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Create your own secure "vpn" with sshuttle using SSH over TLS, all in a Docker container!

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SSLVPN

DEPRECATED REPOSITORY! SSLVPN development continues here: https://github.com/Sineware/sslvpn.

This is a docker container that sets up a "VPN" that runs over SSL (TLS specifically).

What this really means is that and SSH server is exposed through port 443, and encapsulated in TLS using STunnel. This is great because using a program like sshuttle, you can get a VPN-like service that will go through pretty much any firewall, including one that use Deep Packet Inspection (since the connection looks like a normal HTTPS connection).

The container contains the following services:

The container is built from an Ubuntu 18.04 image with systemd to manage the services.

Stunnel is responsible for being the TLS endpoint, and all connections to 443 in the container terminate at it. It then passes the decrypted connection to sslh, which forwards the connection to OpenSSH if it is an SSH connection, or to Apache if it's an http connection. This way, if someone were to access the container through a browser, they would be greeted with a normal webpage.

Server Setup

This container uses port 80 and 443 (i.e you shouldn't have another webserver on the same machine). I recommend using a cheap cloud provider to run SSLVPN.

  • Clone this repository.
git clone https://github.com/Seshpenguin/sslvpn.git && cd sslvpn
  • Create an "id_rsa.pub" file with your SSH public key in the repo folder.
echo "Your Public Key" > id_rsa.pub
  • Build the Docker image.
docker build . -t seshpenguin/sslvpn
  • Deploy the container:
docker run -d --name sslvpn --restart always --privileged -p 80:80 -p 443:443 -v /sys/fs/cgroup:/sys/fs/cgroup:ro seshpenguin/sslvpn

Client Setup (w/ sshuttle) for Linux and macOS

Since the SSH server is behind a TLS proxy, you'll need to use a custom SSH config.

You'll need to install sshuttle first.

  • Open your SSH Config
Host SOME_NAME
User vpn
ProxyCommand openssl s_client -connect YOUR_IP:443 -quiet

Replace "SOME_NAME" with a friendly name for your server, and "YOUR_IP"

  • Test your SSH Connection:
ssh SOME_NAME
  • Exit the SSH Command, and connect to your VPN!
sshuttle -r SOME_NAME -x YOUR_IP:443 0/0

If all goes well, your system traffic should now be routed through the container!

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Create your own secure "vpn" with sshuttle using SSH over TLS, all in a Docker container!

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