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if_ipsec(4)		    Kernel Interfaces Manual		   if_ipsec(4)

NAME
       if_ipsec	-- IPsec virtual tunneling interface

SYNOPSIS
       The if_ipsec network interface is a part	of the FreeBSD IPsec implemen-
       tation.	 To  compile it	into the kernel, place this line in the	kernel
       configuration file:

	     options IPSEC

       It can also be loaded as	part of	the ipsec kernel module	if the	kernel
       was compiled with

	     options IPSEC_SUPPORT

DESCRIPTION
       The  if_ipsec  network  interface  is targeted for creating route-based
       VPNs.  It can tunnel IPv4 and IPv6 traffic over either IPv4 or IPv6 and
       secure it with ESP.

       if_ipsec	interfaces are dynamically  created  and  destroyed  with  the
       ifconfig(8)  create  and	 destroy  subcommands.	The administrator must
       configure IPsec tunnel endpoint addresses.   These  addresses  will  be
       used  for  the  outer  IP header	of ESP packets.	 The administrator can
       also configure the protocol and addresses for the inner IP header  with
       ifconfig(8),  and modify	the routing table to route the packets through
       the if_ipsec interface.

       When the	if_ipsec interface is  configured,  it	automatically  creates
       special security	policies.  These policies can be used to acquire secu-
       rity  associations from the IKE daemon, which are needed	for establish-
       ing an IPsec tunnel.  It	is also	possible to create needed security as-
       sociations manually with	the setkey(8) utility.

       Each if_ipsec interface has an additional numeric configuration	option
       reqid id.  This id is used to distinguish traffic and security policies
       between several if_ipsec	interfaces.  The reqid can be specified	on in-
       terface	creation and changed later.  If	not specified, it is automati-
       cally assigned.	Note that changing reqid will lead  to	generation  of
       new security policies, and this may require creating new	security asso-
       ciations.

EXAMPLES
       The example below shows manual configuration of an IPsec	tunnel between
       two  FreeBSD  hosts.  Host A has	the IP address 192.168.0.3, and	host B
       has the IP address 192.168.0.5.

       On host A:

	     ifconfig ipsec0 create reqid 100
	     ifconfig ipsec0 inet tunnel 192.168.0.3 192.168.0.5
	     ifconfig ipsec0 inet 172.16.0.3/16	172.16.0.5
	     setkey -c
	     add 192.168.0.3 192.168.0.5 esp 10000 -m tunnel -u	100 -E rijndael-cbc "VerySecureKey!!1";
	     add 192.168.0.5 192.168.0.3 esp 10001 -m tunnel -u	100 -E rijndael-cbc "VerySecureKey!!2";
	     ^D

       On host B:

	     ifconfig ipsec0 create reqid 200
	     ifconfig ipsec0 inet tunnel 192.168.0.5 192.168.0.3
	     ifconfig ipsec0 inet 172.16.0.5/16	172.16.0.3
	     setkey -c
	     add 192.168.0.3 192.168.0.5 esp 10000 -m tunnel -u	200 -E rijndael-cbc "VerySecureKey!!1";
	     add 192.168.0.5 192.168.0.3 esp 10001 -m tunnel -u	200 -E rijndael-cbc "VerySecureKey!!2";
	     ^D

       Note the	value 100 on host A and	value 200 on host B are	used as	reqid.
       The same	value must be used as identifier of the	policy	entry  in  the
       setkey(8) command.

SEE ALSO
       gif(4), gre(4), ipsec(4), ifconfig(8), setkey(8)

AUTHORS
       Andrey V. Elsukov <ae@FreeBSD.org>

FreeBSD	14.3		       February	6, 2017			   if_ipsec(4)

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=if_ipsec&manpath=FreeBSD+14.3-RELEASE+and+Ports>

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