strongswan/conf/strongswan.conf.5.head.in

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.TH STRONGSWAN.CONF 5 "" "@PACKAGE_VERSION@" "strongSwan"
.SH NAME
strongswan.conf \- strongSwan configuration file
.SH DESCRIPTION
While the
.IR ipsec.conf (5)
configuration file is well suited to define IPsec related configuration
parameters, it is not useful for other strongSwan applications to read options
from this file.
The file is hard to parse and only
.I ipsec starter
is capable of doing so. As the number of components of the strongSwan project
is continually growing, a more flexible configuration file was needed, one that
is easy to extend and can be used by all components. With strongSwan 4.2.1
.IR strongswan.conf (5)
was introduced which meets these requirements.
.SH SYNTAX
The format of the strongswan.conf file consists of hierarchical
.B sections
and a list of
.B key/value pairs
in each section. Each section has a name, followed by C-Style curly brackets
defining the section body. Each section body contains a set of subsections
and key/value pairs:
.PP
.EX
settings := (section|keyvalue)*
section := name { settings }
keyvalue := key = value\\n
.EE
.PP
Values must be terminated by a newline.
.PP
Comments are possible using the \fB#\fP-character.
.PP
Section names and keys may contain any printable character except:
.PP
.EX
. , : { } = " # \\n \\t space
.EE
.PP
An example file in this format might look like this:
.PP
.EX
a = b
section-one {
somevalue = asdf
subsection {
othervalue = xxx
}
# yei, a comment
yetanother = zz
}
section-two {
x = 12
}
.EE
.PP
Indentation is optional, you may use tabs or spaces.
.SH REFERENCING OTHER SECTIONS
It is possible to inherit settings and sections from another section. This
feature is mainly useful in swanctl.conf (which uses the same file format).
The syntax is as follows:
.PP
.EX
section := name : references { settings }
references := absname[, absname]*
absname := name[.name]*
.EE
.PP
All key/value pairs and all subsections of the referenced sections will be
inherited by the section that references them via their absolute name. Values
may be overridden in the section or any of its sub-sections (use an empty
assignment to clear a value so its default value, if any, will apply). It is
currently not possible to limit the inclusion level or clear/remove inherited
sub-sections.
If the order is important (e.g. for auth rounds in a connection, if \fIround\fR
is not used), it should be noted that inherited settings/sections will follow
those defined in the current section (if multiple sections are referenced, their
settings are enumerated left to right).
References are evaluated dynamically at runtime, so referring to sections later
in the config file or included via other files is no problem.
Here is an example of how this might look like:
.PP
.EX
conn-defaults {
# default settings for all conns (e.g. a cert, or IP pools)
}
eap-defaults {
# defaults if eap is used (e.g. a remote auth round)
}
child-defaults {
# defaults for child configs (e.g. traffic selectors)
}
connections {
conn-a : conn-defaults, eap-defaults {
# set/override stuff specific to this connection
children {
child-a : child-defaults {
# set/override stuff specific to this child
}
}
}
conn-b : conn-defaults {
# set/override stuff specific to this connection
children {
child-b : child-defaults {
# set/override stuff specific to this child
}
}
}
conn-c : connections.conn-a {
# everything is inherited, including everything conn-a
# already inherits from the sections it and its
# sub-section reference
}
}
.EE
.PP
.SH INCLUDING FILES
Using the
.B include
statement it is possible to include other files into strongswan.conf, e.g.
.PP
.EX
include /some/path/*.conf
.EE
.PP
If the file name is not an absolute path, it is considered to be relative
to the directory of the file containing the include statement. The file name
may include shell wildcards (see
.IR sh (1)).
Also, such inclusions can be nested.
.PP
Sections loaded from included files
.I extend
previously loaded sections; already existing values are
.IR replaced .
It is important to note that settings are added relative to the section the
include statement is in.
.PP
As an example, the following three files result in the same final
config as the one given above:
.PP
.EX
a = b
section-one {
somevalue = before include
include include.conf
}
include other.conf
include.conf:
# settings loaded from this file are added to section-one
# the following replaces the previous value
somevalue = asdf
subsection {
othervalue = yyy
}
yetanother = zz
other.conf:
# this extends section-one and subsection
section-one {
subsection {
# this replaces the previous value
othervalue = xxx
}
}
section-two {
x = 12
}
.EE
.SH READING VALUES
Values are accessed using a dot-separated section list and a key.
With reference to the example above, accessing
.B section-one.subsection.othervalue
will return
.BR xxx .
.SH DEFINED KEYS
The following keys are currently defined (using dot notation). The default
value (if any) is listed in brackets after the key.