
Read only properties
Property | Description |
---|---|
key-size (1024 | 2048 | 4096) | Size of this key. |
private-key (yes | no) | Whether this is a private key. |
rsa (yes | no) | Whether this is a RSA key. |
Commands
Property | Description |
---|---|
export-pub-key (file-name; key) | Export public key to file from one of existing private keys. |
generate-key (key-size; name) | Generate private key. Takes two parameters, name of newly generated key and key size 1024,2048 and 4096. |
import (file-name; name) | Import key from file. |
Settings
Property | Description |
---|---|
accounting (yes | no; Default: ) | Whether to send RADIUS accounting requests to RADIUS server. Applicable if EAP Radius (auth-method=eap-radius) or pre-shared key with XAuth authentication method (auth-method=pre-shared-key-xauth) is used. |
interim-update (time; Default: ) | Interval between each consecutive RADIUS accounting Interim update. Accounting must be enabled. |
xauth-use-radius (yes | no; Default: ) | Whether to use Radius client for XAuth users or not. |