--- title: Wireguard description: How to configure a wireguard endpoint on OpenBSD --- ## Introduction This article explains how to configure wireguard on OpenBSD. ## Installation OpenBSD does things elegantly as usual : where linux distributions have a service, OpenBSD has a simple `/etc/hostname.wg0` file. The interface is therefore managed without any tool other than the standard ifconfig, it's so simple and elegant! If you want you can still install the usual tooling with: ```sh pkg_add wireguard-tools ``` ## Generating keys The private and public keys for a host can be generated with the following commands: ```sh PRIVATE_KEY=`wg genkey` PUBLIC_KEY=`printf $PRIVATE_KEY|wg pubkey` echo private_key: $PRIVATE_KEY echo public_key: $PUBLIC_KEY ``` Private keys can also be generated with the following command if you do not wish to use the `wg` tool: ```sh openssl rand -base64 32 ``` I am not aware of an openssl command to extract the corresponding public key, but after setting up your interface `ifconfig` will kindly show it to you. ## Configuration Here is a configuration example of my `/etc/hostname.wg0` that creates a tunnel listening on udp port 342 and several peers : ```cfg wgport 342 wgkey '4J7O3IN7+MnyoBpxqDbDZyAQ3LUzmcR2tHLdN0MgnH8=' 10.1.2.1/24 wgpeer 'LWZO5wmkmzFwohwtvZ2Df6WAvGchcyXpzNEq2m86sSE=' wgaip 10.1.2.2/32 wgpeer 'SjqCIBpTjtkMvKtkgDFIPJsAmQEK/+H33euekrANJVc=' wgaip 10.1.2.4/32 wgpeer '4CcAq3xqN496qg2JR/5nYTdJPABry4n2Kon96wz981I=' wgaip 10.1.2.8/32 wgpeer 'vNNic3jvXfbBahF8XFKnAv9+Cef/iQ6nWxXeOBtehgc=' wgaip 10.1.2.6/32 ``` Your private key goes on the first line as argument to `wgkey`, the other keys are public keys for each peer. As all other hostname interface files on OpenBSD, each line is a valid argument you could pass the `ifconfig` command. To re-read the interface configuration, use : ```sh sh /etc/netstart wg0 ``` ## Administration The tunnel can be managed with the standard `ifconfig` command: ```sh root@yen:~# ifconfig wg0 wg0: flags=80c3 mtu 1420 index 4 priority 0 llprio 3 wgport 342 wgpubkey R4A01RXXqRJSY9TiKQrZGR85HsFNSXxhRKKEu/bEdTQ= wgpeer LWZO5wmkmzFwohwtvZ2Df6WAvGchcyXpzNEq2m86sSE= wgendpoint 90.66.117.156 1024 tx: 158515972, rx: 151576036 last handshake: 93 seconds ago wgaip 10.1.2.2/32 wgpeer SjqCIBpTjtkMvKtkgDFIPJsAmQEK/+H33euekrANJVc= wgendpoint 90.66.117.156 51110 tx: 30969024, rx: 14034688 last handshake: 9527 seconds ago wgaip 10.1.2.4/32 wgpeer 4CcAq3xqN496qg2JR/5nYTdJPABry4n2Kon96wz981I= wgendpoint 90.66.117.156 46247 tx: 36877516, rx: 19036472 last handshake: 23 seconds ago wgaip 10.1.2.8/32 wgpeer vNNic3jvXfbBahF8XFKnAv9+Cef/iQ6nWxXeOBtehgc= wgendpoint 90.66.117.156 1025 tx: 150787792, rx: 146836696 last handshake: 43 seconds ago wgaip 10.1.2.6/32 groups: wg inet 10.1.2.1 netmask 0xffffff00 broadcast 10.1.2.255 ``` Alternatively you can also use the `wg` tool if you installed it.