At present, the Gateway performs DNS resolution for A & AAAA queries via `libc`. The `resolve` system call only provides us with the resolved IPs but not any of the metadata around the query such as TTL. As a result, we can only cache DNS queries for a static amount of time, currently 30s. It would be more correct to cache them for their TTL instead. To do so, we re-introduce `hickory-resolver` to our codebase. Deliberately, we only use it for resolving A and AAAA records on the Gateway for now. DNS resolution for SRV & TXT records happens one layer below and uses the same infrastructure as DNS resolution on the Client. Merging this is difficult however because the Gateway still supports the control protocol of 1.3.x clients. That one requires DNS resolution prior to setting up the connection of DNS resources which means it needs to happen in the event-loop of the Gateway binary and cannot be moved into the `Tunnel` where DNS resolution for Client and SRV/TXT records happen. Once we can drop support for 1.3.x clients, this Gateway's event-loop will simplify drastically which will allow us to refactor this to a more unified approach of DNS resolution. Until then, we can at least fix the hardcoded TTL by using `hickory-resolver` in the event-loop. The functionality is guarded behind a feature-flag which - as usual - is off by default (i.e. for as long as we haven't fetched the flags). The feature flag is already configured to `true` for staging and production so we can test the new behaviour. Resolves: #8232 Related: #10385
A modern alternative to legacy VPNs.
Overview
Firezone is an open source platform to securely manage remote access for any-sized organization. Unlike most VPNs, Firezone takes a granular, least-privileged approach to access management with group-based policies that control access to individual applications, entire subnets, and everything in between.
Features
Firezone is:
- Fast: Built on WireGuard® to be 3-4 times faster than OpenVPN.
- Scalable: Deploy two or more gateways for automatic load balancing and failover.
- Private: Peer-to-peer, end-to-end encrypted tunnels prevent packets from routing through our infrastructure.
- Secure: Zero attack surface thanks to Firezone's holepunching tech which establishes tunnels on-the-fly at the time of access.
- Open: Our entire product is open-source, allowing anyone to audit the codebase.
- Flexible: Authenticate users via email, Google Workspace, Okta, Entra ID, or OIDC and sync users and groups automatically.
- Simple: Deploy gateways and configure access in minutes with a snappy admin UI.
Firezone is not:
- A tool for creating bi-directional mesh networks
- A full-featured router or firewall
- An IPSec or OpenVPN server
Contents of this repository
This is a monorepo containing the full Firezone product, marketing website, and product documentation, organized as follows:
- elixir: Control plane and internal Elixir libraries:
- elixir/apps/web: Admin UI
- elixir/apps/api: API for Clients, Relays and Gateways.
- rust/: Data plane and internal Rust libraries:
- rust/gateway: Gateway - Tunnel server based on WireGuard and deployed to your infrastructure.
- rust/relay: Relay - STUN/TURN server to facilitate holepunching.
- rust/headless-client: Cross-platform CLI client.
- rust/gui-client: Cross-platform GUI client.
- swift/: macOS / iOS clients.
- kotlin/: Android / ChromeOS clients.
- website/: Marketing website and product documentation.
Quickstart
The quickest way to get started with Firezone is to sign up for an account at https://app.firezone.dev/sign_up.
Once you've signed up, follow the instructions in the welcome email to get started.
Frequently asked questions (FAQ)
Can I self-host Firezone?
Our license won't stop you from self-hosting the entire Firezone product top to bottom, but our internal APIs are changing rapidly so we can't meaningfully support self-hosting Firezone in production at this time.
If you're feeling especially adventurous and want to self-host Firezone for educational or hobby purposes, follow the instructions to spin up a local development environment in CONTRIBUTING.md.
The latest published clients (on App Stores and on
releases) are only guaranteed
to work with the managed version of Firezone and may not work with a self-hosted
portal built from this repository. This is because Apple and Google can
sometimes delay updates to their app stores, and so the latest published version
may not be compatible with the tip of main from this repository.
Therefore, if you're experimenting with self-hosting Firezone, you will probably want to use clients you build and distribute yourself as well.
See the READMEs in the following directories for more information on building each client:
- macOS / iOS: swift/apple
- Android / ChromeOS: kotlin/android
- Windows / Linux: rust/gui-client
How long will 0.7 be supported until?
Firezone 0.7 is currently end-of-life and has stopped receiving updates as of
January 31st, 2024. It will continue to be available indefinitely from the
legacy branch of this repo under the Apache 2.0 license.
How much does it cost?
We offer flexible per-seat monthly and annual plans for the cloud-managed version of Firezone, with optional invoicing for larger organizations. See our pricing page for more details.
Those experimenting with self-hosting can use Firezone for free without feature or seat limitations, but we can't provide support for self-hosted installations at this time.
Documentation
Additional documentation on general usage, troubleshooting, and configuration can be found at https://www.firezone.dev/kb.
Get Help
If you're looking for help installing, configuring, or using Firezone, check our community support options:
- Discussion Forums: Ask questions, report bugs, and suggest features.
- Join our Discord Server: Join live discussions, meet other users, and chat with the Firezone team.
- Open a PR: Contribute a bugfix or make a contribution to Firezone.
If you need help deploying or maintaining Firezone for your business, consider contacting our sales team to speak with a Firezone expert.
See all support options on our main support page.
Star History
Developing and Contributing
See CONTRIBUTING.md.
Security
See SECURITY.md.
License
Portions of this software are licensed as follows:
- All content residing under the "elixir/" directory of this repository, if that directory exists, is licensed under the "Elastic License 2.0" license defined in "elixir/LICENSE".
- All third party components incorporated into the Firezone Software are licensed under the original license provided by the owner of the applicable component.
- Content outside of the above mentioned directories or restrictions above is available under the "Apache 2.0 License" license as defined in "LICENSE".
WireGuard® is a registered trademark of Jason A. Donenfeld.
