Android VPN Compatibility

VPN connections may easily be established between an Android device and pfSense® software in multiple ways.

This is a summary of the following information only. Please keep reading for more details!

Table: pfSense software version 2.2+

Android Version

Protocol

L2TP

IPsec

OpenVPN

CHAP/PAP

PSK

RSA

Xauth PSK

Xauth RSA

Hybrid RSA

IKEv2 EAP-MSCHAPv2

IKEv2 EAP-TLS

3rd-party App

2.1 (Eclair)

Probably

?

?

?

?

?

?

?

Maybe

2.2.1 (Froyo)

Probably

?

?

?

?

?

?

?

Maybe

2.3 (Gingerbread)

Probably

?

?

?

Yes (see text for details)

?

?

?

Maybe

3.0 (Honeycomb)

Probably

?

?

?

Probably

?

?

?

Maybe

4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich)

Probably

Probably

?

?

Probably

?

Yes

Yes

Yes

4.1 (Jelly Bean)

Yes

Yes

?

?

Yes

?

Yes

Yes

Yes

4.2 (Jelly Bean)

Probably

Probably

?

?

Probably

?

Yes

Yes

Yes

4.2.2 (Jelly Bean)

Probably

Probably

?

?

Yes

?

Yes

Yes

Yes

4.3 (Jelly Bean)

Probably

Probably

?

?

Yes

?

Yes

Yes

Yes

4.4 (KitKat)

Probably

Probably

?

Probably

Yes

?

Yes

Yes

Yes

5.0 (Lollipop)

?

?

?

?

Yes

?

Yes

Yes

Yes

Notes

  • IKEv2 support on Android 4+ works with the strongSwan app

  • On Android 9+, enabling “Private DNS” will override the DNS server pushed by a VPN server (e.g. OpenVPN), this can prevent local resources from being resolved correctly on the client (e.g. in a split DNS scenario).

Warning

PPTP is no longer considered a secure VPN technology because it relies upon MS-CHAPv2 which has been compromised. If you continue to use PPTP be aware that intercepted traffic can be decrypted by a third party, so it should be considered unencrypted. We advise migrating to another VPN type such as OpenVPN or IPsec.

More information on this can be found at:

  • L2TP - Works - Both PAP and CHAP work fine. IP config similar to PPTP

    Note

    L2TP on its own is just a tunneling protocol, it does not encrypt traffic!

  • L2TP with Shared Secret - Does not work

  • L2TP+IPsec mode - Works in certain cases where the client can set a custom identifier. See L2TP/IPsec on Android. YMMV.

Android 2.1 (Eclair)

See this note on Android and PPTP from a user on the forum:

Android 2.1 does not have MPPE and therefor will not connect to -any- PPTP server that requires encryption.

Android 2.3 (Gingerbread) IPsec

For some devices, Gingerbread brought with it the “Advanced IPsec VPN” choices that will let it work with 2.0 and most likely other scenarios as well. Specifically these options are found on at least the Motorola Droid X, and likely others.

The VPN choices on these versions are:

  • Cert v1 (AES)

  • Cert v1 (AES, aggressive)

  • Cert v1 (AES, xauth)

  • Cert v2 (AES)

  • L2TP Cert v1 (AES)

  • L2TP PSK v1 (AES)

  • PSK v1 (AES)

  • PSK v1 (AES, xauth)

  • PSK v1 (AES, xauth, aggressive) [Tested, working]

  • PSK v2 (AES)

The choices that use main mode (anything that isn’t labeled “aggressive”) likely won’t work as the IP of the phone is used as the identifier, no matter what is entered in the phone’s GUI, so it would require anonymous PSKs which are only available on pfSense software version 2.2 and later. Some Android IPsec GUIs may have an option to manually set an identifier. If that is present, it can work.

PSK v1 (AES, xauth, aggressive) works against a 2.0 server when properly configured. This combination is reported to work well - see Configuring an IPsec Remote Access Mobile VPN using IKEv1 Xauth for configuration details.

If another mode works that is not listed, let us know. The certificate method (Cert v1 (AES, aggressive)) should work in theory but has not yet been tested.

Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) IPsec

With ICS, the VPN options have been revamped and the following choices are available:

  • L2TP/IPsec PSK

  • L2TP/IPsec RSA

  • IPsec Xauth PSK

  • IPsec Xauth RSA

  • IPsec Hybrid RSA

Of those, at least the IPsec Xauth PSK option should work, but testing is needed to confirm.

Android 4.1 (Jelly Bean) IPsec

Should be identical to 4.0. One report so far of a working configuration with XAuth

Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean) IPsec

Should be identical to 4.1.

Android 4.2.2 (Jelly Bean) IPsec

Should be identical to 4.2. One report so far of a working configuration with XAuth

Android 4.3 (Jelly Bean) IPsec

Should be identical to 4.2.x. One report so far of a working configuration with XAuth

Android 4.4 (KitKat) IPsec

Should be identical to 4.3.

Android 5.0 (Lollipop)

OpenVPN and IKEv2 are working fine

OpenVPN on Android (Non-Root)

Android 2.1 - 3.2: The FEAT VPN client, claims to not require root access and to work on older versions of Android.

Android 4.0 introduces a VPN API, so there are quite a few more third-party clients available.

Android 4.4 (KitKat)

Android 4.4 (KitKat) removed the “tun” device (/dev/tun); this change is reported to break most, if not all, of the OpenVPN clients, but has since been worked around.

Testing results

The FEAT VPN client has been tested and shown towork on an Asus Transformer Prime and a Motorola Droid Razr, both with Android 4.0.x.

A user confirms that the FEAT client works on his Motorola Milestone 2 (aka European/GSM “Droid 2”), and that none of the clients he tested work under Android v4.4 (KitKat).

Exporting configuration

With the latest update to the pfSense OpenVPN Client Export package, an “Inline Configuration” can be exported that has the config, the certs, keys, etc, in a single file. This file imports into the client linked above quite easily, as follows:

  • Export the Inline Configuration

  • Transfer the config to the phone (copy the file directly, e-mail it to the device and use a mail client that can save attachments, grab it from a file share on the network, etc.)

  • Open the OpenVPN App

  • Click “All your precious VPNs”

  • Click Import (File folder icon in top right)

  • Find the ovpn file saved above, click it

  • Click Select

  • Click the Save icon

Note

When using K9 mail, and possibly others, when the attachment is saved to /mnt/sdcard/ the OpenVPN app will launch and import automatically.

Now that it’s saved, the username must be set if User Auth is configured on the VPN server.

  • In the list of VPNs, click the icon to edit the VPN (looks like three sliders)

  • Click Edit in the top bar (Pencil icon)

  • Click Basic

  • Fill in the Username

  • Click back a couple times to get back to the VPN list

The VPN should now connect.

After the VPN has been successfully configured and tested, remember to remove the .ovpn file from the SD card in the Android device. The settings are stored securely by the app, so keeping the file on insecure storage is not needed nor recommended.

L2TP/IPsec on Android

L2TP/IPsec in PSK mode has been proven to work at least on Android 4.1.x. For instructions, see L2TP/IPsec on Android