установить и получить конфигурацию интерфейсов WireGuard (set and retrieve configuration of WireGuard interfaces)
Имя (Name)
wg - set and retrieve configuration of WireGuard interfaces
Синопсис (Synopsis)
wg
[ COMMAND ] [ OPTIONS ]... [ ARGS ]...
Описание (Description)
wg
is the configuration utility for getting and setting the
configuration of WireGuard tunnel interfaces. The interfaces
themselves can be added and removed using ip-link(8) and their IP
addresses and routing tables can be set using ip-address(8) and
ip-route(8). The wg
utility provides a series of sub-commands
for changing WireGuard-specific aspects of WireGuard interfaces.
If no COMMAND is specified, COMMAND defaults to show
. Sub-
commands that take an INTERFACE must be passed a WireGuard
interface.
Команды (Commands)
show
{ <interface> | all | interfaces } [public-key | private-key
| listen-port | fwmark | peers | preshared-keys | endpoints |
allowed-ips | latest-handshakes | persistent-keepalive | transfer
| dump]
Shows current WireGuard configuration and runtime
information of specified <interface>. If no <interface>
is specified, <interface> defaults to all. If interfaces
is specified, prints a list of all WireGuard interfaces,
one per line, and quits. If no options are given after the
interface specification, then prints a list of all
attributes in a visually pleasing way meant for the
terminal. Otherwise, prints specified information grouped
by newlines and tabs, meant to be used in scripts. For
this script-friendly display, if all is specified, then
the first field for all categories of information is the
interface name. If dump is specified, then several lines
are printed; the first contains in order separated by tab:
private-key, public-key, listen-port, fwmark. Subsequent
lines are printed for each peer and contain in order
separated by tab: public-key, preshared-key, endpoint,
allowed-ips, latest-handshake, transfer-rx, transfer-tx,
persistent-keepalive.
showconf
<interface>
Shows the current configuration of <interface> in the
format described by CONFIGURATION FILE FORMAT below.
set
<interface> [listen-port <port>] [fwmark <fwmark>] [private-
key <file-path>] [peer <base64-public-key> [remove] [preshared-
key <file-path>] [endpoint <ip>:<port>] [persistent-keepalive
<interval seconds>] [allowed-ips
<ip1>/<cidr1>[,<ip2>/<cidr2>]...] ]...
Sets configuration values for the specified <interface>.
Multiple peers may be specified, and if the remove
argument is given for a peer, that peer is removed, not
configured. If listen-port is not specified, or set to 0,
the port will be chosen randomly when the interface comes
up. Both private-key and preshared-key must be files,
because command line arguments are not considered private
on most systems but if you are using bash(1), you may
safely pass in a string by specifying as private-key or
preshared-key the expression: <(echo PRIVATEKEYSTRING). If
/dev/null or another empty file is specified as the
filename for either private-key or preshared-key, the key
is removed from the device. The use of preshared-key is
optional, and may be omitted; it adds an additional layer
of symmetric-key cryptography to be mixed into the already
existing public-key cryptography, for post-quantum
resistance. If allowed-ips is specified, but the value is
the empty string, all allowed ips are removed from the
peer. The use of persistent-keepalive is optional and is
by default off; setting it to 0 or "off" disables it.
Otherwise it represents, in seconds, between 1 and 65535
inclusive, how often to send an authenticated empty packet
to the peer, for the purpose of keeping a stateful
firewall or NAT mapping valid persistently. For example,
if the interface very rarely sends traffic, but it might
at anytime receive traffic from a peer, and it is behind
NAT, the interface might benefit from having a persistent
keepalive interval of 25 seconds; however, most users will
not need this. The use of fwmark is optional and is by
default off; setting it to 0 or "off" disables it.
Otherwise it is a 32-bit fwmark for outgoing packets and
may be specified in hexadecimal by prepending "0x".
setconf
<interface> <configuration-filename>
Sets the current configuration of <interface> to the
contents of <configuration-filename>, which must be in the
format described by CONFIGURATION FILE FORMAT below.
addconf
<interface> <configuration-filename>
Appends the contents of <configuration-filename>, which
must be in the format described by CONFIGURATION FILE
FORMAT below, to the current configuration of <interface>.
syncconf
<interface> <configuration-filename>
Like setconf
, but reads back the existing configuration
first and only makes changes that are explicitly different
between the configuration file and the interface. This is
much less efficient than setconf
, but has the benefit of
not disrupting current peer sessions. The contents of
<configuration-filename> must be in the format described
by CONFIGURATION FILE FORMAT below.
genkey
Generates a random private key in base64 and prints it to
standard output.
genpsk
Generates a random preshared key in base64 and prints it
to standard output.
pubkey
Calculates a public key and prints it in base64 to
standard output from a corresponding private key
(generated with genkey) given in base64 on standard input.
A private key and a corresponding public key may be
generated at once by calling:
$ umask 077
$ wg genkey | tee private.key | wg pubkey > public.key
help
Shows usage message.
The configuration file format is based on INI. There are two top
level sections -- Interface and Peer. Multiple Peer sections may
be specified, but only one Interface section may be specified.
The Interface section may contain the following fields:
• PrivateKey — a base64 private key generated by wg genkey.
Required.
• ListenPort — a 16-bit port for listening. Optional; if not
specified, chosen randomly.
• FwMark — a 32-bit fwmark for outgoing packets. If set to 0
or "off", this option is disabled. May be specified in
hexadecimal by prepending "0x". Optional.
The Peer sections may contain the following fields:
• PublicKey — a base64 public key calculated by wg pubkey
from a private key, and usually transmitted out of band to
the author of the configuration file. Required.
• PresharedKey — a base64 preshared key generated by wg
genpsk. Optional, and may be omitted. This option adds an
additional layer of symmetric-key cryptography to be mixed
into the already existing public-key cryptography, for
post-quantum resistance.
• AllowedIPs — a comma-separated list of IP (v4 or v6)
addresses with CIDR masks from which incoming traffic for
this peer is allowed and to which outgoing traffic for
this peer is directed. The catch-all 0.0.0.0/0 may be
specified for matching all IPv4 addresses, and ::/0 may be
specified for matching all IPv6 addresses. May be
specified multiple times.
• Endpoint — an endpoint IP or hostname, followed by a
colon, and then a port number. This endpoint will be
updated automatically to the most recent source IP address
and port of correctly authenticated packets from the peer.
Optional.
• PersistentKeepalive — a seconds interval, between 1 and
65535 inclusive, of how often to send an authenticated
empty packet to the peer for the purpose of keeping a
stateful firewall or NAT mapping valid persistently. For
example, if the interface very rarely sends traffic, but
it might at anytime receive traffic from a peer, and it is
behind NAT, the interface might benefit from having a
persistent keepalive interval of 25 seconds. If set to 0
or "off", this option is disabled. By default or when
unspecified, this option is off. Most users will not need
this. Optional.
CONFIGURATION FILE FORMAT EXAMPLE
This example may be used as a model for writing configuration
files, following an INI-like syntax. Characters after and
including a '#' are considered comments and are thus ignored.
[Interface]
PrivateKey = yAnz5TF+lXXJte14tji3zlMNq+hd2rYUIgJBgB3fBmk=
ListenPort = 51820
[Peer]
PublicKey = xTIBA5rboUvnH4htodjb6e697QjLERt1NAB4mZqp8Dg=
Endpoint = 192.95.5.67:1234
AllowedIPs = 10.192.122.3/32, 10.192.124.1/24
[Peer]
PublicKey = TrMvSoP4jYQlY6RIzBgbssQqY3vxI2Pi+y71lOWWXX0=
Endpoint = [2607:5300:60:6b0::c05f:543]:2468
AllowedIPs = 10.192.122.4/32, 192.168.0.0/16
[Peer]
PublicKey = gN65BkIKy1eCE9pP1wdc8ROUtkHLF2PfAqYdyYBz6EA=
Endpoint = test.wireguard.com:18981
AllowedIPs = 10.10.10.230/32
DEBUGGING INFORMATION
Sometimes it is useful to have information on the current runtime
state of a tunnel. When using the Linux kernel module on a kernel
that supports dynamic debugging, debugging information can be
written into dmesg(1) by running as root:
# modprobe wireguard && echo module wireguard +p >
/sys/kernel/debug/dynamic_debug/control
On OpenBSD and FreeBSD, debugging information can be written into
dmesg(1) on a per-interface basis by using ifconfig
(1):
# ifconfig wg0 debug
On userspace implementations, it is customary to set the
LOG_LEVEL environment variable to
verbose.
Переменные окружения (Environment variables)
WG_COLOR_MODE
If set to always, always print ANSI colorized output. If
set to never, never print ANSI colorized output. If set to
auto, something invalid, or unset, then print ANSI
colorized output only when writing to a TTY.
WG_HIDE_KEYS
If set to never, then the pretty-printing show
sub-command
will show private and preshared keys in the output. If set
to always, something invalid, or unset, then private and
preshared keys will be printed as "(hidden)".
WG_ENDPOINT_RESOLUTION_RETRIES
If set to an integer or to infinity, DNS resolution for
each peer's endpoint will be retried that many times for
non-permanent errors, with an increasing delay between
retries. If unset, the default is 15 retries.
Смотри также (See also)
wg-quick(8), ip(8), ip-link(8), ip-address(8), ip-route(8).