Configuring Wireguard Network
Configuring Wireguard Network
Quick Start
The quickest way to try out Wireguard is to use talosctl cluster create
command:
talosctl cluster create --wireguard-cidr 10.1.0.0/24
It will automatically generate Wireguard network configuration for each node with the following network topology:
Where all controlplane nodes will be used as Wireguard servers which listen on port 51111.
All controlplanes and workers will connect to all controlplanes.
It also sets PersistentKeepalive
to 5 seconds to establish controlplanes to workers connection.
After the cluster is deployed it should be possible to verify Wireguard network connectivity.
It is possible to deploy a container with hostNetwork
enabled, then do kubectl exec <container> /bin/bash
and either do:
ping 10.1.0.2
Or install wireguard-tools
package and run:
wg show
Wireguard show should output something like this:
interface: wg0
public key: OMhgEvNIaEN7zeCLijRh4c+0Hwh3erjknzdyvVlrkGM=
private key: (hidden)
listening port: 47946
peer: 1EsxUygZo8/URWs18tqB5FW2cLVlaTA+lUisKIf8nh4=
endpoint: 10.5.0.2:51111
allowed ips: 10.1.0.0/24
latest handshake: 1 minute, 55 seconds ago
transfer: 3.17 KiB received, 3.55 KiB sent
persistent keepalive: every 5 seconds
It is also possible to use generated configuration as a reference by pulling generated config files using:
talosctl read -n 10.5.0.2 /system/state/config.yaml > controlplane.yaml
talosctl read -n 10.5.0.3 /system/state/config.yaml > worker.yaml
Manual Configuration
All Wireguard configuration can be done by changing Talos machine config files. As an example we will use this official Wireguard quick start tutorial.
Key Generation
This part is exactly the same:
wg genkey | tee privatekey | wg pubkey > publickey
Setting up Device
Inline comments show relations between configs and wg
quickstart tutorial commands:
...
network:
interfaces:
...
# ip link add dev wg0 type wireguard
- interface: wg0
mtu: 1500
# ip address add dev wg0 192.168.2.1/24
addresses:
- 192.168.2.1/24
# wg set wg0 listen-port 51820 private-key /path/to/private-key peer ABCDEF... allowed-ips 192.168.88.0/24 endpoint 209.202.254.14:8172
wireguard:
privateKey: <privatekey file contents>
listenPort: 51820
peers:
allowedIPs:
- 192.168.88.0/24
endpoint: 209.202.254.14.8172
publicKey: ABCDEF...
...
When networkd
gets this configuration it will create the device, configure it and will bring it up (equivalent to ip link set up dev wg0
).
All supported config parameters are described in the Machine Config Reference.