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README

This project contents everything related to Jenkins infrastructure VPN. It includes the following elements:

  • Build an OpenVPN Docker image integrated with openldap.
  • Manage client configuration and certificate
  • Hold VPN keys for connecting on Jenkins infrastructure VPN

If you think that you should have access to this network, feel free to read HowTo Get client access.

Connection

To connect to this VPN, your VPN client must be configured with your Jenkins account and certificate authentication, requiring the following files:

  • The CertificateAuthority ca.crt

  • Your private key <your-jenkins-username>.key

    ⚠️ your private key must remain secret! ⚠️

  • Your certificate <your-jenkins-username>.crt

See HowTo Get client access below.

Client

HowTo get client access

To access the Jenkins infrastructure private network, you need a certificate containing your Jenkins username as CN (commonName). Then this certificate must be signed by an administrator who also assigns you a static IP configuration.

Feel free to follow the next action points:

  • Open an issue on jenkins-infra/helpdesk describing the reason why you need an access to the VPN

    • If you need to access infra.ci.jenkins.io or release.ci.jenkins.io, mention it in your request to get access to the private VPN needed for these instances.
  • Fork this repository on your own Github account: fork the repo

  • Clone your fork locally: git clone https://github.com/<your-github-username>/docker-openvpn && cd docker-openvpn

  • Build EASYVPN binary by running one of the following commands depending on your operating system:

    • make init_osx
    • make init_linux
    • make init_windows then copy ./utils/easyvpn/easyvpn.exe at the root of this repository
  • Generate your private key and certificate request: ./easyvpn request <your-jenkins-username> Your private key will be generated in ./cert/pki/private

    ⚠️ This key must remain secret! ⚠️

  • Create a new pull request on jenkins-infra/docker-openvpn

  • Grab a cup of coffee and wait patiently for an administrator to sign your certificate request

  • Once an admin notifies you that everything is setup, you can sync your fork then pull it to retrieve your certificate from ./cert/pki/issued/<your-jenkins-username>.crt

  • We recommend you to move the generated files and the ca.cert to an hidden folder in your home (~/.cert):

    mkdir -p ~/.cert/jenkins-infra
    mv ./cert/pki/issued/<your-jenkins-username>.crt ~/.cert/jenkins-infra/<your-jenkins-username>.crt
    mv ./cert/pki/private/<your-jenkins-username>.key ~/.cert/jenkins-infra/<your-jenkins-username>.key
    cp ./cert/pki/ca.crt ~/.cert/jenkins-infra/ca.crt
  • Then, create the following configuration file (wether your are on Linux, macOS or Windows) private-jenkins-infra.ovpn on your Desktop:

    client
    remote private.vpn.jenkins.io 443
    ca "/absolute/path/to/.cert/ca.crt"
    cert "/absolute/path/to/.cert/<your-jenkins-username>.crt"
    key "/absolute/path/to/.cert/<your-jenkins-username>.key"
    auth-user-pass
    dev tun
    proto tcp
    nobind
    auth-nocache
    script-security 2
    persist-key
    persist-tun
    remote-cert-tls server
    user nobody
    group nobody
    
    • Some important rules:
      • The file name does not matter but it MUST have an extension .ovpn to let your system detect it
      • The content of the file does not support the ~ shortcut, neither variables ($HOME/%HOME%). Please use absolute paths.
    • Then import this file (e.g. double click or use the appropriate command line) into your VPN tool:
      • on macOS, we recommend using Tunnelblick, an OpenVPN client
      • on Linux, we recommend using NetworkManager client. Note that in that case, you must enable the option Use this connection only for resources on its network
      • on Windows, we recommend using OpenVPN Connect client.
  • ⚠️ When connecting, your VPN client requires a username and password. Use your Jenkins project account (same username + password as accounts.jenkins.io, issues.jenkins.io, ci.jenkins.io).

Windows only

If you want to use multiple VPN connections at the same time with OpenVPN, you have to install a new TAP adapter. This can be very easily by running as Admin the C:\Program Files\TAP-Windows\bin\addtap.bat. The TAP-Windows tool is installed in parallel with OpenVPN.

HowTo show request information

  • Enter in the VPN network directory: cd ~/.cert
  • Run make show-req name=<your-jenkins-username>

Howto validate your certificate

You can test if your private key matches your certificate and certificate request by running following commands:

openssl pkey -in ~/.cert/pki/private/<your-jenkins-username>.key -pubout -outform pem | sha256sum
# Should be equal to
openssl x509 -in ~/.cert/pki/issued/<your-jenkins-username>.crt -pubkey -noout -outform pem | sha256sum
# And also equal to
openssl req -in ~/.cert/pki/reqs/<your-jenkins-username>.req -pubkey -noout -outform pem | sha256sum

DNS Problems

If you are having issues connecting to resources behind the VPN, but the VPN appears to be working correctly, check your DNS settings. Some providers seem to filter out requests to the zone. To test, try dig release.ci.jenkins.io, you should get something like this:

dig output (click to expand)
; <<>> DiG 9.10.6 <<>> release.ci.jenkins.io
;; global options: +cmd
;; Got answer:
;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 13457
;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 2, AUTHORITY: 0, ADDITIONAL: 1

;; OPT PSEUDOSECTION:
; EDNS: version: 0, flags:; udp: 1220
;; QUESTION SECTION:
;release.ci.jenkins.io.         IN      A

;; ANSWER SECTION:
release.ci.jenkins.io.  3600    IN      CNAME   private.aks.jenkins.io.
private.aks.jenkins.io. 3600    IN      A       10.0.2.5

;; Query time: 80 msec
;; SERVER: 192.168.1.254#53(192.168.1.254)
;; WHEN: Tue Oct 12 20:49:59 CEST 2021
;; MSG SIZE  rcvd: 92

To enable a different DNS provider only when connected to the VPN you can add the following to you OpenVPN config file:

dhcp-option DNS 8.8.8.8

Administrator

HowTo become an administrator

To add/revoke certificates, you must be allowed to decrypt sensitive files such as ./cert/pki/private/ca.key.enc.

These files are encrypted with sops, your public gpg key must be added to ./.sops.yaml by an existing administrator to decrypt them.

This repository relies on easy-rsa, used under the hood by a custom Golang CLI wrapper named easyvpn.

HowTo Decrypt the Certificate Authority Key

  • Ensure that you are an administrator (Check the section HowTo become an administrator)
  • Execute the command make -C cert decrypt from the root of the repository to decrypt the ca.key to ./cert/pki/private/ca.key (which is a secret that must remain git-ignored)

HowTo show certificate information

HowTo approve client access?

To validate and sign a client certificate, you are going to execute the following actions:

  • Build EASYVPN binary by running one of the following commands depending on your
    • make init_osx
    • make init_linux
    • make init_windows then copy ./utils/easyvpn/easyvpn.exe at the root of this repository
  • Using the official GitHub command line gh, checkout the Pull Request of by the requester to retrieve their CRL your local machine:
gh pr checkout <Pull Request ID>
  • Sign the certificate request: ./easyvpn sign <CN_to_sign>
    • by default this will create a Client Configuration file for the "private" VPN (private.vpn.jenkins.io), and store this file in ./cert/ccd/private/
  • A git commit is automatically created on the local branch
  • Push the approval commit on the current pull request with git push (the remote and local branch name are configured by the gh command line)
  • Approve and merge the Pull Request to the main branch with the signed CRL
  • Once merged, a new tag should be created automatically with automatic publishing of the image
  • The Docker image tag should be automatically updated in the next 24h in the puppet configuration.

HowTo revoke client access?

  • Build EASYVPN binary by running one of the following commands depending on your
    • make init_osx
    • make init_linux
    • make init_windows and copy ./utils/easyvpn/easyvpn.exe at the root of this repository
  • Revoke the certificate: ./easyvpn revoke <CN_to_sign>
  • A git commit is automatically created on the local branch
  • Push the revocation commit (PR or branch, whatever you choose)
  • The Docker image tag should be automatically updated in the next 24h in the puppet configuration.

HowTo renew certificate revocation list

If the CRL (Certificate Revocation list) expired, then the OpenVPN logs will contain errors like 'VERIFY ERROR: depth=0, error=CRL has expired:...' We can run openssl crl -in ./cert/pki/crl.pem -noout -text to validate that the CRL expired and that we need to generate a new one.

To generate a new CRL:

  • Decrypt the required files as described in HowTo Decrypt the Certificate Authority Key
  • Generate a new crl.pem - cd cert ; ./easyrsa gen-crl ; cd ..
  • Publish the new crl.pem - git add ./cert/pki/crl.pem && git commit ./cert/pki/crl.pem -s -m 'Renew revocation list certificate'
  • Before pushing, Delete local ca.key - rm ./cert/pki/private/ca.key
  • Check new expiration date with : openssl crl -nextupdate -in /Users/smerle/code/docker-openvpn/cert/pki/crl.pem -noout

HowTo Renew Server-side Certificate?

  • Build EASYVPN binary by running one of the following commands depending on your operating system:

    • make init_osx
    • make init_linux
    • make init_windows and copy ./utils/easyvpn/easyvpn.exe at the root of this repository
  • Decrypt the required files as described in HowTo Decrypt the Certificate Authority Key

  • Revoke actual certificate (even if it is already expired): ./easyvpn revoke private.vpn.jenkins.io

  • Generate a new certificate + key, with the server DNS as argument: ./easyvpn request private.vpn.jenkins.io

    The generated key is in ./cert/pki/private/private.vpn.jenkins.io.key must remain secret!

  • Sign the request as a "server" request:

    cd ./certs # Running the signing command from this folder is mandatory.
    ./easyrsa --batch sign-req server private.vpn.jenkins.io
  • Ensure that you git-added, git-commited and pushed the changes, without ANY secrets (which should be git-ignored)

  • Update the secrets in the encrypted hieradata for OpenVPN in https://github.com/jenkins-infra/jenkins-infra

Docker

Configuration

This image can be configured at runtime with different environment variables:

  • AUTH_LDAP_BINDDN Define user dn used to query the ldap database
  • AUTH_LDAP_URL Define ldap endpoint url
  • AUTH_LDAP_PASSWORD Define user dn password
  • AUTH_LDAP_GROUPS_MEMBER Define required group member to authenticate
  • OPENVPN_NETWORK_NAME Define the network name from config.yaml to use
  • OPENVPN_SERVER_SUBNET Define the VPN subnet
  • OPENVPN_SERVER_NETMASK Define the netmask associated to the VPN subnet

Some examples can be found inside docker-compose.yaml

Testing

To test this image, you need a "mock" ldap and SSL certificates, then go in the root folder and run make start to start the ldap and vpn service.

⚠️ Certificates must be readable by UID 101! ⚠️

Infrastructure

This project is designed to work with the following requirements:

  • Machine provisioned by Terraform
  • Service configured and orchestrated by Puppet

Contributing

Feel free to contribute to this image by:

  1. Fork this project into your account
  2. Make your changes in your local fork
  3. Submit a pull request with a description and a link to a jenkins-infra/helpdesk issue
  4. Ask for a review

Issue

Please report any issue on the Jenkins infrastructure jenkins-infra/helpdesk tracker

Links