Pekka Helenius 112ecdf187 | 6 years ago | |
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conf-templates | 6 years ago | |
snic | 6 years ago | |
systemd | 6 years ago | |
README.md | 6 years ago | |
snic.sh | 6 years ago |
Toggle between client and router mode on network interface (Linux)
Switch network interface (NIC), such as eth0
or wlan0
, from default client mode to router mode. Basically, you can use the selected network interface to act as a router for your other network client devices such as mobile phones/tablets/etc... and switch it back to client mode quickly if needed.
In the client mode, the network interface acts normally as it does on your normal client Linux computer. It retrieves a IPv4 from a DHCP server on your local network and acts as client, etc.
In the router mode, a DHCP server on your computer kicks in and allocates IPv4 addresses for any connected client devices (which use a DHCP client, of course). This is similar behavior to normal stock/home router.
You can perform occasional MITM attack scenarios without needing a fixed network setup for that
You can occasionally analyze all network traffic going through your network interface, and find out suspicious network traffic originating from a client device
You can quickly extend network area if needed
You can periodically use the same network interface for playing with Raspberry Pi/Arduino/... and switch quickly back to regular internet connection if needed
etc. ...
Linux OS
Software:
sudo
bash
systemd
iproute2
ip
command which is required for NIC configurationdhcp
(server)
hostapd
(for wireless router)
NOTE: Although this repository includes PKGBUILD + tar.xz files, this is not dependent on Arch Linux. You can use this repository on other Linux distributions as well. However, you should adapt the settings properly as configuration and file locations may differ.
snic.sh
= main script. See section "Snic main script" below
snic/
= Snic configuration files. See section "Snic configuration files" below
systemd/
= Snic systemd service files. See section "systemd service files" below
conf-templates/
= Snic templates for iptables & hostapd. See section "Templates folder" below
First you need to know which network interfaces you have in your system. You can check the output of ip address
or ifconfig
commands or simply take a look into /sys/class/net
folder.
Snic main script is a bourne shell script (bash) snic.sh
. It can be run individually, but for global purposes location such as /usr/bin/
or /usr/local/bin
is recommended. If you put the script in these locations (in your $PATH), it is recommended to rename the script from snic.sh
to snic
for convenience.
Make sure the main script file is executable, i.e. run chmod +x snic.sh
This repository includes some sample configurations for wlan0 and eth0. Please be aware that these network interface names may not be the same you have in your system.
Configuration files of snic should be placed at /etc/snic/
folder on a Linux system. The required files are:
/etc/snic/dhcpd4-<nic>.conf
/etc/snic/dhcpd4-eth0.conf
/etc/snic/snic-<nic>.conf
/etc/snic/snic-eth0.conf
Please take a look into these files to find correct configuration for your Linux system.
Additionally, systemd
service files are usually placed at /usr/lib/systemd/system/
on a Linux system.
NOTE: It is not recommended to enable
(read: autostart) systemd service files provided by snic! These service files are used by the snic main script for its internal operations.
This repository includes templates for iptables.rules
and hostapd
configuration.
This is a sample iptables
ruleset file. Change contents as you want. This file includes basic configuration to route traffic from network interface to another one.
NOTE: In order to apply traffic between a local client and internet, you must have iptables
running. In order to check that, run systemctl is-active iptables
. If the answer is inactive
, your iptables firewall service is not running.
Before issuing any of the following commands (~before starting iptables), make sure you have your iptables configuration file /etc/iptables/iptables.rules
set up correctly on your system.
Once the configuration file is OK, you should check whether iptables is started during computer boot process or not: run systemctl is-enabled iptables
And finally, to ensure iptables is automatically started during computer boot and, well, started right now: run sudo systemctl restart iptables && sudo systemctl enable iptables
.
This is a sample hostapd
configuration file. Change contents as you want. Usually this file is located at etc/hostapd/hostapd.conf
on Linux system. On some Linux systems, different locations are used.
The script syntax is as follows:
snic <nic> <mode> <wireless (optional)>
wireless
parameter is required only for wireless interfaces.
For instance:
snic eth0 router
Set eth0 interface to router mode
Set a static IPv4 address for eth0, defined in /etc/snic/snic-eth0.conf
Start DHCP server on subnet where eth0 belongs to.
Disable NetworkManager for this interface because it interferes the connection
snic eth0 client
Set eth0 interface to client mode
Do not set any IPv4 address, let a DHCP server in our network to give one (requires DHCP client daemon on the computer for which eth0 belongs to. Common clients on Linux are dhcpcd
and dhclient
)
Enable NetworkManager for this interface, let it handle the connection
snic wlan0 router wireless
Set wlan0 interface to router mode.
Tell snic script that this is a wireless interface (starts hostapd service)
Set a static IPv4 address for wlan0, defined in /etc/snic/snic-wlan0.conf
Start DHCP server on the subnet where wlan0 belongs to.
Disable NetworkManager for this interface because it interferes the connection
snic wlan0 client wireless
Set wlan0 interface to client mode
Tell snic script that this is a wireless interface (stops hostapd service)
Do not set any IPv4 address, let a DHCP server in our network to give one (requires DHCP client daemon on the computer for which eth0 belongs to. Common clients on Linux are dhcpcd
and dhclient
)
Enable NetworkManager for this interface, let it handle the connection
For any connectivity issues, please check the output of following programs/commands:
program: Wireshark (check traffic of relevant network interfaces)
command: journalctl -xe
command: route
command (router mode): systemctl status snic-dhcpd4@<nic>
command (wireless router mode): systemctl status hostapd
ip addr
and/or ifconfig
And double check contents of all relevant snic configuration files described above in "Pre-configuration" section.
Snic? WTF is it? Useless crap! Basically, you don't know what the hell snic does, you don't care to find out or you don't find it useful in your setup.
Predefined network configuration Do not use snic for absolutely static Linux network interfaces, in environments where client/router mode switching for a single computer is not required/allowed/recommended
DHCP settings are in danger Be aware that this script may alter your current DHCP server setup. However, your current DHCP server setup configuration files are NOT overwritten (or even touched) but snic configuration may cause conflicts in your setup, anyway.
Just be careful when adapting snic settings, thank you. Debug your setup if needed.