IVPN is a fairly popular and generally trustworthy VPN provider. In this post, I will walk you through how to use the official IVPN client in a ProxyVM on Qubes OS. We will deviate from the official guide by using systemd path to handle DNAT. This will provide the same robustness as their approach to modify /opt/ivpn/etc/firewall.sh
, while avoiding the risk that the modifications will be overwritten by a future app update. We will also be using a TemplateVM for IVPN ProxyVMs instead of using Standalone VMs.
Preparing your TemplateVM
I recommend that you make a new TemplateVM based on the latest Fedora GNOME template and remove all unnecessary packages that you might not use. This way, you can minimize the attack surface while not having to deal with missing dependencies like on a minimal template. With that being said, if you do manage to get the minimal template to fully work with IVPN, feel free to open a discussion on GitHub or contact me directly and I will update the post accordingly.
I run this script on my template to trim it down.
Next, you need to create the bind directories for IVPN’s configurations:
sudo mkdir -p /etc/qubes-bind-dirs.d
echo 'binds+=( '\'''/etc/opt/ivpn/mutable''\'' )' | sudo tee /etc/qubes-bind-dirs.d/50_user.conf
Installing the IVPN App
Inside of the TemplateVM you have just created, do the following:
sudo dnf config-manager --add-repo https://repo.ivpn.net/stable/fedora/generic/ivpn.repo
sudo dnf install -y ivpn-ui
IVPN needs to restart systemd-resolved
and run /usr/lib/qubes/qubes-setup-dnat-to-ns
every time IVPN modifies /etc/resolv.conf
. Create the following files:
/etc/systemd/system/dnat-to-ns.service
[Unit]
Description=Run /usr/lib/qubes/qubes-setup-dnat-to-ns
StartLimitIntervalSec=0
[Service]
Type=oneshot
ExecStart=/usr/bin/systemctl restart systemd-resolved
ExecStart=/usr/lib/qubes/qubes-setup-dnat-to-ns
/etc/systemd/system/dnat-to-ns.path
[Unit]
Description=Run /usr/lib/qubes/qubes-setup-dnat-to-ns when /etc/resolv.conf changes
[Path]
PathChanged=/etc/resolv.conf
Unit=dnat-to-ns.service
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
Create /etc/systemd/system/systemd-resolved.conf.d/override.conf
to disable rate limiting on systemd-resolved restarting:
[Unit]
StartLimitIntervalSec=0
Next, enable the systemd path:
sudo systemctl enable dnat-to-ns.path
Finally, shut down the TemplateVM:
sudo shutdown now
Creating the ProxyVM
Create an AppVM based on the TemplateVM you have just created. Set sys-firewall
(or whatever FirewallVM you have connected to your sys-net
) as the net qube. If you do not have such FirewallVM, use sys-net
as the net qube. Next, go to the advanced tab and tick the provides network access to other qubes
box.
Open the IVPN and select Settings
→ DNS
→ Force management of DNS using resolv.conf
.
Go to the IVPN Firewall
section and tick the box Allow LAN traffic when IVPN Firewall is enabled
. Due to some strange interaction between qubes services and IVPN, certain apps will get internet connections while others do not if this toggle is not enabled. This option will not actually allow AppVMs connected to the ProxyVM to connect to the local network.
Enable Always-on firewall
to ensure that the killswitch stays on even when the tunnel is disconnected.
Additional Assurances
For additional assurances against VPN leaks, you can optionally add these 2 lines to /rw/config/qubes-firewall-user-script
:
nft add rule qubes custom-forward oifname eth0 counter drop
nft add rule ip6 qubes custom-forward oifname eth0 counter drop
This is not strictly necessary, as I have not observed any leaks with the VPN killswitch provided by the app.
Notes
With this current setup, the ProxyVM you have just created will be responsible for handling Firewall rules for the qubes behind it. This is not ideal, as this is still a fairly large VM, and there is a risk that IVPN or some other apps may interfere with its firewall handling.
Instead, I highly recommend that you create a minimal Mirage FirewallVM and use it as a firewall behind the IVPN ProxyVM. Other AppVMs then should use the Mirage Firewall as the net qube instead. This way, you can make sure that firewall rules are properly enforced.