Set up a personal VPN in the cloud
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Dan Guido 9cc0b029ac
Fix VPN traffic routing issue with iptables NAT rules (#14825)
* Fix VPN traffic routing issue with iptables NAT rules

The MASQUERADE rules had policy matching (-m policy --pol none --dir out)
which was preventing both WireGuard AND IPsec traffic from being NAT'd
properly. This policy match was incorrect and broke internet routing for
all VPN clients.

The confusion arose because:
- IPsec FORWARD rules check for --pol ipsec (encrypted traffic)
- But POSTROUTING happens AFTER decryption, so packets no longer have policy
- The --pol none match was blocking these decrypted packets from NAT

Changes:
- Removed policy matching from both IPsec and WireGuard NAT rules
- Both VPN types now use simple source-based NAT rules
- Applied to both IPv4 and IPv6 rule templates

This fixes the issue where VPN clients (both WireGuard and IPsec) could
connect but not route traffic to the internet.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>

* Remove unnecessary policy matching from iptables rules

The policy matching (-m policy --pol none) was causing routing issues for
both WireGuard and IPsec VPN traffic. This was based on a misunderstanding
of how iptables processes VPN traffic:

1. FORWARD chain: IPsec needs --pol ipsec to identify encrypted traffic,
   but WireGuard doesn't need any policy match (it's not IPsec)

2. POSTROUTING NAT: Both VPN types see decrypted packets here, so policy
   matching is unnecessary and was blocking NAT

Changes:
- Removed policy matching from all NAT rules (both VPN types)
- Removed policy matching from WireGuard FORWARD rules
- Kept policy matching only for IPsec FORWARD (where it's needed)
- Added comprehensive unit tests to prevent regression

This fully fixes VPN routing for both WireGuard and IPsec clients.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>

* Fix Python linting issues in iptables test file

Fixed all ruff linting issues:
- Removed unused yaml import
- Fixed import sorting (pathlib before third-party imports)
- Removed trailing whitespace from blank lines
- Added newline at end of file

All tests still pass after formatting fixes.

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-08-17 16:33:04 -04:00
.github Bump actions/checkout from 4 to 5 (#14819) 2025-08-16 02:53:17 -04:00
configs ECDSA fixed 2016-07-24 14:44:59 +03:00
docs fix: Prevent sensitive information from being logged (#14779) 2025-08-17 15:58:19 -04:00
files/cloud-init feat: Add comprehensive performance optimizations to reduce deployment time by 30-60% 2025-08-03 16:42:17 -07:00
library Fix AWS Lightsail deployment error (boto3 parameter) (#14823) 2025-08-16 03:39:00 -04:00
playbooks Fix AWS Lightsail deployment error (boto3 parameter) (#14823) 2025-08-16 03:39:00 -04:00
roles Fix VPN traffic routing issue with iptables NAT rules (#14825) 2025-08-17 16:33:04 -04:00
scripts Implement self-bootstrapping uv setup to resolve issue #14776 (#14814) 2025-08-06 22:10:56 -07:00
tests Fix VPN traffic routing issue with iptables NAT rules (#14825) 2025-08-17 16:33:04 -04:00
.ansible-lint Implement self-bootstrapping uv setup to resolve issue #14776 (#14814) 2025-08-06 22:10:56 -07:00
.dockerignore Implement self-bootstrapping uv setup to resolve issue #14776 (#14814) 2025-08-06 22:10:56 -07:00
.gitignore Fix AWS Lightsail deployment error (boto3 parameter) (#14823) 2025-08-16 03:39:00 -04:00
.yamllint fix: Prevent sensitive information from being logged (#14779) 2025-08-17 15:58:19 -04:00
algo Implement self-bootstrapping uv setup to resolve issue #14776 (#14814) 2025-08-06 22:10:56 -07:00
algo-docker.sh chore: Conservative dependency updates for Jinja2 security fix (#14792) 2025-08-03 07:45:26 -04:00
algo-showenv.sh Implement self-bootstrapping uv setup to resolve issue #14776 (#14814) 2025-08-06 22:10:56 -07:00
algo.ps1 Implement self-bootstrapping uv setup to resolve issue #14776 (#14814) 2025-08-06 22:10:56 -07:00
ansible.cfg feat: Add comprehensive performance optimizations to reduce deployment time by 30-60% 2025-08-03 16:42:17 -07:00
CLAUDE.md Add test to detect inline comments in Jinja2 expressions within YAML files (#14817) 2025-08-07 11:12:23 -07:00
cloud.yml Ansible upgrade 6.1 (#14500) 2022-07-30 15:01:24 +03:00
CODEOWNERS Add CODEOWNERS file (#14599) 2023-07-25 14:55:28 +03:00
config.cfg fix: Prevent sensitive information from being logged (#14779) 2025-08-17 15:58:19 -04:00
CONTRIBUTING.md Implement self-bootstrapping uv setup to resolve issue #14776 (#14814) 2025-08-06 22:10:56 -07:00
deploy_client.yml Ansible upgrade 6.1 (#14500) 2022-07-30 15:01:24 +03:00
Dockerfile Implement self-bootstrapping uv setup to resolve issue #14776 (#14814) 2025-08-06 22:10:56 -07:00
input.yml Fix AWS Lightsail deployment error (boto3 parameter) (#14823) 2025-08-16 03:39:00 -04:00
install.sh Implement self-bootstrapping uv setup to resolve issue #14776 (#14814) 2025-08-06 22:10:56 -07:00
inventory Refactor to support Ansible 2.8 (#1549) 2019-09-28 08:10:20 +08:00
LICENSE AGPLv3 change (#1351) 2019-03-17 11:19:24 -04:00
logo.png Closes #82, again 2017-02-07 16:35:23 -05:00
main.yml Implement self-bootstrapping uv setup to resolve issue #14776 (#14814) 2025-08-06 22:10:56 -07:00
PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE.md Implement self-bootstrapping uv setup to resolve issue #14776 (#14814) 2025-08-06 22:10:56 -07:00
pyproject.toml Bump ansible from 11.8.0 to 11.9.0 (#14821) 2025-08-16 02:53:39 -04:00
README.md fix: Prevent sensitive information from being logged (#14779) 2025-08-17 15:58:19 -04:00
requirements.yml Implement self-bootstrapping uv setup to resolve issue #14776 (#14814) 2025-08-06 22:10:56 -07:00
SECURITY.md Create SECURITY.md (#14669) 2023-12-12 19:17:59 +03:00
server.yml fix: Prevent sensitive information from being logged (#14779) 2025-08-17 15:58:19 -04:00
users.yml Fix AWS Lightsail deployment error (boto3 parameter) (#14823) 2025-08-16 03:39:00 -04:00
uv.lock Fix AWS Lightsail deployment error (boto3 parameter) (#14823) 2025-08-16 03:39:00 -04:00

Algo VPN

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Algo VPN is a set of Ansible scripts that simplify the setup of a personal WireGuard and IPsec VPN. It uses the most secure defaults available and works with common cloud providers.

See our release announcement for more information.

Features

  • Supports only IKEv2 with strong crypto (AES-GCM, SHA2, and P-256) for iOS, MacOS, and Linux
  • Supports WireGuard for all of the above, in addition to Android and Windows 11
  • Generates .conf files and QR codes for iOS, macOS, Android, and Windows WireGuard clients
  • Generates Apple profiles to auto-configure iOS and macOS devices for IPsec - no client software required
  • Includes helper scripts to add, remove, and manage users
  • Blocks ads with a local DNS resolver (optional)
  • Sets up limited SSH users for tunneling traffic (optional)
  • Privacy-focused with minimal logging, automatic log rotation, and configurable privacy enhancements
  • Based on Ubuntu 22.04 LTS with automatic security updates
  • Installs to DigitalOcean, Amazon Lightsail, Amazon EC2, Vultr, Microsoft Azure, Google Compute Engine, Scaleway, OpenStack, CloudStack, Hetzner Cloud, Linode, or your own Ubuntu server (for advanced users)

Anti-features

  • Does not support legacy cipher suites or protocols like L2TP, IKEv1, or RSA
  • Does not install Tor, OpenVPN, or other risky servers
  • Does not depend on the security of TLS
  • Does not claim to provide anonymity or censorship avoidance
  • Does not claim to protect you from the FSB, MSS, DGSE, or FSM

Deploy the Algo Server

The easiest way to get an Algo server running is to run it on your local system or from Google Cloud Shell and let it set up a new virtual machine in the cloud for you.

  1. Setup an account on a cloud hosting provider. Algo supports DigitalOcean (most user friendly), Amazon Lightsail, Amazon EC2, Vultr, Microsoft Azure, Google Compute Engine, Scaleway, DreamCompute, Linode other OpenStack-based cloud hosting, Exoscale or other CloudStack-based cloud hosting, or Hetzner Cloud.

  2. Get a copy of Algo. The Algo scripts will be run from your local system. There are two ways to get a copy:

    • Download the ZIP file. Unzip the file to create a directory named algo-master containing the Algo scripts.

    • Use git clone to create a directory named algo containing the Algo scripts:

      git clone https://github.com/trailofbits/algo.git
      
  3. Set your configuration options. Open config.cfg in your favorite text editor. Specify the users you want to create in the users list. Create a unique user for each device you plan to connect to your VPN. You should also review the other options before deployment, as changing your mind about them later may require you to deploy a brand new server.

  4. Start the deployment. Return to your terminal. In the Algo directory, run the appropriate script for your platform:

    macOS/Linux:

    ./algo
    

    Windows:

    .\algo.ps1
    

    The first time you run the script, it will automatically install the required Python environment (Python 3.11+). On subsequent runs, it starts immediately and works on all platforms (macOS, Linux, Windows via WSL). The Windows PowerShell script automatically uses WSL when needed, since Ansible requires a Unix-like environment. There are several optional features available, none of which are required for a fully functional VPN server. These optional features are described in the deployment documentation.

That's it! You can now set up clients to connect to your VPN. Proceed to Configure the VPN Clients below.

    "#                          Congratulations!                            #"
    "#                     Your Algo server is running.                     #"
    "#    Config files and certificates are in the ./configs/ directory.    #"
    "#              Go to https://whoer.net/ after connecting               #"
    "#        and ensure that all your traffic passes through the VPN.      #"
    "#                     Local DNS resolver 172.16.0.1                    #"
    "#        The p12 and SSH keys password for new users is XXXXXXXX       #"
    "#        The CA key password is XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX       #"
    "#      Shell access: ssh -F configs/<server_ip>/ssh_config <hostname>  #"

Configure the VPN Clients

Certificates and configuration files that users will need are placed in the configs directory. Make sure to secure these files since many contain private keys. All files are saved under a subdirectory named with the IP address of your new Algo VPN server.

Important for IPsec users: If you want to add or delete users later, you must select yes at the Do you want to retain the keys (PKI)? prompt during the server deployment. This preserves the certificate authority needed for user management.

Apple

WireGuard is used to provide VPN services on Apple devices. Algo generates a WireGuard configuration file, wireguard/<username>.conf, and a QR code, wireguard/<username>.png, for each user defined in config.cfg.

On iOS, install the WireGuard app from the iOS App Store. Then, use the WireGuard app to scan the QR code or AirDrop the configuration file to the device.

On macOS, install the WireGuard app from the Mac App Store. WireGuard will appear in the menu bar once you run the app. Click on the WireGuard icon, choose Import tunnel(s) from file..., then select the appropriate WireGuard configuration file.

On either iOS or macOS, you can enable "Connect on Demand" and/or exclude certain trusted Wi-Fi networks (such as your home or work) by editing the tunnel configuration in the WireGuard app. (Algo can't do this automatically for you.)

If you prefer to use the built-in IPsec VPN on Apple devices, or need "Connect on Demand" or excluded Wi-Fi networks automatically configured, see the Apple IPsec client setup guide for detailed configuration instructions.

Android

WireGuard is used to provide VPN services on Android. Install the WireGuard VPN Client. Import the corresponding wireguard/<name>.conf file to your device, then set up a new connection with it. See the Android setup guide for detailed installation and configuration instructions.

Windows

WireGuard is used to provide VPN services on Windows. Algo generates a WireGuard configuration file, wireguard/<username>.conf, for each user defined in config.cfg.

Install the WireGuard VPN Client. Import the generated wireguard/<username>.conf file to your device, then set up a new connection with it. See the Windows setup instructions for more detailed walkthrough and troubleshooting.

Linux

Linux clients can use either WireGuard or IPsec:

WireGuard: WireGuard works great with Linux clients. See the Linux WireGuard setup guide for step-by-step instructions on configuring WireGuard on Ubuntu and other distributions.

IPsec: For strongSwan IPsec clients (including OpenWrt, Ubuntu Server, and other distributions), see the Linux IPsec setup guide for detailed configuration instructions.

OpenWrt

For OpenWrt routers using WireGuard, see the OpenWrt WireGuard setup guide for router-specific configuration instructions.

Other Devices

For devices not covered above or manual configuration, you'll need specific certificate and configuration files. The files you need depend on your device platform and VPN protocol (WireGuard or IPsec).

  • ipsec/manual/cacert.pem: CA Certificate
  • ipsec/manual/.p12: User Certificate and Private Key (in PKCS#12 format)
  • ipsec/manual/.conf: strongSwan client configuration
  • ipsec/manual/.secrets: strongSwan client configuration
  • ipsec/apple/.mobileconfig: Apple Profile
  • wireguard/.conf: WireGuard configuration profile
  • wireguard/.png: WireGuard configuration QR code

Setup an SSH Tunnel

If you turned on the optional SSH tunneling role, local user accounts will be created for each user in config.cfg, and SSH authorized_key files for them will be in the configs directory (user.pem). SSH user accounts do not have shell access, cannot authenticate with a password, and only have limited tunneling options (e.g., ssh -N is required). This ensures that SSH users have the least access required to set up a tunnel and can perform no other actions on the Algo server.

Use the example command below to start an SSH tunnel by replacing <user> and <ip> with your own. Once the tunnel is set up, you can configure a browser or other application to use 127.0.0.1:1080 as a SOCKS proxy to route traffic through the Algo server:

ssh -D 127.0.0.1:1080 -f -q -C -N <user>@algo -i configs/<ip>/ssh-tunnel/<user>.pem -F configs/<ip>/ssh_config

SSH into Algo Server

Your Algo server is configured for key-only SSH access for administrative purposes. Open the Terminal app, cd into the algo-master directory where you originally downloaded Algo, and then use the command listed on the success message:

ssh -F configs/<ip>/ssh_config <hostname>

where <ip> is the IP address of your Algo server. If you find yourself regularly logging into the server, it will be useful to load your Algo SSH key automatically. Add the following snippet to the bottom of ~/.bash_profile to add it to your shell environment permanently:

ssh-add ~/.ssh/algo > /dev/null 2>&1

Alternatively, you can choose to include the generated configuration for any Algo servers created into your SSH config. Edit the file ~/.ssh/config to include this directive at the top:

Include <algodirectory>/configs/*/ssh_config

where <algodirectory> is the directory where you cloned Algo.

Adding or Removing Users

Algo makes it easy to add or remove users from your VPN server after initial deployment.

For IPsec users: You must have selected yes at the Do you want to retain the keys (PKI)? prompt during the initial server deployment. This preserves the certificate authority needed for user management. You should also save the p12 and CA key passwords shown during deployment, as they're only displayed once.

To add or remove users, first edit the users list in your config.cfg file. Add new usernames or remove existing ones as needed. Then navigate to the algo directory in your terminal and run:

macOS/Linux:

./algo update-users

Windows:

.\algo.ps1 update-users

After the process completes, new configuration files will be generated in the configs directory for any new users. The Algo VPN server will be updated to contain only the users listed in the config.cfg file. Removed users will no longer be able to connect, and new users will have fresh certificates and configuration files ready for use.

Privacy and Logging

Algo takes a pragmatic approach to privacy. By default, we minimize logging while maintaining enough information for security and troubleshooting.

What IS logged by default:

  • System security events (failed SSH attempts, firewall blocks, system updates)
  • Kernel messages and boot diagnostics (with reduced verbosity)
  • WireGuard client state (visible via sudo wg - shows last endpoint and handshake time)
  • Basic service status (service starts/stops/errors)
  • All logs automatically rotate and delete after 7 days

Privacy is controlled by two main settings in config.cfg:

  • strongswan_log_level: -1 - Controls StrongSwan connection logging (-1 = disabled, 2 = debug)
  • privacy_enhancements_enabled: true - Master switch for log rotation, history clearing, log filtering, and cleanup

To enable full debugging when troubleshooting, set both strongswan_log_level: 2 and privacy_enhancements_enabled: false. This will capture detailed connection logs and disable all privacy features. Remember to revert these changes after debugging.

After deployment, verify your privacy settings:

ssh -F configs/<server_ip>/ssh_config <hostname>
sudo /usr/local/bin/privacy-monitor.sh

Perfect privacy is impossible with any VPN solution. Your cloud provider sees and logs network traffic metadata regardless of your server configuration. And of course, your ISP knows you're connecting to a VPN server, even if they can't see what you're doing through it.

For the highest level of privacy, treat your Algo servers as disposable. Spin up a new instance when you need it, use it for your specific purpose, then destroy it completely. The ephemeral nature of cloud infrastructure can be a privacy feature if you use it intentionally.

Additional Documentation

Setup Instructions for Specific Cloud Providers

Install and Deploy from Common Platforms

Setup VPN Clients to Connect to the Server

  • Setup Windows clients
  • Setup Android clients
  • Setup Linux clients with Ansible
  • Setup Ubuntu clients to use WireGuard
  • Setup Linux clients to use IPsec
  • Setup Apple devices to use IPsec
  • Setup Macs running macOS 10.13 or older to use WireGuard

Advanced Deployment

If you've read all the documentation and have further questions, create a new discussion.

Endorsements

I've been ranting about the sorry state of VPN svcs for so long, probably about time to give a proper talk on the subject. TL;DR: use Algo.

-- Kenn White

Before picking a VPN provider/app, make sure you do some research https://research.csiro.au/ng/wp-content/uploads/sites/106/2016/08/paper-1.pdf ... or consider Algo

-- The Register

Algo is really easy and secure.

-- the grugq

I played around with Algo VPN, a set of scripts that let you set up a VPN in the cloud in very little time, even if you dont know much about development. Ive got to say that I was quite impressed with Trail of Bits approach.

-- Romain Dillet for TechCrunch

If youre uncomfortable shelling out the cash to an anonymous, random VPN provider, this is the best solution.

-- Thorin Klosowski for Lifehacker

Support Algo VPN

PayPal Patreon

All donations support continued development. Thanks!

  • We accept donations via PayPal and Patreon.
  • Use our referral code when you sign up to Digital Ocean for a $10 credit.
  • We also accept and appreciate contributions of new code and bugfixes via Github Pull Requests.

Algo is licensed and distributed under the AGPLv3. If you want to distribute a closed-source modification or service based on Algo, then please consider purchasing an exception . As with the methods above, this will help support continued development.