Netopeer2 is a server for implementing network configuration management based on the NETCONF Protocol. This is the second generation, originally available as the Netopeer project. Netopeer2 is based on the new generation of the NETCONF and YANG libraries - libyang and libnetconf2. The Netopeer2 server uses sysrepo as a NETCONF datastore implementation.
Netopeer2 is maintained and further developed by the Tools for Monitoring and Configuration department of CESNET. Any feedback, testing or feature requests are welcome. Please contact us via the issue tracker.
The project uses 2 main branches master
and devel
. Other branches should not be cloned. In master
there are files of the
last official release. Any latest improvements and changes (of the server), which were tested at least briefly are found
in devel
. On every new release, devel
is merged into master
.
This means that when only stable official releases are to be used, either master
can be used or specific releases downloaded.
If all the latest bugfixes should be applied, devel
branch is the one to be used. Note that whenever a new issue is created
and it occurs on the master
branch, the first response will likely be to use devel
before any further provided support.
We are using openSUSE Build Service to automaticaly prepare binary packages for number of GNU/Linux distros.
The netopeer2
packages are always build from current master
branch (latest release). If you are interested in any other packages
(such as src), you can browse
all packages from our repository.
$ mkdir build; cd build
$ cmake ..
$ make
# make install
The netopeer2-server
requires ietf-netconf-server and all connected YANG modules to be installed in sysrepo
to work correctly. This is performed autmatically during the installation process. Moreover, default
SSH configuration listening on all IPv4 interfaces and a newly generated SSH host key are imported
so that it can be connected to the server out-of-the-box. However, it may not always be desired
to perform all these steps even though the executed scripts check whether the modules/some configuration
already exist and do not repeat/overwrite any modules/configuration.
These are the options that affect the initial setup:
INSTALL_MODULES:ON
GENERATE_HOSTKEY:ON
MERGE_LISTEN_CONFIG:ON
If cross-compiling for a different architecture, you will likey want to turn all these options off
and then run the scripts setup.sh
, merge_hostkey.sh
, and merge_config.sh
manually.
A command-line NETCONF client netopeer2-cli
is included and build/installed by default. This can be
adjusted by an option:
BUILD_CLI:ON
This NETCONF server implements full ietf-netconf-acm access control that bypasses sysrepo
file system access control. NACM is enabled by default, so users other than root
will not be
allowed to write any data but should be granted read and execute permissions unless
the access was modified by a NACM extension. When deploying this server, it is strongly advised
to configure NACM properly.
Right after installation SSH listen and Call Home and TLS listen and Call Home are supported.
By default, only SSH listen configuration is imported so to enable any other connection methods,
they need to be configured manually. Example configuration XML files can be found in the example_configuration
directory. These files can be easily modified to create configuration specific for a particular
environment and configured authentication.
To enable SSH Call Home, only ssh_callhome.xml
file needs to be imported to sysrepo provided
that the default SSH host key genkey
was imported into ietf-keystore configuration.
To support clients connecting using TLS, configuration files tls_keystore.xml
, tls_truststore.xml
,
and tls_listen.xml
needs to be merged into sysrepo configuration of modules ietf-keystore,
ietf-truststore, and ietf-netconf-server, respectively. After doing so, a NETCONF client can
connect using client.crt
certificate and client.key
private key and having ca.pem
CA certificate
set as trusted. These example certificates can be found in example_configuration/tls_certs
.
netopeer2-cli can easily be configured this way and the TLS connection tested.
Once connected, the client will be identified with tls-test
NETCONF username.
Using the same certificates and authorization options, a TLS client can be connected to using
Call Home when tls_callhome.xml
file is imported. But tls_keystore.xml
and tls_truststore.xml
need to be imported first.