Set up your own IPsec VPN server in just a few minutes, with IPsec/L2TP, Cisco IPsec and IKEv2 on Ubuntu, Debian and CentOS. All you need to do is provide your own VPN credentials, and let the scripts handle the rest.
An IPsec VPN encrypts your network traffic, so that nobody between you and the VPN server can eavesdrop on your data as it travels via the Internet. This is especially useful when using unsecured networks, e.g. at coffee shops, airports or hotel rooms.
We will use Libreswan as the IPsec server, and xl2tpd as the L2TP provider.
» See also: IPsec VPN Server on Docker
Read this in other languages: English, 简体中文.
- Quick start
- Features
- Requirements
- Installation
- Next steps
- Important notes
- Upgrade Libreswan
- Manage VPN users
- Advanced usage
- Bugs & Questions
- Uninstallation
- See also
- License
First, prepare your Linux server* with a fresh install of one of the following OS.
Use this one-liner to set up an IPsec VPN server:
Ubuntu & Debian
wget https://git.io/vpnsetup -O vpn.sh && sudo sh vpn.sh && sudo ikev2.sh --auto
CentOS & RHEL
wget https://git.io/vpnsetup-centos -O vpn.sh && sudo sh vpn.sh && sudo ikev2.sh --auto
Amazon Linux 2
wget https://git.io/vpnsetup-amzn -O vpn.sh && sudo sh vpn.sh && sudo ikev2.sh --auto
Your VPN login details will be randomly generated, and displayed on the screen when finished.
For other installation options and how to set up VPN clients, read the sections below.
* A dedicated server or virtual private server (VPS). OpenVZ VPS is not supported.
- New: The faster IPsec/XAuth ("Cisco IPsec") and IKEv2 modes are supported
- New: A pre-built Docker image of the VPN server is now available
- Fully automated IPsec VPN server setup, no user input needed
- Encapsulates all VPN traffic in UDP - does not need ESP protocol
- Can be directly used as "user-data" for a new Amazon EC2 instance
- Includes
sysctl.conf
optimizations for improved performance - Tested with Ubuntu, Debian, CentOS/RHEL and Amazon Linux 2
A newly created Amazon EC2 instance, from one of these images:
- Ubuntu 20.04 (Focal) or 18.04 (Bionic)
- Debian 10 (Buster)* or 9 (Stretch)
- CentOS 8** or 7
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 8 or 7
- Amazon Linux 2
See detailed instructions and EC2 pricing. Alternatively, you may also deploy rapidly using CloudFormation.
-OR-
A dedicated server or virtual private server (VPS), freshly installed with one of the above OS. OpenVZ VPS is not supported, users could instead try OpenVPN.
This also includes Linux VMs in public clouds, such as DigitalOcean, Vultr, Linode, Google Compute Engine, Amazon Lightsail, Microsoft Azure, OVH and IBM Cloud.
» I want to run my own VPN but don't have a server for that
Advanced users can set up the VPN server on a Raspberry Pi. See [1] [2].
* Debian 10 users should use the standard Linux kernel. If using Debian 10 on EC2, you must first switch to the standard Linux kernel before running the VPN setup script.
** Support for CentOS Linux 8 will end on December 31, 2021.
First, update your system with apt-get update && apt-get dist-upgrade
(Ubuntu/Debian) or yum update
and reboot. This is optional, but recommended.
To install the VPN, please choose one of the following options:
Option 1: Have the script generate random VPN credentials for you (will be displayed when finished):
Ubuntu & Debian
wget https://git.io/vpnsetup -O vpn.sh && sudo sh vpn.sh
CentOS & RHEL
yum -y install wget
wget https://git.io/vpnsetup-centos -O vpn.sh && sudo sh vpn.sh
Amazon Linux 2
wget https://git.io/vpnsetup-amzn -O vpn.sh && sudo sh vpn.sh
After successful installation, it is recommended to set up IKEv2:
sudo ikev2.sh --auto
Option 2: Edit the script and provide your own VPN credentials:
Ubuntu & Debian
wget https://git.io/vpnsetup -O vpn.sh
nano -w vpn.sh
[Replace with your own values: YOUR_IPSEC_PSK, YOUR_USERNAME and YOUR_PASSWORD]
sudo sh vpn.sh
CentOS & RHEL
yum -y install wget nano
wget https://git.io/vpnsetup-centos -O vpn.sh
nano -w vpn.sh
[Replace with your own values: YOUR_IPSEC_PSK, YOUR_USERNAME and YOUR_PASSWORD]
sudo sh vpn.sh
Amazon Linux 2
wget https://git.io/vpnsetup-amzn -O vpn.sh
nano -w vpn.sh
[Replace with your own values: YOUR_IPSEC_PSK, YOUR_USERNAME and YOUR_PASSWORD]
sudo sh vpn.sh
Note: A secure IPsec PSK should consist of at least 20 random characters.
After successful installation, it is recommended to set up IKEv2:
sudo ikev2.sh --auto
Option 3: Define your VPN credentials as environment variables:
Ubuntu & Debian
# All values MUST be placed inside 'single quotes'
# DO NOT use these special characters within values: \ " '
wget https://git.io/vpnsetup -O vpn.sh
sudo VPN_IPSEC_PSK='your_ipsec_pre_shared_key' \
VPN_USER='your_vpn_username' \
VPN_PASSWORD='your_vpn_password' \
sh vpn.sh
CentOS & RHEL
# All values MUST be placed inside 'single quotes'
# DO NOT use these special characters within values: \ " '
yum -y install wget
wget https://git.io/vpnsetup-centos -O vpn.sh
sudo VPN_IPSEC_PSK='your_ipsec_pre_shared_key' \
VPN_USER='your_vpn_username' \
VPN_PASSWORD='your_vpn_password' \
sh vpn.sh
Amazon Linux 2
# All values MUST be placed inside 'single quotes'
# DO NOT use these special characters within values: \ " '
wget https://git.io/vpnsetup-amzn -O vpn.sh
sudo VPN_IPSEC_PSK='your_ipsec_pre_shared_key' \
VPN_USER='your_vpn_username' \
VPN_PASSWORD='your_vpn_password' \
sh vpn.sh
After successful installation, it is recommended to set up IKEv2:
sudo ikev2.sh --auto
Note: If unable to download via wget
, you may also open vpnsetup.sh, vpnsetup_centos.sh or vpnsetup_amzn.sh, and click the Raw
button on the right. Press Ctrl-A
to select all, Ctrl-C
to copy, then paste into your favorite editor.
Get your computer or device to use the VPN. Please refer to:
Configure IPsec/L2TP VPN Clients
Configure IPsec/XAuth ("Cisco IPsec") VPN Clients
Guide: How to Set Up and Use IKEv2 VPN
If you get an error when trying to connect, see Troubleshooting.
Enjoy your very own VPN! ✨🎉🚀✨
Read this in other languages: English, 简体中文.
Windows users: A one-time registry change is required if the VPN server or client is behind NAT (e.g. home router).
Android users: If you encounter connection issues, try these steps.
The same VPN account can be used by your multiple devices. However, due to an IPsec/L2TP limitation, if you wish to connect multiple devices simultaneously from behind the same NAT (e.g. home router), you must use only IPsec/XAuth mode, or set up IKEv2.
If you wish to view or update VPN user accounts, see Manage VPN users. Helper scripts are included for convenience.
For servers with an external firewall (e.g. EC2/GCE), open UDP ports 500 and 4500 for the VPN. Aliyun users, see #433.
Clients are set to use Google Public DNS when the VPN is active. If another DNS provider is preferred, you may use alternative DNS servers.
Using kernel support could improve IPsec/L2TP performance. It is available on all supported OS. Ubuntu users should install the linux-modules-extra-$(uname -r)
(or linux-image-extra
) package and run service xl2tpd restart
.
The scripts will backup existing config files before making changes, with .old-date-time
suffix.
The additional scripts in extras/ can be used to upgrade Libreswan (changelog | announce). The latest supported version is 4.4
. Check which version is installed: ipsec --version
.
Ubuntu & Debian
wget https://git.io/vpnupgrade -O vpnup.sh && sudo sh vpnup.sh
CentOS & RHEL
wget https://git.io/vpnupgrade-centos -O vpnup.sh && sudo sh vpnup.sh
Amazon Linux 2
wget https://git.io/vpnupgrade-amzn -O vpnup.sh && sudo sh vpnup.sh
See Manage VPN users.
- View or update the IPsec PSK
- View VPN users
- Manage VPN users using helper scripts
- Manually manage VPN users
See Advanced usage.
- Use alternative DNS servers
- DNS name and server IP changes
- Internal VPN IPs and traffic
- Split tunneling
- Access VPN server's subnet
- IKEv2 only VPN
- Modify IPTables rules
- Got a question? Please first search other people's comments in this Gist and on my blog.
- Ask VPN related questions on the Libreswan or strongSwan mailing list, or read these wikis: [1] [2] [3] [4] [5].
- If you found a reproducible bug, open a GitHub Issue to submit a bug report.
See Uninstall the VPN.
Copyright (C) 2014-2021 Lin Song
Based on the work of Thomas Sarlandie (Copyright 2012)
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
Attribution required: please include my name in any derivative and let me know how you have improved it!