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Router VM
I have just decided to play with installing VM (virtual machines) on my Router hardware (2023-01). I have been reluctant to do this for a number of reasons. My separate listing for Router Hardware. Basically the machine is a bit old slow and under powered, but still adequate for what it does. I do not run a desktop on this machine, CLI (Command Line Interface only). The main services I am currently running on this machine are, all bare metal:
- Network configuration (of 4 x 1 GB/s ethernet ports)
- Access to public internet modem, via 1 Ethernet port - the WAN (Wide Area Network) connection
- modem is VDSL based, set into bridge mode to allow connection to control using this machine as router
- modem is currently set to use direct remote DHCP/IP as specified by ISP (Internet Service Provider requirements), was originally setup using PPPoE.
- There is also as separate static IP address setup to access and control the modem
- A bridge network setup on the remaining 3 Ethernet ports as a LAN (Local Area Network). The bridge network setup has the following required features:
- It allows connections of multiple physical Ethernet ports to a bridge interface device, with the bridge effectively acting as a network switch for the connected physical ports. (On my home server I have 4 x 1GB/s Ethernet ports and an add in PCIe card that provided a 2.5GB/s Ethernet port. All these physical ports are connected to a common network bridge device. This seem to just work, and each physical device seems to operate at its specific capacity.)
- It allows connections of multiple virtual Ethernet ports to the bridge device. This is a commonly used feature on VMs and container system to obtain host system LAN and WAN access.
- ssh (for remote CLI access)
- Router software, using NFTables, with following features:
- Firewall
- NAT (Network Address Translation)
- Port forwarding to basic services
- Main public HTML sever
- Mail server
- VPN server (Wireguard) for remote public access.
- Rate limiting certain IP address ranges to public interface
- Parental control (time limiting access to public interface on certain IP addresses
- Main LAN (Local Area Network) DNS/DHCP), these services work together
- Main local DNS server using ISC Bind9
- Main local DHCP server using ISC DHCP
My preference would be to get a container system functioning directly on the bare metal, but Docker's use of IPtables rules on its Host would impair my Router NFTables setup. Use of a VM isolates Docker's IPTable manipulations from the main system.
VM Setup
I decided to try QEMU/KVM setup as follows:
sudo apt install qemu-system qemu-system-x86 qemu-utils libvirt-clients libvirt-daemon libvirt-daemon-system virtinst --no-install-recommends
package descriptions
In most cases details these packages can be seen at Debian Packages.
Virt-manager remote client setup
sudo apt install virt-manager ssh-askpass-gnome --no-install-recommends
virt-manager -c 'qemu+ssh://baumkp@router.local.kptree.net/system?keyfile=id_rsa'
sudo apt install gir1.2-spiceclientgtk-3.0