===== sslh -- A ssl/ssh multiplexer. ===== Sslh accepts connections on specified ports, and forwards them further based on tests performed on the first data packet sent by the remote client. Probes for HTTP, SSL, SSH, OpenVPN, tinc, XMPP are implemented, and any other protocol that can be tested using a regular expression, can be recognised. A typical use case is to allow serving several services on port 443 (e.g. to connect to ssh from inside a corporate firewall, which almost never block port 443) while still serving HTTPS on that port. Hence sslh acts as a protocol demultiplexer, or a switchboard. Its name comes from its original function to serve SSH and HTTPS on the same port. ==== Compile and install ==== sslh uses libconfig (http://www.hyperrealm.com/libconfig/) and libwrap. For Debian, these are contained in packages libwrap0-dev and libconfig8-dev. For OpenSUSE, these are contained in packages libconfig9 and libconfig-dev in repository http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/multimedia:/libs/openSUSE_12.1/ For Fedora, this package should work: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/pkgdb/acls/name/libconfig (feedback from Fedorans appreciated). If you can't find libconfig, or just don't want a configuration file, set 'USELIBCONFIG=' in the Makefile. After this, the Makefile should work: make install There are a couple of configuration options at the beginning of the Makefile: USELIBWRAP compiles support for host access control (see hosts_access(3)), you will need libwrap headers and library to compile (libwrap0-dev in Debian). USELIBCONFIG compiles support for the configuration file. You will need libconfig headers to compile (libconfig8-dev in Debian). The Makefile produces two different executables: sslh-fork and sslh-select. sslh-fork forks a new process for each incoming connection. It is well-tested and very reliable, but incurs the overhead of many processes. sslh-select uses only one thread, which monitors all connections at once. It is more recent and less tested, but only incurs a 16 byte overhead per connection. Also, if it stops, you'll lose all connections, which means you can't upgrade it remotely. If you are going to use sslh for a "small" setup (less than a dozen ssh connections and a low-traffic https server) then sslh-fork is probably more suited for you. If you are going to use sslh on a "medium" setup (a few thousand ssh connections, and another few thousand ssl connections), sslh-select will be better. If you have a very large site (tens of thousands of connections), you'll need a vapourware version that would use libevent or something like that. To install: make cp sslh-fork /usr/local/sbin/sslh cp scripts/etc.default.sslh /etc/default/sslh For Debian: cp scripts/etc.init.d.sslh /etc/init.d/sslh For CentOS: cp scripts/etc.rc.d.init.d.sslh /etc/rc.d/init.d/sslh and probably create links in /etc/rc.d so that the server start automatically at boot-up, e.g. under Debian: update-rc.d sslh defaults ==== Configuration ==== You can edit settings in /etc/default/sslh: LISTEN=ifname:443 SSH=localhost:22 SSL=localhost:443 A good scheme is to use the external name of the machine in $LISTEN, and bind httpd to localhost:443 (instead of all binding to all interfaces): that way, https connections coming from inside your network don't need to go through sslh, and sslh is only there as a frontal for connections coming from the internet. Note that 'external name' in this context refers to the actual IP address of the machine as seen from your network, i.e. that that is not 127.0.0.1 in the output of ifconfig(8). ==== Libwrap support ==== Sslh can optionnaly perform libwrap checks for the sshd service: because the connection to sshd will be coming locally from sslh, sshd cannot determine the IP of the client. ==== OpenVPN support ==== OpenVPN clients connecting to OpenVPN running with -port-share reportedly take more than one second between the time the TCP connexion is established and the time they send the first data packet. This results in sslh with default settings timing out and assuming an SSH connexion. To support OpenVPN connexions reliably, it is necessary to increase sslh's timeout to 5 seconds. Instead of using OpenVPN's port sharing, it is more reliable to use sslh's -o option to get sslh to do the port sharing. ==== Using proxytunnel with sslh ==== If you are connecting through a proxy that checks that the outgoing connection really is SSL and rejects SSH, you can encapsulate all your traffic in SSL using proxytunnel (this should work with corkscrew as well). On the server side you receive the traffic with stunnel to decapsulate SSL, then pipe through sslh to switch HTTP on one side and SSL on the other. In that case, you end up with something like this: ssh -> proxytunnel -e --------ssh/ssl------> stunnel ---ssh---> sslh --> sshd Web browser --------http/ssl------> stunnel ---http---> sslh --> http:80 Configuration goes like this: On the server side, using stunnel3: stunnel -f -p mycert.pem -d thelonious:443 -l /usr/local/sbin/sslh -- sslh -i --http localhost:80 --ssh localhost:22 stunnel options: -f for foreground/debugging, -p specifies the key + certificate, -d specifies which interface and port we're listening to for incoming connexions, -l summons sslh in inetd mode. sslh options: -i for inetd mode, --http to forward http connexions to port 80, and SSH connexions to port 22. ==== capapbilities support ==== On Linux (only?), you can use POSIX capabilities to reduce a server's capabilities to the minimum it needs (see capabilities(8). For sslh, this is CAP_NET_ADMIN (to perform transparent proxy-ing) and CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE (to bind to port 443 without being root). The simplest way to use capabilities is to give them to the executable as root: # setcap cap_net_bind_service,cap_net_admin+pe sslh-select Then you can run sslh-select as an unpriviledged user, e.g.: $ sslh-select -p myname:443 --ssh localhost:22 --ssl localhost:443 This has 2 advantages over starting as root with -u: - You no longer start as root (duh) - This enables transparent proxying. Caveat: CAP_NET_ADMIN does give sslh too many rights, e.g. configuring the interface. If you're not going to use transparent proxying, just don't use it. ==== Transparent proxy support ==== On Linux (only?) you can use the --transparent option to request transparent proying. This means services behind sslh (Apache, sshd and so on) will see the external IP and ports as if the external world connected directly to them. This simplifies IP-based access control (or makes it possible at all). sslh needs extended rights to perform this: you'll need to give it cap_net_admin capabilities (see appropriate chapter) or run it as root (but don't do that). The firewalling tables also need to be adjusted as follow (example to connect to https on 4443 -- adapt to your needs (I don't think it is possible to have httpd listen to 443 in this scheme -- let me know if you manage that))): # iptables -t mangle -N SSLH # iptables -t mangle -A OUTPUT --protocol tcp --out-interface eth0 --sport 22 --jump SSLH # iptables -t mangle -A OUTPUT --protocol tcp --out-interface eth0 --sport 4443 --jump SSLH # iptables -t mangle -A SSLH --jump MARK --set-mark 0x1 # iptables -t mangle -A SSLH --jump ACCEPT # ip rule add fwmark 0x1 lookup 100 # ip route add local 0.0.0.0/0 dev lo table 100 This will only work if sslh does not use any loopback addresses (no 127.0.0.1 or localhost), you'll need to use explicit IP addresses (or names): sslh --listen 192.168.0.1:443 --ssh 192.168.0.1:22 --ssl 192.168.0.1:4443 This will not work: sslh --listen 192.168.0.1:443 --ssh 127.0.0.1:22 --ssl 127.0.0.1:4443 ==== Comments? 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