Site configuration ================== The ``site`` consists of the files ``site.conf`` and ``site.mk``. In the first community based values are defined, which both are processed during the build process and runtime. The last is directly included in the make process of Gluon. Configuration ------------- The ``site.conf`` is a lua dictionary with the following defined keys. hostname_prefix A string which shall prefix the default hostname of a device. site_name The name of your community. site_code The code of your community. It is good practice to use the TLD of your community here. domain_seed 32 bytes of random data, encoded in hexadecimal, used to seed other random values specific to the mesh domain. It must be the same for all nodes of one mesh, but should be different for firmware that is not supposed to mesh with each other. The recommended way to generate a value for a new site is:: echo $(hexdump -v -n 32 -e '1/1 "%02x"' `. opkg \: optional ``opkg`` package manager configuration. There are two optional fields in the ``opkg`` section: - ``openwrt`` overrides the default OpenWrt repository URL. The default URL would correspond to ``http://downloads.openwrt.org/snapshots/packages/%A`` and usually doesn't need to be changed when nodes are expected to have IPv6 internet connectivity. - ``extra`` specifies a table of additional repositories (with arbitrary keys) :: opkg = { openwrt = 'http://opkg.services.ffac/openwrt/snapshots/packages/%A', extra = { gluon = 'http://opkg.services.ffac/modules/gluon-%GS-%GR/%S', }, } There are various patterns which can be used in the URLs: - ``%d`` is replaced by the OpenWrt distribution name ("openwrt") - ``%v`` is replaced by the OpenWrt version number (e.g. "17.01") - ``%S`` is replaced by the target board (e.g. "ath79/generic") - ``%A`` is replaced by the target architecture (e.g. "mips_24kc") - ``%GS`` is replaced by the Gluon site code (as specified in ``site.conf``) - ``%GV`` is replaced by the Gluon version - ``%GR`` is replaced by the Gluon release (as specified in ``site.mk``) regdom \: optional The wireless regulatory domain responsible for your area, e.g. :: regdom = 'DE' Setting ``regdom`` is mandatory if ``wifi24`` or ``wifi5`` is defined. wifi24 \: optional WLAN configuration for 2.4 GHz devices. ``channel`` must be set to a valid wireless channel for your radio. ``beacon_interval`` can be specified to set a custom beacon interval in time units (TU). A time unit is equivalent to 1024 µs. If not set, the default value of 100 TU (=102.4 ms) is used. There are currently two interface types available. You may choose to configure any subset of them: - ``ap`` creates a master interface where clients may connect - ``mesh`` creates an 802.11s mesh interface with forwarding disabled Each interface may be disabled by setting ``disabled`` to ``true``. This will only affect new installations. Upgrades will not change the disabled state. ``ap`` holds the client network configuration. To create an unencrypted client network, a string named ``ssid`` which sets the interface's ESSID is required. This is the wireless network clients connect to. For an OWE secured network, the ``owe_ssid`` string has to be set. It sets the SSID for the opportunistically encrypted wireless network, to which compatible clients can connect to. For OWE to work, the ``wireless-encryption-wpa3`` has to be enabled (usually by adding it to ``GLUON_FEATURES_standard``) in your ``site.mk``. To utilize the OWE transition mode, ``owe_transition_mode`` has to be set to true. When ``owe_transition_mode`` is enabled, the OWE secured SSID will be hidden. Compatible devices will automatically connect to the OWE secured SSID when selecting the open SSID. Note that for the transition mode to work, both ``ssid`` as well as ``owe_ssid`` have to be enabled. Also, some devices with a broken implementation might not be able to connect with a transition-mode enabled network. ``mesh`` requires a single parameter, a string, named ``id`` which sets the mesh id, also visible as an open WiFi in some network managers. Usually you don't want users to connect to this mesh-SSID, so use a cryptic id that no one will accidentally mistake for the client WiFi. ``mesh`` also accepts an optional ``mcast_rate`` (kbit/s) parameter for setting the multicast bitrate. Increasing the default value of 1000 to something like 12000 is recommended. :: wifi24 = { channel = 11, ap = { ssid = 'alpha-centauri.freifunk.net', owe_ssid = 'owe.alpha-centauri.freifunk.net', owe_transition_mode = true, }, mesh = { id = 'ueH3uXjdp', mcast_rate = 12000, }, }, .. _user-site-wifi5: wifi5 \: optional Same as `wifi24` but for the 5 GHz radio. Additionally a range of channels that are safe to use outsides on the 5 GHz band can be set up through ``outdoor_chanlist``, which allows for a space-separated list of channels and channel ranges, separated by a hyphen. When set this offers the outdoor mode flag for 5 GHz radios in the config mode which reconfigures the AP to select its channel from outdoor chanlist, while respecting regulatory specifications, and disables mesh on that radio. The ``outdoors`` option in turn allows to configure when outdoor mode will be enabled. When set to ``true`` all 5 GHz radios will use outdoor channels, while on ``false`` the outdoor mode will be completely disabled. The default setting is ``'preset'``, which will enable outdoor mode automatically on outdoor-capable devices. It can be beneficial to look up the WLAN channels that are used by `weather radars`_ when constructing ``outdoor_chanlist`` to try and minimize the impact of DFS events. .. _weather radars: https://homepage.univie.ac.at/albert.rafetseder/RADARs/help.html :: wifi5 = { channel = 44, outdoor_chanlist = "100-140", [...] }, next_node \: package Configuration of the local node feature of Gluon :: next_node = { name = { 'nextnode.location.community.example.org', 'nextnode', 'nn' }, ip4 = '10.23.42.1', ip6 = 'fdca:ffee:babe:1::1', mac = '16:41:95:40:f7:dc' } All values of this section are optional. If the IPv4 or IPv6 address is omitted, there will be no IPv4 or IPv6 anycast address. The MAC address defaults to ``16:41:95:40:f7:dc``; this value usually doesn't need to be changed, but it can be adjusted to match existing deployments that use a different value. When the nodes' next-node address is used as a DNS resolver by clients (by passing it via DHCP or router advertisements), it may be useful to allow resolving a next-node hostname without referring to an upstream DNS server (e.g. to allow reaching the node using such a hostname via HTTP or SSH in isolated mesh segments). This is possible by providing one or more names in the ``name`` field. .. _user-site-mesh: mesh Configuration of general mesh functionality. To avoid inter-mesh links, Gluon can encapsulate the mesh protocol in VXLAN for Mesh-on-LAN/WAN. It is recommended to set *mesh.vxlan* to ``true`` to enable VXLAN in new setups. Setting it to ``false`` disables this encapsulation to allow meshing with other nodes that don't support VXLAN (Gluon 2017.1.x and older). In multi-domain setups, *mesh.vxlan* is optional and defaults to ``true``. Gluon generally segments layer-2 meshes so that each node becomes IGMP/MLD querier for its own local clients. This is necessary for reliable multicast snooping. The segmentation is realized by preventing IGMP/MLD queries from passing through the mesh. See also :ref:`gluon-mesh-batman-adv ` for details. By default, not only queries are filtered, but also membership report and leave packets, as they add to the background noise of the mesh. As a consequence, snooping switches outside the mesh that are connected to a Gluon node need to be configured to forward all multicast traffic towards the mesh; this is usually not a problem, as such setups are unusual. If you run a special-purpose mesh that requires membership reports to be working, this filtering can be disabled by setting the optional *filter_membership_reports* value to ``false``. In addition, options specific to the batman-adv routing protocol can be set in the *batman_adv* section: The mandatory value *routing_algo* selects the batman-adv protocol variant. The following values are supported: - ``BATMAN_IV`` - ``BATMAN_V`` The optional value *gw_sel_class* sets the gateway selection class, the default is ``20`` for B.A.T.M.A.N. IV and ``5000`` kbit/s for B.A.T.M.A.N. V. - **B.A.T.M.A.N. IV:** with the value ``20`` the gateway is selected based on the link quality (TQ) only; with class ``1`` it is calculated from both, the TQ and the announced bandwidth. - **B.A.T.M.A.N. V:** with the value ``1500`` the gateway is selected if the throughput is at least 1500 kbit/s faster than the throughput of the currently selected gateway. For details on determining the threshold, when to switch to a new gateway, see `batctl manpage`_, section "gw_mode". .. _batctl manpage: https://www.open-mesh.org/projects/batman-adv/wiki/Gateways :: mesh = { vxlan = true, filter_membership_reports = false, batman_adv = { routing_algo = 'BATMAN_IV', gw_sel_class = 1, }, } mesh_vpn Remote server setup for the mesh VPN. The `enabled` option can be set to true to enable the VPN by default. `mtu` defines the MTU of the VPN interface, determining a proper MTU value is described in the :ref:`FAQ `. By default the public key of a node's VPN daemon is not added to announced respondd data; this prevents malicious ISPs from correlating VPN sessions with specific mesh nodes via public respondd data. If this is of no concern in your threat model, this behaviour can be disabled (and thus announcing the public key be enabled) by setting `pubkey_privacy` to `false`. At the moment, this option only affects fastd. The `fastd` section configures settings specific to the *fastd* VPN implementation. If `configurable` is set to `false` or unset, the method list will be replaced on updates with the list from the site configuration. Setting `configurable` to `true` will allow the user to add the method ``null`` to the beginning of the method list or remove ``null`` from it, and make this change survive updates. Setting `configurable` is necessary for the package `gluon-web-mesh-vpn-fastd`, which adds a UI for this configuration. In any case, the ``null`` method should always be the first method in the list if it is supported at all. You should only set `configurable` to `true` if the configured peers support both the ``null`` method and methods with encryption. You can set syslog_level from verbose (default) to warn to reduce syslog output. fastd allows to configure a tree of peer groups and peers. By default, the list of groups and peers configured in the *fastd* UCI config is completely replaced by the list from site.conf on upgrades. To allow custom modifications to the peer list, removal and modification of peers can be prevented by setting the *preserve* option of a peer to ``1`` in UCI. The `tunneldigger` section is used to define the *tunneldigger* broker list. **Note:** It doesn't make sense to include both `fastd` and `tunneldigger` sections in the same configuration file, as only one of the packages *gluon-mesh-vpn-fastd* and *gluon-mesh-vpn-tunneldigger* should be installed with the current implementation. **Note:** It may be interesting to include the package *gluon-iptables-clamp-mss-to-pmtu* in the build when using *gluon-mesh-babel* to work around ICMP blackholes on the internet. :: mesh_vpn = { -- enabled = true, mtu = 1312, -- pubkey_privacy = true, fastd = { methods = {'salsa2012+umac'}, -- configurable = true, -- syslog_level = 'warn', groups = { backbone = { -- Limit number of connected peers from this group limit = 1, peers = { peer1 = { key = 'XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX', -- Having multiple domains prevents SPOF in freifunk.net remotes = { 'ipv4 "vpn1.alpha-centauri.freifunk.net" port 10000', 'ipv4 "vpn1.alpha-centauri-freifunk.de" port 10000', }, }, peer2 = { key = 'XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX', -- You can also omit the ipv4 to allow both connection via ipv4 and ipv6 remotes = {'"vpn2.alpha-centauri.freifunk.net" port 10000'}, }, peer3 = { key = 'XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX', -- In addition to domains you can also add ip addresses, which provides -- resilience in case of dns outages remotes = { '"vpn3.alpha-centauri.freifunk.net" port 10000', '[2001:db8::3:1]:10000', '192.0.2.3:10000', }, }, }, -- Optional: nested peer groups -- groups = { -- lowend_backbone = { -- limit = 1, -- peers = ... -- }, -- }, }, -- Optional: additional peer groups, possibly with other limits -- peertopeer = { -- limit = 10, -- peers = { ... }, -- }, }, }, tunneldigger = { brokers = {'vpn1.alpha-centauri.freifunk.net'} }, bandwidth_limit = { -- The bandwidth limit can be enabled by default here. enabled = false, -- Default upload limit (kbit/s). egress = 200, -- Default download limit (kbit/s). ingress = 3000, }, } mesh_on_wan \: optional Enables the mesh on the WAN port (``true`` or ``false``). :: mesh_on_wan = true, mesh_on_lan \: optional Enables the mesh on the LAN port (``true`` or ``false``). :: mesh_on_lan = true, poe_passthrough \: optional Enable PoE passthrough by default on hardware with such a feature. autoupdater \: package Configuration for the autoupdater feature of Gluon. Specifying a default branch in *site.conf* is optional. See :doc:`../features/autoupdater` for information how to change the behaviour of the autoupdater during image build. The mirrors are checked in random order until the manifest could be downloaded successfully or all mirrors have been tried. :: autoupdater = { branch = 'stable', -- optional branches = { stable = { name = 'stable', mirrors = { 'http://[fdca:ffee:babe:1::fec1]/firmware/stable/sysupgrade/', 'http://autoupdate.alpha-centauri.freifunk.net/firmware/stable/sysupgrade/', }, -- Number of good signatures required good_signatures = 2, pubkeys = { 'XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX', -- someguy 'XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX', -- someother } } } } All configured mirrors must be reachable from the nodes via IPv6. If you don't want to set an IPv6 address explicitly, but use a hostname (which is recommended), see also the :ref:`FAQ `. .. _user-site-config_mode: config_mode \: optional Additional configuration for the configuration web interface. All values are optional. When no hostname is specified, a default hostname based on the *hostname_prefix* and the node's primary MAC address is assigned. Manually setting a hostname can be enforced by setting *hostname.optional* to *false*. To not prefill the hostname-field in config-mode with the default hostname, set *hostname.prefill* to *false*. By default, no altitude field is shown by the *gluon-config-mode-geo-location* package. Set *geo_location.show_altitude* to *true* if you want the altitude field to be visible. The *geo_location.osm* section is only relevant when the *gluon-config-mode-geo-location-osm* package is used. The *center.lon* and *center.lat* values are mandatory in this case and define the default center of the map when no position has been picked yet. The *zoom* level defaults to 12 in this case. *openlayers_url* allows to override the base URL of the *build/ol.js* and *css/ol.css* files (the default is ``https://cdn.rawgit.com/openlayers/openlayers.github.io/master/en/v5.2.0``). It is also possible to replace the default tile layer (which is OpenStreetMap) with a custom one using the *tile_layer* section. Only XYZ layers are supported at this point. The remote login page only shows SSH key configuration by default. A password form can be displayed by setting *remote_login.show_password_form* to true; in this case, *remote_login.min_password_length* defines the minimum password length. :: config_mode = { hostname = { optional = false, prefill = true, }, geo_location = { show_altitude = true, osm = { center = { lat = 52.951947558, lon = 8.744238281, }, zoom = 13, -- openlayers_url = 'http://ffac.example.org/openlayer', -- tile_layer = { -- type = 'XYZ', -- url = 'https://{a-c}.tile.openstreetmap.org/{z}/{x}/{y}.png', -- attributions = '© OpenStreetMap contributors.', -- }, }, }, remote_login = { show_password_form = true, min_password_length = 10, }, }, roles \: optional Optional role definitions. Nodes will announce their role inside the mesh. This will allow in the backend to distinguish between normal, backbone and service nodes or even gateways (if they advertise that role). It is up to the community which roles to define. See the section below as an example. ``default`` takes the default role which is set initially. This value should be part of ``list``. If you want node owners to change the role via config mode add the package ``gluon-web-node-role`` to ``site.mk``. The strings to display in the web interface are configured per language in the ``i18n/en.po``, ``i18n/de.po``, etc. files of the site repository using message IDs like ``gluon-web-node-role:role:node`` and ``gluon-web-node-role:role:backbone``. :: roles = { default = 'node', list = { 'node', 'test', 'backbone', 'service', }, }, setup_mode \: package Allows skipping setup mode (config mode) at first boot when attribute ``skip`` is set to ``true``. This is optional and may be left out. :: setup_mode = { skip = true, }, .. _user-site-build-configuration: Build configuration ------------------- The ``site.mk`` is a Makefile which defines various values involved in the build process of Gluon. GLUON_DEPRECATED Controls whether images for deprecated devices should be built. The following values are supported: - ``0``: Do not build any images for deprecated devices. - ``upgrade``: Only build sysupgrade images for deprecated devices. - ``full``: Build both sysupgrade and factory images for deprecated devices. Usually, devices are deprecated because their flash size is insufficient to support future Gluon versions. The recommended setting is ``0`` for new sites, and ``upgrade`` for existing configurations (where upgrades for existing deployments of low-flash devices are required). Defaults to ``0``. GLUON_FEATURES Defines a list of features to include. Depending on the device, the feature list defined from this value is combined with the feature list for either the standard or the tiny device-class. The resulting feature list is used to generate the default package set. GLUON_FEATURES_standard Defines a list of additional features to include or exclude for devices of the standard device-class. GLUON_FEATURES_tiny Defines a list of additional features to include or exclude for devices of the tiny device-class. GLUON_SITE_PACKAGES Defines a list of packages which should be installed in addition to the default package set. It is also possible to remove packages from the default set by prepending a minus sign to the package name. GLUON_SITE_PACKAGES_standard Defines a list of additional packages to include or exclude for devices of the standard device-class. GLUON_SITE_PACKAGES_tiny Defines a list of additional packages to include or exclude for devices of the tiny device-class. GLUON_RELEASE The current release version Gluon should use. GLUON_PRIORITY The default priority for the generated manifests (see the autoupdater documentation for more information). GLUON_REGION Region code to build into images where necessary. Valid values are the empty string, ``us`` and ``eu``. GLUON_LANGS List of languages (as two-letter-codes) to be included in the web interface. Should always contain ``en``. .. _user-site-feature-flags: Feature flags ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ With the addition of more and more features that interact in complex ways, it has become necessary to split certain packages into multiple parts, so it is possible to install just what is needed for a specific use case. One example is the package *gluon-status-page-mesh-batman-adv*: There are batman-adv-specific status page components; they should only be installed when both batman-adv and the status page are enabled, making the addition of a specific package for this combination necessary. With the ongoing modularization, e.g. for the purpose of supporting new routing protocols, specifying all such split packages in *site.mk* would soon become very cumbersome: In the future, further components like respondd support or languages might be split off as separate packages, leading to entangled package names like *gluon-mesh-vpn-fastd-respondd* or *gluon-status-page-mesh-batman-adv-i18n-de*. For this reason, we have introduced *feature flags*, which can be specified in the *GLUON_FEATURES* variable. These flags allow to specify a set of features on a higher level than individual package names. Most Gluon packages can simply be specified as feature flags by removing the ``gluon-`` prefix: The feature flag corresponding to the package *gluon-mesh-batman-adv-15* is *mesh-batman-adv-15*. The file ``package/features`` in the Gluon repository (or ``features`` in site feeds) can specify additional rules for deriving package lists from feature flags, e.g. specifying both *status-page* and *mesh-batman-adv-15* will automatically select the additional package *gluon-status-page-mesh-batman-adv*. In the future, selecting the flags *mesh-vpn-fastd* and *respondd* might automatically enable the additional package *gluon-mesh-vpn-fastd-respondd*, and enabling *status-page* and *mesh-batman-adv-15* with ``de`` in *GLUON_LANGS* could add the package *gluon-status-page-mesh-batman-adv-i18n-de*. In short, it is not necessary anymore to list all the individual packages that are relevant for a firmware; instead, the package list is derived from a list of feature flags using a flexible ruleset defined in the Gluon repo or site package feeds. To some extent, it will even allow us to further modularize existing Gluon packages, without necessitating changes to existing site configurations. It is still possible to override such automatic rules using *GLUON_SITE_PACKAGES* (e.g., ``-gluon-status-page-mesh-batman-adv`` to remove the automatically added package *gluon-status-page-mesh-batman-adv*). For convenience, there are two feature flags that do not directly correspond to a Gluon package: * web-wizard Includes the *gluon-config-mode-...* base packages (hostname, geolocation and contact info), as well as the *gluon-config-mode-autoupdater* (when *autoupdater* is in *GLUON_FEATURES*), and *gluon-config-mode-mesh-vpn* (when *mesh-vpn-fastd* or *mesh-vpn-tunneldigger* are in *GLUON_FEATURES*) * web-advanced Includes the *gluon-web-...* base packages (admin, network, WiFi config), as well as the *gluon-web-autoupdater* (when *autoupdater* is in *GLUON_FEATURES*) We recommend to use *GLUON_SITE_PACKAGES* for non-Gluon OpenWrt packages only and completely rely on *GLUON_FEATURES* for Gluon packages, as it is shown in the example *site.mk*. .. _site-config-mode-texts: Config mode texts ----------------- The community-defined texts in the config mode are configured in PO files in the ``i18n`` subdirectory of the site configuration. The message IDs currently defined are: gluon-config-mode:welcome Welcome text on the top of the config wizard page. gluon-config-mode:pubkey Information about the public VPN key on the reboot page. gluon-config-mode:novpn Information shown on the reboot page, if the mesh VPN was not selected. gluon-config-mode:contact-help Description for the usage of the ``contact`` field gluon-config-mode:contact-note Note shown (in small font) below the ``contact`` field gluon-config-mode:hostname-help Description for the usage of the ``hostname`` field gluon-config-mode:geo-location-help Description for the usage of the longitude/latitude fields (and altitude, if shown) gluon-config-mode:altitude-label Label for the ``altitude`` field gluon-config-mode:reboot General information shown on the reboot page. There is a POT file in the site example directory which can be used to create templates for the language files. The command ``msginit -l en -i ../../docs/site-example/i18n/gluon-site.pot`` can be used from the ``i18n`` directory to create an initial PO file called ``en.po`` if the ``gettext`` utilities are installed. .. note:: An empty ``msgstr``, as is the default after running ``msginit``, leads to the ``msgid`` being printed as-is. It does *not* hide the whole text, as might be expected. Depending on the context, you might be able to use comments like ```` as translations to effectively hide the text. Site modules ------------ The file ``modules`` in the site repository is completely optional and can be used to supply additional package feeds from which packages are built. The git repositories specified here are retrieved in addition to the default feeds when ``make update`` is called. This file's format is very similar to the toplevel ``modules`` file of the Gluon tree, with the important different that the list of feeds must be assigned to the variable ``GLUON_SITE_FEEDS``. Multiple feed names must be separated by spaces, for example:: GLUON_SITE_FEEDS='foo bar' The feed names may only contain alphanumerical characters, underscores and slashes. For each of the feeds, the following variables are used to specify how to update the feed: PACKAGES_${feed}_REPO The URL of the git repository to clone (usually ``git://`` or ``http(s)://``) PACKAGES_${feed}_COMMIT The commit ID of the repository to use PACKAGES_${feed}_BRANCH Optional: The branch of the repository the given commit ID can be found in. Defaults to the default branch of the repository (usually ``master``) These variables are always all uppercase, so for an entry ``foo`` in GLUON_SITE_FEEDS, the corresponding configuration variables would be ``PACKAGES_FOO_REPO``, ``PACKAGES_FOO_COMMIT`` and ``PACKAGES_FOO_BRANCH``. Slashes in feed names are replaced by underscores to get valid shell variable identifiers. Examples -------- site.mk ^^^^^^^ .. literalinclude:: ../site-example/site.mk :language: makefile site.conf ^^^^^^^^^ .. literalinclude:: ../site-example/site.conf :language: lua i18n/en.po ^^^^^^^^^^ .. literalinclude:: ../site-example/i18n/en.po :language: po i18n/de.po ^^^^^^^^^^ .. literalinclude:: ../site-example/i18n/de.po :language: po modules ^^^^^^^ .. literalinclude:: ../site-example/modules :language: makefile site-repos in the wild ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ A non-exhaustive list of site-repos from various communities can be found on the wiki: https://github.com/freifunk-gluon/gluon/wiki/Site-Configurations