IPsec with public key authentication on strongSwan >= 5.0.0
Setup
Installation hints
For IPsec with Public Keys you'll need the package strongswan-plugin-pubkey installed.
Don't forget to disable selinux :)
Generate an RSA keypair
root@debian:~# mkdir /etc/ipsec.d/public
root@debian:~# ipsec pki --gen --type rsa --outform pem --size 4096 > /etc/ipsec.d/private/mykey.pem
root@debian:~# ipsec pki --pub --in /etc/ipsec.d/private/mykey.pem --outform pem > /etc/ipsec.d/public/mykey.pem
root@debian:~# echo ": RSA mykey.pem" >> /etc/ipsec.secrets
Exchange public keys with your peer
- 
    Display the public key. Send the key data to your peer. root@debian:~# more /etc/ipsec.d/public/mykey.pem -----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY----- MIICIjANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAAOCAg8AMIICCgKCAgEA2/FWIJuVUtfsLovavNp+ nPSsT2mQoNK3ZUUwuEKfBjT7mhijdXRHh1SAtIaU2aen5+d5q6e27vMCCYOQLagn 9CkKatBq54zGNvDSzQEpz0mIsaBx9xjvhsgqAmKCTpLtKuMz6cZbH8y8o9/ZZ8Kv +Jht67T8BDKXczgOg5IIaX84UpCrlSgmnSvKYKu3PXnt91bZ66HaDZJjPf9aiMNc fvuUqVfFWnsV2zI6HFvG/uwkqLalsnPaAwVeIWl2Ovy2Jzdj0GRLSYx87eneSBo+ 7tjlURQTudAj1+53SFOkBcCPSnzPYpIC3hBfZ8Zw8r/25moW3xf8TlLLJqgAh50Y tVyvyVSv1MKYBdjZcFsEXUceC5LI9JZryB/Serq0R+4//ZiR3LEtetVKNvco9bcI JHXr88HM2XeYRfRPAB6wembIEMKYdwIhwYAPPAtL+lDHtZBiBAIAp0y0FhaozSzl MSry8tbJR2fD/i8/yXr5isVfjJZdw8WK0LAd8a8zvmNIFKgiKWjoDgIycM5HrRD+ rY0Br9xONkNdgB7Lz/wPEyUsiIiZpawM/S4taX7ExK4Wi3pdxkOHLn2ZyaWKsdhX PpCkdMfSOJ0SqCUcVze+xD8GlInUQsPgbDGvxT73jT6Ie+wSA94Cgs3mq7FS6cNo ZAASv7cT9DG+xfQmjrJC9SUCAwEAAQ== -----END PUBLIC KEY-----
- 
    Convert your peer's public key to the PEM format using the pubkey-converter script, if necessary. 
Configuration
Configure the phase 1 IKE parameters
In this example, we'll use the following settings:
| Key | Value | 
|---|---|
| Encryption | AES-128 | 
| Hash | HMAC-SHA1 | 
| DH Group | 5 (modp1536) | 
| Lifetime | 28800 seconds | 
| Peer address | 192.0.2.2 | 
| Local address | 192.0.2.1 | 
- 
    Add your peer's public key root@debian:~# cat << EOF > /etc/ipsec.d/public/peerkey.pem -----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY----- MIICIjANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAAOCAg8AMIICCgKCAgEAuQ1hX3+AEiLis4p5jvmY IfEgaq9488GU2nkuR1gZK4/CphrccmztgADU/TkiE5IOOo7zKPparcl8dZwJfX+j 9oIEfvIHqWbF8rIkmJDAn5ZQANDsVKSVvu8nqNZhAslBkFUw1Il6KJrdZEwV4ILL jZmPjN/TIpzPStufeKLfUr7OodFnJXdvWGW1OwRVR8YPZP+13S2nbaqohJZYulTz EcEaWFhXRKzm1dxXqt2H0S93mv5CT0JzVUAv35lB39NMqcRwrg5Fsw0z448nlenS pIDnP8AIPm5shNf9kZJCksOE9GfPMz5KZDOoR3rWPvvapY/Zs+SBz8drPwHrZahG KjxV2Txl7XYkFEWvre+rpiWSidIsnzizEBQ1ea6Inwd6Y29uzmQLhus1OPfhnCIk AVycK+stCZObPl6abomk/avaT+FwnjRgSZzkotlbA2IHgEjF26C4a3ZUGBwDZ+7r U2A7DKbHRN84f62BcMyiZpavXPvk4AUQD5+lRItbFDDeZYtoIdHb9gmMcNHWsGL8 YVxF2A8IAvr7Q1TQfwm2WPAWvjai2rbl6w8ZYiQBPUwkFtUATXU7XyGcLmjCGJGg HZoAqPHddX1z7HosFId+SSc7ugCnUNtwSYHq+DczBVdTa65aPv758zxeKzUqJBKy mP4HkvHlEmXHP2oAQ4G6PTkCAwEAAQ== -----END PUBLIC KEY----- EOF
- 
    Configure a connection policy in ipsec.conf for your peer root@debian:~# cat << EOF >> /etc/ipsec.conf conn MYPEER # peer IPs left=192.0.2.1 right=192.0.2.2 # phase 1 parameters ike=aes128-sha1-modp1536! ikelifetime=28800s # authentication authby=pubkey leftrsasigkey=/etc/ipsec.d/public/mykey.pem rightrsasigkey=/etc/ipsec.d/public/peerkey.pem EOF
- 
    All done! Configure the phase 2 parameters as you otherwise would. 
Full GRE/IPsec example
root@debian:~# ip addr show dev gre1
11: gre1@NONE: <POINTOPOINT,NOARP,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1400 qdisc noqueue state UNKNOWN
    link/gre 192.0.2.1 peer 192.0.2.2
    inet 10.1.2.0/31 scope global gre1
       valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
    inet6 fe80::200:5efe:6825:1c22/64 scope link
       valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
root@debian:~# more /etc/ipsec.conf
# ipsec.conf - strongSwan IPsec configuration file
config setup
conn %default
    keyexchange=ikev1
    dpdaction=restart
conn MYPEER
    # peer IPs
    left=192.0.2.1
    right=192.0.2.2
    # phase 1 parameters
    ike=aes128-sha1-modp1536!
    ikelifetime=28800s
    # authentication
    authby=pubkey
    leftrsasigkey=/etc/ipsec.d/public/mykey.pem
    rightrsasigkey=/etc/ipsec.d/public/peerkey.pem
    # phase 2 parameters
    esp=aes128-sha1-modp1536!
    lifetime=3600s
    type=transport
    leftprotoport=gre
    rightprotoport=gre
    # startup
    auto=route
    keyingtries=%forever
If your peer is using a Cisco router and is behind NAT, then you might need to add the following option:
    rightid=NATIP
