• Nosoratana: 2019-06-02
  • Mpanoratra: idk

This blog post is intended as a general guide to running a mirror of a clear-net service as an eepSite. It elaborates on the previous blog post about basic I2PTunnel tunnels.

Unfortunately, it's probably impossible to completely cover all possible cases of making an existing web site available as an eepSite, there's simply too diverse an array of server-side software, not to mention the in-practice peculiarities of any particular deployment of software. Instead, I'm going to try and convey, as specifically as possible, the general process preparing a service for deployment to the eepWeb or other hidden services.

Much of this guide will be treating the reader as a conversational participant, in particular If I really mean it I will address the reader directly(i.e. using "you" instead of "one") and I'll frequently head sections with questions I think the reader might be asking. This is, after all, a "process" that an administrator must consider themselves "involved" in just like hosting any other service.

DISCLAIMERS:

While it would be wonderful, it's probably impossible for me to put specific instructions for every single kind of software that one might use to host web sites. As such, this tutorial requires some assumptions on the part of the writer and some critical thinking and common sense on the part of the reader. To be clear, I have assumed that the person following this tutorial is already operating a clear-web service linkable to a real identity or organization and thus is simply offering anonymous access and not anonymizing themselves.

Thus, it makes no attempt whatsoever to anonymize a connection from one server to another. If you want to run a new, un-linkable hidden service that makes server-to-server connections, additional steps will be required and will be covered in another tutorial.

That said: If you can be sure that a brand new service which is not available to the clear-web will never make a server-to-server connection and will not leak server metadata in responses to clients, then services configured in this way will be anonymous.

Process One: Prepare your Server

Step one: Determine what software you are running

In practice, your web service probably uses a number of things to enhance it's reliability and security. These things could be proxies, reverse proxies, containers, tunnels, Intrusion Detection Systems, rate-limiters, load balancers, among many other things. When you get started, you should go through your deployment and determine which software you are using, and what you are using it for.

As you examine your software, ask yourself these questions

These questions should help you evaluate what parts of your software stack are relevant to your I2P eepSite.

Does this software work based on IP addresses?

If you are using software which alters the behavior of traffic based on the IP address of the sender, these things will probably not work with I2P, or may work in complicated or unexpected ways. This is because the address will usually be the localhost, or at least the host where your I2P router is running. Software which sometimes does things based on IP addresses could be Fail2Ban, iptables, and similar applications.

Does this software work by "Tagging" traffic with additional metadata?

Some software may be configured to add information to the traffic it handles. Obviously, if this information is identifying it should not be part of the chain of services that is exposed to the I2P network.

Does this software work by communicating with a remote resource? What triggers this behavior?

Some software may also draw from remote resources, to find up-to-date rules and block lists which can be used to prevent attacks. Some of these might be useful as part of the service that is exposed to I2P, but you should make sure that the rules are applicable and that a rules update cannot be triggered as a result of a normal client request. This would create a server-to-server communication which could reveal the timing of an I2P communication to a third party.

Step two: Determine which port to Forward to I2P and Optionally locate your TLS certificate

Now you've gathered all the information that you will require to forward your service to I2P. Once you've selected the point at which you would like to make your site available to I2P, you will need to note the port you wish to foward. In simple scenarios, this will probably just be port 80 or port 8080. In more sophisticated scenarios, this might be a reverse proxy or something like that. Make a note of the port.

Establishing a Common Identity for both the Clearnet and your eepSite

Should you be a non-anonymous organization that wishes to provide enhanced privacy to your users by providing a hidden service, you may wish to establish a common identity between versions of your site. However, since we can't add .i2p domains to clearnet TLS certificates, we have to do this in another way. To do this, even if you are forwarding the HTTP port and not HTTPS, make a note of the location of your TLS certificate for use in the final step.

Process Two: Forward your service to an eepSite

Congratulations! You've completed the most difficult part. From here on, the decisions you must make, and the consequences that they will have, are much more straightforward and easy to enumerate. Such is the beauty of a cryptographically secure network layer like I2P!

Step three: Generate your .i2p Tunnels and Addresses

For eepSites, you will need to create an HTTP Server Tunnel. This is an I2P destination with a few special features for hosting HTTP services to enable things like rate-limiting, filtering, and the inclusion of headers to identify the destination of the client to the server. These enable flexibility in how you handle connections in terms of load-balancing and rate-limiting on a case-by-case basis, among other things. Explore these options and how they relate to the applications which you considered in step one, even though a very simple setup is easy, larger sites may benefit from taking advantage of these features.

Create an HTTP Tunnel for your application

If you've configured a reverse proxy or an SSH tunnel before, then the general idea here should be very familiar to you. I2PTunnel, in essence, is just forwarding ports from the host to the I2P Network. To set this up using the web interface, go to the I2PTunnel configuration page.

At the bottom of the "I2P Hidden Services" section of the page, select an HTTP Service from the drop-down and click "Create."

config stuff

It will immediately drop you into the granular tunnel configuration page, which we're about to explore from top-to-bottom. The first, most essential settings are the tunnel name and the target host:port. The target host:port is the place where you input the address of the service you are forwarding to I2P. Once you've configured that, your web site will become available over i2p. However, there are probably a few things that we can improve.

host stuff

Next, you may want to pick a hostname to use for your eepSite. This hostname doesn't need to be universally unique, for now, it will only be used locally. We'll publish it to an address helper later. If the Local Destination field isn't populated with your Base64 Destination yet, you should scroll down to the bottom, save the tunnel configuration, and return to the tunnel configuration.

key stuff

A little further down the configuration page, the tunnel options are available. Since you've got a site which is not intended to be anonymous, but rather to provide anonymous access to others by an alternate gateway, it may be good to reduce the number of hops the tunnel takes on the I2P network.

tunnel stuff

Next are the encrypted leaseset options. You can probably leave these as the defaults, since your site isn't anonymous it probably doesn't need features like blinding or encrypted leasesets. If you were to choose encrypted leasesets, you would not be accessible to anyone unless you shared a key with them in advance.

leaseset stuff

The next few parts may be especially useful to you if you run a high-traffic site or find yourself subject to DDOS attacks. Here you can configure various kinds of connection limits.

rate limiting stuff

After that, there are a few other ways of filtering connections by client characteristics. First, you can block access via inproxies like I2P.to and similar. Since you have a clearnet presence already, changing this may be better if you want to encourage I2P users to only use your eepSite. You can also block accesses via specific user-agents, for instance blocking wget may be helpful if you want to prevent spidering. Finally, and of particular interest to Fail2Ban users, the "Unique local address per client" will give each client it's own local IP address instead of them all appearing to the server to be from 127.0.0.1.

coarse blocking stuff

You can probably leave these next few options to the defaults.

Reduced tunnel stuff

Lastly, you can set up an advanced filter definition. Writing filters is beyond what I'm prepared to do in this document, for more information see the format specification for now.

granular blocking stuff

Multi-Home an Application

One interesting thing that I2P can do is host the same site on multiple servers at the same time transparently, which is referred to as "Multihoming." In order to multihome your application, you will need to return to the tunnel menu and change the location of your private key file to it's own, non-shared location.

multihoming key stuff

When you're done, copy the new key file for your new multihomed service to a storage device. Now, you can re-produce your service/tunnel configuration with those same keys on any I2P router and increase your service's redundancy.

Step four: Publicize and Authenticate your eepSite

Since you're running an anonymously accessible instance of an existing clear-net service, you'll probably want to leverage some existing form of trust to distribute your eepSite URL, like a TLS Certificate signed by a recognized and reputable authority. What can I say we live in an imperfect world.

Registering with an Addresshelper service

Nonetheless, there do exist publicly available address subscription feeds, and special services for discovering new human-readable addresses, such as no.i2p, inr.i2p, and stats.i2p. These are sometimes known as Address helpers or Jump Services, and can also be subscribed to automatically. This may be espescially helpful to users of your service who wish to acquire the address without leaving I2P or visiting your clearnet service.

See Also:

Most of the security issues of hosting Tor hidden services also apply to I2P. It would be advisable to take advantage of their resources as well as this one:

Clearnet Web Sites announcing Public Services: