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OPENVPN(8)		    System Manager's Manual		    OPENVPN(8)

NAME
       openvpn - Secure	IP tunnel daemon

SYNOPSIS
       openvpn [ options ... ]
       openvpn	--help

INTRODUCTION
       OpenVPN	is  an	open source VPN	daemon by James	Yonan. Because OpenVPN
       tries to	be a universal VPN tool	offering a great deal of  flexibility,
       there  are a lot	of options on this manual page.	If you're new to Open-
       VPN, you	might want to skip ahead to the	 examples  section  where  you
       will  see how to	construct simple VPNs on the command line without even
       needing a configuration file.

       Also note that there's more documentation and examples on  the  OpenVPN
       web site:  <https://openvpn.net/>

       And  if you would like to see a shorter version of this manual, see the
       openvpn usage message which can be obtained by running openvpn  without
       any parameters.

DESCRIPTION
       OpenVPN	is  a  robust and highly flexible VPN daemon. OpenVPN supports
       SSL/TLS security,  ethernet  bridging,  TCP  or	UDP  tunnel  transport
       through	proxies	 or  NAT,  support  for	dynamic	IP addresses and DHCP,
       scalability to hundreds or thousands of users, and portability to  most
       major OS	platforms.

       OpenVPN	is  tightly  bound to the OpenSSL library, and derives much of
       its crypto capabilities from it.

       OpenVPN supports	conventional encryption	using a	pre-shared secret  key
       (Static	Key mode) or public key	security (SSL/TLS mode)	using client &
       server certificates. OpenVPN also supports non-encrypted	 TCP/UDP  tun-
       nels.

       OpenVPN	is designed to work with the TUN/TAP virtual networking	inter-
       face that exists	on most	platforms.

       Overall,	OpenVPN	aims to	offer many of the key features	of  IPSec  but
       with a relatively lightweight footprint.

OPTIONS
       OpenVPN allows any option to be placed either on	the command line or in
       a configuration file. Though all	command	line options are preceded by a
       double-leading-dash  ("--"),  this prefix can be	removed	when an	option
       is placed in a configuration file.

   Generic Options
       This section covers generic options which are accessible	regardless  of
       which mode OpenVPN is configured	as.

       --help Show options.

       --auth-nocache
	      Don't  cache --askpass or	--auth-user-pass username/passwords in
	      virtual memory.

	      If specified, this directive will	cause OpenVPN  to  immediately
	      forget  username/password	 inputs	 after they are	used. As a re-
	      sult, when OpenVPN needs a username/password, it will prompt for
	      input from stdin,	which may be multiple times during  the	 dura-
	      tion of an OpenVPN session.

	      When  using  --auth-nocache  in combination with a user/password
	      file and --chroot	or --daemon, make  sure	 to  use  an  absolute
	      path.

       --cd dir
	      Change  directory	to dir prior to	reading	any files such as con-
	      figuration files,	key files, scripts, etc. dir should be an  ab-
	      solute  path,  with a leading "/", and without any references to
	      the current directory such as . or ...

	      This option is useful when you are running OpenVPN  in  --daemon
	      mode,  and  you  want to consolidate all of your OpenVPN control
	      files in one location.

       --chroot	dir
	      Chroot to	dir after initialization. --chroot  essentially	 rede-
	      fines  dir  as  being  the top level directory tree (/). OpenVPN
	      will therefore be	unable to access any files outside this	 tree.
	      This can be desirable from a security standpoint.

	      Since  the  chroot  operation is delayed until after initializa-
	      tion, most OpenVPN options that reference	files will operate  in
	      a	pre-chroot context.

	      In  many	cases,	the dir	parameter can point to an empty	direc-
	      tory, however complications can result when scripts or  restarts
	      are executed after the chroot operation.

	      Note:  The  SSL  library	will  probably need /dev/urandom to be
	      available	inside the chroot directory dir. This is  because  SSL
	      libraries	 occasionally  need to collect fresh randomness. Newer
	      linux kernels and	some BSDs implement a  getrandom()  or	geten-
	      tropy()  syscall	that  removes  the need	for /dev/urandom to be
	      available.

       --compat-mode version
	      This option provides a convenient	way to alter the  defaults  of
	      OpenVPN  to  be  more compatible with the	version	version	speci-
	      fied. All	of  the	 changes  this	option	applies	 can  also  be
	      achieved using individual	configuration options.

	      The version specified with this option is	the version of OpenVPN
	      peer  OpenVPN should try to be compatible	with. In general Open-
	      VPN should be compatible with  the  last	two  previous  version
	      without  this  option.  E.g.  OpenVPN 2.6.0 should be compatible
	      with 2.5.x and 2.4.x without this	option.	 However, there	 might
	      be  some edge cases that still require this option even in these
	      cases.

	      Note: Using this option reverts defaults	to  no	longer	recom-
	      mended values and	should be avoided if possible.

	      The  following table details what	defaults are changed depending
	      on the version specified.

	      	2.5.x or  lower:  --allow-compression  asym  is	 automatically
		added to the configuration if no other compression options are
		present.

	      	2.4.x  or  lower:  The	cipher	in  --cipher  is  appended  to
		--data-ciphers.

	      	2.3.x or lower:	--data-ciphers-fallback	is automatically added
		with the same cipher as	--cipher.

	      	2.3.6 or lower:	--tls-version-min 1.0 is added to the configu-
		ration when --tls-version-min is not explicitly	set.

	      If not required, this is option should be	avoided. Setting  this
	      option  can lower	security or disable features like data-channel
	      offloading.

       --config	file
	      Load additional config options from file where each line	corre-
	      sponds  to  one command line option, but with the	leading	-- re-
	      moved.

	      If --config file is the only option to the openvpn command,  the
	      --config can be removed, and the command can be given as openvpn
	      file

	      Note  that  configuration	 files	can  be	nested to a reasonable
	      depth.

	      Double quotation or single quotation characters ("", '') can  be
	      used to enclose single parameters	containing whitespace, and "#"
	      or ";" characters	in the first column can	be used	to denote com-
	      ments.

	      Note  that OpenVPN 2.0 and higher	performs backslash-based shell
	      escaping for characters not in single quotations,	so the follow-
	      ing mappings should be observed:

		 \\	  Maps to a single backslash character (\).
		 \"	  Pass a literal doublequote character ("), don't
			  interpret it as enclosing a parameter.
		 \[SPACE] Pass a literal space or tab character, don't
			  interpret it as a parameter delimiter.

	      For example on Windows,  use  double  backslashes	 to  represent
	      pathnames:

		 secret	"c:\\OpenVPN\\secret.key"

	      For examples of configuration files, see
	       <https://openvpn.net/community-resources/how-to/>

	      Here is an example configuration file:

		 #
		 # Sample OpenVPN configuration	file for
		 # using a pre-shared static key.
		 #
		 # '#' or ';' may be used to delimit comments.

		 # Use a dynamic tun device.
		 dev tun

		 # Our remote peer
		 remote	mypeer.mydomain

		 # 10.1.0.1 is our local VPN endpoint
		 # 10.1.0.2 is our remote VPN endpoint
		 ifconfig 10.1.0.1 10.1.0.2

		 # Our pre-shared static key
		 secret	static.key

       --daemon	progname
	      Become  a	 daemon	 after	all  initialization functions are com-
	      pleted.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 daemon
		 daemon	progname

	      This option will cause all message and error output to  be  sent
	      to  the  syslog file (such as /var/log/messages),	except for the
	      output of	scripts	 and  ifconfig	commands,  which  will	go  to
	      /dev/null	 unless	 otherwise  redirected.	The syslog redirection
	      occurs immediately at the	point that --daemon is parsed  on  the
	      command  line  even though the daemonization point occurs	later.
	      If one of	the --log options is present, it will supersede	syslog
	      redirection.

	      The optional progname parameter will cause OpenVPN to report its
	      program name to the system logger	as progname. This can be  use-
	      ful in linking OpenVPN messages in the syslog file with specific
	      tunnels. When unspecified, progname defaults to openvpn.

	      When OpenVPN is run with the --daemon option, it will try	to de-
	      lay daemonization	until the majority of initialization functions
	      which  are capable of generating fatal errors are	complete. This
	      means that initialization	scripts	can test the return status  of
	      the  openvpn command for a fairly	reliable indication of whether
	      the command has correctly	initialized  and  entered  the	packet
	      forwarding event loop.

	      In  OpenVPN,  the	vast majority of errors	which occur after ini-
	      tialization are non-fatal.

	      Note: as soon as OpenVPN has daemonized,	it  can	 not  ask  for
	      usernames, passwords, or key pass	phrases	anymore. This has cer-
	      tain  consequences,  namely that using a password-protected pri-
	      vate key will fail unless	the --askpass option is	used  to  tell
	      OpenVPN  to  ask for the pass phrase (this requirement is	new in
	      v2.3.7, and is a consequence of calling daemon() before initial-
	      izing the	crypto layer).

	      Further, using --daemon together with --auth-user-pass  (entered
	      on  console) and --auth-nocache will fail	as soon	as key renego-
	      tiation (and reauthentication) occurs.

       --disable-dco
	      Disable "data channel offload" (DCO).

	      On Linux don't use the ovpn-dco device driver, but  rather  rely
	      on the legacy tun	module.

	      You  may	want  to use this option if your server	needs to allow
	      clients older than version 2.4 to	connect.

       --disable-occ
	      DEPRECATED Disable "options consistency check" (OCC) in configu-
	      rations that do not use TLS.

	      Don't output a warning message if	option inconsistencies are de-
	      tected between peers. An	example	 of  an	 option	 inconsistency
	      would be where one peer uses --dev tun while the other peer uses
	      --dev tap.

	      Use  of  this option is discouraged, but is provided as a	tempo-
	      rary fix in situations where a recent version  of	 OpenVPN  must
	      connect to an old	version.

       --engine	engine-name
	      Enable OpenSSL hardware-based crypto engine functionality.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 engine
		 engine	engine-name

	      If  engine-name  is specified, use a specific crypto engine. Use
	      the --show-engines standalone option to list the crypto  engines
	      which are	supported by OpenSSL.

       --fast-io
	      Optimize	 TUN/TAP/UDP   I/O   writes  by	 avoiding  a  call  to
	      poll/epoll/select	prior to the write operation. The  purpose  of
	      such  a  call  would  normally  be  to block until the device or
	      socket is	ready to accept	the write. Such	blocking  is  unneces-
	      sary on some platforms which don't support write blocking	on UDP
	      sockets  or TUN/TAP devices. In such cases, one can optimize the
	      event loop by avoiding the poll/epoll/select call, improving CPU
	      efficiency by 5% to 10%.

	      This option can  only  be	 used  on  non-Windows	systems,  when
	      --proto udp is specified,	and when --shaper is NOT specified.

       --group group
	      Similar  to  the --user option, this option changes the group ID
	      of the OpenVPN process to	group after initialization.

       --ignore-unknown-option args
	      Valid syntax:

		 ignore-unknown-options	opt1 opt2 opt3 ... optN

	      When one of options opt1 ... optN	is encountered in the configu-
	      ration file the configuration file parsing does not fail if this
	      OpenVPN version does not	support	 the  option.  Multiple	 --ig-
	      nore-unknown-option  options  can	 be  given to support a	larger
	      number of	options	to ignore.

	      This option should be used with caution, as there	are good secu-
	      rity reasons for having OpenVPN fail if it detects problems in a
	      config file.  Having said	that,  there  are  valid  reasons  for
	      wanting new software features to gracefully degrade when encoun-
	      tered by older software versions.

	      --ignore-unknown-option is available since OpenVPN 2.3.3.

       --iproute cmd
	      Set  alternate  command  to  execute instead of default iproute2
	      command.	May be used in order to	execute	 OpenVPN  in  unprivi-
	      leged environment.

       --keying-material-exporter args
	      Save  Exported  Keying  Material [RFC5705] of len	bytes (must be
	      between 16 and 4095  bytes)  using  label	 in  environment  (ex-
	      ported_keying_material)  for  use	 by  plugins  in  OPENVPN_PLU-
	      GIN_TLS_FINAL callback.

	      Valid syntax:

		 keying-material-exporter label	len

	      Note that	exporter labels	have the potential to collide with ex-
	      isting PRF labels. In order to prevent this, labels  MUST	 begin
	      with EXPORTER.

       --mlock
	      Disable  paging by calling the POSIX mlockall function. Requires
	      that OpenVPN be initially	run as root (though OpenVPN can	subse-
	      quently downgrade	its UID	using the --user option).

	      Using this option	ensures	that key material and tunnel data  are
	      never  written  to  disk due to virtual memory paging operations
	      which occur under	most modern operating systems. It ensures that
	      even if an attacker was able to crack the	box  running  OpenVPN,
	      he  would	 not  be  able to scan the system swap file to recover
	      previously used ephemeral	keys, which are	used for a  period  of
	      time  governed by	the --reneg options (see below), then are dis-
	      carded.

	      The downside of using --mlock is that it will reduce the	amount
	      of physical memory available to other applications.

	      The limit	on how much memory can be locked and how that limit is
	      enforced	are  OS-dependent.  On Linux the default limit that an
	      unprivileged process may lock (RLIMIT_MEMLOCK) is	 low,  and  if
	      privileges  are  dropped	later,	future memory allocations will
	      very likely fail.	The limit can be  increased  using  ulimit  or
	      systemd directives depending on how OpenVPN is started.

	      If  the  platform	has the	getrlimit(2) system call, OpenVPN will
	      check for	the amount of mlock-able memory	before calling	mlock-
	      all(2),  and  tries to increase the limit	to 100 MB if less than
	      this is configured.  100 Mb is somewhat arbitrary	- it is	enough
	      for a moderately-sized OpenVPN deployment, but the memory	 usage
	      might  go	 beyond	 that  if  the number of concurrent clients is
	      high.

       --nice n
	      Change process priority after initialization (n greater  than  0
	      is lower priority, n less	than zero is higher priority).

       --providers providers
	      Load  the	list of	(OpenSSL) providers. This is mainly useful for
	      using an external	provider for key management like  tpm2-openssl
	      or to load the legacy provider with

		 --providers legacy default

	      Behaviour	 of  changing  this option between SIGHUP might	not be
	      well behaving.  If you need to  change/add/remove	 this  option,
	      fully restart OpenVPN.

       --remap-usr1 signal
	      Control  whether internally or externally	generated SIGUSR1 sig-
	      nals are remapped	to SIGHUP (restart without  persisting	state)
	      or SIGTERM (exit).

	      signal can be set	to SIGHUP or SIGTERM. By default, no remapping
	      occurs.

       --script-security level
	      This  directive offers policy-level control over OpenVPN's usage
	      of external programs and scripts.	Lower level  values  are  more
	      restrictive,  higher  values  are	 more permissive. Settings for
	      level:

	      0	     Strictly no calling of external programs.

	      1	     (Default) Only call built-in executables such  as	ifcon-
		     fig, ip, route, or	netsh.

	      2	     Allow  calling  of	 built-in executables and user-defined
		     scripts.

	      3	     Allow passwords to	be passed to scripts via environmental
		     variables (potentially unsafe).

	      OpenVPN releases before v2.3 also	supported a method flag	 which
	      indicated	how OpenVPN should call	external commands and scripts.
	      This  could  be either execve or system. As of OpenVPN 2.3, this
	      flag is no longer	accepted. In most *nix	environments  the  ex-
	      ecve() approach has been used without any	issues.

	      Some  directives	such as	--up allow options to be passed	to the
	      external script. In these	cases make sure	the script  name  does
	      not  contain  any	 spaces	or the configuration parser will choke
	      because it can't determine where the script name ends and	script
	      options start.

	      To run scripts in	Windows	in earlier OpenVPN versions you	needed
	      to either	add a full path	to the script  interpreter  which  can
	      parse the	script or use the system flag to run these scripts. As
	      of  OpenVPN 2.3 it is now	a strict requirement to	have full path
	      to the script interpreter	when  running  non-executables	files.
	      This  is	not  needed  for executable files, such	as .exe, .com,
	      .bat or .cmd files. For example, if  you	have  a	 Visual	 Basic
	      script, you must use this	syntax now:

		 --up 'C:\\Windows\\System32\\wscript.exe C:\\Program\ Files\\OpenVPN\\config\\my-up-script.vbs'

	      Please note the single quote marks and the escaping of the back-
	      slashes (\) and the space	character.

	      The reason the support for the system flag was removed is	due to
	      the  security  implications with shell expansions	when executing
	      scripts via the system() call.

       --setcon	context
	      Apply SELinux context  after  initialization.  This  essentially
	      provides	the  ability to	restrict OpenVPN's rights to only net-
	      work I/O operations, thanks to SELinux. This goes	 further  than
	      --user  and  --chroot in that those two, while being great secu-
	      rity features, unfortunately do not  protect  against  privilege
	      escalation  by exploitation of a vulnerable system call. You can
	      of course	combine	all three, but please note that	 since	setcon
	      requires	access to /proc	you will have to provide it inside the
	      chroot directory (e.g. with mount	--bind).

	      Since the	setcon operation is delayed  until  after  initializa-
	      tion,  OpenVPN  can be restricted	to just	network-related	system
	      calls, whereas by	applying the context before startup  (such  as
	      the  OpenVPN one provided	in the SELinux Reference Policies) you
	      will have	to allow many things required only during  initializa-
	      tion.

	      Like  with  chroot,  complications  can  result  when scripts or
	      restarts are executed after the setcon operation,	which  is  why
	      you should really	consider using the --persist-tun option.

       --status	args
	      Write  operational status	to file	every n	seconds. n defaults to
	      60 if not	specified.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 status	file
		 status	file n

	      Status can also be written to the	syslog by  sending  a  SIGUSR2
	      signal.

	      With  multi-client  capability  enabled  on a server, the	status
	      file includes a list of clients and a routing table. The	output
	      format  can be controlled	by the --status-version	option in that
	      case.

	      For clients or instances running in point-to-point mode, it will
	      contain the traffic statistics.

       --status-version	n
	      Set the status file format version number	to n.

	      This only	affects	the status file	on servers  with  multi-client
	      capability enabled.  Valid status	version	values:

	      1	     Traditional  format  (default).  The client list contains
		     the following fields comma-separated: Common  Name,  Real
		     Address, Bytes Received, Bytes Sent, Connected Since.

	      2	     A	more reliable format for external processing. Compared
		     to	version	1, the client list  contains  some  additional
		     fields:  Virtual Address, Virtual IPv6 Address, Username,
		     Client ID,	Peer ID, Data Channel Cipher. Future  versions
		     may extend	the number of fields.

	      3	     Identical to 2, but fields	are tab-separated.

       --test-crypto
	      Do a self-test of	OpenVPN's crypto options by encrypting and de-
	      crypting	test packets using the data channel encryption options
	      specified	above.	This option does not require a peer  to	 func-
	      tion, and	therefore can be specified without --dev or --remote.

	      The typical usage	of --test-crypto would be something like this:

		 openvpn --test-crypto --secret	key

	      or

		 openvpn --test-crypto --secret	key --verb 9

	      This  option  is	very  useful to	test OpenVPN after it has been
	      ported to	a new platform,	or to isolate  problems	 in  the  com-
	      piler,  OpenSSL  crypto library, or OpenVPN's crypto code. Since
	      it is a self-test	mode, problems with encryption and authentica-
	      tion can be debugged independently of network and	tunnel issues.

       --tmp-dir dir
	      Specify a	directory dir for temporary files. This	directory will
	      be used by openvpn processes and script to communicate temporary
	      data with	openvpn	main process. Note that	the directory must  be
	      writable	by  the	OpenVPN	process	after it has dropped it's root
	      privileges.

	      This directory will be used by in	the following cases:

	      	--client-connect  scripts  and	 OPENVPN_PLUGIN_CLIENT_CONNECT
		plug-in	 hook to dynamically generate client-specific configu-
		ration client_connect_config_file and  return  success/failure
		via  client_connect_deferred_file  when	 using deferred	client
		connect	method

	      	OPENVPN_PLUGIN_AUTH_USER_PASS_VERIFY  plug-in  hooks   returns
		success/failure	via auth_control_file when using deferred auth
		method and pending authentication via pending_auth_file.

       --use-prediction-resistance
	      Enable prediction	resistance on mbed TLS's RNG.

	      Enabling	prediction resistance causes the RNG to	reseed in each
	      call for random. Reseeding this often can	 quickly  deplete  the
	      kernel entropy pool.

	      If  you  need this option, please	consider running a daemon that
	      adds entropy to the kernel pool.

       --user user
	      Change the user ID of the	OpenVPN	process	to user	after initial-
	      ization, dropping	privileges in the process. This	option is use-
	      ful to protect the system	in the event that some	hostile	 party
	      was able to gain control of an OpenVPN session. Though OpenVPN's
	      security features	make this unlikely, it is provided as a	second
	      line of defense.

	      By  setting  user	to an unprivileged user	dedicated to run open-
	      vpn, the hostile party would be  limited	in  what  damage  they
	      could cause. Of course once you take away	privileges, you	cannot
	      return them to an	OpenVPN	session. This means, for example, that
	      if  you  want  to	 reset an OpenVPN daemon with a	SIGUSR1	signal
	      (for example in response to a DHCP reset), you should  make  use
	      of  one  or more of the --persist	options	to ensure that OpenVPN
	      doesn't need to execute any privileged operations	 in  order  to
	      restart (such as re-reading key files or running ifconfig	on the
	      TUN device).

	      NOTE:  Previous  versions	 of openvpn used nobody	as the example
	      unpriviledged user. It is	not recommended	to actually  use  that
	      user  since it is	usually	used by	other system services already.
	      Always create a dedicated	user for openvpn.

       --writepid file
	      Write OpenVPN's main process ID to file.

   Log options
       --echo parms
	      Echo parms to log	output.

	      Designed to be used to send messages to a	 controlling  applica-
	      tion which is receiving the OpenVPN log output.

       --errors-to-stderr
	      Output  errors  to stderr	instead	of stdout unless log output is
	      redirected by one	of the --log options.

       --log file
	      Output logging  messages	to  file,  including  output  to  std-
	      out/stderr which is generated by called scripts. If file already
	      exists  it  will	be truncated. This option takes	effect immedi-
	      ately when it is parsed in the command line and  will  supersede
	      syslog output if --daemon	is also	specified. This	option is per-
	      sistent  over  the entire	course of an OpenVPN instantiation and
	      will not be reset	by SIGHUP, SIGUSR1, or --ping-restart.

	      Note that	on Windows, when OpenVPN is started as a service, log-
	      ging occurs by default without the need to specify this option.

       --log-append file
	      Append logging messages to file.	If file	 does  not  exist,  it
	      will  be	created. This option behaves exactly like --log	except
	      that it appends to rather	than truncating	the log	file.

       --machine-readable-output
	      Always write timestamps and message flags	to log messages,  even
	      when  they  otherwise would not be prefixed. In particular, this
	      applies to log messages sent to stdout.

       --mute n
	      Log at most n consecutive	messages in the	same category. This is
	      useful to	limit repetitive logging of similar message types.

       --mute-replay-warnings
	      Silence the output of replay warnings, which are a common	 false
	      alarm  on	 WiFi  networks. This option preserves the security of
	      the replay protection code without the verbosity associated with
	      warnings about duplicate packets.

       --suppress-timestamps
	      Avoid writing timestamps to log messages,	even when they	other-
	      wise would be prepended. In particular, this applies to log mes-
	      sages sent to stdout.

       --syslog	progname
	      Direct  log output to system logger, but do not become a daemon.
	      See --daemon directive above for description of progname parame-
	      ter.

       --verb n
	      Set output verbosity to n	(default 1). Each level	shows all info
	      from the previous	levels.	Level 3	is recommended if you  want  a
	      good  summary  of	what's happening without being swamped by out-
	      put.

	      0	     No	output except fatal errors.

	      1	to 4 Normal usage range.

	      5	     Outputs R and W characters	to the console for each	packet
		     read and write, uppercase is used for TCP/UDP packets and
		     lowercase is used for TUN/TAP packets.

	      6	to 11
		     Debug info	range (see errlevel.h in the source  code  for
		     additional	information on debug levels).

   Protocol options
       Options	in  this section affect	features available in the OpenVPN wire
       protocol.  Many of these	options	also define the	encryption options  of
       the  data  channel in the OpenVPN wire protocol.	 These options must be
       configured in a compatible way between both the local and remote	side.

       --allow-compression mode
	      As described in the --compress option, compression is  a	poten-
	      tially dangerous option.	This option allows controlling the be-
	      haviour of OpenVPN when compression is used and allowed.

	      The mode argument	can be one of the following values:

	      asym   OpenVPN  will  only  decompress  incoming packets but not
		     compress outgoing packets.	 This also allows migrating to
		     disable compression when changing both server and	client
		     configurations  to	remove compression at the same time is
		     not a feasible option.

	      no (default)
		     OpenVPN will refuse any compression.  If data-channel of-
		     floading  is  enabled,  OpenVPN  will  additionally  also
		     refuse compression	framing	(stub).

	      yes    DEPRECATED	 This  option is an alias for asym. Previously
		     it	did enable compression for outgoing packets, but Open-
		     VPN never compresses packets on send now.

       --auth alg
	      Authenticate data	channel	packets	and (if	enabled) tls-auth con-
	      trol channel packets with	HMAC using  message  digest  algorithm
	      alg. (The	default	is SHA1	). HMAC	is a commonly used message au-
	      thentication  algorithm  (MAC) that uses a data string, a	secure
	      hash algorithm and a key to produce a digital signature.

	      The OpenVPN data channel protocol	 uses  encrypt-then-mac	 (i.e.
	      first  encrypt  a	 packet	 then  HMAC the	resulting ciphertext),
	      which prevents padding oracle attacks.

	      If an AEAD cipher	mode (e.g. GCM)	is chosen then	the  specified
	      --auth algorithm is ignored for the data channel and the authen-
	      tication	method	of  the	AEAD cipher is used instead. Note that
	      alg still	specifies the digest used for tls-auth.

	      In static-key encryption mode, the HMAC key is included  in  the
	      key file generated by --genkey. In TLS mode, the HMAC key	is dy-
	      namically	generated and shared between peers via the TLS control
	      channel.	If  OpenVPN  receives a	packet with a bad HMAC it will
	      drop the packet. HMAC usually adds 16 or 20  bytes  per  packet.
	      Set alg=none to disable authentication.

	      For more information on HMAC see
	       <http://www.cs.ucsd.edu/users/mihir/papers/hmac.html>

       --cipher	alg
	      This  option should not be used any longer in TLS	mode and still
	      exists for two reasons:

	      	compatibility  with  old  configurations  still	 carrying   it
		around;

	      	allow  users  connecting  to OpenVPN peers older than 2.6.0 to
		have --cipher configured the same way as the  remote  counter-
		part. This can avoid MTU/frame size warnings.

	      Before  2.4.0,  this  option was used to select the cipher to be
	      configured on the	data channel, however, later versions  usually
	      ignored this directive in	favour of a negotiated cipher.	Start-
	      ing  with	 2.6.0,	this option is always ignored in TLS mode when
	      it comes to configuring the cipher.

	      If you wish to specify the cipher	to use on  the	data  channel,
	      please   see   --data-ciphers   (for  regular  negotiation)  and
	      --data-ciphers-fallback (for a fallback option when the negotia-
	      tion cannot take place because the other peer is old or has  ne-
	      gotiation	disabled).

	      To  see  ciphers	that  are  available  with  OpenVPN,  use  the
	      --show-ciphers option.

	      Set alg to none to disable encryption.

       --compress algorithm
	      DEPRECATED Enable	a compression algorithm. Compression is	gener-
	      ally not recommended. VPN	tunnels	which use compression are sus-
	      ceptible to the VORALCE attack vector. See also the migrate  pa-
	      rameter below.

	      The  algorithm parameter may be lzo, lz4,	lz4-v2,	stub, stub-v2,
	      migrate or empty.	 LZO and LZ4 are different  compression	 algo-
	      rithms,  with  LZ4  generally offering the best performance with
	      least CPU	usage.

	      The lz4-v2 and stub-v2 variants implement	a better framing  that
	      does  not	 add  overhead	when packets cannot be compressed. All
	      other variants always add	one extra framing byte compared	to  no
	      compression framing.

	      Especially  stub-v2  is  essentially identical to	no compression
	      and no compression framing as its	header indicates IP version  5
	      in  a tun	setup and can (ab)used to complete disable compression
	      to clients. (See the migrate option below)

	      If the algorithm parameter is stub, stub-v2 or  empty,  compres-
	      sion  will be turned off,	but the	packet framing for compression
	      will still be enabled, allowing a	different setting to be	pushed
	      later.  Additionally, stub and stub-v2  wil  disable  announcing
	      lzo and lz4 compression support via IV_ variables	to the server.

	      Note:  the  stub	(or  empty)  option is NOT compatible with the
	      older option --comp-lzo no.

	      Using migrate as compression algorithm enables a special	migra-
	      tion   mode.    It   allows   migration  away  from  the	--com-
	      press/--comp-lzo options to no compression.   This  option  sets
	      the server to no compression mode	and the	server behaves identi-
	      cal  to  a  server  without a compression	option for all clients
	      without a	compression in their config. However, if a  client  is
	      detected	that indicates that compression	is used	(via OCC), the
	      server will automatically	add --push  compress  stub-v2  to  the
	      client  specific	configuration  if  supported by	the client and
	      otherwise	switch to comp-lzo no and add --push comp-lzo  to  the
	      client specific configuration.

	      *Security	Considerations*

	      Compression  and	encryption  is a tricky	combination. If	an at-
	      tacker knows or is able to control (parts	of) the	plain-text  of
	      packets  that contain secrets, the attacker might	be able	to ex-
	      tract the	secret if compression is enabled. See e.g.  the	 CRIME
	      and  BREACH attacks on TLS and VORACLE on	VPNs which also	lever-
	      age to break encryption. If you are not entirely sure  that  the
	      above does not apply to your traffic, you	are advised to not en-
	      able compression.

	      For  this	 reason	 compression  support was removed from current
	      versions of OpenVPN. It will still decompress compressed packets
	      received via a VPN connection but	it  will  never	 compress  any
	      outgoing packets.

       --comp-lzo mode
	      DEPRECATED  Enable  LZO  compression  algorithm.	Compression is
	      generally	not recommended.  VPN tunnels which  uses  compression
	      are suspectible to the VORALCE attack vector.

	      Allows  the other	side of	the connection to use LZO compression.
	      Due to difference	in packet format this  may  add	 1  additional
	      byte  per	 packet.   With	 current versions of OpenVPN no	actual
	      compression will happen.

	      mode may be yes, no, or adaptive but there is no	actual	change
	      in behavior anymore.

       --comp-noadapt
	      DEPRECATED  This	option	does not have any effect anymore since
	      current versions of OpenVPN never	compress outgoing packets.

       --key-direction
	      Alternative way of specifying the	optional  direction  parameter
	      for  the	--tls-auth option. Useful when using inline files (See
	      section on inline	files).

       --data-ciphers cipher-list
	      Restrict the allowed ciphers to be negotiated to the ciphers  in
	      cipher-list.  cipher-list	 is a colon-separated list of ciphers,
	      and defaults to  AES-256-GCM:AES-128-GCM:CHACHA20-POLY1305  when
	      Chacha20-Poly1305	     is	     available	    and	     otherwise
	      AES-256-GCM:AES-128-GCM.

	      For servers, the first cipher from cipher-list that is also sup-
	      ported by	the client will	be pushed to clients that support  ci-
	      pher negotiation.

	      For more details see the chapter on Data channel cipher negotia-
	      tion.   Especially  if  you need to support clients with OpenVPN
	      versions older than 2.4!

	      Starting with OpenVPN 2.6	a cipher can be	prefixed with a	 ?  to
	      mark  it	as optional. This allows including ciphers in the list
	      that  may	  not	be   available	 on   all   platforms.	  E.g.
	      AES-256-GCM:AES-128-GCM:?CHACHA20-POLY1305   would  only	enable
	      Chacha20-Poly1305	if the underlying SSL library (and its config-
	      uration) supports	it.

	      Starting with OpenVPN 2.7	the special  keyword  DEFAULT  can  be
	      used in the string and is	replaced by the	default	ciphers.  This
	      can  be  used to add an additional allowed cipher	to the allowed
	      ciphers, e.g.  DEFAULT:AES-192-CBC to use	 the  default  ciphers
	      but also allow AES-192-CBC.

	      Cipher  negotiation  is enabled in client-server mode only. I.e.
	      if --mode	is set to  server  (server-side,  implied  by  setting
	      --server	),  or if --pull is specified (client-side, implied by
	      setting --client).

	      If no common cipher is found during cipher negotiation, the con-
	      nection is terminated. To	support	old clients/old	 servers  that
	      do  not  provide	any  cipher negotiation	support	see --data-ci-
	      phers-fallback.

	      If --compat-mode is set to a version older than 2.5.0 the	cipher
	      specified	by --cipher will be appended to	--data-ciphers if  not
	      already present.

	      This list	is restricted to be 127	chars long after conversion to
	      OpenVPN ciphers.

	      This option was called --ncp-ciphers in OpenVPN 2.4 but has been
	      renamed  to --data-ciphers in OpenVPN 2.5	to more	accurately re-
	      flect its	meaning.

       --data-ciphers-fallback alg
	      Configure	a cipher that is used to fall back to if we could  not
	      determine	which cipher the peer is willing to use.

	      This  option  should only	be needed to connect to	peers that are
	      running OpenVPN 2.3 or older versions, and have been  configured
	      with --enable-small (typically used on routers or	other embedded
	      devices).

       --allow-deprecated-insecure-static-crypto
	      DEPRECATED  This allow using OpenVPN without TLS.	This is	depre-
	      cated and	will be	removed	in OpenVPN 2.8.

       --tran-window n
	      Transition window	-- our old key can live	this many seconds  af-
	      ter  a  new  a  key renegotiation	begins (default	3600 seconds).
	      This feature allows for a	graceful transition from  old  to  new
	      key,  and	removes	the key	renegotiation sequence from the	criti-
	      cal path of tunnel data forwarding.

       --force-tls-key-material-export
	      This option is only available in --mode server and forces	to use
	      Keying Material Exporters	(RFC 5705) for clients.	 This  can  be
	      used  to simulate	an environment where the cryptographic library
	      does not support the older method	to generate data channel  keys
	      anymore.	This  option is	intended to be a test option and might
	      be removed in a future OpenVPN version without notice.

   Client Options
       The client options are used when	connecting to an OpenVPN  server  con-
       figured	to use --server, --server-bridge, or --mode server in its con-
       figuration.

       --allow-pull-fqdn
	      Allow client to pull DNS names from server  (rather  than	 being
	      limited	to   IP	  address)   for   --ifconfig,	 --route,  and
	      --route-gateway.

       --allow-recursive-routing
	      When this	option is set, OpenVPN	will  not  drop	 incoming  tun
	      packets with same	destination as host.

       --auth-token token
	      This  is	not an option to be used directly in any configuration
	      files, but rather	 push  this  option  from  a  --client-connect
	      script   or   a  --plugin	 which	hooks  into  the  OPENVPN_PLU-
	      GIN_CLIENT_CONNECT  or  OPENVPN_PLUGIN_CLIENT_CONNECT_V2	calls.
	      This  option provides a possibility to replace the clients pass-
	      word with	an authentication token	during	the  lifetime  of  the
	      OpenVPN client.

	      Whenever	  the	 connection    is    renegotiated    and   the
	      --auth-user-pass-verify script or	--plugin  making  use  of  the
	      OPENVPN_PLUGIN_AUTH_USER_PASS_VERIFY  hook is triggered, it will
	      pass over	this token as the password instead of the password the
	      user provided. The authentication	token can only be reset	 by  a
	      full  reconnect  where  the  server  can push new	options	to the
	      client. The password the user entered is never preserved once an
	      authentication token has been set. If the	 OpenVPN  server  side
	      rejects the authentication token then the	client will receive an
	      AUTH_FAILED and disconnect.

	      The purpose of this is to	enable two factor authentication meth-
	      ods,  such  as  HOTP  or TOTP, to	be used	without	needing	to re-
	      trieve a new OTP code each time the connection is	 renegotiated.
	      Another  use  case is to cache authentication data on the	client
	      without needing to have the users	password cached	in memory dur-
	      ing the life time	of the session.

	      To make use of this  feature,  the  --client-connect  script  or
	      --plugin needs to	put

		 push "auth-token UNIQUE_TOKEN_VALUE"

	      into  the	 file/buffer for dynamic configuration data. This will
	      then make	the OpenVPN server to push this	value to  the  client,
	      which replaces the local password	with the UNIQUE_TOKEN_VALUE.

	      Newer  clients  (2.4.7+) will fall back to the original password
	      method after a failed auth. Older	clients	will  keep  using  the
	      token value and react according to --auth-retry

       --auth-token-user base64username
	      Companion	 option	 to  --auth-token.  This options allows	one to
	      override the username used by the	client	when  reauthenticating
	      with  the	auth-token.  It	also allows one	to use --auth-token in
	      setups that normally do not use username and password.

	      The username has to be base64 encoded.

       --auth-user-pass
	      Authenticate with	server using username/password.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 auth-user-pass
		 auth-user-pass	up

	      If up is present,	it must	be a file containing username/password
	      on 2 lines. If the password line is missing, OpenVPN will	prompt
	      for one.

	      If up is omitted,	username/password will be  prompted  from  the
	      console.

	      This option can also be inlined

		 <auth-user-pass>
		 username
		 [password]
		 </auth-user-pass>

	      where  password  is optional, and	will be	prompted from the con-
	      sole if missing.

	      The server configuration must specify an --auth-user-pass-verify
	      script to	verify the username/password provided by the client.

       --auth-retry type
	      Controls how OpenVPN responds to username/password  verification
	      errors  such  as the client-side response	to an AUTH_FAILED mes-
	      sage from	the server or verification failure of the private  key
	      password.

	      Normally	used  to  prevent  auth	errors from being fatal	on the
	      client side, and to permit username/password requeries  in  case
	      of error.

	      An  AUTH_FAILED message is generated by the server if the	client
	      fails --auth-user-pass authentication,  or  if  the  server-side
	      --client-connect	script returns an error	status when the	client
	      tries to connect.

	      type can be one of:

	      none   Client will exit with a fatal  error  (this  is  the  de-
		     fault).

	      nointeract
		     Client  will  retry the connection	without	requerying for
		     an	--auth-user-pass username/password.  Use  this	option
		     for unattended clients.

	      interact
		     Client   will   requery  for  an  --auth-user-pass	 user-
		     name/password and/or private key password before attempt-
		     ing a reconnection.

	      Note that	while this option cannot be pushed,  it	 can  be  con-
	      trolled from the management interface.

       --client
	      A	 helper	 directive  designed  to simplify the configuration of
	      OpenVPN's	client mode. This directive is equivalent to:

		 pull
		 tls-client

       --client-nat args
	      This pushable client option sets up a stateless  one-to-one  NAT
	      rule  on	packet	addresses  (not	ports),	and is useful in cases
	      where routes or ifconfig settings	pushed	to  the	 client	 would
	      create an	IP numbering conflict.

	      Examples:

		 client-nat snat 192.168.0.0/255.255.0.0
		 client-nat dnat 10.64.0.0/255.255.0.0

	      network/netmask  (for  example  192.168.0.0/255.255.0.0) defines
	      the local	view of	a resource from	the client perspective,	 while
	      alias/netmask  (for  example  10.64.0.0/255.255.0.0) defines the
	      remote view from the server perspective.

	      Use snat (source NAT) for	resources owned	by the client and dnat
	      (destination NAT)	for remote resources.

	      Set --verb 6 for debugging info showing  the  transformation  of
	      src/dest addresses in packets.

       --connect-retry args
	      Wait  n  seconds	between	 connection attempts (default 1).  Re-
	      peated reconnection attempts are slowed down after 5 retries per
	      remote by	doubling the wait time	after  each  unsuccessful  at-
	      tempt.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 connect retry n
		 connect retry n max

	      If the optional argument max is specified, the maximum wait time
	      in seconds gets capped at	that value (default 300).

       --connect-retry-max n
	      n	 specifies  the	 number	of times each --remote or <connection>
	      entry is tried. Specifying n as 1	would try each	entry  exactly
	      once.  A successful connection resets the	counter.  (default un-
	      limited).

       --connect-timeout n
	      See --server-poll-timeout.

       --dns args
	      Client DNS configuration to be used with the connection.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 dns search-domains domain [domain ...]
		 dns server n address addr[:port] [addr[:port] ...]
		 dns server n resolve-domains domain [domain ...]
		 dns server n dnssec yes|optional|no
		 dns server n transport	DoH|DoT|plain
		 dns server n sni server-name

	      The --dns	search-domains directive  takes	 one  or  more	domain
	      names to be added	as DNS domain suffixes.	If it is repeated mul-
	      tiple  times  within  a  configuration the domains are appended,
	      thus e.g.	domain names pushed by a server	will amend locally de-
	      fined ones.

	      The --dns	server directive is used to configure  DNS  server  n.
	      The server id n must be a	value between -128 and 127. For	pushed
	      DNS  server  options it must be between 0	and 127. The server id
	      is used to group options and also	for ordering the list of  con-
	      figured DNS servers; lower numbers come first. DNS servers being
	      pushed  to  a client replace already configured DNS servers with
	      the same server id.

	      The address option configures the	IPv4 and / or IPv6 address(es)
	      of the DNS server. Up to eight addresses can  be	specified  per
	      DNS  server.   Optionally	 a port	can be appended	after a	colon.
	      IPv6 addresses need to be	enclosed in brackets if	a port is  ap-
	      pended.

	      The resolve-domains option takes one or more DNS domains used to
	      define  a	 split-dns  or dns-routing setup, where	only the given
	      domains are resolved by the server. Systems which	do not support
	      fine grained DNS domain configuration will ignore	this setting.

	      The dnssec option	is used	 to  configure	validation  of	DNSSEC
	      records.	 While the exact semantics may differ for resolvers on
	      different	systems, yes likely  makes  validation	mandatory,  no
	      disables it, and optional	uses it	opportunistically.

	      The   transport	option	 enables   DNS-over-HTTPS   (DoH)   or
	      DNS-over-TLS (DoT) for a DNS server. The sni option can be  used
	      with them	to specify the server-name for TLS server name indica-
	      tion.

	      Each  server  has	 to have at least one address configured for a
	      configuration to be valid. All the other options can be omitted.

	      Note that	not all	options	may be supported on all	platforms.  As
	      soon  support  for different systems is implemented, information
	      will be added here how unsupported options are treated.

	      The --dns	option will eventually obsolete	the --dhcp-option  di-
	      rective.	Until then it will replace configuration at the	places
	      --dhcp-option  puts  it,	so that	--dns overrides	--dhcp-option.
	      Thus, --dns can be used today to migrate from --dhcp-option.

       --explicit-exit-notify n
	      In UDP client mode or point-to-point mode, send  server/peer  an
	      exit  notification  if tunnel is restarted or OpenVPN process is
	      exited. In client	mode, on exit/restart, this option  will  tell
	      the  server  to  immediately  close  its	client instance	object
	      rather than waiting for a	timeout.

	      If both server and client	support	sending	this message using the
	      control channel, the message will	 be  sent  as  control-channel
	      message.	Otherwise the message is sent as data-channel message,
	      which will be ignored by data-channel offloaded peers.

	      The n parameter (default 1 if not	present) controls the  maximum
	      number  of  attempts that	the client will	try to resend the exit
	      notification message if messages are sent	in data-channel	mode.

	      In UDP server mode, send RESTART control channel command to con-
	      nected clients. The n parameter (default 1 if not	present)  con-
	      trols  client behavior. With n = 1 client	will attempt to	recon-
	      nect to the same server, with n =	2 client will advance  to  the
	      next server.

	      OpenVPN  will not	send any exit notifications unless this	option
	      is enabled.

       --inactive args
	      Causes OpenVPN to	exit after n  seconds  of  inactivity  on  the
	      TUN/TAP  device. The time	length of inactivity is	measured since
	      the last incoming	or outgoing tunnel packet. The	default	 value
	      is 0 seconds, which disables this	feature.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 inactive n
		 inactive n bytes

	      If  the  optional	bytes parameter	is included, exit if less than
	      bytes of combined	in/out traffic are produced on the tun/tap de-
	      vice in n	seconds.

	      In any case, OpenVPN's internal ping  packets  (which  are  just
	      keepalives)  and	TLS control packets are	not considered "activ-
	      ity", nor	are they counted as traffic, as	they are  used	inter-
	      nally by OpenVPN and are not an indication of actual user	activ-
	      ity.

       --proto-force p
	      When  iterating  through connection profiles, only consider pro-
	      files using protocol p (tcp | udp).

	      Note that	this specifically only filters by the transport	 layer
	      protocol,	 i.e. UDP or TCP. This does not	affect whether IPv4 or
	      IPv6 is used as IP protocol.

	      For implementation reasons the option accepts the	4 and  6  suf-
	      fixes  when  specifying  the protocol (i.e. udp4 / udp6 /	tcp4 /
	      tcp6).  However, these behave the	same as	without	the suffix and
	      should be	avoided	to prevent confusion.

       --pull This option must be used on a client which is  connecting	 to  a
	      multi-client  server. It indicates to OpenVPN that it should ac-
	      cept options pushed by the server, provided they are part	of the
	      legal set	of pushable options (note that the  --pull  option  is
	      implied by --client ).

	      In  particular,  --pull  allows the server to push routes	to the
	      client, so you should not	use --pull or --client	in  situations
	      where  you  don't	 trust	the  server  to	 have control over the
	      client's routing table.

       --pull-filter args
	      Filter options on	the client pushed by the server	to the client.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 pull-filter accept text
		 pull-filter ignore text
		 pull-filter reject text

	      Filter options received from the server  if  the	option	starts
	      with text.  The action flag accept allows	the option, ignore re-
	      moves  it	 and  reject  flags  an	 error	and triggers a SIGUSR1
	      restart. The filters may be specified multiple times,  and  each
	      filter is	applied	in the order it	is specified. The filtering of
	      each option stops	as soon	as a match is found. Unmatched options
	      are accepted by default.

	      Prefix comparison	is used	to match text against the received op-
	      tion so that

		 pull-filter ignore "route"

	      would  remove all	pushed options starting	with route which would
	      include, for example, route-gateway. Enclose text	in  quotes  to
	      embed spaces.

		 pull-filter accept "route 192.168.1."
		 pull-filter ignore "route "

	      would remove all routes that do not start	with 192.168.1.

	      Note  that  reject may result in a repeated cycle	of failure and
	      reconnect, unless	multiple remotes are specified and  connection
	      to the next remote succeeds. To silently ignore an option	pushed
	      by the server, use ignore.

       --push-peer-info
	      Push additional information about	the client to server. The fol-
	      lowing data is always pushed to the server:

	      IV_VER=<version>
		     The client	OpenVPN	version

	      IV_PLAT=[linux|solaris|openbsd|mac|netbsd|freebsd|win]
		     The client	OS platform

	      IV_PROTO
		     Details about protocol extensions that the	peer supports.
		     The  variable  is	a bitfield and the bits	are defined as
		     follows:

		      bit 0: Reserved,	should always be zero

		      bit 1: The peer supports	peer-id	floating mechanism

		      bit 2: The client expects a push-reply and  the	server
		       may  send this reply without waiting for	a push-request
		       first.

		      bit 3: The client is capable of	doing  key  derivation
		       using RFC5705 key material exporter.

		      bit  4:	The  client is capable of accepting additional
		       arguments to the	AUTH_PENDING message.

		      bit 5: The client supports doing	feature	negotiation in
		       P2P mode

		      bit 6: The client is capable of parsing	and  receiving
		       the --dns pushed	option

		      bit  7: The client is capable of	sending	exit notifica-
		       tion via	control	channel	using EXIT message. Also,  the
		       client  is  accepting  the protocol-flags pushed	option
		       for the EKM capability

		      bit   8:	  The	client	 is   capable	of   accepting
		       AUTH_FAILED,TEMP	messages

		      bit 9: The client is capable of dynamic tls-crypt

		      bit 10: The client is capable of	data epoch keys

	      IV_NCP=2
		     Negotiable	 ciphers,  client  supports --cipher pushed by
		     the server, a value of 2 or greater indicates client sup-
		     ports AES-GCM-128 and AES-GCM-256.	IV_NCP	is  deprecated
		     in	favor of IV_CIPHERS.

	      IV_CIPHERS=<data-ciphers>
		     The  client  announces the	list of	supported ciphers con-
		     figured with the --data-ciphers option to the server.

	      IV_MTU=<max_mtu>
		     The client	announces the support of pushable MTU and  the
		     maximum MTU it is willing to accept.

	      IV_GUI_VER=<gui_id> <version>
		     The  UI  version  of  a UI	if one is running, for example
		     de.blinkt.openvpn 0.5.47 for the Android app.   This  may
		     be	set by the client UI/GUI using --setenv.

	      IV_SSO=[crtext,][openurl,][proxy_url]
		     Additional	  authentication   methods  supported  by  the
		     client.  This may be  set	by  the	 client	 UI/GUI	 using
		     --setenv.

	      The following flags depend on which compression formats are com-
	      piled in and whether compression is allowed by options. See Pro-
	      tocol options for	more details.

		 IV_LZO=1
			If client supports LZO compression.

		 IV_LZO_STUB=1
			If  client was built with LZO stub capability. This is
			only sent if IV_LZO=1 is  not  sent.  This  means  the
			client can talk	to a server configured with --comp-lzo
			no.

		 IV_LZ4=1 and IV_LZ4v2=1
			If the client supports LZ4 compression.

		 IV_COMP_STUB=1	and IV_COMP_STUBv2=1
			If  the	 client	 supports stub compression. This means
			the client can talk to a server	configured with	--com-
			press.

	      When --push-peer-info is enabled the additional information con-
	      sists of the following data:

	      IV_HWADDR=<string>
		     This is intended to be a unique and persistent ID of  the
		     client.   The  string  value  can	be  any	readable ASCII
		     string up to 64 bytes.  OpenVPN 2.x and some other	imple-
		     mentations	use the	MAC address of the client's  interface
		     used to reach the default gateway.	If this	string is gen-
		     erated  by	 the  client, it should	be consistent and pre-
		     served across independent sessions	and preferably	re-in-
		     stallations and upgrades.

	      IV_SSL=<version string>
		     The ssl library version used by the client, e.g.  OpenSSL
		     1.0.2f 28 Jan 2016.

	      IV_PLAT_VER=x.y
		     The version of the	operating system, e.g. 6.1 for Windows
		     7.	  This may be set by the client	UI/GUI using --setenv.
		     On	Windows	systems	 it  is	 automatically	determined  by
		     openvpn  itself.  On other	platforms OpenVPN will default
		     to	sending	the information	returned by the	uname()	system
		     call in the release field,	which is usually the currently
		     running kernel version.  This is highly system  specific,
		     though.

	      UV_<name>=<value>
		     Client environment	variables whose	names start with UV_

       --remote	args
	      Remote host name or IP address, port and protocol.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 remote	host
		 remote	host port
		 remote	host port proto

	      The  port	 and  proto arguments are optional. The	OpenVPN	client
	      will try to connect to a server at host:port.  The  proto	 argu-
	      ment  indicates the protocol to use when connecting with the re-
	      mote, and	may be tcp or udp.  To enforce IPv4  or	 IPv6  connec-
	      tions add	a 4 or 6 suffix; like udp4 / udp6 / tcp4 / tcp6.

	      On  the  client,	multiple --remote options may be specified for
	      redundancy, each referring to a different	OpenVPN	server,	in the
	      order specified by the list of --remote options. Specifying mul-
	      tiple --remote options for this purpose is a special case	of the
	      more general connection-profile feature.	See  the  <connection>
	      documentation below.

	      The  client  will	 move  on to the next host in the list,	in the
	      event of connection failure. Note	that at	any  given  time,  the
	      OpenVPN client will at most be connected to one server.

	      Examples:

		 remote	server1.example.net
		 remote	server1.example.net 1194
		 remote	server2.example.net 1194 tcp

	      Note:  Since  UDP	 is  connectionless, connection	failure	is de-
		     fined by the --ping and --ping-restart options.

		     Also, if you use multiple --remote	options, AND  you  are
		     dropping root privileges on the client with --user	and/or
		     --group  AND  the	client is running a non-Windows	OS, if
		     the client	needs to switch	to  a  different  server,  and
		     that  server  pushes back different TUN/TAP or route set-
		     tings, the	client may lack	the  necessary	privileges  to
		     close  and	reopen the TUN/TAP interface. This could cause
		     the client	to exit	with a fatal error.

	      If --remote is unspecified, OpenVPN will listen for packets from
	      any IP address, but will not act on those	 packets  unless  they
	      pass  all	authentication tests. This requirement for authentica-
	      tion is binding on all potential peers, even  those  from	 known
	      and  supposedly trusted IP addresses (it is very easy to forge a
	      source IP	address	on a UDP packet).

	      When used	in TCP mode, --remote will act as a filter,  rejecting
	      connections from any host	which does not match host.

	      If  host	is a DNS name which resolves to	multiple IP addresses,
	      OpenVPN will try them in the order that the system getaddrinfo()
	      presents them, so	priorization and DNS randomization is done  by
	      the system library. Unless an IP version is forced by the	proto-
	      col  specification  (4/6 suffix),	OpenVPN	will try both IPv4 and
	      IPv6 addresses, in the order getaddrinfo() returns them.

       --remote-random
	      When multiple --remote address/ports are specified, or  if  con-
	      nection  profiles	 are being used, initially randomize the order
	      of the list as a kind of basic load-balancing measure.

       --remote-random-hostname
	      Prepend a	random string (6 bytes,	12 hex characters) to hostname
	      to prevent DNS caching. For example, "foo.bar.gov" would be mod-
	      ified to "<random-chars>.foo.bar.gov".

       --resolv-retry n
	      If hostname resolve fails	for --remote, retry resolve for	n sec-
	      onds before failing.

	      Set n to infinite	to retry indefinitely.

	      By default, --resolv-retry infinite is enabled. You can  disable
	      by setting n=0.

       --single-session
	      After  initially	connecting  to a remote	peer, disallow any new
	      connections. Using this option means that	a remote  peer	cannot
	      connect, disconnect, and then reconnect.

	      If  the  daemon  is reset	by a signal or --ping-restart, it will
	      allow one	new connection.

	      --single-session can be used with	--ping-exit or	--inactive  to
	      create a single dynamic session that will	exit when finished.

       --server-poll-timeout n
	      When  connecting	to a remote server do not wait for more	than n
	      seconds for a response before trying the next  server.  The  de-
	      fault  value is 120. This	timeout	includes proxy and TCP connect
	      timeouts.

       --static-challenge args
	      Enable static challenge/response protocol

	      Valid syntax:

		 static-challenge text echo [format]

	      The text challenge text is presented to the user which describes
	      what information is requested.  The echo flag indicates  if  the
	      user's  input should be echoed on	the screen.  Valid echo	values
	      are 0 or 1. The optional format indicates	whether	 the  password
	      and response should be combined using the	SCRV1 protocol (format
	      =	scrv1) or simply concatenated (format =	concat).  scrv1	is the
	      default.

	      See  management-notes.txt	 in the	OpenVPN	distribution for a de-
	      scription	of the OpenVPN challenge/response protocol.

       --http-proxy args
	      Connect to remote	host through an	HTTP proxy.  This requires  at
	      least  an	 address  server and port argument.  If	HTTP Proxy-Au-
	      thenticate is required, a	file name to an	authfile file contain-
	      ing a username and password on 2 lines can be given, or stdin to
	      prompt from console. Its content can also	be  specified  in  the
	      config  file  with the --http-proxy-user-pass option (See	INLINE
	      FILE SUPPORT).

	      The last optional	argument is an auth-method which should	be one
	      of none, basic, or ntlm2.

	      HTTP Digest authentication is supported as well,	but  only  via
	      the auto or auto-nct flags (below).  This	must replace the auth-
	      file argument.

	      The  auto	 flag  causes  OpenVPN	to automatically determine the
	      auth-method and query stdin  or  the  management	interface  for
	      username/password	 credentials, if required. This	flag exists on
	      OpenVPN 2.1 or higher.

	      The auto-nct flag	(no clear-text auth) instructs OpenVPN to  au-
	      tomatically  determine  the authentication method, but to	reject
	      weak authentication protocols such as HTTP Basic Authentication.

	      Examples:

		 # no authentication
		 http-proxy proxy.example.net 3128
		 # basic authentication, load credentials from file
		 http-proxy proxy.example.net 3128 authfile.txt
		 # basic authentication, ask user for credentials
		 http-proxy proxy.example.net 3128 stdin
		 # NTLM	authentication,	load credentials from file
		 http-proxy proxy.example.net 3128 authfile.txt	ntlm2
		 # determine which authentication is required, ask user	for credentials
		 http-proxy proxy.example.net 3128 auto
		 # determine which authentication is required, but reject basic
		 http-proxy proxy.example.net 3128 auto-nct
		 # determine which authentication is required, but set credentials
		 http-proxy proxy.example.net 3128 auto
		 http-proxy-user-pass authfile.txt
		 # basic authentication, specify credentials inline
		 http-proxy proxy.example.net 3128 "" basic
		 <http-proxy-user-pass>
		 username
		 password
		 </http-proxy-user-pass>

	      Note that	support	for NTLMv1 proxies was	removed	 with  OpenVPN
	      2.7.   ntlm  now is an alias for ntlm2; i.e. OpenVPN will	always
	      attempt to use NTLMv2 authentication.

       --http-proxy-user-pass userpass
	      Overwrite	the username/password information for --http-proxy. If
	      specified	as an inline option (see INLINE	FILE SUPPORT), it will
	      be interpreted as	username/password separated by a newline. When
	      specified	on the command line it is interpreted  as  a  filename
	      same as the third	argument to --http-proxy.

	      Example:

		 <http-proxy-user-pass>
		 username
		 password
		 </http-proxy-user-pass>

       --http-proxy-option args
	      Set  extended HTTP proxy options.	Requires an option type	as ar-
	      gument and an optional parameter to the  type.   Repeat  to  set
	      multiple options.

	      VERSION version
		     Set HTTP version number to	version	(default 1.0).

	      AGENT user-agent
		     Set HTTP "User-Agent" string to user-agent.

	      CUSTOM-HEADER name content
		     Adds  the	custom Header with name	as name	and content as
		     the content of the	custom HTTP header.

	      Examples:

		 http-proxy-option VERSION 1.1
		 http-proxy-option AGENT OpenVPN/2.4
		 http-proxy-option X-Proxy-Flag	some-flags

       --socks-proxy args
	      Connect to remote	host  through  a  Socks5  proxy.   A  required
	      server argument is needed.  Optionally a port (default 1080) and
	      authfile	can  be	 given.	  The  authfile	is a file containing a
	      username and password on 2 lines,	or stdin can be	used to	prompt
	      from console.

   Server Options
       Starting	with OpenVPN 2.0, a multi-client TCP/UDP server	mode  is  sup-
       ported,	and  can  be  enabled with the --mode server option. In	server
       mode, OpenVPN will listen on a single port for incoming client  connec-
       tions.  All  client  connections	will be	routed through a single	tun or
       tap interface. This mode	is designed for	scalability and	should be able
       to support hundreds or even thousands of	clients	on  sufficiently  fast
       hardware. SSL/TLS authentication	must be	used in	this mode.

       --auth-gen-token	args
	      Returns  an  authentication  token to successfully authenticated
	      clients.

	      Valid syntax:

		 auth-gen-token	[lifetime] [renewal-time] [external-auth]

	      After  successful	 user/password	authentication,	 the   OpenVPN
	      server will with this option generate a temporary	authentication
	      token  and  push that to the client. On the following renegotia-
	      tions, the OpenVPN client	will pass this token  instead  of  the
	      users  password. On the server side the server will do the token
	      authentication internally	and it will NOT	do any additional  au-
	      thentications  against configured	external user/password authen-
	      tication mechanisms.

	      The tokens implemented by	 this  mechanism  include  an  initial
	      timestamp	and a renew timestamp and are secured by HMAC.

	      The  lifetime  argument  defines how long	the generated token is
	      valid.  The lifetime is defined in seconds. If lifetime  is  not
	      set or it	is set to 0, the token will never expire.

	      If renewal-time is not set it defaults to	reneg-sec.

	      The  token  will	expire either after the	configured lifetime of
	      the token	is reached or after not	being renewed for more than  2
	      *	 renewal-time  seconds.	Clients	will be	sent renewed tokens on
	      every TLS	renegotiation. If renewal-time is lower	than reneg-sec
	      the server will push an  updated temporary authentication	 token
	      every  reneweal-time seconds. This is done to invalidate a token
	      if a client is disconnected for a	sufficiently long time,	 while
	      at  the same time	permitting much	longer token lifetimes for ac-
	      tive clients.

	      This feature is useful for environments which are	configured  to
	      use  One	Time  Passwords	(OTP) as part of the user/password au-
	      thentications and	that authentication mechanism does not	imple-
	      ment any auth-token support.

	      When the external-auth keyword is	present	the normal authentica-
	      tion  method  will always	be called even if auth-token succeeds.
	      Normally other authentications method are	skipped	if  auth-token
	      verification succeeds or fails.

	      This  option postpones this decision to the external authentica-
	      tion methods and checks the validity of the account and do other
	      checks.

	      In this mode the environment will	 have  a  session_id  variable
	      that  holds the session id from auth-gen-token. Also an environ-
	      ment variable session_state is present. This variable  indicates
	      whether  the  auth-token	has  succeeded or not. It can have the
	      following	values:

	      Initial
		     No	token from client.

	      Authenticated
		     Token is valid and	not expired.

	      Expired
		     Token is valid but	has expired.

	      Invalid
		     Token is invalid (failed HMAC or wrong length)

	      AuthenticatedEmptyUser / ExpiredEmptyUser
		     The token is not valid with the username  sent  from  the
		     client  but  would	 be valid (or expired) if we assume an
		     empty username was	used instead.  These two cases	are  a
		     workaround	  for	behaviour   in	OpenVPN	 3.   If  this
		     workaround	is not needed these two	cases should  be  han-
		     dled in the same way as Invalid.

	      Warning:	Use  this feature only if you want your	authentication
	      method called on every verification. Since the external  authen-
	      tication	is called it needs to also indicate a success or fail-
	      ure of the authentication. It is strongly	recommended to	return
	      an  authentication  failure  in  the case	of the Invalid/Expired
	      auth-token with the external-auth	option unless the client could
	      authenticate in another acceptable  way  (e.g.  client  certifi-
	      cate),  otherwise	 returning success will	lead to	authentication
	      bypass (as does returning	success	on a  wrong  password  from  a
	      script).

	      Note:  the  username  for	 --auth-gen-token can be overridden by
	      --override-user. In this case the	client will be pushed also the
	      --auth-token-user	option and an auth token  that	is  valid  for
	      that  username  instead of the original username that the	client
	      authenticated with.

       --auth-gen-token-secret file
	      Specifies	a file that holds  a  secret  for  the	HMAC  used  in
	      --auth-gen-token	If file	is not present OpenVPN will generate a
	      random secret on startup.	This file should be used if auth-token
	      should validate after restarting a server	or if client should be
	      able  to	roam  between  multiple	 OpenVPN  servers  with	 their
	      auth-token.

       --auth-user-pass-optional
	      Allow  connections  by  clients  that  do	 not  specify  a user-
	      name/password.  Normally,	when --auth-user-pass-verify or	--man-
	      agement-client-auth are specified	(or an	authentication	plugin
	      module),	the  OpenVPN  server  daemon  will  require connecting
	      clients to specify a username and	password.  This	 option	 makes
	      the submission of	a username/password by clients optional, pass-
	      ing  the	responsibility to the user-defined authentication mod-
	      ule/script to accept or deny the client based on	other  factors
	      (such as the setting of X509 certificate fields).	 When this op-
	      tion  is	used,  and a connecting	client does not	submit a user-
	      name/password,  the  user-defined	 authentication	 module/script
	      will see the username and	password as being set to empty strings
	      (""). The	authentication module/script MUST have logic to	detect
	      this condition and respond accordingly.

       --ccd-exclusive
	      Require,	as  a  condition  of authentication, that a connecting
	      client has a --client-config-dir file.

       --client-config-dir dir
	      Specify a	directory dir for custom client	config files. After  a
	      connecting  client  has been authenticated, OpenVPN will look in
	      this directory for a file	having the same	name as	 the  client's
	      X509  common  name. If a matching	file exists, it	will be	opened
	      and parsed for  client-specific  configuration  options.	If  no
	      matching	file  is  found,  OpenVPN will instead try to open and
	      parse a default file called "DEFAULT", which may be provided but
	      is not required. Note that the configuration files must be read-
	      able by the OpenVPN process after	it has dropped it's root priv-
	      ileges.

	      This file	can specify a fixed IP address for a given client  us-
	      ing  --ifconfig-push,  as	 well  as  fixed  subnets owned	by the
	      client using --iroute.

	      One of the useful	properties of this option is  that  it	allows
	      client  configuration  files to be conveniently created, edited,
	      or removed while the server is live, without needing to  restart
	      the server.

	      The  following  options  are legal in a client-specific context:
	      --push, --push-reset, --push-remove, --iroute,  --ifconfig-push,
	      --vlan-pvid and --config.

       --client-to-client
	      Because the OpenVPN server mode handles multiple clients through
	      a	 single	 tun or	tap interface, it is effectively a router. The
	      --client-to-client  flag	tells  OpenVPN	to  internally	 route
	      client-to-client	traffic	 rather	than pushing all client-origi-
	      nating traffic to	the TUN/TAP interface.

	      When this	option is used,	 each  client  will  "see"  the	 other
	      clients  which  are  currently connected.	Otherwise, each	client
	      will only	see the	server.	Don't use this option if you  want  to
	      firewall tunnel traffic using custom, per-client rules.

	      Please note that when using data channel offload this option has
	      no  effect.  Packets are always sent to the tunnel interface and
	      then routed based	on the system routing table.

       --disable
	      Disable a	particular client (based on the	common name) from con-
	      necting.	Don't use this option to disable a client due  to  key
	      or  password compromise. Use a CRL (certificate revocation list)
	      instead (see the --crl-verify option).

	      This option must be associated with a specific client  instance,
	      which  means  that  it  must be specified	either in a client in-
	      stance config file using --client-config-dir or dynamically gen-
	      erated using a --client-connect script.

       --connect-freq args
	      Allow a maximum of  n  new  connections  per  sec	 seconds  from
	      clients.

	      Valid syntax:

		 connect-freq n	sec

	      This  is	designed to contain DoS	attacks	which flood the	server
	      with connection requests using  certificates  which  will	 ulti-
	      mately fail to authenticate.

	      This limit applies after --connect-freq-initial and only applies
	      to  client that have completed the three-way handshake or	client
	      that use --tls-crypt-v2 without cookie support  (allow-noncookie
	      argument to --tls-crypt-v2).

	      This  is	an  imperfect  solution	however, because in a real DoS
	      scenario,	legitimate connections might also be refused.

	      For the best protection against DoS attacks in server mode,  use
	      --proto udp and either --tls-auth	or --tls-crypt.

       --connect-freq-initial args
	      (UDP  only)  Allow  a maximum of n initial connection packet re-
	      sponses per sec seconds from the OpenVPN server to clients.

	      Valid syntax:

		 connect-freq-initial n	sec

	      OpenVPN starting at 2.6 is very efficient	in responding to  ini-
	      tial connection packets. When not	limiting the initial responses
	      an OpenVPN daemon	can be abused in reflection attacks.  This op-
	      tion  is designed	to limit the rate OpenVPN will respond to ini-
	      tial attacks.

	      Connection attempts that complete	the  initial  three-way	 hand-
	      shake  will  not be counted against the limit. The default is to
	      allow 100	initial	connection per 10s.

       --duplicate-cn
	      Allow multiple clients with the same common name to concurrently
	      connect. In the absence of this option, OpenVPN will  disconnect
	      a	 client	 instance  upon	 connection of a new client having the
	      same common name.

       --ifconfig-pool args
	      Set aside	a pool of subnets to be	dynamically allocated to  con-
	      necting clients, similar to a DHCP server.

	      Valid syntax:

		 ifconfig-pool start-IP	end-IP [netmask]

	      For  tun-style  tunnels,	each client will be given a /30	subnet
	      (for interoperability with Windows clients).  For	tap-style tun-
	      nels, individual addresses will be allocated, and	 the  optional
	      netmask parameter	will also be pushed to clients.

       --ifconfig-ipv6-pool args
	      Specify an IPv6 address pool for dynamic assignment to clients.

	      Valid args:

		 ifconfig-ipv6-pool ipv6addr/bits

	      The  pool	 starts	 at ipv6addr and matches the offset determined
	      from the start of	the IPv4 pool.	If the host part of the	 given
	      IPv6 address is 0, the pool starts at ipv6addr +1.

       --ifconfig-pool-persist args
	      Persist/unpersist	 ifconfig-pool data to file, at	seconds	inter-
	      vals (default 600), as well as on	program	startup	and shutdown.

	      Valid syntax:

		 ifconfig-pool-persist file [seconds]

	      The goal of this option is to provide  a	long-term  association
	      between  clients	(denoted by their common name) and the virtual
	      IP address assigned to them from the ifconfig-pool.  Maintaining
	      a	 long-term  association	 is good for clients because it	allows
	      them to effectively use the --persist-tun	option.

	      file  is	a  comma-delimited  ASCII  file,  formatted  as	 <Com-
	      mon-Name>,<IP-address>.

	      If  seconds = 0, file will be treated as read-only. This is use-
	      ful if you would like to treat file as a configuration file.

	      Note that	the entries in this file are  treated  by  OpenVPN  as
	      suggestions  only,  based	 on past associations between a	common
	      name and IP address.  They do not	guarantee that the given  com-
	      mon  name	 will always receive the given IP address. If you want
	      guaranteed assignment, use --ifconfig-push

       --ifconfig-push args
	      Push virtual IP endpoints	 for  client  tunnel,  overriding  the
	      --ifconfig-pool dynamic allocation.

	      Valid syntax:

		 ifconfig-push local remote-netmask [alias]

	      The parameters local and remote-netmask are set according	to the
	      --ifconfig directive which you want to execute on	the client ma-
	      chine  to	 configure the remote end of the tunnel. Note that the
	      parameters local and remote-netmask are from the perspective  of
	      the client, not the server. They may be DNS names	rather than IP
	      addresses,  in which case	they will be resolved on the server at
	      the time of client connection.

	      The optional alias parameter may be  used	 in  cases  where  NAT
	      causes  the client view of its local endpoint to differ from the
	      server view. In this case	local/remote-netmask will refer	to the
	      server view while	alias/remote-netmask will refer	to the	client
	      view.

	      This  option must	be associated with a specific client instance,
	      which means that it must be specified either  in	a  client  in-
	      stance config file using --client-config-dir or dynamically gen-
	      erated using a --client-connect script.

	      Remember also to include a --route directive in the main OpenVPN
	      config  file  which encloses local, so that the kernel will know
	      to route it to the server's TUN/TAP interface.

	      OpenVPN's	internal client	IP address selection  algorithm	 works
	      as follows:

	      1. Use  --client-connect	script	generated  file	 for static IP
		 (first	choice).

	      2. Use --client-config-dir file for static IP (next choice).

	      3. Use --ifconfig-pool allocation	for dynamic IP (last choice).

       --ifconfig-ipv6-push args
	      for --client-config-dir per-client static	IPv6 interface config-
	      uration, see --client-config-dir and  --ifconfig-push  for  more
	      details.

	      Valid syntax:

		 ifconfig-ipv6-push ipv6addr/bits ipv6remote

       --multihome
	      Configure	a multi-homed UDP server. This option needs to be used
	      when a server has	more than one IP address (e.g. multiple	inter-
	      faces,  or  secondary IP addresses), and is not using --local to
	      force binding to one specific address only. This option will add
	      some extra lookups to the	packet path to ensure that the UDP re-
	      ply packets are always sent from the address that	the client  is
	      talking  to. This	is not supported on all	platforms, and it adds
	      more processing, so it's not enabled by default.

	      Notes:

		      This option is only relevant for	UDP servers.

		      If you do an IPv6+IPv4 dual-stack bind on a  Linux  ma-
		       chine  with  multiple IPv4 address, connections to IPv4
		       addresses will not work right on	kernels	 before	 3.15,
		       due  to missing kernel support for the IPv4-mapped case
		       (some distributions have	ported this to earlier	kernel
		       versions, though).

       --iroute	args
	      Generate an internal route to a specific client. The netmask pa-
	      rameter, if omitted, defaults to 255.255.255.255.

	      Valid syntax:

		 iroute	network	[netmask]

	      This  directive  can  be	used  to route a fixed subnet from the
	      server to	a particular client, regardless	of where the client is
	      connecting from.	Remember that you must also add	the  route  to
	      the  system  routing table as well (such as by using the --route
	      directive). The reason why two routes are	 needed	 is  that  the
	      --route  directive routes	the packet from	the kernel to OpenVPN.
	      Once in OpenVPN, the --iroute directive routes to	 the  specific
	      client.

	      However,	when  using  DCO,  the	--iroute  directive is usually
	      enough for DCO to	fully configure	the routing table.  The	 extra
	      --route  directive is required only if the expected behaviour is
	      to route the traffic for a specific network to the VPN interface
	      also when	the responsible	client is not connected	(traffic  will
	      then be dropped).

	      This option must be specified either in a	client instance	config
	      file  using --client-config-dir or dynamically generated using a
	      --client-connect script.

	      The --iroute directive also has an  important  interaction  with
	      --push  "route ...". --iroute essentially	defines	a subnet which
	      is owned by a particular client (we will call this client	A). If
	      you would	like other clients to be able to reach A's subnet, you
	      can use --push "route ..." together with	--client-to-client  to
	      effect this. In order for	all clients to see A's subnet, OpenVPN
	      must push	this route to all clients EXCEPT for A,	since the sub-
	      net  is already owned by A. OpenVPN accomplishes this by not not
	      pushing a	route to a client if it	matches	one  of	 the  client's
	      iroutes.

       --iroute-ipv6 args
	      for  --client-config-dir per-client static IPv6 route configura-
	      tion, see	--iroute for more details how to setup and  use	 this,
	      and how --iroute and --route interact.

	      Valid syntax:

		 iroute-ipv6 ipv6addr/bits

       --max-clients n
	      Limit server to a	maximum	of n concurrent	clients.

       --max-routes-per-client n
	      Allow  a	maximum	of n internal routes per client	(default 256).
	      This is designed to help contain DoS attacks where an  authenti-
	      cated  client  floods  the server	with packets appearing to come
	      from many	unique MAC addresses, forcing the  server  to  deplete
	      virtual  memory  as its internal routing table expands. This di-
	      rective can be used in a --client-config-dir file	or auto-gener-
	      ated by a	--client-connect script	to override the	 global	 value
	      for a particular client.

	      Note  that this directive	affects	OpenVPN's internal routing ta-
	      ble, not the kernel routing table.

       --opt-verify
	      DEPRECATED Clients that connect with options that	are incompati-
	      ble with those of	the server will	be disconnected.

	      Options  that  will  be  compared	 for   compatibility   include
	      dev-type,	 link-mtu,  tun-mtu,  proto, ifconfig, comp-lzo, frag-
	      ment,  keydir,  cipher,  auth,  keysize,	tls-auth,  key-method,
	      tls-server and tls-client.

	      This option requires that	--disable-occ NOT be used.

       --override-username username
	      Sets  the	 username  of  a connection to the specified username.
	      This username will also be used  by  --auth-gen-token.  However,
	      the  overridden  username	 comes	only  into  effect  after  the
	      --client-config-dir has been read	and the	 --auth-user-pass-ver-
	      ify and --client-connect scripts have been run.

	      Also  --username-as-common-name  will  use  the  client provided
	      username as common-name. It is recommended to avoid the  use  of
	      the  --override-username option if the option --username-as-com-
	      mon-name is being	used.

	      The changed username will	be picked up by	the status output  and
	      also  by	the --auth-gen-token option. It	will also be pushed to
	      the client using --auth-token-user if  --auth-gen-token  is  en-
	      abled.

	      Internally  on all subsequent renegotiations the client provided
	      username will be replaced	by the username	 provided  by  --over-
	      ride-username.  If the client changes to a username that is dif-
	      ferent  from  both  the initial and the overridden username, the
	      client will be rejected.

	      Special care should be taken that	both the initial  username  of
	      the  client  and	the  overridden	username are handled correctly
	      when using --override-username and the related options to	 avoid
	      authentication/authorisation bypasses.

	      This  option  is mainly intended for use cases that use certifi-
	      cates and	multi factor authentication and	therefore do not  pro-
	      vide  a  username	that can be used for --auth-gen-token to allow
	      providing	a username in these scenarios.

	      If the --auth-token directive is pushed by another script/plugin
	      or management interface, consider	also  generating  and  pushing
	      --auth-token-user.

       --port-share args
	      Share OpenVPN TCP	with another service

	      Valid syntax:

		 port-share host port [dir]

	      When run in TCP server mode, share the OpenVPN port with another
	      application,  such  as an	HTTPS server. If OpenVPN senses	a con-
	      nection to its port which	is using a  non-OpenVPN	 protocol,  it
	      will  proxy the connection to the	server at host:port. Currently
	      only designed to work with HTTP/HTTPS, though it would be	 theo-
	      retically	possible to extend to other protocols such as ssh.

	      dir  specifies an	optional directory where a temporary file with
	      name N containing	content	C will be  dynamically	generated  for
	      each  proxy  connection,	where  C  is the source	IP:port	of the
	      client connection	and N is the source IP:port of the  connection
	      to  the  proxy receiver. This directory can be used as a dictio-
	      nary by the proxy	receiver to determine the origin of  the  con-
	      nection.	Each generated file will be automatically deleted when
	      the proxied connection is	torn down.

	      Not implemented on Windows.

       --push option
	      Push a config file option	back to	the client for	remote	execu-
	      tion.  Note  that	option must be enclosed	in double quotes ("").
	      The client must specify --pull in	its config file.  The  set  of
	      options  which  can be pushed is limited by both feasibility and
	      security.	Some options such as those which would execute scripts
	      are banned, since	they would  effectively	 allow	a  compromised
	      server  to  execute  arbitrary code on the client. Other options
	      such as TLS or MTU  parameters  cannot  be  pushed  because  the
	      client  needs  to	 know them before the connection to the	server
	      can be initiated.

	      This is a	partial	list of	options	which can currently be pushed:
	      --route,	--route-gateway,  --route-delay,   --redirect-gateway,
	      --ip-win32,    --dhcp-option,    --dns,	 --inactive,   --ping,
	      --ping-exit,  --ping-restart,  --setenv,	--auth-token,	--per-
	      sist-tun,	   --echo,   --comp-lzo,   --socket-flags,   --sndbuf,
	      --rcvbuf,	--session-timeout

       --push-remove opt
	      Selectively remove all --push options matching  "opt"  from  the
	      option  list for a client. opt is	matched	as a substring against
	      the  whole  option  string  to-be-pushed	to  the	  client,   so
	      --push-remove route would	remove all --push route	... and	--push
	      route-ipv6  ...	statements,  while  --push-remove  "route-ipv6
	      2001:" would only	remove IPv6 routes for 2001:...	networks.

	      --push-remove can	only be	used  in  a  client-specific  context,
	      like  in	a --client-config-dir file, or --client-connect	script
	      or plugin	-- similar to --push-reset, just more selective.

	      NOTE: to change an option, --push-remove can be  used  to	 first
	      remove  the old value, and then add a new	--push option with the
	      new value.

	      NOTE 2: due to implementation details,  'ifconfig'  and  'ifcon-
	      fig-ipv6'	 can only be removed with an exact match on the	option
	      (	push-remove ifconfig), no substring matching and  no  matching
	      on the IPv4/IPv6 address argument	is possible.

       --push-reset
	      Don't  inherit  the  global  push	list for a specific client in-
	      stance.  Specify this option in a	client-specific	 context  such
	      as  with	a  --client-config-dir configuration file. This	option
	      will ignore --push options at the	global config file level.

	      NOTE: --push-reset is very thorough: it will remove  almost  all
	      options  from  the list of to-be-pushed options.	In many	cases,
	      some of these options will need to be re-configured afterwards -
	      specifically, --topology subnet  and  --route-gateway  will  get
	      lost  and	 this  will break client configs in many cases.	 Thus,
	      for most purposes, --push-remove is better suited	to selectively
	      remove push options for individual clients.

       --server	args
	      A	helper directive designed to  simplify	the  configuration  of
	      OpenVPN's	 server	 mode.	This  directive	will set up an OpenVPN
	      server which will	allocate addresses to clients out of the given
	      network/netmask. The server itself will take the .1  address  of
	      the given	network	for use	as the server-side endpoint of the lo-
	      cal  TUN/TAP interface. If the optional nopool flag is given, no
	      dynamic IP address pool will prepared for	VPN clients.

	      Valid syntax:

		 server	network	netmask	[nopool]

	      For example, --server 10.8.0.0 255.255.255.0 expands as follows:

		 mode server
		 tls-server
		 push "topology	[topology]"

		 if dev	tun AND	(topology == net30 OR topology == p2p):
		   ifconfig 10.8.0.1 10.8.0.2
		   if !nopool:
		     ifconfig-pool 10.8.0.4 10.8.0.251
		   route 10.8.0.0 255.255.255.0
		   if client-to-client:
		     push "route 10.8.0.0 255.255.255.0"
		   else	if topology == net30:
		     push "route 10.8.0.1"

		 if dev	tap OR (dev tun	AND topology ==	subnet):
		   ifconfig 10.8.0.1 255.255.255.0
		   if !nopool:
		     ifconfig-pool 10.8.0.2 10.8.0.253 255.255.255.0
		   push	"route-gateway 10.8.0.1"
		   if route-gateway unset:
		     route-gateway 10.8.0.2

	      Don't  use  --server  if	you   are   ethernet   bridging.   Use
	      --server-bridge instead.

       --server-bridge args
	      A	helper directive similar to --server which is designed to sim-
	      plify  the  configuration	 of  OpenVPN's server mode in ethernet
	      bridging configurations.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 server-bridge gateway netmask pool-start-IP pool-end-IP
		 server-bridge [nogw]

	      If --server-bridge is used without any parameters, it  will  en-
	      able  a  DHCP-proxy  mode, where connecting OpenVPN clients will
	      receive an IP address for	their TAP adapter from the DHCP	server
	      running on the OpenVPN server-side LAN. Note that	 only  clients
	      that  support  the binding of a DHCP client with the TAP adapter
	      (such as Windows)	can support this mode. The optional nogw  flag
	      (advanced)  indicates  that  gateway  information	 should	not be
	      pushed to	the client.

	      To configure ethernet bridging, you must	first  use  your  OS's
	      bridging	capability to bridge the TAP interface with the	ether-
	      net NIC interface.  For example, on Linux	this is	done with  the
	      brctl  tool,  and	with Windows XP	it is done in the Network Con-
	      nections Panel by	selecting the ethernet and  TAP	 adapters  and
	      right-clicking on	"Bridge	Connections".

	      Next  you	you must manually set the IP/netmask on	the bridge in-
	      terface.	The gateway and	netmask	parameters to  --server-bridge
	      can  be set to either the	IP/netmask of the bridge interface, or
	      the IP/netmask of	the default gateway/router on the bridged sub-
	      net.

	      Finally, set aside a IP range in the bridged subnet, denoted  by
	      pool-start-IP  and  pool-end-IP, for OpenVPN to allocate to con-
	      necting clients.

	      For example,  server-bridge  10.8.0.4  255.255.255.0  10.8.0.128
	      10.8.0.254 expands as follows:

		 mode server
		 tls-server

		 ifconfig-pool 10.8.0.128 10.8.0.254 255.255.255.0
		 push "route-gateway 10.8.0.4"

	      In another example, --server-bridge (without parameters) expands
	      as follows:

		 mode server
		 tls-server

		 push "route-gateway dhcp"

	      Or --server-bridge nogw expands as follows:

		 mode server
		 tls-server

       --server-ipv6 args
	      Convenience-function  to enable a	number of IPv6 related options
	      at once, namely --ifconfig-ipv6, --ifconfig-ipv6-pool and	--push
	      tun-ipv6.

	      Valid syntax:

		 server-ipv6 ipv6addr/bits

	      Pushing of the --tun-ipv6	directive is done  for	older  clients
	      which require an explicit	--tun-ipv6 in their configuration.

       --stale-routes-check args
	      Remove routes which haven't had activity for n seconds (i.e. the
	      ageing time).  This check	is run every t seconds (i.e. check in-
	      terval).

	      Valid syntax:

		 stale-routes-check n [t]

	      If t is not present it defaults to n.

	      This  option  helps to keep the dynamic routing table small. See
	      also --max-routes-per-client

       --username-as-common-name
	      Use the authenticated username as	the common-name,  rather  than
	      the  common-name from the	client certificate. Requires that some
	      form of --auth-user-pass verification is in effect. As  the  re-
	      placement	happens	after --auth-user-pass verification, the veri-
	      fication	script	or  plugin  will still receive the common-name
	      from the certificate.

	      The common_name environment variable passed to scripts and plug-
	      ins invoked after	authentication	(e.g,  client-connect  script)
	      and  file	names parsed in	client-config directory	will match the
	      username.

       --verify-client-cert mode
	      Specify whether the client is required to	supply	a  valid  cer-
	      tificate.

	      Possible mode options are:

	      none   A client certificate is not required. the client needs to
		     authenticate  using username/password only. Be aware that
		     using this	directive is less secure than  requiring  cer-
		     tificates from all	clients.

		     If	 you  use this directive, the entire responsibility of
		     authentication will rest on your  --auth-user-pass-verify
		     script,  so  keep	in mind	that bugs in your script could
		     potentially compromise the	security of your VPN.

		     --verify-client-cert none is functionally	equivalent  to
		     --client-cert-not-required.

	      optional
		     A client may present a certificate	but it is not required
		     to	do so.	When using this	directive, you should also use
		     a	--auth-user-pass-verify	 script	to ensure that clients
		     are authenticated using a	certificate,  a	 username  and
		     password, or possibly even	both.

		     Again,  the  entire responsibility	of authentication will
		     rest on your --auth-user-pass-verify script, so  keep  in
		     mind  that	 bugs in your script could potentially compro-
		     mise the security of your VPN.

	      require
		     This is the default  option.  A  client  is  required  to
		     present a certificate, otherwise VPN access is refused.

	      If you don't use this directive (or use --verify-client-cert re-
	      quire)  but  you also specify an --auth-user-pass-verify script,
	      then OpenVPN will	perform	double authentication. The client cer-
	      tificate verification  AND  the  --auth-user-pass-verify	script
	      will  need  to succeed in	order for a client to be authenticated
	      and accepted onto	the VPN.

       --vlan-tagging
	      Server-only option. Turns	the OpenVPN  server  instance  into  a
	      switch that understands VLAN-tagging, based on IEEE 802.1Q.

	      The server TAP device and	each of	the connecting clients is seen
	      as  a  port of the switch. All client ports are in untagged mode
	      and the server TAP device	is VLAN-tagged,	 untagged  or  accepts
	      both, depending on the --vlan-accept setting.

	      Ethernet frames with a prepended 802.1Q tag are called "tagged".
	      If  the  VLAN  Identifier	(VID) field in such a tag is non-zero,
	      the frame	is called "VLAN-tagged". If the	VID is zero,  but  the
	      Priority	Control	 Point	(PCP)  field is	non-zero, the frame is
	      called "prio-tagged". If there is	no 802.1Q tag,	the  frame  is
	      "untagged".

	      Using   the   --vlan-pvid	  v   option   once  per  client  (see
	      --client-config-dir), each port can be associated	with a certain
	      VID.  Packets can	only be	forwarded  between  ports  having  the
	      same VID.	 Therefore, clients with differing VIDs	are completely
	      separated	 from one-another, even	if --client-to-client is acti-
	      vated.

	      The packet filtering takes place in the OpenVPN server.  Clients
	      should not have any VLAN tagging configuration applied.

	      The  --vlan-tagging  option is off by default. While turned off,
	      OpenVPN accepts any Ethernet frame and does not perform any spe-
	      cial processing for VLAN-tagged packets.

	      This option can only be activated	in --dev tap mode.

       --vlan-accept args
	      Configure	the VLAN tagging policy	for the	server TAP device.

	      Valid syntax:

		 vlan-accept  all|tagged|untagged

	      The following modes are available:

	      tagged Admit only	VLAN-tagged frames. Only  VLAN-tagged  packets
		     are  accepted,  while untagged or priority-tagged packets
		     are dropped when entering the server TAP device.

	      untagged
		     Admit only	untagged and prio-tagged frames.   VLAN-tagged
		     packets  are  not	accepted,  while  untagged  or	prior-
		     ity-tagged	packets	entering the  server  TAP  device  are
		     tagged   with   the   value  configured  for  the	global
		     --vlan-pvid setting.

	      all (default)
		     Admit all frames.	All  packets  are  admitted  and  then
		     treated like untagged or tagged mode respectively.

	      Note:  Some vendors refer	to switch ports	running	in tagged mode
		     as	 "trunk	 ports"	 and  switch ports running in untagged
		     mode as "access ports".

	      Packets forwarded	from clients to	 the  server  are  VLAN-tagged
	      with  the	 originating client's PVID, unless the VID matches the
	      global --vlan-pvid, in which case	the tag	is removed.

	      If no PVID is configured for a given  client  (see  --vlan-pvid)
	      packets are tagged with 1	by default.

       --vlan-pvid v
	      Specifies	 which	VLAN  identifier  a "port" is associated with.
	      Only valid when --vlan-tagging is	specified.

	      In the client context, the setting specifies  which  VLAN	 ID  a
	      client is	associated with. In the	global context,	the VLAN ID of
	      the  server  TAP	device is set. The latter only makes sense for
	      --vlan-accept untagged and --vlan-accept all modes.

	      Valid values for v go from 1 through to 4094. The	 global	 value
	      defaults to 1. If	no --vlan-pvid is specified in the client con-
	      text, the	global value is	inherited.

	      In  some switch implementations, the PVID	is also	referred to as
	      "Native VLAN".

   Encryption Options
   SSL Library information
       --show-ciphers
	      (Standalone) Show	all cipher algorithms to use with the --cipher
	      option.

       --show-digests
	      (Standalone) Show	all message digest algorithms to use with  the
	      --auth option.

       --show-tls
	      (Standalone)  Show  all  TLS ciphers supported by	the crypto li-
	      brary.  OpenVPN uses TLS to secure  the  control	channel,  over
	      which  the  keys that are	used to	protect	the actual VPN traffic
	      are exchanged. The TLS ciphers will be sorted from highest pref-
	      erence (most secure) to lowest.

	      Be aware that whether a cipher suite in this list	 can  actually
	      work  depends  on	 the  specific	setup of both peers (e.g. both
	      peers must support the cipher, and an ECDSA  cipher  suite  will
	      not work if you are using	an RSA certificate, etc.).

       --show-engines
	      (Standalone)  Show currently available hardware-based crypto ac-
	      celeration engines supported by the OpenSSL library.

       --show-groups
	      (Standalone) Show	all available elliptic	curves/groups  to  use
	      with the --ecdh-curve and	tls-groups options.

   Generating key material
       --genkey	args
	      (Standalone)  Generate  a	key to be used of the type keytype. if
	      keyfile is left out or empty the key will	be output  on  stdout.
	      See the following	sections for the different keytypes.

	      Valid syntax:

		 --genkey keytype keyfile

	      Valid keytype arguments are:

	      secret		    Standard OpenVPN shared secret keys

	      tls-crypt		    Alias for secret

	      tls-auth		    Alias for secret

	      auth-token	    Key	used for --auth-gen-token-key

	      tls-crypt-v2-server   TLS	Crypt v2 server	key

	      tls-crypt-v2-client   TLS	Crypt v2 client	key

	      Examples:

		 $ openvpn --genkey secret shared.key
		 $ openvpn --genkey tls-crypt shared.key
		 $ openvpn --genkey tls-auth shared.key
		 $ openvpn --genkey tls-crypt-v2-server	v2crypt-server.key
		 $ openvpn --tls-crypt-v2 v2crypt-server.key --genkey tls-crypt-v2-client v2crypt-client-1.key

	      	Generating  Shared  Secret  Keys Generate a shared secret, for
		use with the --tls-auth	or --tls-crypt options.

		Syntax:

		   $ openvpn --genkey tls-crypt|tls-auth keyfile

		The key	is saved in  keyfile.  Both  variants  (tls-crypt  and
		tls-auth) generate the same type of key. The aliases are added
		for convenience.

		This file must be shared with the peer over a pre-existing se-
		cure channel such as scp(1).

	      	Generating  TLS	 Crypt v2 Server key Generate a	--tls-crypt-v2
		key to be used by an OpenVPN server.  The  key	is  stored  in
		keyfile.

		Syntax:

		   --genkey tls-crypt-v2-server	keyfile

	      	Generating  TLS	 Crypt v2 Client key Generate a	--tls-crypt-v2
		key to be used by OpenVPN clients.  The	key is stored in  key-
		file.

		Syntax

		   --genkey tls-crypt-v2-client	keyfile	[metadata]

		If  supplied,  include	the  supplied  metadata	in the wrapped
		client key. This metadata must be supplied  in	base64-encoded
		form. The metadata must	be at most 733 bytes long (980 charac-
		ters in	base64,	though note that 980 base64 characters can en-
		code more than 733 bytes).

		If  no	metadata  is  supplied,	OpenVPN	will use a 64-bit unix
		timestamp representing the current time	 in  UTC,  encoded  in
		network	order, as metadata for the generated key.

		A  tls-crypt-v2	 client	 key is	wrapped	using a	server key. To
		generate a client key, the  user  must	therefore  supply  the
		server key using the --tls-crypt-v2 option.

		Servers	 can  use  --tls-crypt-v2-verify to specify a metadata
		verification command.

	      	Generate Authentication	Token key Generate a new  secret  that
		can be used with --auth-gen-token-secret

		Syntax:

		   --genkey auth-token [keyfile]

		Note:  This file should	be kept	secret to the server as	anyone
		       that  has  access to this file will be able to generate
		       auth tokens that	the  OpenVPN  server  will  accept  as
		       valid.

   Data	Channel	Renegotiation
       When running OpenVPN in client/server mode, the data channel will use a
       separate	 ephemeral  encryption	key which is rotated at	regular	inter-
       vals.

       --reneg-bytes n
	      Renegotiate data channel key after  n  bytes  sent  or  received
	      (disabled	 by default with an exception, see below). OpenVPN al-
	      lows the lifetime	of a key to be expressed as a number of	 bytes
	      encrypted/decrypted,  a  number  of packets, or a	number of sec-
	      onds. A key renegotiation	will be	forced if any of  these	 three
	      criteria are met by either peer.

	      If  using	 ciphers  with	cipher block sizes less	than 128-bits,
	      --reneg-bytes is set to 64MB by default, unless it is explicitly
	      disabled by setting the value to 0, but this is HIGHLY  DISCOUR-
	      AGED  as	this  is  designed  to add some	protection against the
	      SWEET32 attack vector. For more information see the --cipher op-
	      tion.

       --reneg-pkts n
	      Renegotiate data channel key after n packets sent	 and  received
	      (disabled	by default).

       --reneg-sec args
	      Renegotiate  data	channel	key after at most max seconds (default
	      3600) and	at least min  seconds  (default	 is  90%  of  max  for
	      servers, and equal to max	for clients).

		 reneg-sec max [min]

	      The  effective --reneg-sec value used is per session pseudo-uni-
	      form-randomized between min and max.

	      With the default value of	3600 this results in an	effective  per
	      session  value in	the range of 3240 .. 3600 seconds for servers,
	      or just 3600 for clients.

	      When using dual-factor authentication, note  that	 this  default
	      value  may  cause	 the  end user to be challenged	to reauthorize
	      once per hour.

	      Also, keep in mind that this option can  be  used	 on  both  the
	      client  and  server,  and	whichever uses the lower value will be
	      the one to trigger the renegotiation. A common mistake is	to set
	      --reneg-sec to a higher value on either the  client  or  server,
	      while  the  other	 side of the connection	is still using the de-
	      fault value of 3600 seconds, meaning that	the renegotiation will
	      still occur once per 3600	seconds. The solution is  to  increase
	      --reneg-sec on both the client and server, or set	it to 0	on one
	      side of the connection (to disable), and to your chosen value on
	      the other	side.

   TLS Mode Options
       TLS  mode  is the most powerful crypto mode of OpenVPN in both security
       and flexibility.	TLS mode works by establishing control and data	 chan-
       nels  which  are	multiplexed over a single TCP/UDP port.	OpenVPN	initi-
       ates a TLS session over the control channel and uses it to exchange ci-
       pher and	HMAC keys to protect the data channel. TLS mode	uses a	robust
       reliability  layer over the UDP connection for all control channel com-
       munication, while the data channel, over	which  encrypted  tunnel  data
       passes,	is  forwarded without any mediation. The result	is the best of
       both worlds: a fast data	channel	that forwards over UDP with  only  the
       overhead	of encrypt, decrypt, and HMAC functions, and a control channel
       that  provides  all of the security features of TLS, including certifi-
       cate-based authentication and Diffie Hellman forward secrecy.

       To use TLS mode,	each peer that runs OpenVPN should have	its own	 local
       certificate/key pair (--cert and	--key),	signed by the root certificate
       which is	specified in --ca.

       When  two OpenVPN peers connect,	each presents its local	certificate to
       the other. Each peer will then check that its partner peer presented  a
       certificate  which  was signed by the master root certificate as	speci-
       fied in --ca.

       If that check on	both peers succeeds, then  the	TLS  negotiation  will
       succeed,	 both  OpenVPN peers will exchange temporary session keys, and
       the tunnel will begin passing data.

       The OpenVPN project provides a set of scripts for managing RSA certifi-
       cates and keys:	<https://github.com/OpenVPN/easy-rsa>

       --askpass file
	      Get certificate password from console or file before  we	daemo-
	      nize.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 askpass
		 askpass file

	      For  the extremely security conscious, it	is possible to protect
	      your private key with a password.	 Of  course  this  means  that
	      every  time  the	OpenVPN	daemon is started you must be there to
	      type the password. The --askpass	option	allows	you  to	 start
	      OpenVPN from the command line.  It will query you	for a password
	      before  it  daemonizes. To protect a private key with a password
	      you should omit the -nodes option	when you use the openssl  com-
	      mand line	tool to	manage certificates and	private	keys.

	      If  file	is specified, read the password	from the first line of
	      file. Keep in mind that storing your password in	a  file	 to  a
	      certain  extent invalidates the extra security provided by using
	      an encrypted key.

       --ca file
	      Certificate authority (CA) file in .pem format, also referred to
	      as the root certificate. This file can  have  multiple  certifi-
	      cates  in	 .pem format, concatenated together. You can construct
	      your own certificate authority certificate and  private  key  by
	      using a command such as:

		 openssl req -nodes -new -x509 -keyout ca.key -out ca.crt

	      Then  edit  your openssl.cnf file	and edit the certificate vari-
	      able to point to your new	root certificate ca.crt.

	      For testing purposes only, the OpenVPN distribution  includes  a
	      sample  CA  certificate (ca.crt).	Of course you should never use
	      the test certificates and	test keys distributed with OpenVPN  in
	      a	 production environment, since by virtue of the	fact that they
	      are distributed with OpenVPN, they are totally insecure.

       --capath	dir
	      Directory	containing trusted certificates	(CAs  and  CRLs).  Not
	      available	with mbed TLS.

	      CAs in the capath	directory are expected to be named <hash>.<n>.
	      CRLs  are	 expected to be	named <hash>.r<n>. See the -CApath op-
	      tion of openssl verify, and the -hash option  of	openssl	 x509,
	      openssl crl and X509_LOOKUP_hash_dir()(3)	for more information.

	      Similar  to  the	--crl-verify  option, CRLs are not mandatory -
	      OpenVPN will log the usual warning in the	logs if	 the  relevant
	      CRL is missing, but the connection will be allowed.

       --cert file|uri
	      Local  peer's  signed  certificate in .pem format	or as a	URI --
	      must be signed by	a certificate authority	whose  certificate  is
	      in  --ca	file  in the peer configuration. URI is	supported only
	      when built with OpenSSL 3.0 or later and any required  providers
	      are  loaded. Types of URIs supported and their syntax depends on
	      providers.  OpenSSL  has	internal  support  for	"   <file:/ab-
	      solute/path> " URI in which case the scheme "file:" is optional,
	      and any file format recognized by	OpenSSL	(e.g., PEM, PKCS12) is
	      supported.    PKCS#11   URI   (RFC   7512)   is	supported   by
	      pkcs11-provider.

	      Each peer	in an OpenVPN link running in TLS mode should have its
	      own certificate and private key file. In addition, each certifi-
	      cate should have been signed by the key of a certificate author-
	      ity whose	public key resides in the --ca	certificate  authority
	      file.  You  can  easily make your	own certificate	authority (see
	      above) or	 pay  money  to	 use  a	 commercial  service  such  as
	      thawte.com  (in  which  case  you	will be	helping	to finance the
	      world's second space tourist :). To generate a certificate,  you
	      can use a	command	such as:

		 openssl req -nodes -new -keyout mycert.key -out mycert.csr

	      If  your	certificate authority private key lives	on another ma-
	      chine, copy the certificate signing request (mycert.csr) to this
	      other machine (this can be done over an insecure channel such as
	      email). Now sign the certificate with a command such as:

		 openssl ca -out mycert.crt -in	mycert.csr

	      Now copy the certificate (mycert.crt) back  to  the  peer	 which
	      initially	 generated  the	 .csr  file (this can be over a	public
	      medium). Note that the openssl ca	command	reads the location  of
	      the  certificate	authority key from its configuration file such
	      as /usr/share/ssl/openssl.cnf -- note also that for  certificate
	      authority	functions, you must set	up the files index.txt (may be
	      empty) and serial	(initialize to 01).

       --crl-verify args
	      Check peer certificate against a Certificate Revocation List.

	      Valid syntax:

		 crl-verify file/directory flag

	      Examples:

		 crl-verify crl-file.pem
		 crl-verify /etc/openvpn/crls dir

	      A	 CRL  (certificate  revocation list) is	used when a particular
	      key is compromised but when the overall PKI is still intact.

	      Suppose you had a	PKI consisting of a CA,	root certificate,  and
	      a	 number	of client certificates.	Suppose	a laptop computer con-
	      taining a	client key and certificate was stolen. By  adding  the
	      stolen certificate to the	CRL file, you could reject any connec-
	      tion  which attempts to use it, while preserving the overall in-
	      tegrity of the PKI.

	      The only time when it would be necessary to rebuild  the	entire
	      PKI from scratch would be	if the root certificate	key itself was
	      compromised.

	      The  option  is  not mandatory - if the relevant CRL is missing,
	      OpenVPN will log a warning in the	logs - e.g.

		 VERIFY	WARNING: depth=0, unable to get	certificate CRL

	      but the connection will be allowed.  If the optional dir flag is
	      specified, enable	a  different  mode  where  the	crl-verify  is
	      pointed  at a directory containing files named as	revoked	serial
	      numbers (the files may be	empty, the contents are	 never	read).
	      If  a client requests a connection, where	the client certificate
	      serial number (decimal string) is	the name of a file present  in
	      the directory, it	will be	rejected.

	      Note:  As	 the crl file (or directory) is	read every time	a peer
		     connects,	if  you	 are  dropping	root  privileges  with
		     --user,  make  sure  that this user has sufficient	privi-
		     leges to read the file.

       --dh file
	      File containing Diffie Hellman parameters	in  .pem  format  (re-
	      quired for --tls-server only).

	      Set file to none to disable Diffie Hellman key exchange (and use
	      ECDH only). Note that this requires peers	to be using an SSL li-
	      brary that supports ECDH TLS cipher suites (e.g. OpenSSL 1.0.1+,
	      or mbed TLS 2.0+).

	      Use openssl dhparam -out dh2048.pem 2048 to generate 2048-bit DH
	      parameters. Diffie Hellman parameters may	be considered public.

       --ecdh-curve name
	      Specify  the  curve  to  use  for	elliptic curve Diffie Hellman.
	      Available	curves can be listed with --show-curves. The specified
	      curve will only be used for ECDH TLS-ciphers.

	      This option is not supported in mbed TLS builds of OpenVPN.

       --extra-certs file
	      Specify a	file containing	one or more  PEM  certs	 (concatenated
	      together)	that complete the local	certificate chain.

	      This  option  is useful for "split" CAs, where the CA for	server
	      certs is different than the CA for client	certs.	Putting	 certs
	      in  this	file allows them to be used to complete	the local cer-
	      tificate chain without trusting them to verify the  peer-submit-
	      ted  certificate,	 as would be the case if the certs were	placed
	      in the ca	file.

       --hand-window n
	      Handshake	Window -- the TLS-based	 key  exchange	must  finalize
	      within n seconds of handshake initiation by any peer (default 60
	      seconds).	 If  the  handshake fails we will attempt to reset our
	      connection with our peer and try again. Even  in	the  event  of
	      handshake	 failure  we will still	use our	expiring key for up to
	      --tran-window seconds to maintain	continuity of transmission  of
	      tunnel data.

	      The  --hand-window  parameter  also  controls the	amount of time
	      that the OpenVPN client repeats the pull request until it	 times
	      out.

       --key file|uri
	      Local  peer's  private key in .pem format	or a URI. Use the pri-
	      vate key which was generated when	you built your peer's certifi-
	      cate (see	--cert file above). URI	is supported only  when	 built
	      with OpenSSL 3.0 or later	and any	required providers are loaded.
	      (See --cert for more details).

       --pkcs12	file
	      Specify a	PKCS #12 file containing local private key, local cer-
	      tificate,	 and  root CA certificate. This	option can be used in-
	      stead of --ca, --cert, and --key.	 Not available with mbed TLS.

       --remote-cert-eku oid
	      Require that peer	certificate was	signed with  an	 explicit  ex-
	      tended key usage.

	      This is a	useful security	option for clients, to ensure that the
	      host they	connect	to is a	designated server.

	      The  extended  key  usage	 should	be encoded in oid notation, or
	      OpenSSL symbolic representation.

       --remote-cert-ku	key-usage
	      Require that  peer  certificate  was  signed  with  an  explicit
	      key-usage.

	      If  present  in the certificate, the keyUsage value is validated
	      by the TLS library during	the TLS	handshake. Specifying this op-
	      tion without arguments requires this extension to	be present (so
	      the TLS library will verify it).

	      If key-usage is a	list of	usage bits, the	 keyUsage  field  must
	      have at least the	same bits set as the bits in one of the	values
	      supplied in the key-usage	list.

	      The key-usage values in the list must be encoded in hex, e.g.

		 remote-cert-ku	a0

       --remote-cert-tls type
	      Require  that  peer  certificate was signed with an explicit key
	      usage and	extended key usage based on RFC3280 TLS	rules.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 remote-cert-tls server
		 remote-cert-tls client

	      This is a	useful security	option for clients, to ensure that the
	      host they	connect	to is a	designated server. Or  the  other  way
	      around;  for  a  server  to verify that only hosts with a	client
	      certificate can connect.

	      The --remote-cert-tls client option is equivalent	to

		 remote-cert-ku
		 remote-cert-eku "TLS Web Client Authentication"

	      The --remote-cert-tls server option is equivalent	to

		 remote-cert-ku
		 remote-cert-eku "TLS Web Server Authentication"

	      This is an important security precaution to  protect  against  a
	      man-in-the-middle	 attack	where an authorized client attempts to
	      connect to another client	by impersonating the server.  The  at-
	      tack  is	easily	prevented  by having clients verify the	server
	      certificate  using  any	one   of   --remote-cert-tls,	--ver-
	      ify-x509-name, --peer-fingerprint	or --tls-verify.

       --tls-auth args
	      Add an additional	layer of HMAC authentication on	top of the TLS
	      control  channel	to mitigate DoS	attacks	and attacks on the TLS
	      stack.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 tls-auth file
		 tls-auth file 0
		 tls-auth file 1

	      In a nutshell, --tls-auth	enables	a kind of "HMAC	 firewall"  on
	      OpenVPN's	 TCP/UDP port, where TLS control channel packets bear-
	      ing an incorrect HMAC signature can be dropped immediately with-
	      out response.

	      file (required) is a file	in OpenVPN static key format which can
	      be generated by --genkey.

	      Older  versions  (up  to	OpenVPN	 2.3)  supported  a   freeform
	      passphrase  file.	 This is no longer supported in	newer versions
	      (v2.4+).

	      The optional direction parameter enables the use of  2  distinct
	      keys (HMAC-send, HMAC-receive), so that each data	flow direction
	      has  a  different	HMAC key. This has a number of desirable secu-
	      rity properties including	eliminating certain kinds of  DoS  and
	      message replay attacks.

	      When  the	 direction  parameter is omitted, the same key is used
	      bidirectionally.

	      The direction parameter should always be complementary on	either
	      side of the connection, i.e. one side should use 0 and the other
	      should use 1, or both sides should omit it altogether.

	      The direction parameter requires that file contains a  2048  bit
	      key.  While  pre-1.5  versions  of OpenVPN generate 1024 bit key
	      files, any version of OpenVPN which supports the direction para-
	      meter, will also support 2048 bit	key file generation using  the
	      --genkey option.

	      --tls-auth is recommended	when you are running OpenVPN in	a mode
	      where  it	 is listening for packets from any IP address, such as
	      when --remote is not specified, or --remote  is  specified  with
	      --float.

	      The  rationale  for  this	 feature is as follows.	TLS requires a
	      multi-packet exchange before it is able to authenticate a	 peer.
	      During  this  time  before authentication, OpenVPN is allocating
	      resources	(memory	and CPU) to this potential peer. The potential
	      peer is also exposing many parts of OpenVPN and the OpenSSL  li-
	      brary  to	the packets it is sending. Most	successful network at-
	      tacks today seek to either exploit bugs  in  programs  (such  as
	      buffer  overflow	attacks) or force a program to consume so many
	      resources	that it	becomes	unusable. Of course the	first line  of
	      defense  is  always to produce clean, well-audited code. OpenVPN
	      has been written with buffer overflow attack prevention as a top
	      priority.	But as history has shown, many of the most widely used
	      network applications have, from time to time, fallen  to	buffer
	      overflow attacks.

	      So  as  a	 second	 line  of defense, OpenVPN offers this special
	      layer of authentication on top of	the  TLS  control  channel  so
	      that  every packet on the	control	channel	is authenticated by an
	      HMAC signature and a unique ID for replay	protection. This  sig-
	      nature  will  also  help protect against DoS (Denial of Service)
	      attacks. An important rule of thumb in reducing vulnerability to
	      DoS attacks is to	minimize the amount of resources a  potential,
	      but as yet unauthenticated, client is able to consume.

	      --tls-auth does this by signing every TLS	control	channel	packet
	      with  an HMAC signature, including packets which are sent	before
	      the TLS level has	had a chance to	authenticate the peer. The re-
	      sult is that  packets  without  the  correct  signature  can  be
	      dropped immediately upon reception, before they have a chance to
	      consume  additional system resources such	as by initiating a TLS
	      handshake. --tls-auth can	be strengthened	by  adding  the	 --re-
	      play-persist  option which will keep OpenVPN's replay protection
	      state in a file so that it is not	lost across restarts.

	      It should	be emphasized that this	feature	is optional  and  that
	      the key file used	with --tls-auth	gives a	peer nothing more than
	      the power	to initiate a TLS handshake. It	is not used to encrypt
	      or authenticate any tunnel data.

	      Use  --tls-crypt	instead	if you want to use the key file	to not
	      only authenticate, but also encrypt the TLS control channel.

       --tls-groups list
	      A	list of	allowable groups/curves	in order of preference.

	      Set the allowed elliptic	curves/groups  for  the	 TLS  session.
	      These  groups  are  allowed to be	used in	signatures and key ex-
	      change.

	      mbedTLS currently	allows all known curves	per default.

	      OpenSSL 1.1+ restricts the list per default to

		 "X25519:secp256r1:X448:secp521r1:secp384r1".

	      If you use certificates that use non-standard curves, you	 might
	      need to add them here. If	you do not force the ecdh curve	by us-
	      ing  --ecdh-curve,  the groups for ecdh will also	be picked from
	      this list.

	      OpenVPN maps the curve name secp256r1  to	 prime256v1  to	 allow
	      specifying the same tls-groups option for	mbedTLS	and OpenSSL.

	      Warning:	this  option  not only affects elliptic	curve certifi-
	      cates but	also the key exchange in TLS 1.3 and using this	option
	      improperly will disable TLS 1.3.

       --tls-cert-profile profile
	      Set the allowed cryptographic algorithms	for  certificates  ac-
	      cording to profile.

	      The following profiles are supported:

	      insecure
		     Identical for mbed	TLS to legacy

	      legacy (default)
		     SHA1 and newer, RSA 2048-bit+, any	elliptic curve.

	      preferred
		     SHA2 and newer, RSA 2048-bit+, any	elliptic curve.

	      suiteb SHA256/SHA384, ECDSA with P-256 or	P-384.

	      This option is only fully	supported for mbed TLS builds. OpenSSL
	      builds use the following approximation:

	      insecure
		     sets "security level 0"

	      legacy (default)
		     sets "security level 1"

	      preferred
		     sets "security level 2"

	      suiteb sets "security level 3" and --tls-cipher "SUITEB128".

	      OpenVPN  will  migrate  to 'preferred' as	default	in the future.
	      Please ensure that your keys already comply.

       WARNING:	--tls-ciphers, --tls-ciphersuites and tls-groups
	      These options are	expert features, which - if used  correctly  -
	      can  improve the security	of your	VPN connection.	But it is also
	      easy to unwittingly use them to carefully	align a	gun with  your
	      foot, or just break your connection. Use with care!

       --tls-cipher l
	      A	list l of allowable TLS	ciphers	delimited by a colon (":").

	      These  setting  can be used to ensure that certain cipher	suites
	      are used (or not used) for the TLS connection. OpenVPN uses  TLS
	      to secure	the control channel, over which	the keys that are used
	      to protect the actual VPN	traffic	are exchanged.

	      The  supplied  list  of ciphers is (after	potential OpenSSL/IANA
	      name translation)	simply supplied	to the crypto library.	Please
	      see the OpenSSL and/or mbed TLS documentation for	details	on the
	      cipher list interpretation.

	      For OpenSSL, the --tls-cipher is used for	TLS 1.2	and below.

	      Use  --show-tls  to  see a list of TLS ciphers supported by your
	      crypto library.

	      The default for --tls-cipher is to use mbed TLS's	default	cipher
	      list	when	  using	     mbed	TLS	  or	   DE-
	      FAULT:!EXP:!LOW:!MEDIUM:!kDH:!kECDH:!DSS:!PSK:!SRP:!kRSA	  when
	      using OpenSSL.

       --tls-ciphersuites l
	      Same as --tls-cipher but for TLS 1.3 and up. mbed	TLS has	no TLS
	      1.3 support yet and only the --tls-cipher	setting	is used.

	      The default for --tls-ciphersuites is  to	 use  the  crypto  li-
	      brary's default.

       --tls-client
	      Enable TLS and assume client role	during TLS handshake.

       --tls-crypt keyfile
	      Encrypt  and  authenticate  all control channel packets with the
	      key from keyfile.	(See --tls-auth	for more background.)

	      Encrypting (and authenticating) control channel packets:

	      	provides more privacy by hiding	the certificate	used  for  the
		TLS connection,

	      	makes it harder	to identify OpenVPN traffic as such,

	      	provides "poor-man's" post-quantum security, against attackers
		who  will  never  know the pre-shared key (i.e.	no forward se-
		crecy).

	      In contrast to --tls-auth, --tls-crypt does not require the user
	      to set --key-direction.

	      Security Considerations

	      All peers	use the	same --tls-crypt pre-shared group key  to  au-
	      thenticate  and encrypt control channel messages.	To ensure that
	      IV collisions remain unlikely, this key should not  be  used  to
	      encrypt more than	2^48 client-to-server or 2^48 server-to-client
	      control channel messages.	A typical initial negotiation is about
	      10  packets in each direction. Assuming both initial negotiation
	      and renegotiations are at	most 2^16 (65536) packets (to be  con-
	      servative),  and	(re)negotiations  happen  each minute for each
	      user (24/7), this	limits the  tls-crypt  key  lifetime  to  8171
	      years divided by the number of users. So a setup with 1000 users
	      should  rotate  the  key	at least once each eight years.	(And a
	      setup with 8000 users each year.)

	      If IV collisions were to occur, this could result	in  the	 secu-
	      rity  of	--tls-crypt  degrading	to  the	same security as using
	      --tls-auth.  That	is, the	control	channel	 still	benefits  from
	      the  extra  protection  against active man-in-the-middle-attacks
	      and DoS attacks, but may	no  longer  offer  extra  privacy  and
	      post-quantum security on top of what TLS itself offers.

	      For  large  setups or setups where clients are not trusted, con-
	      sider using --tls-crypt-v2 instead. That uses per-client	unique
	      keys, and	thereby	improves the bounds to 'rotate a client	key at
	      least once per 8000 years'.

       --tls-crypt-v2 keyfile
	      Valid syntax:

		 tls-crypt-v2 keyfile
		 tls-crypt-v2 keyfile force-cookie
		 tls-crypt-v2 keyfile allow-noncookie

	      Use client-specific tls-crypt keys.

	      For  clients, keyfile is a client-specific tls-crypt key.	Such a
	      key can be generated using the --genkey tls-crypt-v2-client  op-
	      tion.

	      For servers, keyfile is used to unwrap client-specific keys sup-
	      plied  by	 the  client during connection setup. This key must be
	      the same as the key used to  generate  the  client-specific  key
	      (see --genkey tls-crypt-v2-client).

	      On servers, this option can be used together with	the --tls-auth
	      or  --tls-crypt  option.	In  that  case,	the server will	detect
	      whether the client is using client-specific keys,	and  automati-
	      cally select the right mode.

	      The  optional  parameters	 force-cookie allows only tls-crypt-v2
	      clients that support a cookie based stateless  three  way	 hand-
	      shake  that  avoids  replay  attacks and state exhaustion	on the
	      server side (OpenVPN 2.6 and later). The option  allow-noncookie
	      explicitly  allows  older	 tls-crypt-v2  clients.	The default is
	      (currently) allow-noncookie.

       --tls-crypt-v2-verify cmd
	      Run command cmd to verify	the metadata  of  the  client-specific
	      tls-crypt-v2  key	of a connecting	client.	This allows server ad-
	      ministrators to reject client connections, before	 exposing  the
	      TLS  stack  (including the notoriously dangerous X.509 and ASN.1
	      stacks) to the connecting	client.

	      OpenVPN supplies the following environment variables to the com-
	      mand (and	only these variables. The normal environment variables
	      available	for other scripts are NOT present):

	      	script_type is set to tls-crypt-v2-verify

	      	metadata_type is set to	0 if the metadata was  user  supplied,
		or 1 if	it's a 64-bit unix timestamp representing the key cre-
		ation time.

	      	metadata_file  contains	 the filename of a temporary file that
		contains the client metadata.

	      The command can reject the connection by exiting with a non-zero
	      exit code.

       --tls-exit
	      Exit on TLS negotiation failure. This option can be useful  when
	      you  only	want to	make one attempt at connecting,	e.g. in	a test
	      or monitoring script.  (OpenVPN's	own test suite	uses  it  this
	      way.)

       --tls-server
	      Enable  TLS  and	assume	server role during TLS handshake. Note
	      that OpenVPN is designed as a peer-to-peer application. The des-
	      ignation of client or server is only for the purpose of  negoti-
	      ating the	TLS control channel.

       --tls-timeout n
	      Packet  retransmit timeout on TLS	control	channel	if no acknowl-
	      edgment from remote within n seconds (default 2).	 When  OpenVPN
	      sends a control packet to	its peer, it will expect to receive an
	      acknowledgement  within  n  seconds  or  it  will	retransmit the
	      packet, subject to a  TCP-like  exponential  backoff  algorithm.
	      This  parameter  only  applies  to control channel packets. Data
	      channel packets (which carry encrypted tunnel  data)  are	 never
	      acknowledged, sequenced, or retransmitted	by OpenVPN because the
	      higher level network protocols running on	top of the tunnel such
	      as TCP expect this role to be left to them.

       --tls-version-min args
	      Sets  the	 minimum TLS version we	will accept from the peer (de-
	      fault in 2.6.0 and later is "1.2").

	      Valid syntax:

		 tls-version-min version ['or-highest']

	      Examples for version include 1.0,	1.1, or	1.2. If	or-highest  is
	      specified	and version is not recognized, we will only accept the
	      highest TLS version supported by the local SSL implementation.

       --tls-version-max version
	      Set  the maximum TLS version we will use (default	is the highest
	      version supported). Examples for version include	1.0,  1.1,  or
	      1.2.

       --verify-hash args
	      DEPRECATED Specify SHA1 or SHA256	fingerprint for	level-1	cert.

	      Valid syntax:

		 verify-hash hash [algo]

	      The level-1 cert is the CA (or intermediate cert)	that signs the
	      leaf  certificate,  and is one removed from the leaf certificate
	      in the direction of the root. When accepting a connection	from a
	      peer, the	level-1	cert fingerprint must match hash  or  certifi-
	      cate  verification will fail. Hash is specified as XX:XX:... For
	      example:

		 AD:B0:95:D8:09:C8:36:45:12:A9:89:C8:90:09:CB:13:72:A6:AD:16

	      The algo flag can	be either SHA1 or SHA256. If not provided,  it
	      defaults to SHA1.

	      This option can also be inlined

		 <verify-hash>
		 00:11:22:33:44:55:66:77:88:99:aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff:00:11:22:33:44:55:66:77:88:99:aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff
		 11:22:33:44:55:66:77:88:99:aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff:00:11:22:33:44:55:66:77:88:99:aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff:00
		 </verify-hash>

       If the option is	inlined, algo is always	SHA256.

       --peer-fingerprint args
		 Specify  a  SHA256 fingerprint	or list	of SHA256 fingerprints
		 to verify the peer certificate	against. The peer  certificate
		 must match one	of the fingerprint or certificate verification
		 will fail. The	option can also	be inlined

	      Valid syntax:

		 peer-fingerprint AD:B0:95:D8:09:...

	      or inline:

		 <peer-fingerprint>
		 00:11:22:33:44:55:66:77:88:99:aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff:00:11:22:33:44:55:66:77:88:99:aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff
		 11:22:33:44:55:66:77:88:99:aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff:00:11:22:33:44:55:66:77:88:99:aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff:00
		 </peer-fingerprint>

	      When the --peer-fingerprint option is used, specifying a CA with
	      --ca  or --capath	is optional. This allows the he	--peer-finger-
	      print to be used as alternative to a PKI with  self-signed  cer-
	      tificates	 for small setups. See the examples section for	such a
	      setup.

       --verify-x509-name args
	      Accept connections only if a host's X.509	name is	equal to name.
	      The remote host must also	pass all other tests of	verification.

	      Valid syntax:

		 verify-x509 name type

	      Which X.509 name is compared to name depends on the  setting  of
	      type.  type can be subject to match the complete subject DN (de-
	      fault),  name  to	 match a subject RDN or	name-prefix to match a
	      subject RDN prefix. Which	RDN is verified	as name	depends	on the
	      --x509-username-field option. But	it defaults to the common name
	      (CN), e.g. a certificate with a subject DN

		 C=KG, ST=NA, L=Bishkek, CN=Server-1

	      would be matched by:

		 verify-x509-name 'C=KG, ST=NA,	L=Bishkek, CN=Server-1'
		 verify-x509-name Server-1 name
		 verify-x509-name Server- name-prefix

	      The last example is useful if you	want a client to  only	accept
	      connections to Server-1, Server-2, etc.

	      --verify-x509-name  is a useful replacement for the --tls-verify
	      option to	verify the  remote  host,  because  --verify-x509-name
	      works in a --chroot environment without any dependencies.

	      Using  a	name  prefix is	a useful alternative to	managing a CRL
	      (Certificate Revocation List) on the client, since it allows the
	      client to	refuse all certificates	except	for  those  associated
	      with designated servers.

	      NOTE:  Test  against a name prefix only when you are using Open-
		     VPN with a	custom CA certificate that is under your  con-
		     trol.  Never  use	this option with type name-prefix when
		     your client certificates are signed  by  a	 third	party,
		     such as a commercial web CA.

       --x509-track attribute
	      Save peer	X509 attribute value in	environment for	use by plugins
	      and  management interface. Prepend a + to	attribute to save val-
	      ues from full cert chain.	Otherwise the attribute	will  only  be
	      exported	for  the  leaf	cert (i.e. depth 0 of the cert chain).
	      Values will be encoded as	X509_<depth>_<attribute>=<value>. Mul-
	      tiple --x509-track options can be	defined	to track multiple  at-
	      tributes.

	      attribute	 can  be  any  part  of	 the X509 Subject field	or any
	      X509v3 extension (RFC 3280). X509v3 extensions might not be sup-
	      ported when not using the	default	TLS backend library (OpenSSL).
	      You can also request the SHA1 and	 SHA256	 fingerprints  of  the
	      cert,  but that is always	exported as tls_digest_{n} and tls_di-
	      gest_sha256_{n} anyway.

	      Note that	by default all parts of	the X509 Subject field are ex-
	      ported in	the environment	for the	whole cert chain. If  you  use
	      --x509-track  at	least  once  only  the attributes specified by
	      these options are	exported.

	      Examples:

		 x509-track CN		     # exports only X509_0_CN
		 x509-track +CN		     # exports X509_{n}_CN for chain
		 x509-track basicConstraints # exports value of	"X509v3	Basic Constraints"
		 x509-track SHA256	     # exports SHA256 fingerprint

       --x509-username-field args
	      Fields in	the X.509 certificate subject to be used as the	 user-
	      name (default CN). If multiple fields are	specified their	values
	      will  be	concatenated into the one username using _ symbol as a
	      separator.

	      Valid syntax:

		 x509-username-field [ext:]fieldname [[ext:]fieldname...]

	      Typically, this option is	specified with fieldname arguments  as
	      either of	the following:

		 x509-username-field emailAddress
		 x509-username-field 1.2.840.113549.1.9.1
		 x509-username-field ext:subjectAltName
		 x509-username-field CN	serialNumber

	      The  first  two  examples	 use the value of the emailAddress at-
	      tribute in the certificate's  Subject  field  as	the  username,
	      where  the  first	example	uses the name while the	second example
	      uses the oid. The	third example uses the ext: prefix to  signify
	      that  the	 X.509	extension fieldname subjectAltName be searched
	      for an rfc822Name	(email)	field to be used as the	 username.  In
	      cases where there	are multiple email addresses in	ext:fieldname,
	      the  last	 occurrence is chosen. The last	example	uses the value
	      of the CN	attribute in the Subject field,	combined  with	the  _
	      separator	 and  the  hexadecimal	representation of the certifi-
	      cate's serialNumber.

	      When this	option is used,	 the  --verify-x509-name  option  will
	      match against the	chosen fieldname instead of the	Common Name.

	      Only  the	 subjectAltName	and issuerAltName X.509	extensions and
	      serialNumber X.509 attribute are supported.

	      Non-compliant symbols are	being replaced with the	_ symbol, same
	      as the field separator, so concatenating	multiple  fields  with
	      such or _	symbols	can potentially	lead to	username collisions.

   PKCS#11 / SmartCard options
       --pkcs11-cert-private args
	      Set  if  access  to certificate object should be performed after
	      login.  Every provider has its own setting.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 pkcs11-cert-private 0
		 pkcs11-cert-private 1

       --pkcs11-id name
	      Specify the serialized certificate id to be used.	The id can  be
	      gotten  by the standalone	--show-pkcs11-ids option. See also the
	      description of --pkcs11-providers	option.

       --pkcs11-id-management
	      Acquire PKCS#11 id from management interface.  In	 this  case  a
	      NEED-STR	'pkcs11-id-request'  real-time	message	 will be trig-
	      gered, application may use pkcs11-id-count command  to  retrieve
	      available	 number	 of certificates, and pkcs11-id-get command to
	      retrieve certificate id and certificate body.  See also the  de-
	      scription	of --pkcs11-providers option.

       --pkcs11-pin-cache seconds
	      Specify  how  many seconds the PIN can be	cached,	the default is
	      until the	token is removed.

       --pkcs11-private-mode mode
	      Specify which method to use in order to perform private key  op-
	      erations.	  A different mode can be specified for	each provider.
	      Mode is encoded as hex number, and can be	a mask one of the fol-
	      lowing:

	      0	(default)   Try	to determine automatically.

	      1		    Use	sign.

	      2		    Use	sign recover.

	      4		    Use	decrypt.

	      8		    Use	unwrap.

       --pkcs11-protected-authentication args
	      Use PKCS#11 protected authentication path, useful	for  biometric
	      and external keypad devices. Every provider has its own setting.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 pkcs11-protected-authentication 0
		 pkcs11-protected-authentication 1

       --pkcs11-providers providers
	      Specify an RSA Security Inc. PKCS	#11 Cryptographic Token	Inter-
	      face (Cryptoki) providers	to load. A space-separated list	of one
	      or  more	provider  library  names may be	specified. This	option
	      along with --pkcs11-id or	pkcs11-id-management can be  used  in-
	      stead of --cert and --key	or --pkcs12.

	      If  p11-kit  is  present	on  the	 system	and was	enabled	during
	      build, its p11-kit-proxy.so module will be loaded	by default  if
	      either  the  --pkcs11-id	or  --pkcs11-id-management  options is
	      present without --pkcs11-providers. If default  loading  is  not
	      enabled  in the build and	no providers are specified, the	former
	      options will be ignored.

       --show-pkcs11-ids args
	      (Standalone) Show	PKCS#11	token object list.

	      Valid syntax:

		 show-pkcs11 [provider]	[cert_private]

	      Specify cert_private as 1	if certificates	are stored as  private
	      objects.

	      If  p11-kit  is  present on the system, the provider argument is
	      optional;	if omitted the default p11-kit-proxy.so	module will be
	      queried.

	      --verb option can	be used	BEFORE this option to  produce	debug-
	      ging information.

   Data	channel	cipher negotiation
       OpenVPN 2.4 and higher have the capability to negotiate the data	cipher
       that is used to encrypt data packets. This section describes the	mecha-
       nism in more detail and the different backwards compatibility mechanism
       with older server and clients.

   OpenVPN 2.5 and later behaviour
       When  both client and server are	at least running OpenVPN 2.5, that the
       order of	the ciphers of the server's --data-ciphers is used to pick the
       data cipher.  That means	that the first cipher in  that	list  that  is
       also in the client's --data-ciphers list	is chosen. If no common	cipher
       is  found the client is rejected	with a AUTH_FAILED message (as seen in
       client log):
	  AUTH:	Received control message: AUTH_FAILED,Data channel cipher  ne-
	  gotiation failed (no shared cipher)

       OpenVPN	2.5  and  later	 will  only  allow  the	 ciphers  specified in
       --data-ciphers.	 If  --data-ciphers  is	 not  set   the	  default   is
       AES-256-GCM:AES-128-GCM.	  In  2.6  and later the default is changed to
       AES-256-GCM:AES-128-GCM:CHACHA20-POLY1305  when	Chacha20-Poly1305   is
       available.

       For  backwards  compatibility  OpenVPN 2.6 and later with --compat-mode
       2.4.x (or lower)	and OpenVPN 2.5	will automatically add a cipher	speci-
       fied using the --cipher option to this list.

   OpenVPN 2.4 clients
       The negotiation support in OpenVPN 2.4 was the first iteration  of  the
       implementation and still	had some quirks. Its main goal was "upgrade to
       AES-256-GCM  when  possible".   An  OpenVPN  2.4	 client	 that is built
       against a crypto	library	that supports AES in GCM  mode	and  does  not
       have  --ncp-disable  will  always  announce support for AES-256-GCM and
       AES-128-GCM to a	server by sending IV_NCP=2.

       This only causes	a problem if --ncp-ciphers  option  has	 been  changed
       from  the  default  of AES-256-GCM:AES-128-GCM to a value that does not
       include these  two  ciphers.  When  an  OpenVPN	server	tries  to  use
       AES-256-GCM  or AES-128-GCM the connection will then fail. It is	there-
       fore recommended	to always have the AES-256-GCM and AES-128-GCM ciphers
       to the --ncp-ciphers options to avoid this behaviour.

   OpenVPN 3 clients
       Clients based on	the OpenVPN 3.x	 library  (  <https://github.com/open-
       vpn/openvpn3/> )	do not have a configurable --ncp-ciphers or --data-ci-
       phers option. Newer versions by default disable legacy AES-CBC, BF-CBC,
       and  DES-CBC  ciphers.	These clients will always announce support for
       all their supported AEAD	ciphers	(AES-256-GCM, AES-128-GCM and in newer
       versions	also Chacha20-Poly1305).

       To support OpenVPN 3.x based clients at	least  one  of	these  ciphers
       needs to	be included in the server's --data-ciphers option.

   OpenVPN 2.3 and older clients (and clients with --ncp-disable)
       When  a	client without cipher negotiation support connects to a	server
       the cipher specified with the --cipher option in	the client  configura-
       tion must be included in	the --data-ciphers option of the server	to al-
       low  the	 client	 to  connect.  Otherwise  the  client will be sent the
       AUTH_FAILED message that	indicates no shared cipher.

       If the client is	2.3 or older and has been configured  with  the	 --en-
       able-small  ./configure argument, using data-ciphers-fallback cipher in
       the  server  config file	with the explicit cipher used by the client is
       necessary.

   OpenVPN 2.4 server
       When a client indicates support for AES-128-GCM and  AES-256-GCM	 (with
       IV_NCP=2)  an  OpenVPN  2.4  server  will  send the first cipher	of the
       --ncp-ciphers to	the OpenVPN client regardless of what the  cipher  is.
       To  emulate the behaviour of an OpenVPN 2.4 client as close as possible
       and have	compatibility to a setup that depends on  this	quirk,	adding
       AES-128-GCM  and	 AES-256-GCM  to the client's --data-ciphers option is
       required. OpenVPN 2.5+ will only	announce the IV_NCP=2  flag  if	 those
       ciphers are present.

   OpenVPN 2.3 and older servers (and servers with --ncp-disable)
       The cipher used by the server must be included in --data-ciphers	to al-
       low  the	 client	connecting to a	server without cipher negotiation sup-
       port.  (For compatibility OpenVPN 2.5 will also accept the  cipher  set
       with --cipher)

       If  the	server is 2.3 or older and  has	been configured	with the --en-
       able-small ./configure argument,	adding --data-ciphers-fallback	cipher
       to  the	client	config	with the explicit cipher used by the server is
       necessary.

   Blowfish in CBC mode	(BF-CBC) deprecation
       The --cipher option defaulted to	BF-CBC in OpenVPN 2.4 and  older  ver-
       sion.  The default was never changed to ensure backwards	compatibility.
       In OpenVPN 2.5 this behaviour has now been changed so that if the --ci-
       pher is not explicitly set it does not allow the	weak BF-CBC cipher any
       more and	needs to explicitly added as  --cipher	BFC-CBC	 or  added  to
       --data-ciphers.

       We  strongly  recommend	to switching away from BF-CBC to a more	secure
       cipher as soon as possible instead.

NETWORK	CONFIGURATION
       OpenVPN consists	of two sides of	network	configuration.	 One  side  is
       the  link between the local and remote side, the	other side is the vir-
       tual network adapter (tun/tap device).

   Link	Options
       This link options section covers	options	related	to the connection  be-
       tween the local and the remote host.

       --bind keywords
	      Bind  to	local address and port.	This is	the default unless any
	      of --proto tcp-client , --http-proxy or --socks-proxy are	used.

	      If the optional ipv6only keyword is present  OpenVPN  will  bind
	      only to IPv6 (as opposed to IPv6 and IPv4) when a	IPv6 socket is
	      opened.

       --float
	      Allow  remote  peer to change its	IP address and/or port number,
	      such as due to DHCP (this	is the	default	 if  --remote  is  not
	      used).   --float	when specified with --remote allows an OpenVPN
	      session to initially connect to a	peer at	a known	address,  how-
	      ever if packets arrive from a new	address	and pass all authenti-
	      cation  tests, the new address will take control of the session.
	      This is useful when you are connecting to	a peer which  holds  a
	      dynamic address such as a	dial-in	user or	DHCP client.

	      Essentially, --float tells OpenVPN to accept authenticated pack-
	      ets  from	 any address, not only the address which was specified
	      in the --remote option.

       --fragment args
	      Valid syntax:

		 fragment max
		 fragment max mtu

	      Enable internal datagram fragmentation so	that no	UDP  datagrams
	      are sent which are larger	than max bytes.

	      If the mtu parameter is present the max parameter	is interpreted
	      to  include IP and UDP encapsulation overhead. The mtu parameter
	      is introduced in OpenVPN version 2.6.0.

	      If the mtu parameter is absent, the max parameter	is interpreted
	      in the same way as  the  --link-mtu  parameter,  i.e.   the  UDP
	      packet  size after encapsulation overhead	has been added in, but
	      not including the	UDP header itself.

	      The --fragment option only makes sense when you  are  using  the
	      UDP protocol (--proto udp).

	      --fragment adds 4	bytes of overhead per datagram.

	      See the --mssfix option below for	an important related option to
	      --fragment.

	      It should	also be	noted that this	option is not meant to replace
	      UDP  fragmentation  at the IP stack level. It is only meant as a
	      last resort when path MTU	discovery is broken. Using this	option
	      is less efficient	than fixing path MTU  discovery	 for  your  IP
	      link and using native IP fragmentation instead.

	      Having  said that, there are circumstances where using OpenVPN's
	      internal fragmentation capability	may be your only option,  such
	      as  tunneling  a	UDP multicast stream which requires fragmenta-
	      tion.

       --keepalive args
	      A	helper directive designed to simplify the expression of	--ping
	      and --ping-restart.

	      Valid syntax:

		 keepalive interval timeout

	      Send ping	once every interval seconds, restart if	 ping  is  not
	      received for timeout seconds.

	      This  option  can	be used	on both	client and server side,	but it
	      is enough	to add this on the server side as it will push	appro-
	      priate  --ping and --ping-restart	options	to the client. If used
	      on both server and client, the values pushed  from  server  will
	      override the client local	values.

	      The  timeout  argument will be twice as long on the server side.
	      This ensures that	a timeout is detected on  client  side	before
	      the server side drops the	connection.

	      For example, --keepalive 10 60 expands as	follows:

		 if mode server:
		     ping 10			# Argument: interval
		     ping-restart 120		# Argument: timeout*2
		     push "ping	10"		# Argument: interval
		     push "ping-restart	60"	# Argument: timeout
		 else
		     ping 10			# Argument: interval
		     ping-restart 60		# Argument: timeout

       --link-mtu n
	      DEPRECATED  Sets an upper	bound on the size of UDP packets which
	      are sent between OpenVPN peers. It's best	not to set this	 para-
	      meter unless you know what you're	doing.

	      Due  to variable header size of IP header	(20 bytes for IPv4 and
	      40 bytes for IPv6) and dynamically negotiated data  channel  ci-
	      pher,  this  option  is  not  reliable. It is recommended	to set
	      tun-mtu with enough headroom instead.

       --local host|* [port] [protocol]
	      Local host name or IP address and	port for bind.	If  specified,
	      OpenVPN  will bind to this address. If unspecified, OpenVPN will
	      bind to all interfaces.  '*' can be used as hostname  and	 means
	      'any  host' (OpenVPN will	listen on what is returned by the OS).
	      On a client, or in point-to-point	mode, this can only be	speci-
	      fied once	(1 socket).

	      On  an  OpenVPN setup running as --server, this can be specified
	      multiple times to	open multiple listening	sockets	 on  different
	      addresses	 and/or	different ports.  In order to specify multiple
	      listen ports without specifying an address, use  '*'  to	signal
	      "use  what  the operating	system gives you as default", for "all
	      IPv4 addresses" use "0.0.0.0",  for  "all	 IPv6  addresses"  use
	      '::'.  --local implies --bind.

       --lport port
	      Set  default  TCP/UDP  port number. Cannot be used together with
	      --nobind option.	A port number of 0 is only honoured to achieve
	      "bind() to a random assigned port	number"	if a  bind-to  IP  ad-
	      dress is specified with --local.

       --mark value
	      Mark encrypted packets being sent	with value. The	mark value can
	      be matched in policy routing and packetfilter rules. This	option
	      is  only	supported in Linux and does nothing on other operating
	      systems.

       --mode m
	      Set  OpenVPN  major  mode.   By	default,   OpenVPN   runs   in
	      point-to-point  mode  (p2p).  OpenVPN  2.0 introduces a new mode
	      (server) which implements	a multi-client server capability.

       --mssfix	args
	      Valid syntax:

		 mssfix	max [mtu]

		 mssfix	max [fixed]

		 mssfix

	      Announce to TCP sessions	running	 over  the  tunnel  that  they
	      should limit their send packet sizes such	that after OpenVPN has
	      encapsulated  them,  the	resulting UDP packet size that OpenVPN
	      sends to its peer	will not exceed	max bytes. The	default	 value
	      is 1492 mtu. Use 0 as max	to disable mssfix.

	      If  the  mtu parameter is	specified the max value	is interpreted
	      as the resulting packet size of VPN packets including the	IP and
	      UDP header.  Support for the mtu parameter was added with	 Open-
	      VPN version 2.6.0.

	      If  the mtu parameter is not specified, the max parameter	is in-
	      terpreted	in the same way	as the --link-mtu parameter, i.e.  the
	      UDP packet size after encapsulation overhead has been added  in,
	      but  not including the UDP header	itself.	Resulting packet would
	      be at most 28 bytes larger for IPv4 and 48 bytes for IPv6	(20/40
	      bytes for	IP header and 8	bytes for UDP header).	Default	 value
	      of  1450 allows OpenVPN packets to be transmitted	over IPv4 on a
	      link with	MTU 1478 or higher without IP level fragmentation (and
	      1498 for IPv6).

	      If the fixed parameter is	specified, OpenVPN will	 make  no  at-
	      tempt  to	 calculate  the	VPN encapsulation overhead but instead
	      will set the MSS to limit	the size of the	payload	IP packets  to
	      the  specified number. IPv4 packets will have the	MSS value low-
	      ered to mssfix - 40 and IPv6 packets to mssfix - 60.

	      if --mssfix is specified is specified without any	 parameter  it
	      inherits	the  parameters	of --fragment if specified or uses the
	      default for --mssfix otherwise.

	      The --mssfix option only makes sense when	you are	using the  UDP
	      protocol	for  OpenVPN  peer-to-peer communication, i.e. --proto
	      udp.

	      --mssfix and --fragment can  be  ideally	used  together,	 where
	      --mssfix	will try to keep TCP from needing packet fragmentation
	      in the first place, and if big packets come through anyhow (from
	      protocols	other than TCP), --fragment will  internally  fragment
	      them.

	      --max-packet-size, --fragment, and --mssfix are designed to work
	      around  cases  where Path	MTU discovery is broken	on the network
	      path between OpenVPN peers.

	      The usual	symptom	of such	a breakdown is an  OpenVPN  connection
	      which successfully starts, but then stalls during	active usage.

	      If --fragment and	--mssfix are used together, --mssfix will take
	      its default max parameter	from the --fragment max	option.

	      Therefore,  one  could lower the maximum UDP packet size to 1300
	      (a good first try	for solving MTU-related	 connection  problems)
	      with the following options:

		 --tun-mtu 1500	--fragment 1300	--mssfix

	      If  the max-packet-size size option is used in the configuration
	      it will also act as if mssfix size mtu was specified in the con-
	      figuration.

       --mtu-disc type
	      Should we	do Path	MTU discovery on TCP/UDP  channel?  Only  sup-
	      ported  on OSes such as Linux that supports the necessary	system
	      call to set.

	      Valid types:

	      no      Never send DF (Don't Fragment) frames

	      maybe   Use per-route hints

	      yes     Always DF	(Don't Fragment)

       --mtu-test
	      To empirically  measure  MTU  on	connection  startup,  add  the
	      --mtu-test  option to your configuration.	OpenVPN	will send ping
	      packets of various sizes to the  remote  peer  and  measure  the
	      largest packets which were successfully received.	The --mtu-test
	      process normally takes about 3 minutes to	complete.

       --nobind
	      Do  not  bind to local address and port. The IP stack will allo-
	      cate a dynamic port for returning	packets. Since	the  value  of
	      the  dynamic  port could not be known in advance by a peer, this
	      option is	only suitable for peers	which will be initiating  con-
	      nections by using	the --remote option.

       --passtos
	      Set the TOS field	of the tunnel packet to	what the payload's TOS
	      is.

       --ping n
	      Ping  remote over	the TCP/UDP control channel if no packets have
	      been sent	for at least n seconds (specify	--ping on  both	 peers
	      to  cause	ping packets to	be sent	in both	directions since Open-
	      VPN ping packets are not echoed like IP ping packets).

	      This option has two intended uses:

	      1. Compatibility with stateful firewalls.	The periodic ping will
		 ensure	that a stateful	firewall rule which allows OpenVPN UDP
		 packets to pass will not time out.

	      2. To provide a basis for	the remote to test  the	 existence  of
		 its peer using	the --ping-exit	option.

	      When using OpenVPN in server mode	see also --keepalive.

       --ping-exit n
	      Causes OpenVPN to	exit after n seconds pass without reception of
	      a	 ping or other packet from remote. This	option can be combined
	      with --inactive, --ping and --ping-exit to create	 a  two-tiered
	      inactivity disconnect.

	      For example,

		 openvpn [options...] --inactive 3600 --ping 10	--ping-exit 60

	      when  used  on  both  peers will cause OpenVPN to	exit within 60
	      seconds if its peer disconnects, but will	exit after one hour if
	      no actual	tunnel data is exchanged.

       --ping-restart n
	      Similar to --ping-exit, but trigger a SIGUSR1  restart  after  n
	      seconds  pass  without  reception	of a ping or other packet from
	      remote.

	      This option is useful in cases where the remote peer has	a  dy-
	      namic  IP	address	and a low-TTL DNS name is used to track	the IP
	      address using a service such as  <https://www.nsupdate.info/>  +
	      a	dynamic	DNS client such	as ddclient.

	      If the peer cannot be reached,  a	 restart  will	be  triggered,
	      causing  the  hostname  used with	--remote to be re-resolved (if
	      --resolv-retry is	also specified).

	      In server	mode, --ping-restart, --inactive or any	other type  of
	      internally generated signal will always be applied to individual
	      client instance objects, never to	whole server itself. Note also
	      in  server mode that any internally generated signal which would
	      normally cause a restart,	will cause the deletion	of the	client
	      instance object instead.

	      In  client mode, the --ping-restart parameter is set to 120 sec-
	      onds by default. This default will hold until the	client pulls a
	      replacement value	from the server, based on the --keepalive set-
	      ting in the server configuration.	To disable the 120 second  de-
	      fault, set --ping-restart	0 on the client.

	      See the signals section below for	more information on SIGUSR1.

	      Note  that the behavior of SIGUSR1 can be	modified by the	--per-
	      sist-tun,	--persist-local-ip and --persist-remote-ip options.

	      Also note	that --ping-exit and --ping-restart are	 mutually  ex-
	      clusive and cannot be used together.

       --ping-timer-rem
	      Run the --ping-exit / --ping-restart timer only if we have a re-
	      mote  address. Use this option if	you are	starting the daemon in
	      listen mode (i.e.	without	an explicit --remote  peer),  and  you
	      don't  want  to start clocking timeouts until a remote peer con-
	      nects.

       --proto p
	      Use protocol p for communicating with remote host. p can be udp,
	      tcp-client, or tcp-server. You can also  limit  OpenVPN  to  use
	      only  IPv4  or  only  IPv6 by specifying p as udp4, tcp4-client,
	      tcp4-server or udp6, tcp6-client,	tcp6-server, respectively.

	      The default protocol is udp when --proto is not specified.

	      For UDP operation, --proto  udp  should  be  specified  on  both
	      peers.

	      For  TCP operation, one peer must	use --proto tcp-server and the
	      other  must  use	--proto	 tcp-client.  A	 peer	started	  with
	      tcp-server  will wait indefinitely for an	incoming connection. A
	      peer started with	tcp-client will	attempt	 to  connect,  and  if
	      that  fails, will	sleep for 5 seconds (adjustable	via the	--con-
	      nect-retry option) and try again infinite	or  up	to  N  retries
	      (adjustable via the --connect-retry-max option). Both TCP	client
	      and server will simulate a SIGUSR1 restart signal	if either side
	      resets the connection.

	      OpenVPN is designed to operate optimally over UDP, but TCP capa-
	      bility  is  provided for situations where	UDP cannot be used. In
	      comparison with UDP, TCP will usually be somewhat	less efficient
	      and less robust when used	over unreliable	or congested networks.

	      This article outlines some of problems with  tunneling  IP  over
	      TCP:
	       <http://sites.inka.de/sites/bigred/devel/tcp-tcp.html>

	      There  are certain cases,	however, where using TCP may be	advan-
	      tageous from a security and robustness perspective, such as tun-
	      neling non-IP or application-level UDP protocols,	 or  tunneling
	      protocols	which don't possess a built-in reliability layer.

       --port port
	      TCP/UDP port number or port name for both	local and remote (sets
	      both --lport and --rport options to given	port). The current de-
	      fault  of	 1194 represents the official IANA port	number assign-
	      ment for OpenVPN and has been  used  since  version  2.0-beta17.
	      Previous versions	used port 5000 as the default.

       --rport port
	      Set TCP/UDP port number or name used by the --remote option. The
	      port can also be set directly using the --remote option.

       --replay-window args
	      Modify  the  replay protection sliding-window size and time win-
	      dow.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 replay-window n
		 replay-window n t

	      Use a replay protection sliding-window of	size n and a time win-
	      dow of t seconds.

	      By default n is 64 (the IPSec default) and t is 15 seconds.

	      This option is only relevant  in	UDP  mode,  i.e.  when	either
	      --proto udp is specified,	or no --proto option is	specified.

	      When OpenVPN tunnels IP packets over UDP,	there is the possibil-
	      ity that packets might be	dropped	or delivered out of order. Be-
	      cause  OpenVPN,  like  IPSec,  is	emulating the physical network
	      layer, it	will accept an out-of-order packet sequence, and  will
	      deliver such packets in the same order they were received	to the
	      TCP/IP  protocol	stack,	provided  they	satisfy	 several  con-
	      straints.

	      a. The packet cannot be a	replay.

	      b. If a packet arrives out of order, it will only	be accepted if
		 the difference	between	its sequence number  and  the  highest
		 sequence number received so far is less than n.

	      c. If a packet arrives out of order, it will only	be accepted if
		 it  arrives no	later than t seconds after any packet contain-
		 ing a higher sequence number.

	      If you are using a network link with a large  pipeline  (meaning
	      that the product of bandwidth and	latency	is high), you may want
	      to use a larger value for	n. Satellite links in particular often
	      require this.

	      If  you  run  OpenVPN  at	 --verb	 4,  you  will see the message
	      "PID_ERR replay-window backtrack occurred	[x]"  every  time  the
	      maximum  sequence	number backtrack seen thus far increases. This
	      can be used to calibrate n.

	      There is some controversy	on the appropriate method of  handling
	      packet reordering	at the security	layer.

	      Namely, to what extent should the	security layer protect the en-
	      capsulated  protocol  from attacks which masquerade as the kinds
	      of normal	packet loss and	reordering that	 occur	over  IP  net-
	      works?

	      The  IPSec  and  OpenVPN	approach is to allow packet reordering
	      within a certain fixed sequence number window.

	      OpenVPN adds to the IPSec	model by limiting the window  size  in
	      time as well as sequence space.

	      OpenVPN  also  adds  TCP	transport as an	option (not offered by
	      IPSec) in	which case OpenVPN can adopt a	very  strict  attitude
	      towards  message	deletion and reordering: Don't allow it. Since
	      TCP guarantees reliability, any packet loss or reordering	 event
	      can be assumed to	be an attack.

	      In  this	sense, it could	be argued that TCP tunnel transport is
	      preferred	when tunneling non-IP  or  UDP	application  protocols
	      which  might  be	vulnerable to a	message	deletion or reordering
	      attack which falls within	the normal operational	parameters  of
	      IP networks.

	      So  I  would  make  the statement	that one should	never tunnel a
	      non-IP protocol or UDP application protocol  over	 UDP,  if  the
	      protocol might be	vulnerable to a	message	deletion or reordering
	      attack that falls	within the normal operating parameters of what
	      is  to  be  expected  from the physical IP layer.	The problem is
	      easily fixed by simply using TCP as the VPN transport layer.

       --replay-persist	file
	      Persist replay-protection	state across sessions  using  file  to
	      save and reload the state.

	      This  option will	keep a disk copy of the	current	replay protec-
	      tion state (i.e. the most	recent packet timestamp	 and  sequence
	      number  received	from  the  remote peer), so that if an OpenVPN
	      session is stopped and restarted,	it will	reject any replays  of
	      packets which were already received by the prior session.

	      This  option  only makes sense when replay protection is enabled
	      (the default) and	you are	using TLS mode with --tls-auth.

       --session-timeout n
	      Raises SIGTERM for the client instance after n seconds since the
	      beginning	of the session,	forcing	 OpenVPN  to  disconnect.   In
	      client  mode,  OpenVPN will disconnect and exit, while in	server
	      mode all client sessions are terminated.

	      This option can also be specified	in a  client  instance	config
	      file  using --client-config-dir or dynamically generated using a
	      --client-connect script. In these	cases, only the	related	client
	      session is terminated.

       --socket-flags flags
	      Apply the	given flags to	the  OpenVPN  transport	 socket.  Cur-
	      rently, only TCP_NODELAY is supported.

	      The  TCP_NODELAY	socket	flag is	useful in TCP mode, and	causes
	      the kernel to send tunnel	packets	immediately over the TCP  con-
	      nection  without	trying to group	several	smaller	packets	into a
	      larger packet.  This can result in a considerably	improvement in
	      latency.

	      This option is pushable from server to  client,  and  should  be
	      used on both client and server for maximum effect.

       --tcp-nodelay
	      This  macro  sets	 the  TCP_NODELAY socket flag on the server as
	      well as pushes it	to connecting clients.	The  TCP_NODELAY  flag
	      disables	the  Nagle algorithm on	TCP sockets causing packets to
	      be transmitted immediately with low latency, rather than waiting
	      a	short period of	time in	order  to  aggregate  several  packets
	      into  a larger containing	packet.	 In VPN	applications over TCP,
	      TCP_NODELAY is generally a good latency optimization.

	      The macro	expands	as follows:

		 if mode server:
		     socket-flags TCP_NODELAY
		     push "socket-flags	TCP_NODELAY"

       --max-packet-size size
	      This option will instruct	OpenVPN	to try to  limit  the  maximum
	      on-write	packet	size by	restricting the	control	channel	packet
	      size and setting --mssfix.

	      OpenVPN will try to keep its control channel messages below this
	      size but due to some constraints in the protocol this is not al-
	      ways possible. If	the option is not set, the control packet max-
	      imum size	defaults to 1250.  The	control	 channel  packet  size
	      will  be	restricted to values between 154 and 2048. The maximum
	      packet size includes encapsulation overhead like UDP and IP.

	      In terms of --mssfix it will expand to:

		 mssfix	size mtu

	      If you need to set --mssfix for data channel and control channel
	      maximum packet size independently, use --max-packet-size	first,
	      followed by a --mssfix in	the configuration.

	      In  general  the default size of 1250 should work	almost univer-
	      sally apart from specific	corner cases,  especially  since  IPv6
	      requires a MTU of	1280 or	larger.

   Virtual Network Adapter (VPN	interface)
       Options in this section relates to configuration	of the virtual tun/tap
       network	interface,  including  setting	the VPN	IP address and network
       routing.

       --bind-dev device
	      (Linux only) Set device to bind the server socket	to  a  Virtual
	      Routing and Forwarding device

       --block-ipv6
	      On the client, instead of	sending	IPv6 packets over the VPN tun-
	      nel,  all	IPv6 packets are answered with an ICMPv6 no route host
	      message. On the server, all IPv6 packets from  clients  are  an-
	      swered  with an ICMPv6 no	route to host message. This options is
	      intended for cases when IPv6 should be blocked and other options
	      are not available. --block-ipv6 will  use	 the  remote  IPv6  as
	      source  address of the ICMPv6 packets if set, otherwise will use
	      fe80::7 as source	address.

	      For this option to make sense you	actually have to route traffic
	      to the tun interface. The	following example config  block	 would
	      send all IPv6 traffic to OpenVPN and answer all requests with no
	      route  to	host, effectively blocking IPv6	(to avoid IPv6 connec-
	      tions from dual-stacked clients  leaking	around	IPv4-only  VPN
	      services).

	      Client config

			--ifconfig-ipv6	fd15:53b6:dead::2/64 fd15:53b6:dead::1
			--redirect-gateway ipv6
			--block-ipv6

	      Server config
		     Push a "valid" ipv6 config	to the client and block	on the
		     server

			--push "ifconfig-ipv6 fd15:53b6:dead::2/64 fd15:53b6:dead::1"
			--push "redirect-gateway ipv6"
			--block-ipv6

	      Note:  this  option  does	 not  influence	 traffic sent from the
	      server towards the client	(neither on  the  server  nor  on  the
	      client  side).   This  is	not seen as necessary, as such traffic
	      can be most easily avoided by not	configuring IPv6 on the	server
	      tun, or setting up a server-side firewall	rule.

       --dev device
	      TUN/TAP virtual network device which can be tunX,	tapX, null  or
	      an  arbitrary  name  string  (X can be omitted for a dynamic de-
	      vice.)

	      See examples section below for an	example	on setting  up	a  TUN
	      device.

	      You  must	 use either tun	devices	on both	ends of	the connection
	      or tap devices on	both ends. You cannot mix them,	as they	repre-
	      sent different underlying	network	layers:

	      tun    devices encapsulate IPv4 or IPv6 (OSI Layer 3)

	      tap    devices encapsulate Ethernet 802.3	(OSI Layer 2).

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 dev tun2
		 dev tap4
		 dev ovpn

	      What happens if the device name is not tun or  tap  is  platform
	      dependent.

	      On  most platforms, tunN (e.g. tun2, tun30) and tapN (e.g. tap3)
	      will create a numbered tun/tap interface with the	number	speci-
	      fied  - this is useful if	multiple OpenVPN instances are active,
	      and the instance-to-device mapping  needs	 to  be	 known.	  Some
	      platforms	 do  not  support "numbered tap", so trying --dev tap3
	      will fail.

	      Arbitrary	device names (e.g. --dev tun-home) will	only  work  on
	      FreeBSD  (with  the DCO kernel driver for	tun devices) and Linux
	      (for both	tun and	tap devices, DCO and tun/tap driver).

	      If such a	device name starts with	tun or	tap  (e.g.  tun-home),
	      OpenVPN will choose the right device type	automatically.	Other-
	      wise  the	 desired  device  type	needs  to  be  specified  with
	      --dev-type tun or	--dev-type tap.

	      On Windows, only the names tun and tap are supported.  Selection
	      among multiple installed drivers or  driver  instances  is  done
	      with --dev-node and --windows-driver.

       --dev-node node
	      This  is	a  highly system dependent option to influence tun/tap
	      driver selection.

	      On Linux,	tun/tap	devices	are created by accessing /dev/net/tun,
	      and this device name can be changed using	--dev-node ....

	      Under Mac	OS X this option can be	used to	 specify  the  default
	      tun  implementation.  Using  --dev-node utun forces usage	of the
	      native Darwin tun	kernel support.	Use --dev-node utunN to	select
	      a	 specific  utun	 instance.  To	force	using	the   tun.kext
	      (/dev/tunX) use --dev-node tun. When not specifying a --dev-node
	      option  openvpn  will  first  try	to open	utun, and fall back to
	      tun.kext.

	      On Windows systems, select the TAP-Win32 adapter which is	 named
	      node in the Network Connections Control Panel or the raw GUID of
	      the adapter enclosed by braces. The --show-adapters option under
	      Windows  can  also  be used to enumerate all available TAP-Win32
	      adapters and will	show  both  the	 network  connections  control
	      panel name and the GUID for each TAP-Win32 adapter.

	      On other platforms, --dev-node node will influence the naming of
	      the  created  tun/tap device, if supported on that platform.  If
	      OpenVPN cannot figure out	whether	node is	a TUN  or  TAP	device
	      based  on	 the  name,  you should	also specify --dev-type	tun or
	      --dev-type tap.

	      If node starts with the string unix: openvpn will	treat the rest
	      of the argument as a program.  OpenVPN will  start  the  program
	      and create a temporary unix domain socket	that will be passed to
	      the  program  together with the tun configuration	as environment
	      variables.  The temporary	unix domain socket  will be be	passed
	      in the environment variable TUNTAP_SOCKET_FD.

	      This unix: mode is designed mainly to use	with the lwipovpn net-
	      work emulator ( <https://github.com/OpenVPN/lwipovpn> ).

       --dev-type device-type
	      Which  device  type are we using?	device-type should be tun (OSI
	      Layer 3) or tap (OSI Layer 2).  Use  this	 option	 only  if  the
	      TUN/TAP device used with --dev does not begin with tun or	tap.

       --dhcp-option args
	      Set additional network parameters	on supported platforms.	May be
	      specified	 on  the  client or pushed from	the server. On Windows
	      these options are	handled	by the tap-windows6 driver by  default
	      or  directly by OpenVPN if dhcp is disabled or the wintun	driver
	      is in use. The OpenVPN for Android client	also handles them  in-
	      ternally.

	      On  all  other  platforms	 these	options	 are only saved	in the
	      client's environment under the  name  foreign_option_{n}	before
	      the  --up	 script	 is called. A plugin or	an --up	script must be
	      used to pick up and interpret these as required. Many Linux dis-
	      tributions include such scripts and some third-party user	inter-
	      faces such as tunnelblick	also come with	scripts	 that  process
	      these options.

	      Valid syntax:

		 dhcp-option type [parm]

	      DOMAIN name
		     Set Connection-specific DNS Suffix	to name.

	      ADAPTER_DOMAIN_SUFFIX name
		     Alias  to	DOMAIN.	 This  is  a  compatibility option, it
		     should not	be used	in new deployments.

	      DOMAIN-SEARCH name
		     Add name to the domain search list.  Repeat  this	option
		     to	add more entries. Up to	10 domains are supported.

	      DNS address
		     Set primary domain	name server IPv4 or IPv6 address.  Re-
		     peat this option to set secondary DNS server addresses.

		     Note: DNS IPv6 servers are	currently set using netsh (the
		     existing DHCP code	can only do IPv4 DHCP, and that	proto-
		     col  only	permits	 IPv4  addresses anywhere). The	option
		     will be put into the environment, so an --up script could
		     act upon it if needed.

	      WINS address
		     Set primary WINS server address (NetBIOS over TCP/IP Name
		     Server).  Repeat this option to set secondary WINS	server
		     addresses.

	      NBDD address
		     Set primary NBDD  server  address	(NetBIOS  over	TCP/IP
		     Datagram  Distribution Server). Repeat this option	to set
		     secondary NBDD server addresses.

	      NTP address
		     Set primary NTP server address (Network  Time  Protocol).
		     Repeat this option	to set secondary NTP server addresses.

	      NBT type
		     Set NetBIOS over TCP/IP Node type.	Possible options:

		     1	    b-node (broadcasts)

		     2	    p-node  (point-to-point  name  queries  to	a WINS
			    server)

		     4	    m-node (broadcast then query name server)

		     8	    h-node (query name server, then broadcast).

	      NBS scope-id
		     Set NetBIOS over TCP/IP Scope. A NetBIOS  Scope  ID  pro-
		     vides  an	extended  naming  service for the NetBIOS over
		     TCP/IP (Known as NBT) module. The primary	purpose	 of  a
		     NetBIOS  scope ID is to isolate NetBIOS traffic on	a sin-
		     gle network to only those nodes  with  the	 same  NetBIOS
		     scope ID. The NetBIOS scope ID is a character string that
		     is	 appended to the NetBIOS name. The NetBIOS scope ID on
		     two hosts must match, or the two hosts will not  be  able
		     to	communicate.  The NetBIOS Scope	ID also	allows comput-
		     ers to use	the same computer name,	as they	have different
		     scope  IDs.  The  Scope  ID becomes a part	of the NetBIOS
		     name, making the name unique. (This description  of  Net-
		     BIOS scopes courtesy of  <NeonSurge@abyss.com> )

	      DISABLE-NBT
		     Disable Netbios-over-TCP/IP.

	      code   PROXY_HTTP	 host  port  Sets  a HTTP proxy	that should be
		     used when connected to the	VPN.

		     This option currently only	works on OpenVPN  for  Android
		     and requires Android 10 or	later.

       --ifconfig args
	      Set  TUN/TAP  adapter  parameters. It requires the IP address of
	      the local	VPN endpoint. For TUN devices in point-to-point	 mode,
	      the  next	 argument must be the VPN IP address of	the remote VPN
	      endpoint.	For TAP	devices, or TUN	devices	used  with  --topology
	      subnet,  the  second  argument is	the subnet mask	of the virtual
	      network segment which is being created or	connected to.

	      For TUN devices, which facilitate	virtual	point-to-point IP con-
	      nections (when used in --topology	net30 or p2p mode), the	proper
	      usage of --ifconfig is to	use two	private	IP addresses which are
	      not a member of any existing subnet which	is in use. The IP  ad-
	      dresses  may be consecutive and should have their	order reversed
	      on the remote peer.  After the VPN is  established,  by  pinging
	      rn, you will be pinging across the VPN.

	      For  TAP	devices,  which	 provide the ability to	create virtual
	      ethernet segments, or TUN	 devices  in  --topology  subnet  mode
	      (which create virtual "multipoint	networks"), --ifconfig is used
	      to set an	IP address and subnet mask just	as a physical ethernet
	      adapter  would be	similarly configured. If you are attempting to
	      connect to a remote ethernet bridge, the IP address  and	subnet
	      should be	set to values which would be valid on the bridged eth-
	      ernet segment (note also that DHCP can be	used for the same pur-
	      pose).

	      This  option,  while  primarily a	proxy for the ifconfig(8) com-
	      mand, is designed	to simplify TUN/TAP  tunnel  configuration  by
	      providing	 a standard interface to the different ifconfig	imple-
	      mentations on different platforms.

	      --ifconfig parameters which are IP addresses can also be	speci-
	      fied as a	DNS or /etc/hosts file resolvable name.

	      For TAP devices, --ifconfig should not be	used if	the TAP	inter-
	      face will	be getting an IP address lease from a DHCP server.

	      Examples:

		 # tun device in net30/p2p mode
		 ifconfig 10.8.0.2 10.8.0.1

		 # tun/tap device in subnet mode
		 ifconfig 10.8.0.2 255.255.255.0

       --ifconfig-ipv6 args
	      Configure	an IPv6	address	on the tun device.

	      Valid syntax:

		 ifconfig-ipv6 ipv6addr/bits [ipv6remote]

	      The  ipv6addr/bits argument is the IPv6 address to use. The sec-
	      ond parameter is used as route target  for  --route-ipv6	if  no
	      gateway is specified.

	      The --topology option has	no influence with --ifconfig-ipv6

       --ifconfig-noexec
	      Don't  actually  execute	ifconfig/netsh	commands, instead pass
	      --ifconfig parameters to scripts using environmental variables.

       --ifconfig-nowarn
	      Don't output an options consistency check	warning	if  the	 --if-
	      config  option  on this side of the connection doesn't match the
	      remote side.  This is useful when	you want to retain the overall
	      benefits of the  options	consistency  check  (also  see	--dis-
	      able-occ	option)	while only disabling the ifconfig component of
	      the check.

	      For example, if you have a configuration where  the  local  host
	      uses  --ifconfig	but  the  remote  host	does not, use --ifcon-
	      fig-nowarn on the	local host.

	      This option will also silence warnings about  potential  address
	      conflicts	 which	occasionally  annoy  more experienced users by
	      triggering "false	positive" warnings.

       --lladdr	address
	      Specify the link layer address, more commonly known as  the  MAC
	      address.	Only applied to	TAP devices.

       --persist-tun
	      Don't  close  and	 reopen	 TUN/TAP device	or run up/down scripts
	      across SIGUSR1 or	--ping-restart restarts.

	      SIGUSR1 is a restart signal similar to SIGHUP, but which	offers
	      finer-grained control over reset options.

	      On Linux,	this option can	be useful when OpenVPN is not executed
	      as  root and the CAP_NET_ADMIN has not been granted, because the
	      process would otherwise not be allowed to	 bring	the  interface
	      down and back up.

	      Alongside	 the  above, using --persist-tun allows	the tunnel in-
	      terface to retain	all IP/route settings, thus allowing the  user
	      to  implement  any  advanced  traffic leaking protection (please
	      note that	for full protection, extra route/firewall  rules  must
	      be in place).

       --redirect-gateway flags
	      Automatically  execute routing commands to cause all outgoing IP
	      traffic to be redirected over the	VPN. This is a client-side op-
	      tion.

	      This option performs three steps:

	      1. Create	a static route for the --remote	address	which forwards
		 to the	pre-existing default gateway. This is done so that (3)
		 will not create a routing loop.

	      2. Delete	the default gateway route.

	      3. Set the new default gateway to	be the	VPN  endpoint  address
		 (derived  either from --route-gateway or the second parameter
		 to --ifconfig when --dev tun is specified).

	      When the tunnel is torn down, all	of the	above  steps  are  re-
	      versed so	that the original default route	is restored.

	      Option flags:

	      local  Add  the  local  flag  if both OpenVPN peers are directly
		     connected via a common subnet, such as with wireless. The
		     local flag	will cause step	(1) above to be	omitted.

	      autolocal
		     Try to automatically determine whether  to	 enable	 local
		     flag above.

	      def1   Use  this	flag  to override the default gateway by using
		     0.0.0.0/1 and 128.0.0.0/1 rather than 0.0.0.0/0. This has
		     the benefit of overriding but not wiping out the original
		     default gateway.

	      bypass-dhcp
		     Add a direct route	to the DHCP server (if it  is  non-lo-
		     cal)  which  bypasses  the	 tunnel	 (Available on Windows
		     clients, may not be available on non-Windows clients).

	      bypass-dns
		     Add a direct route	to the	DNS  server(s)	(if  they  are
		     non-local)	 which	bypasses the tunnel (Available on Win-
		     dows  clients,  may  not  be  available  on   non-Windows
		     clients).

	      block-local
		     Block  access to local LAN	when the tunnel	is active, ex-
		     cept for the LAN gateway itself. This is accomplished  by
		     routing  the  local  LAN  (except for the LAN gateway ad-
		     dress) into the tunnel.  On Windows WFP filters are added
		     in	addition to the	routes which block access to resources
		     not routed	through	the VPN	adapter.  Push	this  flag  to
		     protect   against	 TunnelCrack  type  of	attacks	 (see:
		     <https://tunnelcrack.mathyvanhoef.com/> ).

	      ipv6   Redirect IPv6 routing into	the tunnel. This works similar
		     to	the def1 flag, that is,	more specific IPv6 routes  are
		     added  (2000::/4, 3000::/4), covering the whole IPv6 uni-
		     cast space.

	      !ipv4  Do	not redirect IPv4 traffic - typically used in the flag
		     pair ipv6 !ipv4 to	redirect IPv6-only.

       --redirect-private flags
	      Like --redirect-gateway, but omit	actually changing the  default
	      gateway.	Useful when pushing private subnets.

       --route args
	      Add route	to routing table after connection is established. Mul-
	      tiple routes can be specified. Routes will be automatically torn
	      down in reverse order prior to TUN/TAP device close.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 route network/IP
		 route network/IP netmask
		 route network/IP netmask gateway
		 route network/IP netmask gateway metric

	      This  option is intended as a convenience	proxy for the route(8)
	      shell command, while at the same time providing portable	seman-
	      tics across OpenVPN's platform space.

	      netmask
		     defaults to 255.255.255.255 when not given

	      gateway
		     default  taken from --route-gateway or the	second parame-
		     ter to --ifconfig when --dev tun is specified.

	      metric default taken from	--route-metric if set, otherwise 0.

	      The default can be specified by leaving an option	blank or  set-
	      ting it to default.

	      The  network  and	 gateway parameters can	also be	specified as a
	      DNS or /etc/hosts	file resolvable	name, or as one	of three  spe-
	      cial keywords:

	      vpn_gateway
		     The  remote  VPN  endpoint	 address  (derived either from
		     --route-gateway or	the  second  parameter	to  --ifconfig
		     when --dev	tun is specified).

	      net_gateway
		     The  pre-existing IP default gateway, read	from the rout-
		     ing table (not supported on all OSes).

	      remote_host
		     The --remote address if OpenVPN is	being  run  in	client
		     mode, and is undefined in server mode.

       --route-delay args
	      Valid syntaxes:

		 route-delay
		 route-delay n
		 route-delay n w

	      Delay  n seconds (default	0) after connection establishment, be-
	      fore adding routes. If n is 0, routes will be added  immediately
	      upon  connection	establishment.	If  --route-delay  is omitted,
	      routes will be added immediately after TUN/TAP device  open  and
	      --up  script  execution,	before any --user or --group privilege
	      downgrade	(or --chroot execution.)

	      This option is designed to be useful in scenarios	where DHCP  is
	      used  to set tap adapter addresses. The delay will give the DHCP
	      handshake	time to	complete before	routes are added.

	      On Windows, --route-delay	tries to be more intelligent by	 wait-
	      ing  w seconds (default 30) for the TAP-Win32 adapter to come up
	      before adding routes.

       --route-ipv6 args
	      Setup IPv6 routing in the	system to send the specified IPv6 net-
	      work into	OpenVPN's tun.

	      Valid syntax:

		 route-ipv6 ipv6addr/bits [gateway] [metric]

	      The gateway parameter is only used for IPv6  routes  across  tap
	      devices,	and  if	 missing,  the	ipv6remote field from --ifcon-
	      fig-ipv6 or --route-ipv6-gateway is used.

       --route-gateway arg
	      Specify a	default	gateway	for use	with --route.

	      If dhcp is specified as the parameter, the gateway address  will
	      be   extracted   from   a	 DHCP  negotiation  with  the  OpenVPN
	      server-side LAN.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 route-gateway gateway
		 route-gateway dhcp

       --route-ipv6-gateway gw
	      Specify a	default	gateway	gw for use with	--route-ipv6.

       --route-metric m
	      Specify a	default	metric m for use with --route.

       --route-noexec
	      Don't add	or remove routes automatically.	Instead	pass routes to
	      --route-up script	using environmental variables.

       --route-nopull
	      When used	with --client or  --pull,  accept  options  pushed  by
	      server  EXCEPT  for  routes,  block-outside-dns and dhcp options
	      like DNS servers.

	      When used	on the client, this option effectively bars the	server
	      from adding routes to the	client's routing table,	 however  note
	      that this	option still allows the	server to set the TCP/IP prop-
	      erties of	the client's TUN/TAP interface.

       --topology mode
	      Configure	 virtual addressing topology when running in --dev tun
	      mode. This directive has no meaning in --dev tap mode, which al-
	      ways uses	a subnet topology.

	      If you set this  directive  on  the  server,  the	 --server  and
	      --server-bridge  directives  will	automatically push your	chosen
	      topology setting to clients as well. This	directive can also  be
	      manually	pushed	to clients. Like the --dev directive, this di-
	      rective must always be compatible	between	client and server.

	      mode can be one of:

	      subnet Use a subnet rather than  a  point-to-point  topology  by
		     configuring the tun interface with	a local	IP address and
		     subnet  mask,  similar  to	the topology used in --dev tap
		     and ethernet bridging mode. This mode allocates a	single
		     IP	 address per connecting	client and works on Windows as
		     well. This	is the default.

	      net30  Use a point-to-point topology, by allocating one /30 sub-
		     net per client. This is designed to allow	point-to-point
		     semantics	when  some  or	all  of	the connecting clients
		     might be Windows systems.

	      p2p    Use a point-to-point topology where the  remote  endpoint
		     of	 the client's tun interface always points to the local
		     endpoint of the server's tun interface. This  mode	 allo-
		     cates a single IP address per connecting client. Only use
		     when none of the connecting clients are Windows systems.

	      Note:  Using --topology subnet changes the interpretation	of the
	      arguments	of --ifconfig to mean "address netmask", and not  "lo-
	      cal remote".

       --tun-mtu args
	      Valid syntaxes:

		 tun-mtu tun-mtu
		 tun-mtu tun-mtu occ-mtu

	      Take  the	 TUN  device MTU to be tun-mtu and derive the link MTU
	      from it.	In most	cases, you will	probably want  to  leave  this
	      parameter	set to its default value.

	      The default for tun-mtu is 1500.

	      The  OCC	MTU can	be used	to avoid warnings about	mismatched MTU
	      from clients. If occ-mtu is not specified, it will to default to
	      the tun-mtu.

	      The MTU (Maximum Transmission Units)  is	the  maximum  datagram
	      size  in	bytes  that can	be sent	unfragmented over a particular
	      network path.  OpenVPN requires that packets on the control  and
	      data channels be sent unfragmented.

	      MTU problems often manifest themselves as	connections which hang
	      during periods of	active usage.

	      It's  best to use	the --fragment and/or --mssfix options to deal
	      with MTU sizing issues.

	      Note: Depending on the platform, the operating system allows one
	      to receive packets larger	than tun-mtu (e.g. Linux and  FreeBSD)
	      but  other  platforms (like macOS) limit received	packets	to the
	      same size	as the MTU.

       --tun-max-mtu maxmtu
	      This configures the maximum MTU size that	a server can  push  to
	      maxmtu,  by  configuring	the internal buffers to	allow at least
	      this packet size.	 The default for maxmtu	 is  1600.  Currently,
	      only  increasing	beyond 1600 is possible, and attempting	to re-
	      duce max-mtu below 1600 will be ignored.

       --tun-mtu-extra n
	      Assume that the TUN/TAP device might return as many as  n	 bytes
	      more than	the --tun-mtu size on read. This parameter defaults to
	      0, which is sufficient for most TUN devices. TAP devices may in-
	      troduce  additional  overhead  in	 excess	of the MTU size, and a
	      setting of 32 is the default when	TAP devices are	used. This pa-
	      rameter only controls internal OpenVPN buffer sizing,  so	 there
	      is  no  transmission  overhead  associated  with	using a	larger
	      value.

   TUN/TAP standalone operations
       These two standalone  operations	 will  require	--dev  and  optionally
       --user and/or --group.

       --mktun
	      (Standalone)  Create a persistent	tunnel on platforms which sup-
	      port them	such as	Linux. Normally	TUN/TAP	tunnels	exist only for
	      the period of time that an application has them open.  This  op-
	      tion  takes  advantage  of the TUN/TAP driver's ability to build
	      persistent tunnels that live through multiple instantiations  of
	      OpenVPN and die only when	they are deleted or the	machine	is re-
	      booted.

	      One  of the advantages of	persistent tunnels is that they	elimi-
	      nate the need for	separate --up and --down scripts  to  run  the
	      appropriate  ifconfig(8)	and  route(8) commands.	These commands
	      can be placed in the same	shell script which  starts  or	termi-
	      nates an OpenVPN session.

	      Another	advantage   is	 that  open  connections  through  the
	      TUN/TAP-based tunnel will	not  be	 reset	if  the	 OpenVPN  peer
	      restarts.	This can be useful to provide uninterrupted connectiv-
	      ity  through  the	 tunnel	 in  the  event	of a DHCP reset	of the
	      peer's public IP address (see the	--ipchange option above).

	      One disadvantage of persistent tunnels is	that it	is  harder  to
	      automatically  configure	their  MTU  value  (see	--link-mtu and
	      --tun-mtu	above).

	      On some platforms	such as	Windows, TAP-Win32 tunnels are persis-
	      tent by default.

       --rmtun
	      (Standalone) Remove a persistent tunnel.

   Virtual Routing and Forwarding
       Options in this section relates to configuration	of virtual routing and
       forwarding in combination with the underlying operating system.

       As of today this	is only	supported on Linux, a kernel >=	4.9 is	recom-
       mended.

       This  could  come in handy when for example the external	network	should
       be only used as a means to connect to some VPN endpoints	and all	 regu-
       lar traffic should only be routed through any tunnel(s).	 This could be
       achieved	by setting up a	VRF and	configuring the	interface connected to
       the  external  network  to  be part of the VRF. The examples below will
       cover this setup.

       Another option would be to put the tun/tap interface into a  VRF.  This
       could  be done by an up-script which uses the ip	link set command shown
       below.

   VRF setup with iproute2
       Create VRF vrf_external and map it to routing table 1023

	  ip link add vrf_external type	vrf table 1023

       Move eth0 into vrf_external

	  ip link set master vrf_external dev eth0

       Any prefixes configured on eth0 will  be	 moved	from  the  :code`main`
       routing table into routing table	1023

   VRF setup with ifupdown
       For Debian based	Distributions ifupdown2	provides an almost drop-in re-
       placement for ifupdown including	VRFs and other features.  A configura-
       tion  for  an  interface	eth0 being part	of VRF code:vrf_external could
       look like this:

	  auto eth0
	  iface	eth0
	      address 192.0.2.42/24
	      address 2001:db8:08:15::42/64
	      gateway 192.0.2.1
	      gateway 2001:db8:08:15::1
	      vrf vrf_external

	  auto vrf_external
	  iface	vrf_external
	      vrf-table	1023

   OpenVPN configuration
       The OpenVPN configuration needs to contain this line:

	  bind-dev vrf_external

   Further reading
       Wikipedia has nice page one VRFs:   <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vir-
       tual_routing_and_forwarding>

       This  talk  from	the Network Track of FrOSCon 2018 provides an overview
       about advanced layer 2 and layer	3 features of Linux

	   Slides:	<https://www.slideshare.net/BarbarossaTM/l2l3-fr-fort-
	    geschrittene-helle-und-dunkle-magie-im-linuxnetzwerkstack>

	   Video		     (german):			  <https://me-
	    dia.ccc.de/v/froscon2018-2247-l2_l3_fur_fortgeschrit-
	    tene_-_helle_und_dunkle_magie_im_linux-netzwerkstack>

SCRIPTING INTEGRATION
       OpenVPN can execute external scripts in various phases of the  lifetime
       of the OpenVPN process.

   Script Order	of Execution
       1.  --up

	   Executed after TCP/UDP socket bind and TUN/TAP open.

       2.  --tls-verify

	   Executed when we have a still untrusted remote peer.

       3.  --ipchange

	   Executed  after  connection	authentication,	 or  remote IP address
	   change.

       4.  --client-connect

	   Executed in --mode server mode immediately after client authentica-
	   tion.

       5.  --route-up

	   Executed after connection authentication, either immediately	after,
	   or some number of seconds after as defined by the --route-delay op-
	   tion.

       6.  --route-pre-down

	   Executed right before the routes are	removed.

       7.  --client-disconnect

	   Executed in --mode server mode on client instance shutdown.

       8.  --down

	   Executed after TCP/UDP and TUN/TAP close.

       9.  --learn-address

	   Executed in --mode server mode whenever an  IPv4  address/route  or
	   MAC address is added	to OpenVPN's internal routing table.

       10. --auth-user-pass-verify

	   Executed  in	--mode server mode on new client connections, when the
	   client is still untrusted.

       11. --client-crresponse
	      Execute in --mode	server whenever	a client sends	a  CR_RESPONSE
	      message

   SCRIPT HOOKS
       --auth-user-pass-verify args
	      Require  the  client to provide a	username/password (possibly in
	      addition to a client certificate)	for authentication.

	      Valid syntax:

		 auth-user-pass-verify cmd method

	      OpenVPN will run command cmd to validate	the  username/password
	      provided by the client.

	      cmd  consists of a path to a script (or executable program), op-
	      tionally followed	by arguments. The path and  arguments  may  be
	      single-  or  double-quoted and/or	escaped	using a	backslash, and
	      should be	separated by one or more spaces.

	      If method	is set to via-env, OpenVPN will	call cmd with the  en-
	      vironmental  variables  username	and  password set to the user-
	      name/password strings provided by	the client. Beware  that  this
	      method  is insecure on some platforms which make the environment
	      of a process publicly visible to other unprivileged processes.

	      If method	is set to via-file, OpenVPN will  write	 the  username
	      and  password  to	 the  first two	lines of a temporary file. The
	      filename will be passed as an argument to	cmd, and the file will
	      be automatically deleted by OpenVPN after	 the  script  returns.
	      The  location  of	 the  temporary	 file  is  controlled  by  the
	      --tmp-dir	option,	and will default to the	current	 directory  if
	      unspecified.  For	 security,  consider  setting  --tmp-dir  to a
	      volatile storage medium such as /dev/shm (if available) to  pre-
	      vent the username/password file from touching the	hard drive.

	      The script should	examine	the username and password, returning a
	      success  exit code (0) if	the client's authentication request is
	      to be accepted, a	failure	code (1) to reject the	client,	 or  a
	      that  the	 authentication	is deferred (2). If the	authentication
	      is deferred, the script must fork/start a	background or  another
	      non-blocking  operation  to  continue  the authentication	in the
	      background. When finshing	the authentication, a 1	or 0  must  be
	      written to the file specified by the auth_control_file.

	      If  the file specified by	auth_failed_reason_file	exists and has
	      non-empty	content, the content of	this  file  will  be  used  as
	      AUTH_FAILED  message. To avoid race conditions, this file	should
	      be written before	auth_control_file.

	      This auth	fail reason can	be something  simple  like  "User  has
	      been  permanently	disabled" but there are	also some special auth
	      failed messages.

	      The TEMP message indicates that the  authentication  temporarily
	      failed  and that the client should continue to retry to connect.
	      The server can optionally	give a user readable message and  hint
	      the  client  a  behavior	how  to	 proceed.  The keywords	of the
	      AUTH_FAILED,TEMP message are  comma  separated  keys/values  and
	      provide  a  hint to the client how to proceed. Currently defined
	      keywords are:

	      backoff s
		     instructs the client to wait at least  s  seconds	before
		     the next connection attempt. If the client	already	uses a
		     higher delay for reconnection attempt, the	delay will not
		     be	shortened.

	      advance addr
		     Instructs	the  client  to	reconnect to the next (IP) ad-
		     dress of the current server.

	      advance remote
		     Instructs the client to skip the remaining	 IP  addresses
		     of	 the  current  server  and instead connect to the next
		     server specified in the configuration file.

	      advance no
		     Instructs the client to  retry  connecting	 to  the  same
		     server again.

	      For example, the message TEMP[backoff 42,advance no]: No free IP
	      addresses	 indicates  that  the VPN connection can currently not
	      succeed and instructs the	client to retry	in 42 seconds again.

	      When deferred authentication is in use, the script can also  re-
	      quest pending authentication by writing to the file specified by
	      the  auth_pending_file.  The  first  line	must be	the timeout in
	      seconds, the required method on the second  line	(e.g.  crtext)
	      and   third  line	 must  be  the	EXTRA  as  documented  in  the
	      client-pending-auth section of doc/management.txt.

	      This directive is	designed to enable  a  plugin-style  interface
	      for extending OpenVPN's authentication capabilities.

	      To  protect  against a client passing a maliciously formed user-
	      name or password string, the username string must	 consist  only
	      of  these	 characters: alphanumeric, underbar ('_'), dash	('-'),
	      dot ('.'), or at ('@'). The password string can consist  of  any
	      printable	characters except for CR or LF.	Any illegal characters
	      in  either  the username or password string will be converted to
	      underbar ('_').

	      Care must	be taken by any	user-defined scripts to	avoid creating
	      a	security vulnerability in the way that these strings are  han-
	      dled.  Never  use	these strings in such a	way that they might be
	      escaped or evaluated by a	shell interpreter.

	      For a sample script that performs	PAM authentication,  see  sam-
	      ple-scripts/auth-pam.pl in the OpenVPN source distribution.

       --client-crresponse
		 Executed  when	 the  client  sends a text based challenge re-
		 sponse.

		 Valid syntax:

		     client-crresponse cmd

	      OpenVPN will write the response of the client into  a  temporary
	      file.   The  filename  will be passed as an argument to cmd, and
	      the file will be automatically  deleted  by  OpenVPN  after  the
	      script returns.

	      The  response  is	passed as is from the client. The script needs
	      to check itself if the input is valid,  e.g.  if	the  input  is
	      valid base64 encoding.

	      The script can either directly write the result of the verifica-
	      tion   to	  auth_control_file   or   further   defer   it.   See
	      `--auth-user-pass-verify`` for details.

	      For a  sample  script  that  implement  TOTP  (RFC  6238)	 based
	      two-factor authentication, see sample-scripts/totpauth.py.

       --client-connect	cmd
	      Run command cmd on client	connection.

	      cmd  consists of a path to a script (or executable program), op-
	      tionally followed	by arguments. The path and  arguments  may  be
	      single-  or  double-quoted and/or	escaped	using a	backslash, and
	      should be	separated by one or more spaces.

	      The command is passed the	common name  and  IP  address  of  the
	      just-authenticated  client as environmental variables (see envi-
	      ronmental	variable section below). The command  is  also	passed
	      the pathname of a	freshly	created	temporary file as the last ar-
	      gument  (after  any  arguments specified in cmd ), to be used by
	      the command to pass dynamically generated	config file directives
	      back to OpenVPN.

	      If the script wants to generate a	dynamic	config file to be  ap-
	      plied on the server when the client connects, it should write it
	      to the file named	by the last argument.

	      See  the	--client-config-dir option below for options which can
	      be legally used in a dynamically generated config	file.

	      Note that	the return value of script is significant.  If	script
	      returns  a non-zero error	status,	it will	cause the client to be
	      disconnected.

	      If a --client-connect wants to defer the generating of the  con-
	      figuration  then	the script needs to use	the client_connect_de-
	      ferred_file  and	client_connect_config_file  environment	 vari-
	      ables,  and  write status	accordingly into these files.  See the
	      Environmental Variables section for more details.

       --client-disconnect cmd
	      Like --client-connect but	called on  client  instance  shutdown.
	      Will  not	be called unless the --client-connect script and plug-
	      ins (if defined) were previously called on  this	instance  with
	      successful (0) status returns.

	      The exception to this rule is if the --client-disconnect command
	      or  plugins  are cascaded, and at	least one client-connect func-
	      tion succeeded, then ALL of the client-disconnect	functions  for
	      scripts  and  plugins  will  be called on	client instance	object
	      deletion,	even in	cases where some of the	related	client-connect
	      functions	returned an error status.

	      The --client-disconnect command is not passed  any  extra	 argu-
	      ments (only those	arguments specified in cmd, if any).

       --down cmd
	      Run  command  cmd	 after	TUN/TAP	 device	close (post --user UID
	      change and/or --chroot ).	cmd consists of	a path to  script  (or
	      executable  program), optionally followed	by arguments. The path
	      and arguments may	be single- or double-quoted and/or escaped us-
	      ing a backslash, and should be separated by one or more spaces.

	      Called with the same parameters and environmental	 variables  as
	      the --up option above.

	      Note  that  if  you  reduce  privileges  by  using --user	and/or
	      --group, your --down script will also run	at reduced privilege.

       --down-pre
	      Call --down cmd/script before, rather than after,	TUN/TAP	close.

       --ipchange cmd
	      Run command cmd when our remote ip-address is initially  authen-
	      ticated or changes.

	      cmd  consists of a path to a script (or executable program), op-
	      tionally followed	by arguments. The path and  arguments  may  be
	      single-  or  double-quoted and/or	escaped	using a	backslash, and
	      should be	separated by one or more spaces.

	      When cmd is executed two arguments are appended after any	 argu-
	      ments specified in cmd , as follows:

		 cmd ip	address	port number

	      Don't  use --ipchange in --mode server mode. Use a --client-con-
	      nect script instead.

	      See the Environmental Variables section below for	additional pa-
	      rameters passed as environmental variables.

	      If you are running in a dynamic IP address environment where the
	      IP addresses of either peer could	change without notice, you can
	      use this script, for example, to edit the	/etc/hosts  file  with
	      the  current  address  of	the peer. The script will be run every
	      time the remote peer changes its IP address.

	      Similarly	if our IP address changes due to DHCP, we should  con-
	      figure our IP address change script (see man page	for dhcpcd(8))
	      to  deliver  a SIGHUP or SIGUSR1 signal to OpenVPN. OpenVPN will
	      then re-establish	a connection with its most recently  authenti-
	      cated peer on its	new IP address.

       --learn-address cmd
	      Run command cmd to validate client virtual addresses or routes.

	      cmd  consists of a path to a script (or executable program), op-
	      tionally followed	by arguments. The path and  arguments  may  be
	      single-  or  double-quoted and/or	escaped	using a	backslash, and
	      should be	separated by one or more spaces.

	      Three arguments will be appended to any arguments	in cmd as fol-
	      lows:

	      $1 - [operation]
		     "add", "update", or "delete" based	on whether or not  the
		     address  is  being	 added	to,  modified, or deleted from
		     OpenVPN's internal	routing	table.

	      $2 - [address]
		     The address being learned or unlearned. This  can	be  an
		     IPv4 address such as "198.162.10.14", an IPv4 subnet such
		     as	 "198.162.10.0/24",  or	 an ethernet MAC address (when
		     --dev tap is being	used) such as "00:FF:01:02:03:04".

	      $3 - [common name]
		     The common	name on	the certificate	 associated  with  the
		     client  linked to this address. Only present for "add" or
		     "update" operations, not "delete".

	      On "add" or "update" methods, if the script  returns  a  failure
	      code  (non-zero),	 OpenVPN  will reject the address and will not
	      modify its internal routing table.

	      Normally,	the cmd	script will use	the information	provided above
	      to set appropriate firewall entries on the  VPN  TUN/TAP	inter-
	      face.  Since OpenVPN provides the	association between virtual IP
	      or MAC address and the client's authenticated  common  name,  it
	      allows  a	user-defined script to configure firewall access poli-
	      cies with	regard to the client's high-level common name,	rather
	      than the low level client	virtual	addresses.

       --route-up cmd
	      Run  command  cmd	after routes are added,	subject	to --route-de-
	      lay.

	      cmd consists of a	path to	a script (or executable	program),  op-
	      tionally	followed  by  arguments. The path and arguments	may be
	      single- or double-quoted and/or escaped using a  backslash,  and
	      should be	separated by one or more spaces.

	      See the Environmental Variables section below for	additional pa-
	      rameters passed as environmental variables.

       --route-pre-down	cmd
	      Run command cmd before routes are	removed	upon disconnection.

	      cmd  consists of a path to a script (or executable program), op-
	      tionally followed	by arguments. The path and  arguments  may  be
	      single-  or  double-quoted and/or	escaped	using a	backslash, and
	      should be	separated by one or more spaces.

	      See the Environmental Variables section below for	additional pa-
	      rameters passed as environmental variables.

       --setenv	args
	      Set a  custom  environmental  variable  name=value  to  pass  to
	      script.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 setenv	name value
		 setenv	FORWARD_COMPATIBLE 1
		 setenv	opt config_option

	      By  setting  FORWARD_COMPATIBLE  to  1,  the  config file	syntax
	      checking is relaxed so that unknown directives  will  trigger  a
	      warning  but  not	 a fatal error,	on the assumption that a given
	      unknown directive	might be valid in future OpenVPN versions.

	      This option should be used with caution, as there	are good secu-
	      rity reasons for having OpenVPN fail if it detects problems in a
	      config file.  Having said	that,  there  are  valid  reasons  for
	      wanting new software features to gracefully degrade when encoun-
	      tered by older software versions.

	      It is also possible to tag a single directive so as not to trig-
	      ger a fatal error	if the directive isn't recognized. To do this,
	      prepend the following before the directive: setenv opt

	      Versions	prior  to OpenVPN 2.3.3	will always ignore options set
	      with the setenv opt directive.

	      See also --ignore-unknown-option

       --setenv-safe args
	      Set a custom environmental variable  OPENVPN_name	 to  value  to
	      pass to scripts.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 setenv-safe name value

	      This  directive  is  designed  to	 be  pushed  by	 the server to
	      clients, and the prepending of  OPENVPN_	to  the	 environmental
	      variable	is  a  safety precaution to prevent a LD_PRELOAD style
	      attack from a malicious or compromised server.

       --tls-verify cmd
	      Run command cmd to verify	the X509 name of a pending TLS connec-
	      tion that	has otherwise passed all other tests of	 certification
	      (except  for  revocation via --crl-verify	directive; the revoca-
	      tion test	occurs after the --tls-verify test).

	      cmd should return	0 to allow the TLS handshake to	proceed, or  1
	      to fail.

	      cmd  consists of a path to a script (or executable program), op-
	      tionally followed	by arguments. The path and  arguments  may  be
	      single-  or  double-quoted and/or	escaped	using a	backslash, and
	      should be	separated by one or more spaces.

	      When cmd is executed two arguments are appended after any	 argu-
	      ments specified in cmd, as follows:

		 cmd certificate_depth subject

	      These arguments are, respectively, the current certificate depth
	      and the X509 subject distinguished name (dn) of the peer.

	      This  feature is useful if the peer you want to trust has	a cer-
	      tificate which was signed	by a certificate  authority  who  also
	      signed many other	certificates, where you	don't necessarily want
	      to  trust	 all of	them, but rather be selective about which peer
	      certificate you will accept. This	feature	allows you to write  a
	      script which will	test the X509 name on a	certificate and	decide
	      whether  or  not it should be accepted. For a simple perl	script
	      which will test the common name field on	the  certificate,  see
	      the file verify-cn in the	OpenVPN	distribution.

	      See the Environmental Variables section below for	additional pa-
	      rameters passed as environmental variables.

       --tls-export-cert dir
	      Adds   an	  environment  variable	 peer_cert  when  calling  the
	      --tls-verify script or executing	the  OPENVPN_PLUGIN_TLS_VERIFY
	      plugin hook to verify the	certificate.

	      The environment variable contains	the path to a PEM encoded cer-
	      tificate of the current peer certificate in the directory	dir.

       --up cmd
	      Run command cmd after successful TUN/TAP device open (pre	--user
	      UID change).

	      cmd  consists of a path to a script (or executable program), op-
	      tionally followed	by arguments. The path and  arguments  may  be
	      single-  or  double-quoted and/or	escaped	using a	backslash, and
	      should be	separated by one or more spaces.

	      The up command is	useful for  specifying	route  commands	 which
	      route IP traffic destined	for private subnets which exist	at the
	      other end	of the VPN connection into the tunnel.

	      For --dev	tun execute as:

		 cmd tun_dev tun_mtu 0 ifconfig_local_ip ifconfig_remote_ip [init | restart]

	      For --dev	tap execute as:

		 cmd tap_dev tap_mtu 0 ifconfig_local_ip ifconfig_netmask [init	| restart]

	      See the Environmental Variables section below for	additional pa-
	      rameters passed as environmental variables.  The 0 argument used
	      to  be  link_mtu	which is no longer passed to scripts - to keep
	      the argument order, it was replaced with 0.

	      Note that	if cmd includes	arguments, all OpenVPN-generated argu-
	      ments will be appended to	them to	build an  argument  list  with
	      which the	executable will	be called.

	      Typically, cmd will run a	script to add routes to	the tunnel.

	      Normally	the  up	 script	 is called after the TUN/TAP device is
	      opened. In this context, the last	command	line parameter	passed
	      to  the  script will be init. If the --up-restart	option is also
	      used, the	up script will be  called  for	restarts  as  well.  A
	      restart  is considered to	be a partial reinitialization of Open-
	      VPN where	the TUN/TAP instance is	preserved  (the	 --persist-tun
	      option  will enable such preservation).  A restart can be	gener-
	      ated by a	SIGUSR1	signal,	a --ping-restart timeout, or a connec-
	      tion reset when the TCP protocol is enabled with the --proto op-
	      tion. If a restart occurs, and --up-restart has been  specified,
	      the up script will be called with	restart	as the last parameter.

	      NOTE:  On	 restart,  OpenVPN will	not pass the full set of envi-
		     ronment variables to the script. Namely,  everything  re-
		     lated  to	routing	 and  gateways	will not be passed, as
		     nothing needs to be done anyway - all the	routing	 setup
		     is	 already in place. Additionally, the up-restart	script
		     will run with the downgraded UID/GID settings (if config-
		     ured).

	      The following standalone example shows how the --up  script  can
	      be  called in both an initialization and restart context.	(NOTE:
	      for security reasons, don't run the following example unless UDP
	      port 9999	is blocked by your firewall. Also,  the	 example  will
	      run indefinitely,	so you should abort with control-c).

		 openvpn --dev tun --port 9999 --verb 4	--ping-restart 10 \
			 --up 'echo up'	--down 'echo down' --persist-tun  \
			 --up-restart

	      Note  that  OpenVPN also provides	the --ifconfig option to auto-
	      matically	ifconfig the TUN device, eliminating the need  to  de-
	      fine an --up script, unless you also want	to configure routes in
	      the --up script.

	      If  --ifconfig is	also specified,	OpenVPN	will pass the ifconfig
	      local and	remote endpoints on  the  command  line	 to  the  --up
	      script so	that they can be used to configure routes such as:

		 route add -net	10.0.0.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw $5

       --up-delay
	      Delay  TUN/TAP open and possible --up script execution until af-
	      ter TCP/UDP connection establishment with	peer.

	      In --proto udp mode, this	option normally	requires  the  use  of
	      --ping  to  allow	 connection initiation to be sensed in the ab-
	      sence of tunnel data, since UDP is a "connectionless" protocol.

	      On Windows, this option will delay  the  TAP-Win32  media	 state
	      transitioning  to	 "connected"  until  connection	establishment,
	      i.e. the receipt of the  first  authenticated  packet  from  the
	      peer.

       --up-restart
	      Enable  the --up and --down scripts to be	called for restarts as
	      well as initial program start. This  option  is  described  more
	      fully above in the --up option documentation.

   String Types	and Remapping
       In  certain  cases,  OpenVPN  will  perform  remapping of characters in
       strings.	Essentially, any characters outside the	set of permitted char-
       acters for each string type will	be converted to	underbar ('_').

       Q: Why is string	remapping necessary?
	      It's an important	security feature to prevent the	malicious cod-
	      ing of strings from untrusted sources to be passed as parameters
	      to scripts, saved	in the environment, used  as  a	 common	 name,
	      translated to a filename,	etc.

       Q: Can string remapping be disabled?
	      Yes,  by	using  the  --no-name-remapping	 option,  however this
	      should be	considered an advanced option.

       Here is a brief rundown of OpenVPN's current string types and the  per-
       mitted character	class for each string:

       X509 Names
	      Alphanumeric,  underbar  ('_'), dash ('-'), dot ('.'), at	('@'),
	      colon (':'), slash ('/'),	and equal ('='). Alphanumeric  is  de-
	      fined  as	 a  character which will cause the C library isalnum()
	      function to return true.

       Common Names
	      Alphanumeric, underbar ('_'), dash  ('-'),  dot  ('.'),  and  at
	      ('@').

       --auth-user-pass	username
	      Same  as	Common Name, with one exception: starting with OpenVPN
	      2.0.1,   the   username	is   passed   to   the	  OPENVPN_PLU-
	      GIN_AUTH_USER_PASS_VERIFY	plugin in its raw form,	without	string
	      remapping.

       --auth-user-pass	password
	      Any  "printable" character except	CR or LF. Printable is defined
	      to be a character	which will cause the C library isprint() func-
	      tion to return true.

       --client-config-dir filename as derived from common name	or`username
	      Alphanumeric, underbar ('_'), dash ('-'),	and dot	 ('.')	except
	      for  "." or ".." as standalone strings. As of v2.0.1-rc6,	the at
	      ('@') character has been added as	well  for  compatibility  with
	      the common name character	class.

       Environmental variable names
	      Alphanumeric or underbar ('_').

       Environmental variable values
	      Any printable character.

       For  all	cases, characters in a string which are	not members of the le-
       gal character class for that string type	will be	remapped  to  underbar
       ('_').

   Environmental Variables
       Once  set,  a variable is persisted indefinitely	until it is reset by a
       new value or a restart,

       As of OpenVPN 2.0-beta12, in server mode, environmental	variables  set
       by  OpenVPN are scoped according	to the client objects they are associ-
       ated with, so there should not be any issues with scripts having	access
       to stale, previously set	variables which	refer to different client  in-
       stances.

       bytes_received
	      Total  number  of	bytes received from client during VPN session.
	      Set prior	to execution of	the --client-disconnect	script.

       bytes_sent
	      Total number of bytes sent to client  during  VPN	 session.  Set
	      prior to execution of the	--client-disconnect script.

       client_connect_config_file
	      The  path	to the configuration file that should be written to by
	      the --client-connect script (optional, if	per-session configura-
	      tion is desired).	 This is the same file name as passed via com-
	      mand line	argument on the	call to	the --client-connect script.

       client_connect_deferred_file
	      This file	can be optionally written to in	order to  to  communi-
	      cate  a  status  code  of	 the --client-connect script or	plgin.
	      Only the first character in the file is relevant.	  It  must  be
	      either 1 to indicate normal script execution, 0 indicates	an er-
	      ror  (in	the same way that a non	zero exit status does) or 2 to
	      indicate that the	script deferred	returning the config file.

	      For deferred (background)	handling, the script  or  plugin  MUST
	      write  2	to  the	 file to indicate the deferral and then	return
	      with exit	code 0 to signal deferred handler started OK.

	      A	background process or similar must then	take care  of  writing
	      the  configuration  to  the  file	 indicated  by the client_con-
	      nect_config_file environment variable and	when  finished,	 write
	      the a 1 to this file (or 0 in case of an error).

	      The  absence  of	any character in the file when the script fin-
	      ishes executing is  interpreted  the  same  as  1.  This	allows
	      scripts  that  are not written to	support	the defer mechanism to
	      be used unmodified.

       common_name
	      The X509 common name of an authenticated client.	Set  prior  to
	      execution	   of	 --client-connect,   --client-disconnect   and
	      --auth-user-pass-verify scripts.

       config Name of first --config file. Set on program initiation and reset
	      on SIGHUP.

       daemon Set to "1" if the	--daemon directive is specified, or "0"	other-
	      wise.  Set on program initiation and reset on SIGHUP.

       daemon_log_redirect
	      Set to "1" if the	--log or --log-append  directives  are	speci-
	      fied,  or	 "0" otherwise.	Set on program initiation and reset on
	      SIGHUP.

       dev    The actual name of the TUN/TAP device, including a  unit	number
	      if it exists. Set	prior to --up or --down	script execution.

       dev_idx
	      On  Windows, the device index of the TUN/TAP adapter (to be used
	      in netsh.exe calls which sometimes just do not work  right  with
	      interface	names).	Set prior to --up or --down script execution.

       dns_*  The --dns	configuration options will be made available to	script
	      execution	 through  this set of environment variables. Variables
	      appear only if the corresponding option has  a  value  assigned.
	      For  the	semantics of each individual variable, please refer to
	      the documentation	for --dns.

		 dns_search_domain_{n}
		 dns_server_{n}_address_{m}
		 dns_server_{n}_port_{m}
		 dns_server_{n}_resolve_domain_{m}
		 dns_server_{n}_dnssec
		 dns_server_{n}_transport
		 dns_server_{n}_sni

       foreign_option_{n}
	      An option	pushed via --push to a client which does not  natively
	      support  it, such	as --dhcp-option on a non-Windows system, will
	      be recorded to this environmental	 variable  sequence  prior  to
	      --up script execution.

       ifconfig_ipv6_local
	      The  local  VPN  endpoint	IPv6 address specified in the --ifcon-
	      fig-ipv6 option (first parameter). Set prior to OpenVPN  calling
	      the  ifconfig  or	 code:netsh (windows version of	ifconfig) com-
	      mands which normally occurs prior	to --up	script execution.

       ifconfig_ipv6_netbits
	      The prefix length	of the IPv6 network on the VPN interface.  De-
	      rived  from  the /nnn parameter of the IPv6 address in the --if-
	      config-ipv6 option (first	parameter). Set	prior to OpenVPN call-
	      ing the ifconfig or netsh	(windows version of ifconfig) commands
	      which normally occurs prior to --up script execution.

       ifconfig_ipv6_remote
	      The remote VPN endpoint IPv6 address specified in	 the  --ifcon-
	      fig-ipv6 option (second parameter). Set prior to OpenVPN calling
	      the  ifconfig  or	 netsh	(windows version of ifconfig) commands
	      which normally occurs prior to --up script execution.

       ifconfig_local
	      The local	VPN endpoint IP	address	specified  in  the  --ifconfig
	      option  (first  parameter). Set prior to OpenVPN calling the if-
	      config or	netsh (windows version	of  ifconfig)  commands	 which
	      normally occurs prior to --up script execution.

       ifconfig_remote
	      The  remote  VPN endpoint	IP address specified in	the --ifconfig
	      option (second parameter)	when --dev tun is used.	Set  prior  to
	      OpenVPN calling the ifconfig or netsh (windows version of	ifcon-
	      fig)  commands which normally occurs prior to --up script	execu-
	      tion.

       ifconfig_netmask
	      The subnet mask of the virtual ethernet segment that  is	speci-
	      fied as the second parameter to --ifconfig when --dev tap	is be-
	      ing  used.  Set  prior  to OpenVPN calling the ifconfig or netsh
	      (windows version of ifconfig)  commands  which  normally	occurs
	      prior to --up script execution.

       ifconfig_pool_local_ip
	      The local	virtual	IPv4 address for the TUN/TAP tunnel taken from
	      an --ifconfig-push directive if specified, or otherwise from the
	      ifconfig pool (controlled	by the --ifconfig-pool config file di-
	      rective).	 Only set for --dev tun	tunnels. This option is	set on
	      the server  prior	 to  execution	of  the	 --client-connect  and
	      --client-disconnect scripts.

       ifconfig_pool_local_ip6
	      The local	virtual	IPv6 address for the TUN/TAP tunnel taken from
	      an  --ifconfig-ipv6-push	directive  if  specified, or otherwise
	      from the ifconfig	pool (controlled by  the  --ifconfig-ipv6-pool
	      config file directive). Only set for --dev tun tunnels. This op-
	      tion   is	  set	on  the	 server	 prior	to  execution  of  the
	      --client-connect and --client-disconnect scripts.

       ifconfig_pool_netmask
	      The virtual IPv4 netmask for the TUN/TAP tunnel  taken  from  an
	      --ifconfig-push  directive  if  specified, or otherwise from the
	      ifconfig pool (controlled	by the --ifconfig-pool config file di-
	      rective).	Only set for --dev tap tunnels.	This option is set  on
	      the  server  prior  to  execution	 of  the  --client-connect and
	      --client-disconnect scripts.

       ifconfig_pool_ip6_netbits
	      The virtual IPv6 prefix length for the TUN/TAP tunnel taken from
	      an --ifconfig-ipv6-push directive	 if  specified,	 or  otherwise
	      from  the	 ifconfig pool (controlled by the --ifconfig-ipv6-pool
	      config file directive). Only set for --dev tap tunnels. This op-
	      tion  is	set  on	 the  server  prior  to	  execution   of   the
	      --client-connect and --client-disconnect scripts.

       ifconfig_pool_remote_ip
	      The  remote  virtual  IPv4  address for the TUN/TAP tunnel taken
	      from an --ifconfig-push directive	 if  specified,	 or  otherwise
	      from the ifconfig	pool (controlled by the	--ifconfig-pool	config
	      file  directive).	This option is set on the server prior to exe-
	      cution of	the --client-connect and --client-disconnect scripts.

       ifconfig_pool_remote_ip6
	      The remote virtual IPv6 address for  the	TUN/TAP	 tunnel	 taken
	      from  an	--ifconfig-ipv6-push directive if specified, or	other-
	      wise  from  the  ifconfig	 pool  (controlled  by	the   --ifcon-
	      fig-ipv6-pool  config file directive). This option is set	on the
	      server  prior  to	 execution   of	  the	--client-connect   and
	      --client-disconnect scripts.

       link_mtu
	      REMOVED  No  longer passed to scripts since OpenVPN 2.6.0.  Used
	      to be the	maximum	packet size (not including the IP  header)  of
	      tunnel data in UDP tunnel	transport mode.

       local  The  --local  parameter.	Set on program initiation and reset on
	      SIGHUP.

       local_port
	      The local	port number or name, specified by --port  or  --lport.
	      Set on program initiation	and reset on SIGHUP.

       password
	      The  password  provided  by  a  connecting  client. Set prior to
	      --auth-user-pass-verify script execution only when  the  via-env
	      modifier	is  specified,	and deleted from the environment after
	      the script returns.

       peer_cert
	      If the option --tls-export-cert is enabled, this option contains
	      the path to the current peer certificate to be verified  in  PEM
	      format.	 See   also  the  argument  certificate_depth  to  the
	      --tls-verify command.

       proto  The --proto parameter. Set on program initiation	and  reset  on
	      SIGHUP.

       remote_{n}
	      The  --remote  parameter.	Set on program initiation and reset on
	      SIGHUP.

       remote_port_{n}
	      The remote port number, specified	by --port or --rport.  Set  on
	      program initiation and reset on SIGHUP.

       route_net_gateway
	      The pre-existing default IP gateway in the system	routing	table.
	      Set prior	to --up	script execution.

       route_vpn_gateway
	      The default gateway used by --route options, as specified	in ei-
	      ther the --route-gateway option or the second parameter to --if-
	      config when --dev	tun is specified. Set prior to --up script ex-
	      ecution.

       route_{parm}_{n}
	      A	 set of	variables which	define each route to be	added, and are
	      set prior	to --up	script execution.

	      parm will	be one of network, netmask", gateway, or metric.

	      n	is the OpenVPN route number, starting from 1.

	      If the network or	gateway	are resolvable DNS names, their	IP ad-
	      dress translations will be recorded rather than their  names  as
	      denoted on the command line or configuration file.

       route_ipv6_{parm}_{n}
	      A	set of variables which define each IPv6	route to be added, and
	      are set prior to --up script execution.

	      parm  will be one	of network, gateway or metric. route_ipv6_net-
	      work_{n} contains	netmask	as  /nnn,  unlike  IPv4	 where	it  is
	      passed in	a separate environment variable.

	      n	is the OpenVPN route number, starting from 1.

	      If the network or	gateway	are resolvable DNS names, their	IP ad-
	      dress  translations  will	be recorded rather than	their names as
	      denoted on the command line or configuration file.

       script_context
	      Set to "init" or "restart" prior to  up/down  script  execution.
	      For more information, see	documentation for --up.

       script_type
	      Prior  to	 execution  of any script, this	variable is set	to the
	      type of script being run.	It can be one of  the  following:  up,
	      down,  ipchange,	route-up,  tls-verify,	auth-user-pass-verify,
	      client-connect, client-disconnect	or learn-address. Set prior to
	      execution	of any script.

       signal The reason for exit or restart. Can be one of  sigusr1,  sighup,
	      sigterm,	sigint,	 inactive  (controlled	by --inactive option),
	      ping-exit	(controlled by --ping-exit option), ping-restart (con-
	      trolled by --ping-restart	option),  connection-reset  (triggered
	      on  TCP  connection  reset),  error or unknown (unknown signal).
	      This variable is set just	prior to down script execution.

       time_ascii
	      Client connection	timestamp, formatted as	a human-readable  time
	      string.  Set prior to execution of the --client-connect script.

       time_duration
	      The  duration  (in  seconds)  of the client session which	is now
	      disconnecting. Set prior to execution of the --client-disconnect
	      script.

       time_unix
	      Client  connection  timestamp,  formatted	 as  a	unix   integer
	      date/time	 value.	Set prior to execution of the --client-connect
	      script.

       tls_digest_{n} /	tls_digest_sha256_{n}
	      Contains the certificate SHA1 / SHA256 fingerprint, where	 n  is
	      the  verification	level. Only set	for TLS	connections. Set prior
	      to execution of --tls-verify script.

       tls_id_{n}
	      A	series of certificate fields from the remote peer, where n  is
	      the  verification	level. Only set	for TLS	connections. Set prior
	      to execution of --tls-verify script.

       tls_serial_{n}
	      The serial number	of the certificate from	the remote peer, where
	      n	is the verification level. Only	set for	TLS  connections.  Set
	      prior  to	 execution of --tls-verify script. This	is in the form
	      of a decimal string like "933971680", which is suitable for  do-
	      ing serial-based OCSP queries (with OpenSSL, do not prepend "0x"
	      to  the  string) If something goes wrong while reading the value
	      from the certificate it will be an empty string,	so  your  code
	      should  check  that.  See	 the  contrib/OCSP_check/OCSP_check.sh
	      script for an example.

       tls_serial_hex_{n}
	      Like tls_serial_{n}, but in hex form (e.g.  12:34:56:78:9A).

       tun_mtu
	      The MTU of the TUN/TAP device.  Set  prior  to  --up  or	--down
	      script execution.

       trusted_ip / trusted_ip6)
	      Actual  IP  address  of connecting client	or peer	which has been
	      authenticated.   Set   prior   to	  execution   of   --ipchange,
	      --client-connect	and --client-disconnect	scripts. If using ipv6
	      endpoints	(udp6, tcp6), trusted_ip6 will be set instead.

       trusted_port
	      Actual port number of connecting client or peer which  has  been
	      authenticated.   Set   prior   to	  execution   of   --ipchange,
	      --client-connect and --client-disconnect scripts.

       untrusted_ip / untrusted_ip6
	      Actual IP	address	of connecting client or	 peer  which  has  not
	      been  authenticated  yet.	 Sometimes used	to nmap	the connecting
	      host in a	--tls-verify script to ensure it is  firewalled	 prop-
	      erly.    Set    prior   to   execution   of   --tls-verify   and
	      --auth-user-pass-verify scripts. If using	ipv6 endpoints	(udp6,
	      tcp6), untrusted_ip6 will	be set instead.

       untrusted_port
	      Actual  port  number  of connecting client or peer which has not
	      been authenticated yet. Set prior	to execution  of  --tls-verify
	      and --auth-user-pass-verify scripts.

       username
	      The  username  provided  by  a  connecting  client. Set prior to
	      --auth-user-pass-verify script execution only when  the  via-env
	      modifier is specified.

       X509_{n}_{subject_field}
	      An  X509 subject field from the remote peer certificate, where n
	      is the verification level. Only set  for	TLS  connections.  Set
	      prior to execution of --tls-verify script. This variable is sim-
	      ilar  to tls_id_{n} except the component X509 subject fields are
	      broken out, and no string	remapping occurs on these field	values
	      (except for remapping of control characters to "_").  For	 exam-
	      ple,  the	following variables would be set on the	OpenVPN	server
	      using the	sample client certificate in sample-keys (client.crt).
	      Note that	the verification level is 0 for	the client certificate
	      and 1 for	the CA certificate.

	      You can use the --x509-track option to export more or  less  in-
	      formation	from the certificates.

		 X509_0_emailAddress=me@myhost.mydomain
		 X509_0_CN=Test-Client
		 X509_0_O=OpenVPN-TEST
		 X509_0_ST=NA
		 X509_0_C=KG
		 X509_1_emailAddress=me@myhost.mydomain
		 X509_1_O=OpenVPN-TEST
		 X509_1_L=BISHKEK
		 X509_1_ST=NA
		 X509_1_C=KG

   Management Interface	Options
       OpenVPN	provides  a feature rich socket	based management interface for
       both server and client mode operations.

       --management args
	      Enable a management server on a socket-name Unix socket on those
	      platforms	supporting it, or on a designated TCP port.

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 management socket-name	unix	      #
		 management socket-name	unix pw-file  #	(recommended)
		 management IP port		      #	(INSECURE)
		 management IP port pw-file	      #

	      pw-file, if specified, is	a password  file  where	 the  password
	      must be on first line. Instead of	a filename it can use the key-
	      word stdin which will prompt the user for	a password to use when
	      OpenVPN is starting.

	      For  unix	sockets, the default behaviour is to create a unix do-
	      main socket that may be connected	to by  any  process.  Use  the
	      --management-client-user	and  --management-client-group	direc-
	      tives to restrict	access.

	      The management interface provides	a special mode where  the  TCP
	      management  link	can  operate over the tunnel itself. To	enable
	      this mode, set IP	to tunnel. Tunnel mode will cause the  manage-
	      ment  interface  to listen for a TCP connection on the local VPN
	      address of the TUN/TAP interface.

	      *BEWARE* of enabling the management interface over TCP. In these
	      cases you	should ALWAYS make use of pw-file to password  protect
	      the  management  interface. Any user who can connect to this TCP
	      IP:port will be able to manage and control (and interfere	 with)
	      the  OpenVPN  process. It	is also	strongly recommended to	set IP
	      to 127.0.0.1 (localhost) to restrict accessibility of  the  man-
	      agement server to	local clients.

	      While  the  management port is designed for programmatic control
	      of OpenVPN by other applications,	it is possible	to  telnet  to
	      the  port,  using	a telnet client	in "raw" mode. Once connected,
	      type help	for a list of commands.

	      For detailed documentation on the	management interface, see  the
	      management-notes.txt  file in the	management folder of the Open-
	      VPN source distribution.

       --management-client
	      Management interface will	connect	as a TCP/unix domain client to
	      IP:port specified	by --management	rather than listen  as	a  TCP
	      server or	on a unix domain socket.

	      If  the client connection	fails to connect or is disconnected, a
	      SIGTERM signal will be generated causing OpenVPN to quit.

       --management-client-auth
	      Gives management interface client	the responsibility to  authen-
	      ticate clients after their client	certificate has	been verified.
	      See  management-notes.txt	 in  OpenVPN distribution for detailed
	      notes.

       --management-client-group g
	      When the management interface is	listening  on  a  unix	domain
	      socket, only allow connections from group	g.

       --management-client-user	u
	      When  the	 management  interface	is  listening on a unix	domain
	      socket, only allow connections from user u.

       --management-external-cert certificate-hint
	      Allows usage for external	certificate instead of	--cert	option
	      (client-only).  certificate-hint is an arbitrary string which is
	      passed to	a  management  interface  client  as  an  argument  of
	      NEED-CERTIFICATE	 notification.	 Requires  --management-exter-
	      nal-key.

       --management-external-key args
	      Allows usage for external	private	key file instead of --key  op-
	      tion (client-only).

	      Valid syntaxes:

		 management-external-key
		 management-external-key nopadding
		 management-external-key pkcs1
		 management-external-key pss

	      or any combination like:

		 management-external-key nopadding pkcs1
		 management-external-key pkcs1 pss

	      The  optional  parameters	nopadding pkcs1	and pss	signal support
	      for different padding  algorithms.  See  doc/mangement-notes.txt
	      for a complete description of this feature.

       --management-forget-disconnect
	      Make  OpenVPN  forget  passwords when management session discon-
	      nects.

	      This directive does not affect the  --http-proxy	username/pass-
	      word.  It	is always cached.

       --management-hold
	      Start OpenVPN in a hibernating state, until a client of the man-
	      agement  interface  explicitly  starts  it with the hold release
	      command.

       --management-log-cache n
	      Cache the	most recent n lines of log file	history	for  usage  by
	      the management channel.

       --management-query-passwords
	      Query   management   channel   for   private  key	 password  and
	      --auth-user-pass username/password. Only	query  the  management
	      channel for inputs which ordinarily would	have been queried from
	      the console.

       --management-query-proxy
	      Query management channel for proxy server	information for	a spe-
	      cific --remote (client-only).

       --management-query-remote
	      Allow  management	 interface  to	override  --remote  directives
	      (client-only).

       --management-signal
	      Send SIGUSR1 signal to OpenVPN  if  management  session  discon-
	      nects.  This  is	useful	when you wish to disconnect an OpenVPN
	      session on user logoff.  For --management-client this option  is
	      not needed since a disconnect will always	generate a SIGTERM.

       --management-up-down
	      Report tunnel up/down events to management interface.

   Plug-in Interface Options
       OpenVPN can be extended by loading external plug-in modules at runtime.
       These plug-ins must be prebuilt and adhere to the OpenVPN Plug-In API.

       --plugin	args
	      Loads an OpenVPN plug-in module.

	      Valid syntax:

		 plugin	module-name
		 plugin	module-name "arguments"

	      The  module-name	needs to be the	first argument,	indicating the
	      plug-in to load.	The second argument is an optional init	string
	      which will be passed directly to the plug-in.  If	the init  con-
	      sists of multiple	arguments it must be enclosed in double-quotes
	      (").   Multiple  plugin  modules	may be loaded into one OpenVPN
	      process.

	      The module-name argument can be just a filename  or  a  filename
	      with a relative or absolute path.	The format of the filename and
	      path  defines  if	 the  plug-in  will  be	 loaded	from a default
	      plug-in directory	or outside this	directory.

		 --plugin path	       Effective directory used
		 ===================== =============================
		  myplug.so	       DEFAULT_DIR/myplug.so
		  subdir/myplug.so     DEFAULT_DIR/subdir/myplug.so
		  ./subdir/myplug.so   CWD/subdir/myplug.so
		  /usr/lib/my/plug.so  /usr/lib/my/plug.so

	      DEFAULT_DIR is replaced by the default plug-in directory,	 which
	      is  configured  at the build time	of OpenVPN. CWD	is the current
	      directory	where OpenVPN was started  or  the  directory  OpenVPN
	      have  switched  into via the --cd	option before the --plugin op-
	      tion.

	      For more information  and	 examples  on  how  to	build  OpenVPN
	      plug-in modules, see the README file in the plugin folder	of the
	      OpenVPN source distribution.

	      If you are using an RPM install of OpenVPN, see /usr/share/open-
	      vpn/plugin.  The	documentation  is in doc and the actual	plugin
	      modules are in lib.

	      Multiple plugin modules can be cascaded, and modules can be used
	      in tandem	with scripts. The modules will be called by OpenVPN in
	      the order	that they are declared in the config file. If  both  a
	      plugin  and  script  are	configured  for	the same callback, the
	      script will be called last. If  the  return  code	 of  the  mod-
	      ule/script controls an authentication function (such as tls-ver-
	      ify,  auth-user-pass-verify, or client-connect), then every mod-
	      ule and script must return success (0) in	order for the  connec-
	      tion to be authenticated.

	      WARNING:
		     Plug-ins  may  do deferred	execution, meaning the plug-in
		     will return the control back to the main OpenVPN  process
		     and  provide  the plug-in result later on via a different
		     thread or process.	 OpenVPN does NOT support multiple au-
		     thentication plug-ins where more than one plugin tries to
		     do	deferred authentication.  If  this  behaviour  is  de-
		     tected, OpenVPN will shut down upon first authentication.

   Windows-Specific Options
       --allow-nonadmin	TAP-adapter
	      (Standalone)  Set	 TAP-adapter to	allow access from non-adminis-
	      trative accounts.	If TAP-adapter is omitted, all TAP adapters on
	      the system will be configured to	allow  non-admin  access.  The
	      non-admin	 access	 setting  will	only persist for the length of
	      time that	the TAP-Win32 device object and	driver remain  loaded,
	      and  will	need to	be re-enabled after a reboot, or if the	driver
	      is unloaded and reloaded.	This directive can only	be used	by  an
	      administrator.

       --block-outside-dns
	      Block  DNS  servers  on  other  network  adapters	to prevent DNS
	      leaks. This option prevents any application from	accessing  TCP
	      or  UDP  port  53	 except	one inside the tunnel. It uses Windows
	      Filtering	Platform (WFP) and works on Windows Vista or later.

	      This option is considered	unknown	on non-Windows	platforms  and
	      unsupported  on  Windows	XP,  resulting in fatal	error. You may
	      want to use --setenv opt or --ignore-unknown-option  (not	 suit-
	      able for Windows XP) to ignore said error. Note that pushing un-
	      known options from server	does not trigger fatal errors.

       --cryptoapicert select-string
	      (Windows/OpenSSL Only) Load the certificate and private key from
	      the Windows Certificate System Store.

	      Use this option instead of --cert	and --key.

	      This  makes it possible to use any smart card, supported by Win-
	      dows, but	also any kind of certificate,  residing	 in  the  Cert
	      Store, where you have access to the private key. This option has
	      been  tested  with  a  couple of different smart cards (GemSAFE,
	      Cryptoflex, and Swedish Post Office eID) on the client side, and
	      also an imported PKCS12 software certificate on the server side.

	      To select	a certificate, based on	a substring search in the cer-
	      tificate's subject:

		 cryptoapicert "SUBJ:Peter Runestig"

	      To select	a certificate, based on	certificate's thumbprint (SHA1
	      hash):

		 cryptoapicert "THUMB:f6 49 24 41 01 b4	..."

	      The thumbprint hex string	can easily be copy-and-pasted from the
	      Windows Certificate Store	GUI. The embedded spaces  in  the  hex
	      string are optional.

	      To  select  a  certificate based on a substring in certificate's
	      issuer name:

		 cryptoapicert "ISSUER:Sample CA"

	      To select	a certificate based on a certificate's	template  name
	      or OID of	the template:

		 cryptoapicert "TMPL:Name of Template"
		 cryptoapicert "TMPL:1.3.6.1.4..."

	      The  first  non-expired certificate found	in the user's store or
	      the machine store	that matches the select-string is used.

       --dhcp-release
	      Ask Windows to release the TAP adapter lease on  shutdown.  This
	      option  has  no effect now, as it	is enabled by default starting
	      with OpenVPN 2.4.1.

       --dhcp-renew
	      Ask Windows to renew the TAP adapter lease on startup. This  op-
	      tion  is normally	unnecessary, as	Windows	automatically triggers
	      a	DHCP renegotiation on the TAP adapter when it comes  up,  how-
	      ever  if	you set	the TAP-Win32 adapter Media Status property to
	      "Always Connected", you may need this flag.

       --ip-win32 method
	      When using --ifconfig on Windows,	set the	TAP-Win32  adapter  IP
	      address  and  netmask using method. Don't	use this option	unless
	      you are also using --ifconfig.

	      manual Don't set the IP address or  netmask  automatically.  In-
		     stead output a message to the console telling the user to
		     configure the adapter manually and	indicating the IP/net-
		     mask which	OpenVPN	expects	the adapter to be set to.

	      dynamic [offset] [lease-time]
		     Automatically  set	the IP address and netmask by replying
		     to	DHCP query messages generated  by  the	kernel.	  This
		     mode  is probably the "cleanest" solution for setting the
		     TCP/IP properties since it	uses the well-known DHCP  pro-
		     tocol.  There  are,  however, two prerequisites for using
		     this mode:

		     1.	The TCP/IP properties for the TAP-Win32	 adapter  must
			be set to "Obtain an IP	address	automatically",	and

		     2.	OpenVPN	needs to claim an IP address in	the subnet for
			use as the virtual DHCP	server address.

		     By	 default in --dev tap mode, OpenVPN will take the nor-
		     mally unused first	address	in the subnet. For example, if
		     your subnet is 192.168.4.0	 netmask  255.255.255.0,  then
		     OpenVPN  will  take  the IP address 192.168.4.0 to	use as
		     the virtual DHCP server  address.	 In  --dev  tun	 mode,
		     OpenVPN will cause	the DHCP server	to masquerade as if it
		     were coming from the remote endpoint.

		     The  optional  offset  parameter is an integer which is >
		     -256 and <	256 and	which defaults to 0. If	offset is pos-
		     itive, the	DHCP server will masquerade as the IP  address
		     at	 network  address + offset. If offset is negative, the
		     DHCP server will masquerade as the	IP address  at	broad-
		     cast address + offset.

		     The  Windows  ipconfig  /all  command can be used to show
		     what Windows thinks the DHCP server address  is.  OpenVPN
		     will "claim" this address,	so make	sure to	use a free ad-
		     dress.  Having  said  that,  different OpenVPN instantia-
		     tions, including different	ends of	the  same  connection,
		     can share the same	virtual	DHCP server address.

		     The  lease-time  parameter	controls the lease time	of the
		     DHCP assignment given to the TAP-Win32  adapter,  and  is
		     denoted  in  seconds.  Normally a very long lease time is
		     preferred	because	 it  prevents  routes  involving   the
		     TAP-Win32 adapter from being lost when the	system goes to
		     sleep. The	default	lease time is one year.

	      netsh  Automatically  set	 the  IP address and netmask using the
		     Windows command-line "netsh" command. This	method appears
		     to	work correctly on Windows XP but not Windows 2000.

	      ipapi  Automatically set the IP address and  netmask  using  the
		     Windows  IP Helper	API. This approach does	not have ideal
		     semantics,	though testing has  indicated  that  it	 works
		     okay  in  practice. If you	use this option, it is best to
		     leave the TCP/IP properties for the TAP-Win32 adapter  in
		     their default state, i.e. "Obtain an IP address automati-
		     cally."

	      adaptive (Default)
		     Try  dynamic  method  initially and fail over to netsh if
		     the DHCP negotiation with the TAP-Win32 adapter does  not
		     succeed  in  20 seconds. Such failures have been known to
		     occur when	 certain  third-party  firewall	 packages  in-
		     stalled  on the client machine block the DHCP negotiation
		     used by the TAP-Win32 adapter. Note  that	if  the	 netsh
		     failover  occurs, the TAP-Win32 adapter TCP/IP properties
		     will be reset from	DHCP to	static,	and  this  will	 cause
		     future  OpenVPN  startups	using the adaptive mode	to use
		     netsh immediately,	rather than trying dynamic first.

		     To	"unstick" the adaptive	mode  from  using  netsh,  run
		     OpenVPN  at  least	once using the dynamic mode to restore
		     the TAP-Win32 adapter TCP/IP properties to	a DHCP config-
		     uration.

       --pause-exit
	      Put up a "press any key to  continue"  message  on  the  console
	      prior to OpenVPN program exit. This option is automatically used
	      by  the  Windows explorer	when OpenVPN is	run on a configuration
	      file using the right-click explorer menu.

       --register-dns
	      Run ipconfig /flushdns and ipconfig /registerdns	on  connection
	      initiation.  This	 is  known  to	kick  Windows into recognizing
	      pushed DNS servers.

       --route-method m
	      Which method m to	use for	adding routes on Windows?

	      adaptive (default)
		     Try IP helper API first. If that fails, fall back to  the
		     route.exe shell command.

	      ipapi  Use IP helper API.

	      exe    Call the route.exe	shell command.

       --service args
	      Should  be  used when OpenVPN is being automatically executed by
	      another program in such a	context	that no	interaction  with  the
	      user via display or keyboard is possible.

	      Valid syntax:

		 service exit-event [0|1]

	      In  general,  end-users should never need	to explicitly use this
	      option, as it is automatically  added  by	 the  OpenVPN  service
	      wrapper  when  a	given  OpenVPN configuration is	being run as a
	      service.

	      exit-event is the	name of	a Windows  global  event  object,  and
	      OpenVPN will continuously	monitor	the state of this event	object
	      and exit when it becomes signaled.

	      The  second  parameter indicates the initial state of exit-event
	      and normally defaults to 0.

	      Multiple OpenVPN processes can be	simultaneously	executed  with
	      the  same	 exit-event  parameter.	 In  any case, the controlling
	      process  can  signal  exit-event,	 causing  all	such   OpenVPN
	      processes	to exit.

	      When executing an	OpenVPN	process	using the --service directive,
	      OpenVPN  will  probably not have a console window	to output sta-
	      tus/error	messages, therefore it	is  useful  to	use  --log  or
	      --log-append to write these messages to a	file.

       --show-adapters
	      (Standalone)  Show available TAP-Win32 adapters which can	be se-
	      lected using the --dev-node option. On non-Windows systems,  the
	      ifconfig(8) command provides similar functionality.

       --show-net
	      (Standalone) Show	OpenVPN's view of the system routing table and
	      network adapter list.

       --show-net-up
	      Output  OpenVPN's	 view  of the system routing table and network
	      adapter list to the syslog or log	file after the TUN/TAP adapter
	      has been brought up and any routes have been added.

       --show-valid-subnets
	      (Standalone) Show	valid subnets for --dev	tun  emulation.	 Since
	      the  TAP-Win32  driver exports an	ethernet interface to Windows,
	      and since	TUN devices are	point-to-point in nature, it is	neces-
	      sary for the TAP-Win32 driver to impose certain  constraints  on
	      TUN endpoint address selection.

	      Namely,  the  point-to-point endpoints used in TUN device	emula-
	      tion must	be the middle two addresses of a /30  subnet  (netmask
	      255.255.255.252).

       --tap-sleep n
	      Cause  OpenVPN  to  sleep	 for  n	 seconds immediately after the
	      TAP-Win32	adapter	state is set to	"connected".

	      This option is intended to be used to troubleshoot problems with
	      the --ifconfig and --ip-win32 options, and is used to  give  the
	      TAP-Win32	 adapter  time to come up before Windows IP Helper API
	      operations are applied to	it.

       --win-sys path
	      Set the Windows system directory pathname	to  use	 when  looking
	      for  system  executables such as route.exe and netsh.exe.	By de-
	      fault, if	this directive is not specified, OpenVPN will use  the
	      SystemRoot environment variable.

	      This option has changed behaviour	since OpenVPN 2.3. Earlier you
	      had  to  define  --win-sys env to	use the	SystemRoot environment
	      variable,	otherwise it  defaulted	 to  C:\\WINDOWS.  It  is  not
	      needed  to use the env keyword any more, and it will just	be ig-
	      nored. A warning is logged when this is found in the  configura-
	      tion file.

       --windows-driver	drv
	      Specifies	 which	tun  driver  to	 use. Values are ovpn-dco (de-
	      fault), tap-windows6 and wintun.	ovpn-dco  and  wintun  require
	      --dev tun. wintun	also requires OpenVPN process to run elevated,
	      or be invoked using the Interactive Service.

   Standalone Debug Options
       --show-gateway args
	      (Standalone)  Show current IPv4 and IPv6 default gateway and in-
	      terface towards the gateway (if the protocol in question is  en-
	      abled).

	      Valid syntax:

		 --show-gateway
		 --show-gateway	IPv4-target
		 --show-gateway	IPv6-target

	      For  IPv4	 it looks for a	0.0.0.0/0 route, or the	specified IPv4
	      address if the target can	be parsed as  an  IPv4	address.   For
	      IPv6  this  queries  the	route towards ::/128, or the specified
	      IPv6 target address if the argument is an	IPv6 address.

	      Adding a target is helpful for diagnostics  to  see  if  OpenVPN
	      will  do	the  right  thing if there are more specific IPv4/IPv6
	      routes to	a VPN server.

   Advanced Expert Options
       These are options only required when special tweaking is	needed,	 often
       used when debugging or testing out special usage	scenarios.

       --hash-size args
	      Set the size of the real address hash table to r and the virtual
	      address table to v.

	      Valid syntax:

		 hash-size r v

	      By default, both tables are sized	at 256 buckets.

       --bcast-buffers n
	      Allocate n buffers for broadcast datagrams (default 256).

       --persist-local-ip
	      Preserve	initially  resolved  local  IP address and port	number
	      across SIGUSR1 or	--ping-restart restarts.

       --persist-remote-ip
	      Preserve most recently authenticated remote IP address and  port
	      number across SIGUSR1 or --ping-restart restarts.

       --rcvbuf	size
	      Set  the TCP/UDP socket receive buffer size. Defaults to operat-
	      ing system default.

       --shaper	n
	      Limit bandwidth of outgoing tunnel data to n bytes per second on
	      the TCP/UDP port.	Note that this will only work if mode  is  set
	      to  p2p.	If you want to limit the bandwidth in both directions,
	      use this option on both peers.

	      OpenVPN uses the following algorithm to implement	traffic	 shap-
	      ing: Given a shaper rate of n bytes per second, after a datagram
	      write  of	 b bytes is queued on the TCP/UDP port,	wait a minimum
	      of (b / n) seconds before	queuing	the next write.

	      It should	be noted that OpenVPN supports	multiple  tunnels  be-
	      tween  the  same two peers, allowing you to construct full-speed
	      and reduced bandwidth tunnels at the same	time, routing low-pri-
	      ority data such as off-site backups over the  reduced  bandwidth
	      tunnel, and other	data over the full-speed tunnel.

	      Also  note  that for low bandwidth tunnels (under	1000 bytes per
	      second), you should probably use lower MTU values	as  well  (see
	      above),  otherwise  the  packet latency will grow	so large as to
	      trigger timeouts in the TLS layer	and  TCP  connections  running
	      over the tunnel.

	      OpenVPN allows n to be between 100 bytes/sec and 100 Mbytes/sec.

       --sndbuf	size
	      Set  the	TCP/UDP	socket send buffer size. Defaults to operating
	      system default.

       --tcp-queue-limit n
	      Maximum number of	output packets queued before TCP (default 64).

	      When OpenVPN is tunneling	data from a TUN/TAP device to a	remote
	      client over a TCP	connection, it is possible  that  the  TUN/TAP
	      device  might produce data at a faster rate than the TCP connec-
	      tion can support.	When the number	of output packets  queued  be-
	      fore  sending  to	 the TCP socket	reaches	this limit for a given
	      client connection, OpenVPN will start to drop  outgoing  packets
	      directed at this client.

       --txqueuelen n
	      (Linux  only)  Set the TX	queue length on	the TUN/TAP interface.
	      Currently	defaults to operating system default.

       --disable-dco
	      Disables the opportunistic use of	 data  channel	offloading  if
	      available.   Without this	option,	OpenVPN	will opportunistically
	      use DCO mode if the config options and the running  kernel  sup-
	      ports using DCO.

	      Data  channel  offload  currently	 requires data-ciphers to only
	      contain AEAD ciphers (AES-GCM and	Chacha20-Poly1305)  and	 Linux
	      with the ovpn-dco	module.

	      Note that	some options have no effect or cannot be used when DCO
	      mode is enabled.

	      On platforms that	do not support DCO disable-dco has no effect.

UNSUPPORTED OPTIONS
       Options	listed	in this	section	have been removed from OpenVPN and are
       no longer supported

       --client-cert-not-required
	      Removed in OpenVPN 2.5.  This should  be	replaxed  with	--ver-
	      ify-client-cert none.

       --ifconfig-pool-linear
	      Removed in OpenVPN 2.5.  This should be replaced with --topology
	      p2p.

       --key-method
	      Removed  in OpenVPN 2.5.	This option should not be used,	as us-
	      ing the old key-method weakens the VPN tunnel security.  The old
	      key-method was also only needed when the remote side  was	 older
	      than OpenVPN 2.0.

       --management-client-pf
	      Removed  in  OpenVPN  2.6.   The	built-in packet	filtering (pf)
	      functionality has	been removed.

       --ncp-disable
	      Removed in OpenVPN 2.6.  This option mainly served a role	as de-
	      bug option when NCP was first introduced.	 It should  no	longer
	      be necessary.

       --no-iv
	      Removed  in  OpenVPN  2.5.  This option should not be used as it
	      weakens the VPN tunnel security.	This has been  a  NOOP	option
	      since OpenVPN 2.4.

       --no-replay
	      Removed  in  OpenVPN  2.7.  This option should not be used as it
	      weakens the VPN tunnel security.	Previously we claimed to  have
	      removed this in OpenVPN 2.5, but this wasn't actually the	case.

       --ns-cert-type
	      Removed  in OpenVPN 2.5.	The nsCertType field is	no longer sup-
	      ported in	recent SSL/TLS libraries.  If your  certificates  does
	      not  include  key	usage and extended key usage fields, they must
	      be upgraded and the --remote-cert-tls option should be used  in-
	      stead.

       --prng Removed  in  OpenVPN 2.6.	 We now	always use the PRNG of the SSL
	      library.

       --persist-key
	      Ignored since OpenVPN 2.7. Keys are now always persisted	across
	      restarts.

CONNECTION PROFILES
       Client configuration files may contain multiple remote servers which it
       will  attempt to	connect	against.  But there are	some configuration op-
       tions which are related to specific --remote options.   For  these  use
       cases, connection profiles are the solution.

       By  encapsulating  the --remote option and related options within <con-
       nection>	and </connection>, these options are handled as	a group.

       An OpenVPN client will try each connection profile  sequentially	 until
       it achieves a successful	connection.

       --remote-random	can  be	 used  to  initially "scramble"	the connection
       list.

       Here is an example of connection	profile	usage:

	  client
	  dev tun

	  <connection>
	  remote 198.19.34.56 1194 udp
	  </connection>

	  <connection>
	  remote 198.19.34.56 443 tcp
	  </connection>

	  <connection>
	  remote 198.19.34.56 443 tcp
	  http-proxy 192.168.0.8 8080
	  </connection>

	  <connection>
	  remote 198.19.36.99 443 tcp
	  http-proxy 192.168.0.8 8080
	  </connection>

	  persist-tun
	  pkcs12 client.p12
	  remote-cert-tls server
	  verb 3

       First we	try to connect to a server at 198.19.34.56:1194	using UDP.  If
       that  fails,  we	 then try to connect to	198.19.34.56:443 using TCP. If
       that  also  fails,  then	 try  connecting  through  an  HTTP  proxy  at
       192.168.0.8:8080	to 198.19.34.56:443 using TCP. Finally,	try to connect
       through the same	proxy to a server at 198.19.36.99:443 using TCP.

       The  following  OpenVPN	options	 may  be used inside of	a <connection>
       block:

       bind,   connect-retry,	 connect-retry-max,    connect-timeout,	   ex-
       plicit-exit-notify,  float,  fragment,  http-proxy,  http-proxy-option,
       key-direction, link-mtu,	local, lport, mssfix, mtu-disc,	nobind,	 port,
       proto,  remote,	rport,	socks-proxy, tls-auth, tls-crypt, tun-mtu and,
       tun-mtu-extra.

       A defaulting mechanism exists for specifying options to	apply  to  all
       <connection>  profiles. If any of the above options (with the exception
       of remote ) appear outside of a <connection> block, but in a configura-
       tion file which has one or more <connection> blocks, the	option setting
       will be used as a default for <connection> blocks which	follow	it  in
       the configuration file.

       For  example,  suppose the nobind option	were placed in the sample con-
       figuration file above, near the top of the file,	before the first <con-
       nection>	block. The effect would	be as if nobind	were declared  in  all
       <connection> blocks below it.

INLINE FILE SUPPORT
       OpenVPN	allows including files in the main configuration for the --ca,
       --cert,	 --dh,	 --extra-certs,	  --key,    --pkcs12,	 --crl-verify,
       --http-proxy-user-pass,	     --tls-auth,      --auth-gen-token-secret,
       --peer-fingerprint,  --tls-crypt,  --tls-crypt-v2,  --verify-hash   and
       --auth-user-pass	options.

       Each  inline  file  started  by the line	<option> and ended by the line
       </option>

       Here is an example of an	inline file usage

	  <cert>
	  -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
	  [...]
	  -----END CERTIFICATE-----
	  </cert>

       When using the inline file feature with --pkcs12	the inline file	has to
       be base64 encoded. Encoding of a	.p12 file into base64 can be done  for
       example with OpenSSL by running openssl base64 -in input.p12

SIGNALS
       SIGHUP Cause  OpenVPN  to  close	 all  TUN/TAP and network connections,
	      restart, re-read the configuration file  (if  any),  and	reopen
	      TUN/TAP and network connections.

       SIGUSR1
	      Like  SIGHUP`, except don't re-read configuration	file, and pos-
	      sibly don't close	and reopen TUN/TAP device, re-read key	files,
	      preserve	local  IP  address/port, or preserve most recently au-
	      thenticated  remote  IP  address/port  based  on	--persist-tun,
	      --persist-local-ip  and --persist-remote-ip options respectively
	      (see above).

	      This signal may also be internally generated by a	timeout	condi-
	      tion, governed by	the --ping-restart option.

	      This signal, when	combined with --persist-remote-ip, may be sent
	      when the underlying parameters of	the host's  network  interface
	      change  such as when the host is a DHCP client and is assigned a
	      new IP address.  See --ipchange for more information.

       SIGUSR2
	      Causes OpenVPN to	display	its current statistics (to the	syslog
	      file if --daemon is used,	or stdout otherwise).

       SIGINT, SIGTERM
	      Causes OpenVPN to	exit gracefully.

FAQ
	<https://community.openvpn.net/openvpn/wiki/FAQ>

HOWTO
       The  manual  openvpn-examples(5)	 gives	some  examples,	especially for
       small setups.

       For a more comprehensive	guide to setting up OpenVPN  in	 a  production
       setting,	see the	OpenVPN	HOWTO at
	<https://openvpn.net/community-resources/how-to/>

PROTOCOL
       An ongoing effort to document the OpenVPN protocol can be found under
	<https://github.com/openvpn/openvpn-rfc>

WEB
       OpenVPN's web site is at	 <https://community.openvpn.net/>

       Go  here	 to  download  the latest version of OpenVPN, subscribe	to the
       mailing lists, read the mailing list archives, or browse	the Git	repos-
       itory.

BUGS
       Report all bugs to the OpenVPN team  <info@openvpn.net>

SEE ALSO
       openvpn-examples(5),  dhcpcd(8),	 ifconfig(8),  openssl(1),   route(8),
       scp(1) ssh(1)

NOTES
       This  product  includes	software  developed  by	 the OpenSSL Project (
       <https://www.openssl.org/> )

       For more	information on the TLS protocol, see
	<http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2246.txt>

       For more	information on the LZO real-time compression library see
	<https://www.oberhumer.com/opensource/lzo/>

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (C) 2002-2020 OpenVPN Inc This	program	is free	software;  you
       can redistribute	it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General
       Public License version 2	as published by	the Free Software Foundation.

AUTHORS
       James Yonan  <james@openvpn.net>

								    OPENVPN(8)

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
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