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Introduction to WireGuard VPN

Note:
This documentation has moved to a new home! Please update your bookmarks to the new URL for the up-to-date version of this page.

WireGuard is a simple, fast and modern VPN implementation. It is widely deployed and can be used cross-platform.

VPNs have traditionally been hard to understand, configure and deploy. WireGuard removed most of that complexity by focusing on its single task, and leaving out things like key distribution and pushed configurations. You get a network interface which encrypts and verifies the traffic, and the remaining tasks like setting up addresses, routing, etc, are left to the usual system tools like ip-route(8) and ip-address(8).

Setting up the cryptographic keys is very much similar to configuring SSH for key based authentication: each side of the connection has its own private and public key, and the peers’ public key, and this is enough to start encrypting and verifying the exchanged traffic.

For more details on how WireGuard works, and information on its availability on other platforms, please see the references section.

WireGuard concepts

It helps to think of WireGuard primarily as a network interface, like any other. It will have the usual attributes, like IP address, CIDR, and there will be some routing associated with it. But it also has WireGuard-specific attributes, which handle the VPN part of things.

All of this can be configured via different tools. WireGuard itself ships its own tools in the user-space package wireguard-tools: wg and wg-quick. But these are not strictly needed: any user space with the right privileges and kernel calls can configure a WireGuard interface. For example, systemd-networkd and network-manager can do it on their own, without the WireGuard user-space utilities.

Important attributes of a WireGuard interface are:

  • Private key: together with the corresponding public key, they are used to authenticate and encrypt data. This is generated with the wg genkey command.
  • Listen port: the UDP port that WireGuard will be listening to for incoming traffic.
  • List of peers, each one with:
    • Public key: the public counterpart of the private key. Generated from the private key of that peer, using the wg pubkey command.
    • Endpoint: where to send the encrypted traffic to. This is optional, but at least one of the corresponding peers must have it to bootstrap the connection.
    • Allowed IPs: list of inner tunnel destination networks or addresses for this peer when sending traffic, or, when receiving traffic, which source networks or addresses are allowed to send traffic to us.

Note:
Cryptography is not simple. When we say that, for example, a private key is used to decrypt or sign traffic, and a public key is used to encrypt or verify the authenticity of traffic, this is a simplification and is hiding a lot of important details. WireGuard has a detailed explanation of its protocols and cryptography handling on its website.

These parameters can be set with the low-level wg tool, directly via the command line or with a configuration file. This tool, however, doesn’t handle the non-WireGuard settings of the interface. It won’t assign an IP address to it, for example, nor set up routing. For this reason, it’s more common to use wg-quick.

wg-quick will handle the lifecycle of the WireGuard interface. It can bring it up or down, set up routing, execute arbitrary commands before or after the interface is up, and more. It augments the configuration file that wg can use, with its own extra settings, which is important to keep in mind when feeding that file to wg, as it will contain settings wg knows nothing about.

The wg-quick configuration file can have an arbitrary name, and can even be placed anywhere on the system, but the best practice is to:

  • Place the file in /etc/wireguard.
  • Name it after the interface it controls.

For example, a file called /etc/wireguard/wg0.conf will have the needed configuration settings for a WireGuard network interface called wg0. By following this practice, you get the benefit of being able to call wg-quick with just the interface name:

$ sudo wg-quick up wg0

That will bring the wg0 interface up, give it an IP address, set up routing, and configure the WireGuard-specific parameters for it to work. This interface is usually called wg0, but can have any valid network interface name, like office (it doesn’t need an index number after the name), home1, etc. It can help to give it a meaningful name if you plan to connect to multiple peers.

Let’s go over an example of such a configuration file:

[Interface]
PrivateKey = eJdSgoS7BZ/uWkuSREN+vhCJPPr3M3UlB3v1Su/amWk=
ListenPort = 51000
Address = 10.10.11.10/24

[Peer]
# office
PublicKey = xeWmdxiLjgebpcItF1ouRo0ntrgFekquRJZQO+vsQVs=
Endpoint = wg.example.com:51000 # fake endpoint, just an example
AllowedIPs = 10.10.11.0/24, 10.10.10.0/24

In the [Interface] section:

  • Address: this is the IP address, and CIDR, that the WireGuard interface will be set up with.
  • ListenPort: the UDP port WireGuard will use for traffic (listening and sending).
  • PrivateKey: the secret key used to decrypt traffic destined for this interface.

The peers list, each one in its own [Peer] section (example above has just one), comes next:

  • PublicKey: the key that will be used to encrypt traffic to this peer.
  • Endpoint: where to send encrypted traffic to.
  • AllowedIPs: when sending traffic, this is the list of target addresses that identify this peer. When receiving traffic, it’s the list of addresses that are allowed to be the source of the traffic.

To generate the keypairs for each peer, the wg command is used:

$ umask 077
$ wg genkey > wg0.key
$ wg pubkey < wg0.key > wg0.pub

And then the contents of wg0.key and wg0.pub can be used in the configuration file.

This is what it looks like when this interface is brought up by wg-quick:

$ sudo wg-quick up wg0
[#] ip link add wg0 type wireguard
[#] wg setconf wg0 /dev/fd/63
[#] ip -4 address add 10.10.11.10/24 dev wg0
[#] ip link set mtu 1420 up dev wg0
[#] ip -4 route add 10.10.10.0/24 dev wg0

This is what wg-quick:

  • Created the WireGuard wg0 interface.
  • Configured it with the data from the configuration file.
  • Added the IP/CIDR from the Address field to the wg0 interface.
  • Calculated a proper MTU (which can be overridden in the config if needed).
  • Added a route for AllowedIPs.

Note that in this example AllowedIPs is a list of two CIDR network blocks, but wg-quick only added a route for 10.10.10.0/24 and skipped 10.10.11.0/24. That’s because the Address was already specified as a /24 one. Had we specified the address as 10.10.11.10/32 instead, then wg-quick would have added a route for 10.10.11.0/24 explicitly.

To better understand how AllowedIPs work, let’s go through a quick example.

Let’s say this system wants to send traffic to 10.10.10.201/24. There is a route for it which says to use the wg0 interface for that:

$ ip route get 10.10.10.201
10.10.10.201 dev wg0 src 10.10.11.10 uid 1000
    cache

Since wg0 is a WireGuard interface, it will consult its configuration to see if any peer has that target address in the AllowedIPs list. Turns out one peer has it, in which case the traffic will:

a) Be authenticated as us, and encrypted for that peer.
b) Sent away via the configured Endpoint.

Now let’s picture the reverse. This system received traffic on the ListenPort UDP port. If it can be decrypted, and verified as having come from one of the listed peers using its respective public key, and if the source IP matches the corresponding AllowedIPs list, then the traffic is accepted.

What if there is no Endpoint? Well, to bootstrap the VPN, at least one of the peers must have an Endpoint, or else it won’t know where to send the traffic to, and you will get an error saying “Destination address required” (see the troubleshooting section for details).

But once the peers know each other, the one that didn’t have an Endpoint setting in the interface will remember where the traffic came from, and use that address as the current endpoint. This has a very nice side effect of automatically tracking the so called “road warrior” peer, which keeps changing its IP. This is very common with laptops that keep being suspended and awakened in a new network, and then try to establish the VPN again from that new address.

Peers

You will notice that the term “peers” is used preferably to “server” or “client”. Other terms used in some VPN documentation are “left” and “right”, which is already starting to convey that the difference between a “server” and a “client” is a bit blurry. It only matters, if at all, at the start of the traffic exchange: who sends the first packet of data?

In that sense, “servers” expect to sit idle and wait for connections to be initiated to them, and “clients” are the initiators. For example, a laptop in a public cafe initiating a connection to the company VPN peer. The laptop needs to know the address of that peer, because it’s initiating the exchange. But the “server” doesn’t need to know the IP of the laptop beforehand.

On a site-to-site VPN, however, when two separate networks are connected through the tunnel, who is the server and who is the client? Both! So it’s best to call them “peers” instead.

Putting it all together

Key takeaways from this introduction:

  • Each peer participating in the WireGuard VPN has a private key and a public key.
  • AllowedIPs is used as a routing key when sending traffic, and as an ACL when receiving traffic.
  • To establish a VPN with a remote peer, you need its public key. Likewise, the remote peer will need your public key.
  • At least one of the peers needs an Endpoint configured in order to be able to initiate the VPN.

To help better understand these (and other) concepts, we will create some WireGuard VPNs in the next sections, illustrating some common setups.

Peer-to-site

Site-to-site

Default gateway

Other common tasks, hints and tips

Note:
Throughout this guide, we will sometimes mention a VPN “connection”. This is technically false, as WireGuard uses UDP and there is no persistent connection. The term is used just to facilitate understanding, and means that the peers in the examples know each other and have completed a handshake already.

Further reading

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