This project contains the source code for an unofficial Linux client for Check Point VPN, written in Rust.
- Open source
- IPSec support (provides a much faster tunnel)
- More authentication methods
- Better privacy for DNS requests: only requests for VPN-specific suffixes are routed through the tunnel
- Better integration with system DNS resolver
- Optional integration with GNOME Keyring or KDE KWallet
- Customizable routing and DNS settings
- Browser-based SSO authentication
- Username/password authentication with MFA support
- Certificate authentication via provided client certificate (PFX, PEM, or HW token)
- HW token support via PKCS11
- GTK frontend with tray icon
- IPSec tunnel via Linux native kernel XFRM interface or TCPT/TUN transport
- Automatic IPSec tunnel reconnection without authentication, via optional parameter
- SSL tunnel via Linux TUN device (deprecated in favour of IPSec/TCPT)
- Store password factor in the OS keychain using Secret Service API
- Certificate enrollment and renewal is not supported
- A recent Linux distribution with kernel version 4.19 or higher
- systemd-resolved is recommended as a global DNS resolver
- iproute2 (the
ipcommand) - D-Bus
- GTK3 and libappindicator3 for the GUI frontend
By default, if systemd-resolved is not detected as a global DNS resolver, snx-rs will fall back to modify the /etc/resolv.conf file directly and DNS servers acquired from the tunnel will be used globally. For better privacy, use the split DNS provided by systemd-resolved.
In order to find out whether it is already enabled, check the /etc/resolv.conf file:
readlink /etc/resolv.conf
If it is a symlink pointing to /run/systemd/resolve/stub-resolv.conf then it is already configured on your system.
Otherwise follow these steps:
sudo ln -sf /run/systemd/resolve/stub-resolv.conf /etc/resolv.confsudo systemctl enable --now systemd-resolvedsudo systemctl restart NetworkManager
With systemd-resolved it is also possible to use routing domains (as opposed to search domains).
Routing domains are prefixed with ~ character and when configured only requests for the fully-qualified domains
will be forwarded through the tunnel. For further explanation please check this article.
The set-routing-domains=true|false option controls whether to treat all acquired search domains as routing domains.
IPSec is the default transport and is preferred because of it's performance and support for extended authentication types. By default, it will use kernel IPSec infrastructure with UDP-based tunnel over ports 500 and 4500.
In some environments those ports may be blocked by the firewall, in this case use the ike-transport=tcpt and esp-transport=tcpt options
to tunnel IPSec traffic over TCP port 443. Note that TCPT transport is slower than native IPSec over UDP.
For older VPN servers or in case they don't have IPSec enabled, the legacy SSL tunnel can be used as well, selected with tunnel-type=ssl.
SSL tunnel has a limited support for authentication types: no browser-based SSO, no hardware token support, no MFA in combination with the certificates.
| SSL | IPSec | |
|---|---|---|
| Implementation | User-space TCP-encapsulated tunnel via TUN device | Kernel-space UDP-encapsulated tunnel via native OS support or user-space TCPT tunnel. |
| Performance | Up to 2MB/s | Close to plain connection for native UDP tunnel, 2-5 MB/s for TCPT transport. |
| Ports | TCP port 443 | UDP ports 4500 and 500 for native UDP tunnel, TCP port 443 for TCPT transport. |
| Supported authentication types |
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|
- Run the main application in command mode:
sudo ./snx-rs -m commandor install it as a systemd service - Run the
snx-rs-guiapplication, which will display a tray icon with a menu - GNOME environment: if the tray icon is not displayed, install the Appindicator extension
Check the Configuration Options section for a list of all available options. Options can be specified in the configuration file
and the path of the file given via -c /path/to/custom.conf command line parameter.
Alternatively, in standalone mode, they can be specified via the command line of the snx-rs executable.
Before the client can establish a connection, it must know the login (authentication) method to use (--login-type or -o option). To find the supported login types, run it with the -m info parameter:
snx-rs -m info -s remote.acme.comThis command will display the supported login types. Use the vpn_XXX identifier as the login type. If a certificate error is returned, try adding the -X true command line parameter to ignore certificate errors.
Example output (may differ for your server):
Supported tunnel protocols:
IPSec
SSL
L2TP
Available login types:
vpn_Microsoft_Authenticator (Microsoft Authenticator)
vpn_Emergency_Access (Emergency Access)
vpn_Username_Password (Username Password)
vpn_Azure_Authentication (Azure Authentication)
vpn (Standard)
There are two ways to use the application:
- Command Mode: Selected by the
-m commandparameter. In this mode, the application runs as a service without establishing a connection and awaits commands from the external client. Use thesnxctlutility to send commands to the service. This mode is recommended for desktop usage. The following commands are accepted:connect: Establish a connection. Parameters are taken from the~/.config/snx-rs/snx-rs.conffile.disconnect: Disconnect a tunnel.reconnect: Drop the connection and then reconnect.status: Show connection status.info: Show server authentication methods and supported tunnel types.- Run it with the
--helpoption to get usage help.
- Standalone Service Mode: Selected by the
-m standaloneparameter. This is the default mode if no parameters are specified. Runsnx-rs --helpto get help with all command line parameters. In this mode, the application takes connection parameters either from the command line or from the specified configuration file. This mode is recommended for headless usage.
# standalone mode with trace logging and IPSec tunnel
sudo ./snx-rs -o vpn_Microsoft_Authenticator -s remote.company.com -e ipsec -l trace
# command mode with debug logging (use snxctl to establish a connection)
sudo ./snx-rs -m command -l debugCheck this repository for a docker container.
The following parameters control certificate validation during TLS and IKE exchanges:
ca-cert: Comma-separated list of paths to PEM or DER files which contain custom CA root certificatesno-cert-check: true|false. Disable server hostname check for TLS connection. Insecure and not recommended. Default is false.ignore-server-cert: true|false. Disable all TLS certificate checks. Insecure and not recommended. Default is false.ipsec-cert-check: true|false. Enable additional certificate checks for IKE exchange. Requires custom CA root certificate to be specified. Standard system-wide CA roots are not used. Default is false (certificates are not checked).
Note that enabling any of the insecure options may compromise the channel security.
The following parameters control certificate-based authentication:
cert-type: One of "none", "pkcs12", "pkcs8", or "pkcs11". Choose "pkcs12" to read the certificate from an external PFX file. Choose "pkcs8" to read the certificate from an external PEM file (containing both private key and x509 cert). Choose "pkcs11" to use a hardware token via a PKCS11 driver.cert-path: Path to the PFX, PEM, or custom PKCS11 driver file, depending on the selected cert type. The default PKCS11 driver isopensc-pkcs11.so, which requires the opensc package to be installed.cert-password: Password for PKCS12 or PIN for PKCS11. Must be provided for those types.cert-id: Optional hexadecimal ID of the certificate for the PKCS11 type. Could be in the form of 'xx:xx:xx' or 'xxxxxx'.
A new ike-persist option will save IPSec session to disk and restore it after the service or computer restarts,
it will then attempt to automatically reconnect the tunnel without authentication. This parameter works best in combination with the ike-lifetime option:
for example, setting ike-lifetime to 604800 will keep the session for 7 days.
Note that most IPSec servers have shorter IKE duration configured, so it may be terminated earlier. There is also a corresponding GUI switch under "Misc settings" category in the settings dialog.
Automatic channel reconnection will happen when running in the standalone mode, when GUI application starts or when snxctl sends the "connect" command.
- If SAML SSO authentication is used in standalone mode, the browser URL will be printed to the console. In command mode, the browser will be opened automatically.
- If the password is not provided in the configuration file, the first entered MFA challenge code will be stored in the OS keychain unless the
no-keychainparameter is specified. Keychain integration is provided only in command mode. Thepassword-factoroption controls which MFA factor to consider a password.
| Problem | Solution |
|---|---|
Probing failed, server is not reachable via ESPinUDP tunnel |
IPSec ports are blocked by the firewall. Use esp-transport=tcpt and ike-transport=tcpt options as a workaround. Note: tunnel performance will be slower than native IPSec via UDP. |
deadline has elapsed |
Try connecting again. Check if the correct login type is specified (one of the vpn_XXX identifiers returned from the "-m info" command). |
failed to fill whole buffer |
Usually happens when a firewall blocks fragmented UDP packets. Try the ike-transport=tcpt option. |
Unknown device type |
Make sure IPv6 protocol is enabled in the Linux kernel and 'xfrm' module can be loaded with sudo modprobe xfrm. Alternatively, use esp-transport=tcpt option. |
error sending request for url (https://IP_OR_HOSTNAME/clients/) |
VPN server certificate is self-signed or untrusted. Use ignore-server-cert parameter to disable all HTTPS certificate checks. Use no-cert-check to only disable hostname validation. |
No CCC session in reply! |
Try the client-mode parameter with different values: endpoint_security, secure_remote, secure_connect |
Pull requests, bug reports, and suggestions are welcome. This is a hobby project I maintain in my free time.
Before opening a PR, make sure to reformat the sources with the cargo fmt command and run it through the cargo clippy for any warnings.
- Install the required dependencies:
- Debian/Ubuntu:
sudo apt install build-essential pkg-config libssl-dev libgtk-3-dev - openSUSE:
sudo zypper install pkgconf libopenssl-3-devel gtk3-devel - Other distros: C compiler, pkg-config, OpenSSL and GTK 3 development packages
- Debian/Ubuntu:
- Install a recent Rust compiler
- Run
cargo buildto build the debug version, orcargo build --releaseto build the release version - If the GUI frontend is not needed, build it with
cargo build --release --workspace --exclude snx-rs-gui
Special thanks to the cpyvpn project for inspiration around SAML and IKEv1 exchange.
Licensed under the GNU Affero General Public License version 3.