syncthing/man/syncthing-networking.7

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.TH "SYNCTHING-NETWORKING" "7" "Aug 16, 2020" "v1" "Syncthing"
.SH NAME
syncthing-networking \- Firewall Setup
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.SH ROUTER SETUP
.SS Port Forwards
.sp
If you have a NAT router which supports UPnP, the easiest way to get a working
port forward is to make sure UPnP setting is enabled on both Syncthing and the
router Syncthing will try to handle the rest. If it succeeds you will see a
message in the console saying:
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.sp
.nf
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Created UPnP port mapping for external port XXXXX on UPnP device YYYYY.
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.fi
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.sp
If this is not possible or desirable, you should set up a port forward for port
\fB22000/TCP\fP (or whichever port is set in the \fISync Protocol Listen Address\fP setting).
The external forwarded port and the internal destination port has to be the same
(e.g. 22000/TCP).
.sp
Communication in Syncthing works both ways. Therefore if you set up port
forwards for one device, other devices will be able to connect to it even when
they are behind a NAT network or firewall.
.sp
In the absence of port forwarding, relaying may work well enough to get
devices connected and synced, but will perform poorly in comparison to a
direct connection.
.SS Local Discovery
.sp
The router needs to allow/forward broad\-/multicasts for local discovery to work.
Usually these are allowed by default in a single local subnet, but may be
blocked between different subnets or even between a bridged Wi\-Fi and LAN.
.sp
If you are unable to set up your router thus or your firewall as shown below,
and your devices have static IP addresses, you can specify them directly by
changing the default \fBdynamic\fP setting for \fIAddresses\fP to something like:
\fBtcp://192.168.1.xxx:22000, dynamic\fP\&.
.SH LOCAL FIREWALL
.sp
If your PC has a local firewall, you will need to open the following ports for
incoming and outgoing traffic:
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.IP \(bu 2
Port \fB22000/TCP\fP (or the actual listening port if you have changed
the \fISync Protocol Listen Address\fP setting.)
.IP \(bu 2
Port \fB21027/UDP\fP (for discovery broadcasts on IPv4 and multicasts on IPv6)
.UNINDENT
.SS Uncomplicated Firewall (ufw)
.sp
If youre using \fBufw\fP on Linux and have installed the \fI\%Syncthing package\fP <\fBhttps://apt.syncthing.net/\fP>, you can allow the necessary ports by running:
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.nf
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sudo ufw allow syncthing
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.fi
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.sp
If you also want to allow external access to the Syncthing web GUI, run:
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.nf
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sudo ufw allow syncthing\-gui
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.fi
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.sp
Allowing external access is \fBnot\fP necessary for a typical installation.
.sp
You can then verify that the ports mentioned above are allowed:
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.nf
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sudo ufw status verbose
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.fi
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.sp
In case you installed Syncthing manually you can follow the \fI\%instructions to manually add the syncthing preset\fP <\fBhttps://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/tree/main/etc/firewall-ufw\fP> to ufw.
.SS Firewalld
.sp
If you are using [Firewalld](\fI\%https://www.firewalld.org\fP) it has included
support for syncthing (since version 0.5.0, January 2018), and you can enable
it with
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sudo firewall\-cmd zone=public add\-service=syncthing permanent
sudo firewall\-cmd reload
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.sp
Similarly there is also a syncthing\-gui service.
.SH REMOTE WEB GUI
.sp
To be able to access the web GUI from other computers, you need to change the
\fIGUI Listen Address\fP setting from the default \fB127.0.0.1:8384\fP to
\fB0.0.0.0:8384\fP\&. You also need to open the port in your local firewall if you
have one.
.SS Tunneling via SSH
.sp
If you have SSH access to the machine running Syncthing but would rather not
open the web GUI port to the outside world, you can access it through a SSH
tunnel instead. You can start a tunnel with a command like the following:
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.nf
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ssh \-L 9999:localhost:8384 machine
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.fi
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.sp
This will bind to your local port 9999 and forward all connections from there to
port 8384 on the target machine. This still works even if Syncthing is bound to
listen on localhost only.
.SH VIA A PROXY
.sp
Syncthing can use a SOCKS5 proxy for outbound connections. Please see proxying\&.
.SH AUTHOR
The Syncthing Authors
.SH COPYRIGHT
2014-2019, The Syncthing Authors
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