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Ubiquity Unifi Security Gateway (USG) Configuration for KPN

Introduction

At home I have KPN as provider for Internet, IPTV and Voip services. The services are provided through fiber (FTTH). I recently tossed and sold all disperse hardware and bought Ubiquiti gear to upgrade, speedup and simplify my home network. This guide provides the information and guidance needed to configure the Ubiquiti Unifi Security Gateway (https://www.ubnt.com/unifi-routing/usg/) to support both Internet and IPTV.

There are a lot of useful posts out there, this one is a composition of those articles and seems to work. See "Background reading / alternative sources".

Design considerations

  • Simplicity: I'd like my network to be as simple as possible, in hardware, software and configuration.
  • Forward compatibility: Keep as much configuration in the USG configured as per controller to increase and maintain forward compatibility with upgrades. The USG comes with a default firewall configuration and routing options that allow you for guest network isolation etc. I'd like to adopt future advancements.
  • Automated updates: Automate the updates of the routing as the IPTV network changes.
  • Custom IP Range: Keep the internal networking ranges as they were (192.168.100.1/24).

Global design

        fiber
          |
    +----------+
    | FTTH NTU |
    +----------+
          |
      vlan4 - iptv
      vlan6 - internet
      vlan7 - voip (not used in this setup)
          |
       +-----+
       | USG |   - Ubiquity Unifi Security Gateway
       +-----+
          |
         lan
          |
      +--------+
      | Switch |   - Ubiquity Unify Managed Switch
      +--------+
       |  |  |
       |  |  +-----------------------------+
       |  |                                |
       |  +-----------------+              |
       |                    |              |
+--------------+       +---------+      +-----+
| IPTV Decoder |       | Wifi AP |      | NAS |
+--------------+       +---------+      +-----+
  - KPN IPTV                              - Synology diskstation
  - Netflix                               - Docker
                                          - Unifi controller

Hardware

Further notes:

  • Voip services are excluded in this configuration (I'm not using them). Read the links below if you're interested in setting this up. Basically you'll bridge VLAN 7 to USG LAN2 and connect the Experiabox.
  • The Ubiquity Unifi controller is running in a Docker container on a Synology NAS (having a static IP address).
  • Configuration is focused on IPV4. I don't bother setting up and securing IPV6.
  • This configuration guide references commands to be issued on multiple devices USG or the Unifi Controller. Always make sure you're connected to the right device.
  • When connected to USG, you're connected to EdgeOS. Double pressing tab will give you an overview of commands.

Prerequisites

  1. To support routed IPTV make sure you're using a (managed) switch supporting IGMP snooping
  2. Have a Ubiquity Unifi Controller running. If not, see: https://miketabor.com/running-ubiquiti-unifi-controller-in-docker-on-synology-nas/
  3. Adopt, provision and upgrade your USG.
  4. Configure you're internal LAN setup (IP range(s) / DHCP / AP's / etc.).
  5. Connect the USG WAN port (eth0) to the FTTP NTU of KPN.
  6. Connect the USG LAN1 port (eth1) to the Managed Switch

Steps

1. Setup basic Internet

  1. In the Unifi Controller -> Devices -> USG
  2. In tab: Information copy the devices MAC address (you'll need it in step 5).
  3. Type: pppoe
  4. Check the checkbox VLAN, enter the value 6
  5. Set the username to: Past the MAC address AND replace the semicolons (":") with dashes ("-") AND postfix it with @internet. The format should look like: xx-xx-xx-xx-xx-xx@internet.
  6. Set the password to: kpn.
  7. Click: Queue change.
  8. Go to: Device Management and click Force provision

All done, you should now have Internet in your LAN.

2. Create config.gateway.json file

The USG runs linux (EdgeOS version) as it's OS. The advanced settings need you to use the extension hooks Ubiquity build into the USG. See https://help.ubnt.com/hc/en-us/articles/215458888-UniFi-How-to-further-customize-USG-configuration-with-config-gateway-json for more information.

At the time of writing the article is not 100% correct, the configuration in the custom configuration file is merged with the system configuration in the way that non-existent settings are added and existing items are overwritten by the settings in the file. Take good care not to mix and overwrite critical security settings with the config file. For this reason the config file provided in this repo is a minimum set of settings, all other settings are preserved (and hence future changes in upgrades as well).

Notes:

  • Basically you'll need to create and upload an JSON file named: config.gateway.json into a specific folder of the Unifi Controller filesystem and then force the provisioning from the controller to the USG.
  • The custom configuration file references firewall rules that are not within the configuration file, those are registered and provided by Ubiquity in the standard configuration of the USG.

Let's get started.

Pull the config.gateway.json from the repo and change the following:

  1. Replace the MAC address placeholder xx-xx-xx-xx-xx-xx with the real MAC address of the USG (see Setup basic Internet, step 2).
  2. Adjust the IP ranges / DHCP ranges to you're liking (currently 192.168.100.1/24) but they can be any range as long as they do not overlap public IP spaces (duh) and the IPTV ranges KPN uses.
  3. Save the file (using UNIX file format)
  4. (optional) Use an online JSON validator to check of you have created / not corrupted the JSON file.

3. Publish and provision the configuration

In order for the file to by applied to the USG you need to upload it to the Unifi Controller from there you can provision it to the USG.

There are several ways to publish the file to the Unifi controller.

  1. In case the Controller has an SSH deamon running. Connect with SFTP and cd /usr/lib/unifi/data/sites/default and push config.gateway.json

  2. In (my) case the Controller is running in a Docker container (without SSH deamon) with a volume mapping. Connect with SFTP to the docker host and /volume1/docker/unifi/data/sites/default and push config.gateway.json.

The location of the file should be data/sites/default. Where default is the name / identifier of the site in which the USG is located. For finding the correct location see: https://help.ubnt.com/hc/en-us/articles/215458888-UniFi-How-to-further-customize-USG-configuration-with-config-gateway-json.

After completing these steps continue provision the configuration to the USG.

  1. In the Unifi Controller -> Devices -> USG
  2. Go to: Device Management and click Force provision

The USG status changes to provisioning and after a few minutes the status should return back to connected.

In case the USG remains in the status provisioning please consult the section "Troubleshooting" below.

4. Auto update IPTV route automatically

The routed IP network sometimes changes, therefore the next-hop settings for routing should periodically change

  1. Pull the update_iptv_route.sh from the repo
  2. SFTP into the USG
  3. Push the update script: push update_iptv_route.sh
  4. SSH into the USG
  5. Move the file: mv update_iptv_route.sh /config/scripts/post-config.d/
  6. Make the file executable chmod +x /config/scripts/post-config.d/update_iptv_route.sh
  7. Execute the script ./update_iptv_route.sh

5. Celebrate!.

Wait for it.... you're done. The Internet and IPTV should be working. Test you're IPTV by rebooting the decoders and see if they come back online. If not... read below.

In case the USG or IPTV doesn't work, please consult the section "Troubleshooting" below.

Troubleshooting

This section describes some of the most commmon issues and (possible) solutions. If these tips don't help you, read the articles mentioned below. Further sources of wisdom include the UBNT, Tweakers.net and KPN fora.

Troubleshooting provisioning

In case your USG status remains provisioning for more then ten minutes consider there is an error in the configuration file.

To troubleshoot look at these logfiles:

  • Log into the webinterface of the Unifi Controller and check the events and logs.

  • SSH to the USG directly (login using the controller admin username and password) and read the log files.

  • SSH to the Unifi Controller directly and read log files indicating any errors in the provisioning.

Troubleshooting IPTV

In case IPTV is not working there is a plethora of possible root causes. Below are some of the ones I ran into and the solutions I've found.

IPTV issues:

  • IPTV black screen
  • Decoder can't connect
  • IPTV black screen (after few minutes)

Determining cause and solutions:

  1. Check the IPTV routing

    1.1 SSH into the USG and issue the command: show dhcp client leases

    1.2 Compare the resulting router and subnet with the settings in the config.gateway.json and update_iptv_route.sh settings.

    1.3 Adjust the settings in the files to match these returned by the IPTV network of KPN (see the appropriate steps above).

  2. Check the IGMP Proxy

    2.1 SSH into the USG and issue the command: show protocols igmp-proxy interface and check that the returned values match the settings expressed in the config.gateway.json (on the Unifi Controller filesystem).

    2.3 Issue the command: show ip multicast interfaces and check the output.

    2.4 Issue the command: show ip multicast mfc and check the output.

    2.5 Issue the command: ps aux | grep igmp to see if the IGMP proxy is running. If not run: /opt/vyatta/sbin/config-igmpproxy.pl --action=restart to start the proxy.

  3. Reprovision the configuration

    Force a reprovisioning of the configuration from the Unifi controller.

  4. Restart the USG

    Poor solution, but sometimes helps. After restart retry steps 1 to 3 otherwise, step 5.

  5. Find help.

    Use your favorite search engine and the links below to read up about possible symptoms, causes and solutions.

Networking issues

Possible networking issues:

  • Slow network (latency)
  • Network saturation (throughput)

Determining cause and solutions:

  1. Check utilization of the network, switch, AP's and USG in the Unifi Controller. Try to determine where issues are located (is it your uplink, is it the local network, etc.).

  2. Check if IGMP Snooping is supported by your switch (and all other switches in between the NTU and the IPTV decoders)

    Make sure you're switch is IGMP snooping compatible. I chose to use switches from Ubiquity to allow me to manage the entire network using the Unifi Controller.

Background reading / alternative sources