Nebula

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Revision as of 13:49, 1 April 2024 by Mic92 (talk | contribs) (fix links)

Nebula is a meshing overlay network made as an open-source program by Slack. You can seamlessly mesh hundreds, thousands, or more machines across the globe, using minimal changes to your process.

Nebula runs by assigning a number of nodes the role of "lighthouse". These nodes should be assigned a public global IP address - any kind of NAT or port forwarding is likely to render your lighthouses useless. A minimal $5/mo cloud machine is good enough to run as a lighthouse node, and luckily no traffic passes through those nodes; they only broker the peer-to-peer connections of the other nodes in your mesh.

Lighthouse Node

In Nebula, a "lighthouse" is a signaling node accessible through a public IP address, using UDP port 4242.

Because you're likely using a cloud server option for your lighthouse, there is a chance you'll be unable to use NixOS on that node. Double check the NixOS friendly hosters article your options for running NixOS in the cloud], or choose a secondary distribution and look for the nebula package, and go through the Quick Start guide.


A simple configuration may look like:

  environment.systemPackages = with pkgs; [ nebula ];
  services.nebula.networks.mesh = {
    enable = false;
    isLighthouse = true;
    cert = "/etc/nebulanode.crt";
    key = "/etc/nebula/node.key";
    ca = "/etc/nebula/ca.crt";
  };


Here is a quick process for making a certificate authority (ca) and a certificate for a lighthouse node, called "beacon".

> mkdir ~/mesh && cd ~/mesh
> nebula-cert ca -name mesh
> nebula-cert sign -ca-crt ./ca.crt -ca-key ./ca.key -name beacon -ip 10.0.0.1
> ls
ca.crt  ca.key  node.crt  node.key

Of these four files produced, you should do as much as you can to keep ca.key secure.

(...more coming soon...)