From: Guus Sliepen Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 16:10:17 +0000 (+0000) Subject: - Update. X-Git-Tag: release-1.0pre3~49 X-Git-Url: https://git.librecmc.org/?p=oweals%2Ftinc.git;a=commitdiff_plain;h=af565d00220b7536b9987c48e2a71459b45027b4 - Update. --- diff --git a/NEWS b/NEWS index ee5c2c1..da91eef 100644 --- a/NEWS +++ b/NEWS @@ -1,3 +1,10 @@ +version 1.0pre3 Oct 31 2000 + * Major overhaul + * Use public/private key cryptography (fixes security hole) + * Use OpenSSL crypto library for all cryptography + * Support for multiple subnets per tinc daemon + * Support for tun/tap device + version 1.0pre2 May 31 2000 * Internationalized, Dutch translation available * Many sanity checks on the meta protocol added diff --git a/README b/README index 7c0fe12..65b6be3 100644 --- a/README +++ b/README @@ -1,47 +1,60 @@ -This is the README file for tinc version 1.0. -Installation instructions may be found in the INSTALL file. +This is the README file for tinc version 1.0pre3. Installation instructions may +be found in the INSTALL file. -tinc is Copyright (C) 1998,1999,2000 Ivo Timmermans -, Guus Sliepen and -others. For a complete list of authors see the AUTHORS file. +tinc is Copyright (C) 1998,1999,2000 Ivo Timmermans , +Guus Sliepen and others. For a complete list of +authors see the AUTHORS file. -This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify -it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by -the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at -your option) any later version. See the file COPYING for more details. +This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under +the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software +Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later +version. See the file COPYING for more details. +Security statement +------------------ + +In august 2000, we discovered the existence of a security hole in all versions +of tinc up to and including 1.0pre2. This had to do with the way we exchanged +keys. Since then, we have been working on a new authentication scheme to make +tinc as secure as possible. The current version uses the OpenSSL library and +does authentication in much the same way as the SSH protocol does. + +Cryptography is a hard thing to get right. We cannot make any guarantees. Time, +review and feedback are the only things that can prove the security of any +cryptographic product. If you wish to review tinc or give us feedback, you are +stronly encouraged to do so. + Requirements ------------ -Since 1.0pre3, we use OpenSSL for all cryptographic functions. So you -need to install this library first; grab it from -http://www.openssl.org/. We recommend version 0.9.5 or better. If -this library is not installed on you system, configure will fail. The -manual in doc/tinc.texi contains more detailed information on how to -install this library. +Since 1.0pre3, we use OpenSSL for all cryptographic functions. So you need to +install this library first; grab it from http://www.openssl.org/. We recommend +version 0.9.5 or better. If this library is not installed on you system, +configure will fail. The manual in doc/tinc.texi contains more detailed +information on how to install this library. Features -------- -This version of tinc supports multiple virtual networks at once. To -use this feature, you may supply a netname via the -n or --net -options. The standard locations for the config files will then be -/etc/tinc//. Because of this feature, tinc will send packets -directly to their destinations, instead of to the uplink. If this -behaviour is undesirable (for instance because of firewalls or -other restrictions), please use an older version of tinc (I would -recommend tinc-0.2.19). - -In this version, MAC addresses are stripped off before encoding and -sending a packet. When the packet reaches its destination, the MAC -addresses are rebuilt again. They then have the form -FE:FD:aa:bb:cc:dd. aa, bb, cc and dd are taken from the destination -and source IP address. See the manual for more detailed information. - -tincd regenerates its encryption key pairs. It does this on the first -activity after the keys have expired. This period is adjustable in the -configuration file, and the default time is 3600 seconds (one -hour). If you send a USR2 signal to the daemon, it'll regenerate -immediately. +This version of tinc supports multiple virtual networks at once. To use this +feature, you may supply a netname via the -n or --net options. The standard +locations for the config files will then be /etc/tinc//. Because of this +feature, tinc will send packets directly to their destinations, instead of to +the uplink. If this behaviour is undesirable (for instance because of firewalls +or other restrictions), please use an older version of tinc (I would recommend +tinc-0.2.19). + +In order to force the kernel to accept received packets, the destination MAC +address will be set to FE:FD:00:00:00:00 upon reception. The MAC address of the +ethertap or tun/tap interface must also be set to this address. See the manual +for more detailed information. + +tincd regenerates its encryption key pairs. It does this on the first activity +after the keys have expired. This period is adjustable in the configuration +file, and the default time is 3600 seconds (one hour). + +This version supports multiple subnets at once. They are also sorted on subnet +mask size. This means that it is possible to have overlapping subnets on the +VPN, as long as their subnet mask sizes differ. diff --git a/TODO b/TODO index 4415e16..e054e09 100644 --- a/TODO +++ b/TODO @@ -1,9 +1,16 @@ -Things left to do to make cabal superstable: --------------------------------------------- - * Check for connection loops. Inter-daemon - connections should always satisfy the - tree property. - * Redundancy: multiple ConnectTo lines, if - one fails others might be tried. - * Allow connects to hosts that use - nodirectdata. +Todo list (in no specific order): + +* Compression +* Routing by MAC (allows for more than only IPv4) +* Store private key in a separate file +* Sanity checks on configuration directory +* Use efficient tree algorithms instead of linked lists +* Reenable queues for delayed packets +* Broadcast/multicast +* Windowing, chaffing, scattering, background noise +* ABC protocol (superscalabilty) +* Proxy ARP +* Eazy setup scripts (graphical?) +* FreeBSD and Solaris ports +* Threading +* Everything else not mentioned.