This document is available online at http://www.c2.net/~raph/premail/.
This is the documentation for premail 0.46.
Introduction to premail
This is the documentation for version 0.46 of premail, an e-mail
privacy package by Raph
Levien. It is organized as a single, large document so as to be easily
readable when printed. You can, however, jump directly to one of these
topics:
installation,
secrets,
preferences,
Netscape,
Pine,
other mailers,
command line,
encryption,
decoding,
anonymity,
nyms,
usenet,
address book,
smime,
debugging,
technical notes,
related documents,
(end of list).
The main function of premail is adding support for encrypted e-mail to
your mailer, using plain PGP, PGP/MIME, MOSS, or S/MIME.
In addition, premail provides a seamless, transparent interface to
the anonymous
remailers, including full support for Mixmaster remailers and the
nymservers. Nymservers provide cryptographically protected, fully
anonymous accounts for both sending and receiving e-mail.
While premail can be used as a stand-alone application, it works
best when integrated with your mailer. Currently, premail is
integrated completely seamlessly and transparently only with Netscape
3.0's built-in mailer. It works fairly well with Pine 3.94 or later, as
well (plain PGP is supported, but decryption of MIME-based e-mail
encryption protocols is still missing). Transparent integration of
outgoing mail only is supported for any mailer in which the mail
sending program can be configured, including Berkeley mail, most emacs
mailers, and MH.
For these mailers, you can decode messages with a single command.
To integrate with your mailer, premail places itself between the
mailer and the actual mail transport. For outgoing mail, premail
masquerades as sendmail. You configure your mailer to call premail
instead of sendmail. Then, premail performs the encryption or signing,
and invokes sendmail to actually send the message.
For mailers that call a command to receive incoming mail
(including Netscape 3.0), the situation is similar. Netscape, for
example, can be configured to call movemail to get incoming mail. To
integrate premail, you'd configure Netscape to call premail instead,
which would in turn call movemail to actually get the mail, then would
decode it.
You need the following software in order to effectively use
premail:
- Unix. Unfortunately, premail does not work on Mac or Windows.
- Perl 5.000 or
later.
- PGP
(version 2.6.2 recommended).
- RIPEM 3.0b3 or
later (optional, for S/MIME support)
- TIS/MOSS 7.1
(optional, for MOSS support)
- Mixmaster (optional,
for higher security anonymous mail)
- Lynx
(only if you're behind a firewall)
Installation
First, you need to get premail. The source code is available from
an export-control
Web server. You may also be able to find a copy on the Hacktic FTP
site in the Netherlands. In either case, you want to get the file
premail-0.46.tar.gz.
After you've gotten the file, unpack it. This command should do
it:
gzip -dc premail-0.46.tar.gz | tar xvf -
The unpacking process will create a subdirectory called
premail-0.46, containing the following files:
README | A short
description of the contents |
premail | The premail
program itself |
preferences | A skeletal
preferences file |
Test to see if you can run premail. These commands should print a
usage summary:
cd premail-0.46
./premail
If you get an error message reading "command not found," then you
will have to edit the first line of premail to refer to the
actual pathname of the perl5 interpreter. One good way to find out the
pathname is to do "which perl5" or "which perl".
On the other hand, if you get a string of syntax errors, then the
problem is that you are running perl4, while premail needs perl5. Try
to see if you can find perl5 on your machine. Otherwise, you may need
to install perl5 yourself.
If you will be using premail from the command line frequently,
then you may want to copy (or symlink) the premail program into a
location in your $PATH. For example, if you have permission
to add files into /usr/local/bin, then you may consider
running this command:
cp -p premail /usr/local/bin
At this point, you are ready to test whether premail actually
works. We are assuming that you already have PGP installed and have
generated your own public key. Type this command, substituting in your
own e-mail address:
./premail -t
To: your@own.email.addr ((encrypt-pgp))
Subject: Test
Does this really work?
.
If all goes well, you should be back at the command line within a
couple of seconds. If it seems to hang without any disk or net
activity, try typing randomly for a minute, under the assumption that
PGP needs random keystrokes. This shouldn't happen if PGP is already
set up correctly (including having generated your own public key), but
on the chance that it isn't, hanging while waiting for random
keystrokes is one of the more common failure modes.
This is also the point at which you may get a PGP error. Two
common problems are that premail can't find the PGP program, in which
case you will want to add a line to your preferences file (see below), or that it can't find the public key
corresponding to your e-mail address.
If the test was successful you now have a PGP-encrypted message in
your mailbox, then you should now have a PGP-encrypted message in your
mailbox.
Preferences
While premail's default configuration is designed to be sufficient
for the the most common cases, you may want to change some of the
configuration options. This is done by adding lines to the
preferences file.
The default location for the preferences file is
~/.premail/preferences, where ~ represents your home
directory. The premail distribution comes with a skeleton preferences
file, but it does not automatically copy it into the
~/.premail directory. You might choose to do that yourself,
or you might create one from scratch.
The format of the preferences file is a sequence of lines such as
the following:
$config{'option'} = 'value';
All other lines (including those beginning with #) are
considered to be comments and are ignored. Here's a typical
preferences file (actually, the one on my home machine):
$config{'logfile'} = '/home/raph/premail/log';
$config{'debug'} = 'chvl';
$config{'movemail'} = '/home/raph/bin/movehome';
$config{'ripem'} = '/home/raph/install/ripem/main/ripem';
$config{'pgp'} = '/usr/local/bin/pgp';
As you can see, a major use for the preferences file is to specify
full pathnames for the helper programs. In addition, I've set it up to
produce a full log, which I find useful, because I'm constantly
tracking down bugs :-)
Here's a table of all the configuration options, their defaults,
and a very brief description. More complete descriptions are found in
the preferences file included in the premail distribution.
option default |
explanation |
pgp pgp | The location
of the PGP executable. |
sendmail
/usr/lib/sendmail | The location of the
sendmail executable. |
mixmaster mixmaster | The
location of the Mixmaster executable (useful for more
secure anonymous mail). |
movemail movemail | The
location of the movemail executable (useful for integrating
Netscape 3.0). |
ripem ripem | The location
of the ripem executable (needed for S/MIME messages). |
mossbin | The directory
containing the TIS/MOSS executables (needed for MOSS messages). |
post post | The location
of the MH post executable (needed for MH
integration). |
geturl | A command for
getting files from the Web. Use "lynx -source" if behind a
firewall. |
dead-letter ~/dead.letter |
The file where premail stores undeliverable
mail. |
logfile | The location
where premail stores its log, if the l debug flag is
set. |
storefile | If set, the
location where premail stores outgoing mail, instead of calling
sendmail. |
tmpdir /tmp | Where
premail stores its temporary files. |
charset iso-8859-1 | The
default charset for outgoing 8-bit messages. |
encrypt yes | Set to
blank to disable PGP encryption to remailers. |
ack | If set, nymservers will
send acknowledgements for all outgoing mail. |
extrablank | If set,
premail adds an extra blank on remailer messages. Useful if behind a
broken mail proxy. |
debug | Debugging flags
(see section on debugging). |
signuser | The user id of the
default PGP secret key used to sign messages. |
default-reply-to | Adds a
Reply-To: header field with this address when sending
anonymous e-mail. |
addresses
~/.premail/addresses | The file containing your
addresses. |
rlist
~/.premail/rlist | The file where premail
stores the remailer list. |
pubring
~/.premail/pubring.pgp | The file where premail
stores the public keyring for the remailers. |
premail-secrets-pgp
~/.premail/secrets.pgp |
The file where premail stores the encrypted
secrets file. |
premail-secrets
/tmp/premail-secrets.$< | The location of your
secrets file |
rlist-url
http://kiwi.cs.berkeley.edu/rlist | The URL for
the remailer list. |
pubring-url
http://kiwi.cs.berkeley.edu/pubring.pgp | The URL
for the remailer public keyring. |
type2-list-url
http://www.jpunix.com/type2.html |
The URL for the Mixmaster type2
list. |
pubring-mix-url
http://www.jpunix.com/pubring.html | The URL for
the Mixmaster pubring. |
Secrets
To create signatures, decrypt messages, or use nyms, you need to
set up a "premail secrets" file. If you will only be using premail to
encrypt outgoing mail, you can skip this section.
The default filename is /tmp/.premail-secrets.$< ,
where $< is equal to your numeric user id. To change the
filename, use a preferences line such as this one:
$config{'premail-secrets'} = '/mnt/cryptdisk/premail-secrets';
If you don't know your numeric user id, you can find it by running
"echo $uid" (from csh or tcsh), "echo $UID" (from sh
or bash), or:
perl -e 'print "$<\n"'
The premail secrets file has this format:
$pgppass{'user'} = 'PGP passphrase for user';
$pgppass{'alternate'} = 'PGP passphrase for alternate';
$penetpass = 'Passphrase for anon.penet.fi';
However, make sure your premail secrets file has restrictive
permissions, so other people on your system can't read your
passphrases! This command is well recommended (substituting your
actual user id, of course):
chmod 600 /tmp/.premail-secrets.7437
Logging in and logging out
Generally, premail stores its secrets file in the /tmp
directory. In some cases, this is good enough security. In other
cases, it might be better to store the file encrypted most of the
time, and only decrypt it when necessary. To use this capability of
premail, first set a passphrase with:
premail -setpass
You will be prompted for a passphrase. You can use the same
passphrase as for your PGP key, or a different one, depending on how
many passphrases you want to remember. This command leaves you logged
in with the new passphrase set.
To log out:
premail -logout
You might consider adding this command to your .logout file, so
that it occurs automatically every time you log out of your account.
To log in again:
premail -login
If you are running on a system with X, then premail will
automatically pop up a window to log in whenever the secrets are
needed. If you are not running X, and the secrets are needed, you will
get an error. In this case, you can log in manually and try the
command again.
Netscape
This section describes how to integrate premail into Netscape
3.0's built-in mailer. Skip this section if you won't be using
Netscape mail.
1. Create symbolic links to premail called "prezilla" and
"premailmove". To do this, make sure you are in the same directory as
premail itself, and type:
ln -s premail prezilla
ln -s premail premailmove
2. Find a working movemail. If you have emacs installed, then you
most likely have one in /usr/lib/emacs/etc/movemail or a similar
location. If you don't already have one, then the source (or possibly
binary) for one is included in the Netscape Navigator distribution and
you can build it (no need if a binary is included). Then, make sure
premail can find it by adding a line such as this one to your
preferences file:
$config{'movemail'} = '/usr/lib/emacs/etc/movemail';
This usage assumes that you get your mail from a mail spool, as
opposed to POP or some such. You may be able to get it to work for POP
as well, but you need to figure out how to invoke movemail to move the
mail from your mailbox to a file (specified as the second argument to
the movemail script).
3. Add this line to your .cshrc, assuming your shell is csh or
tcsh:
setenv NS_MSG_DELIVERY_HOOK /your/path/to/prezilla
Also run this command from the shell so it takes effect
immediately. The syntax is slightly different if your shell is sh or
bash (note: is this right?):
NS_MSG_DELIVERY_HOOK=/your/path/to/prezilla
export NS_MSG_DELIVERY_HOOK
4. Start Netscape (exit first if it's already running). Go to the
Options|Mail and News Preferences dialog, select the Servers tab.
Click on "External Movemail" and set the value to
/your/path/to/premailmove.
Try sending yourself mail, and clicking on "Get Mail" from the
Netscape Mail window. The mail should show up in the Inbox, correctly
decoded.
To view the X-Premail-Auth: header field to see the result of
signature checking, select Options|Show All Headers from the Netscape
Mail window.
Note: as of Netscape v3.0, there is still a bug in the handling
of the Bcc: header field, which causes it to be ignored. Do
not use this field. Hopefully, this will be fixed in a future version
of Netscape.
Note: some 3.0 beta versions modify the PATH environment
variable. If premail seems to work correctly from the command line,
but not from Netscape, try setting absolute pathnames for the programs
used by premail.
Pine
As of Pine 3.94, premail integrates both outgoing mail and the
decryption of plain PGP incoming mail. Unfortunately, decryption of
MIME-based mail is not yet supported.
Two Pine configuration options need to be set to integrate premail
(i.e. from the main Pine screen, S for setup, then C
for configure). First, sendmail-path should be set to a value
similar to this (substituting the actual path to premail):
/your/path/to/premail -oem -t -oi
Second, display_filters should be set to a value similar
to this:
_BEGINNING("-----BEGIN PGP")_ /your/path/to/premail -decode -body
If you have trouble finding these options in the setup screen,
then you can edit the .pinerc file directly.
One caveat when using Pine: it usually tries to be "smart" and
remove comments from e-mail addresses, which includes the double-paren
commands such as ((encrypt-pgp)). There are a few ways to
deal with this problem:
Other mailers
This section describes how to integrate premail with MH, emacs,
and UCBMail. With these mailers, premail will only handle outgoing
mail automatically. To decode incoming mail, you still need to invoke
premail -decode by hand.
Integrating premail with Emacs
To add premail support to emacs, just add this line to your .emacs
file:
(setq sendmail-program "/your/path/to/premail")
Integrating premail with MH
In whatever directory you keep the premail executable, create a
symbolic link as follows:
ln -s premail prepost
Under the name "prepost", premail will masquerade as MH's post
program rather than sendmail. You can get MH to call premail instead
of post by adding this line to your .mh_profile:
postproc: /your/path/to/prepost
One thing to keep in mind is that premail's processing is done
before that of post. Thus, if you have MH aliases, they will get
expanded after the call to premail. If you use only premail aliases,
only MH aliases, or neither, this won't be a problem.
Alternatively, if you have appropriate privileges, you can add this
line to /usr/lib/mh/mtstailor:
sendmail: /your/path/to/premail
You may also have to configure MH to call sendmail locally rather
than connecting to an SMTP server. Don't do both the mtstailor and
mh_profile methods -- that would run premail twice.
Installing premail with UCBmail
UCBmail is a simple mailer front-end (also known as Mail and
mailx). If, when you type "mail user@site.dom", the mailer asks you
for a "Subject: " line, you are undoubtedly using UCBmail. If so, you
are in luck - it integrates very easily with premail. Just add this
line to your ~/.mailrc file:
set sendmail=/your/path/to/premail
Using premail with UCBmail is not very different from using
premail by itself, but you do get some handy features, such as
including files and using an editor on the mail.
Command line
Hopefully, you have integrated premail into your mail client, and
you won't have to invoke it from the command line. However, there may
still be times when it is convenient to use premail from the command
line.
The most basic use of premail is as a replacement for sendmail.
For example, you can send mail directly from the command line, as
follows (here, the > represents the Unix prompt):
> premail -t
To: raph@cs.berkeley.edu ((sign))
Subject: premail bug report
Here's a bug in premail: ...
.
>
The -t option specifies that the recipients are extracted
from the header fields (To:, Cc:, Bcc:, and
the Resent- variants of each). As in sendmail, you can
specify the recipients on the command line instead of using the
-t option.
In addition, you can set configuration options from the command
line, using the +option=value syntax. This is especially
useful with the debug option. For example, to
show you what happens when formatting mail for remailers, but not
actually send the message:
> premail +debug=ry -t
To: raph@cs.berkeley.edu ((chain=1))
Subject: test of remailer
test
.
Chose chain exon
/usr/lib/sendmail -oi remailer\@remailer\.nl\.com << -eof-
To: remailer@remailer.nl.com
::
Encrypted: PGP
-----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE----- remailer@remailer.nl.com
::
Request-Remailing-To: raph@cs.berkeley.edu
##
Subject: test of remailer
test
-----END PGP MESSAGE-----
-eof-
There is one configuration option that can only be set from the
command line in this fashion, which is the location of the preferences
file itself. The configuration option is preferences, and the
default value is ~/.premail/preferences.
Encryption
Once you've got premail set up, actually using encryption is easy.
You simply add commands in double parentheses to the e-mail addresses.
The encrypt-pgp command (which can be abbreviated to
key) adds encryption to the outgoing mail, and the
sign command signs it.
For example, to send me encrypted mail, you'd send it to
raph@cs.berkeley.edu ((encrypt-pgp)). You need to have a key
with this user id on your PGP public keyring, otherwise you'll get an
error message. If the user id on the key doesn't match the e-mail
address, you can specify it directly. For example, to send mail
directly to my workstation, but using the same public key as above,
use raph@kiwi.cs.berkeley.edu ((key=raph@cs.berkeley.edu)).
Signing works much the same way. I can sign mail by adding
((sign=raph@cs.berkeley.edu)) to the outgoing address.
Actually, because I set the signuser configuration option in
my preferences file, all I have to add is ((sign)).
Doing both encryption and signing is just as easy. For example,
to send me signed, encrypted mail, use this line:
To: raph@cs.berkeley.edu ((encrypt-pgp, sign))
Each recipient is treated separately - the double-paren commands
after an e-mail address apply to that recipient only. However, you can
add a Sign: header field to indicate that your message is
signed for all recipients. Example:
To: vp@company, secretary@company, employees@company,
friend@outside ((encrypt-pgp))
Subject: Important announcement
Sign:
...
In this example, all recipients will get a signed message, and the
message to friend@outside will be encrypted as well.
Decoding
The basic way to decode encrypted messages is to use premail
-decode as a command line. You can either give a filename as an
argument, or premail will accept the encrypted message on its standard
input. In either case, the decoded message will be printed on the
standard output.
The message can be a standard e-mail message (RFC 822 format), or
it can be an entire mailbox. In the latter case, premail will decode
each of the messages individually. If you don't have premail directly
integrated into your mailer, then here's a handy way to view your
mail:
premail -decode $MAIL | more
If the message is actually encrypted, then premail will need to
access the secrets file. If you are logged out of premail, then
premail will try to open an xterm window for you to type the
passphrase for the secrets file. If that doesn't succeed, premail will
print an error message. At that point, you might choose to log in
(i.e. premail -login) and then try the decoding again.
If, as in many mailers, you have easy access to the body of the
message but not the header, then you can use premail -decode
-body on the body. This works well for plain PGP encrypted
messages, but unfortunately does not work for MIME-based message
formats, because important information is contained in the header.
The results of the decoding (including signature verification) are
given in an X-Premail-Auth: header field. This header field
is protected against forgery; if the original message contains it, it
is changed to X-Attempted-Auth-Forgery.
Anonymity
The original reason for writing premail was to provide good
support for anonymous
remailers. If you're not interested in sending anonymous mail, you
can skip this section.
Sending anonymous mail is very similar to sending encrypted mail.
Simply add the ((chain)) command to the recipient's e-mail
address. Alternatively, you can add a Chain: header field,
and the mail will be send anonymously to all recipients.
Even though the chain command is simple, a lot is going on under
the surface. The default chain is 3, which asks that three
"good" remailers be chosen randomly. To make sure that it makes its
choice based on fresh, up-to-date information, premail downloads the
remailer list and a set of PGP public keys for the remailers from the
Web (the actual URLs are configuration options). After choosing the
remailers, the message is multiply encrypted with the PGP public keys,
and finally sent to the first remailer in the chain.
The automatic chain selection process is very good. My tests
indicate that reliability is consistently above 99%. Further, the
chain selection process avoids some potential problems. For example,
some remailers are known not to work well in chains, probably because
of incorrectly configured "block lists." Also, some remailers are
"linked," in the sense of being hosted on the same machine, or being
administered by the same person. Choosing a sequence of linked
remailers wouldn't offer much security, so premail doesn't.
You can also choose the chain length. A shorter chain will be
faster and more reliable, but less secure, and conversely for longer
chains. For example, ((chain=5)) selects a chain of five
remailers.
If this isn't enough control, you can specify the exact chain of
remailers by hand. For example, ((chain=replay;jam;exon))
bounces the message around a few times outside the US.
Mixmaster chains are specified inside an additional set of
parentheses. At the moment, there is no way to automatically select a
chain of Mixmaster remailers, so you have to do it by hand. For
example: ((chain=(replay;ecafe-mix;lcs))). You can even mix
Mixmaster and type-1 remailers; for example,
((chain=(anon);1;(replay))) will sandwich one well-chosen
remailer between the two Mixmaster remailers.
Extra header fields can be placed in the outgoing message by
prefixing the header with "Anon-". A particularly common
usage is an Anon-Reply-To: field, which specifies a reply-to
address in the mail delivered to the recipient. The Reply-To:
header field is used often enough that premail includes a
default-reply-to configuration option, which automatically
adds it to all anonymous messages.
The following header fields are passed through to the anonymized
message, even without the Anon- prefix:
Mime-Version:
Content-Type:
Content-Transfer-Encoding:
Newsgroups:
X-Anon-To:
In-Reply-To:
References:
Using nyms
This section describes how to create and use nyms, which
are accounts for sending and receiving anonymous mail. There are two
types of nymservers: alpha (named after the now defunct alpha.c2.org),
and newnym. For the most part, the operation of the two is similar.
To create a new nym, type
premail -makenym
and follow the prompts. This command is also good for updating an
existing nym, which is important if one of the nym's remailers goes
down.
You can also create or update a nym from the command line, as
follows:
premail -makenym you@alias.cyberpass.net your@real.email.address
When premail creates a nym, it chooses random passphrases (one for
each remailer in the chain). The passphrases and other details of the
nym are stored in the premail secrets file. Thus, the nym is fairly
secure (much more so than, say, anon.penet.fi).
The decode mechanism handles responses to nyms, again looking up
the passphrases in the premail secrets file.
You can also send mail from your nym, in one of two ways. Assume
for the sake of example that your nym is you@alias.cyberpass.net. Then, you
would use a chain of 2;cyber=you. Alternatively, you can use
a chain of 2;cyber and include this header field:
Anon-From: you@alias.cyberpass.net (You Know Who)
If you want the nymserver to send you a confirmation every time
you send mail from your nym, add a $config{'ack'} = 'yes';
line to your preferences file.
To delete a nym:
premail -makenym you@alias.cyberpass delete
Please delete nyms if you are not actually using them; this helps
free up disk space and prevents the nymservers from being overloaded.
As of version 0.46, premail now supports the newnym type of
nymserver. This nymserver is more richly featured than the alpha type.
You do have to answer a few more prompts when creating nyms for the
newnym type, including creating a new PGP key. It's worth it, though.
The newnym servers seem to be working a lot better than the alpha ones
ever did. For more information on newnym, see the nym.alias.net
homepage. If you want to exchange nyms between premail and other
programs (or a manual setup), then take a look at the -importnym and
-exportnym commands, which are explained in the documentation for the
patch
that upgraded premail 0.44 to have newnym capability.
Posting to Usenet
Even though some remailers can post directly to Usenet, premail does
not support that. Thus, if you want to post to Usenet, you should use
a mail-to-news gateway.
To find a working mail-to-news gateway, check Don Kitchen's list. There
are two basic kinds: sites that scan the header fields, and sites that
include the newsgroup in the address.
Using the address-parsing kind, to post to alt.anonymous, you'd
just send mail to alt.anonymous@myriad.alias.net (assuming, of
course, that myriad.alias.net is still functioning).
Using the header-scanning kind, send mail to
mail2news@myriad.alias.net, and include this header field:
Newsgroups: alt.anonymous
The header scanning kind has one advantage: you can cross-post to
multiple newsgroups using one mail message. If you post to multiple
newsgroups, make sure you don't put a space between the newsgroups,
only a comma. Otherwise, the articles will bounce.
One frequently asked question is: how can I follow up on a thread
while posting anonymously? This is easy. Find the Message-Id:
header field in the post you're responding to, and change it into a
References: field in your outgoing mail.
Here's an example that ties it all together. Let's say you wanted
to reply to this post:
From: Edward Brian Kaufman <ebk8@columbia.edu>
Newsgroups: alt.privacy.anon-server,alt.anonymous
Subject: A few questions about anon posts
Message-ID: <Pine.SUN.3.94L.960630113156@aloha.cc.columbia.edu>
Hi,
I'd like to know what the best/easiest way to do anon posts is and
how to do them. Thank you,
Ed
To post the reply anonymously, send this mail:
To: mail2news@myriad.alias.net ((chain))
Cc: Edward Brian Kaufman <ebk8@columbia.edu> ((chain))
Newsgroups: alt.privacy.anon-server, alt.anonymous
Subject: Re: A few questions about anon posts
References: <Pine.SUN.3.94L.960630113156@aloha.cc.columbia.edu>
If you have a Unix machine, using premail is the best way. To find
out how, read the manual.
Address book
Adding the extra encryption commands is not difficult, but it can
be tedious and potentially error prone. Thus, premail provides an address
book for specifying commands to be used with specific e-mail addresses.
For example, let's say that one of your correspondents tells you
that she prefers mail to be PGP encrypted. Then, instead of typing
((encrypt-pgp)) every time you send her mail, you could add
this line to your addresses file:
her@email.address: ((encrypt-pgp))
The addresses file is usually at ~/.premail/addresses,
but the location is a configurable option.
Another example was the hackerpunks mailing list (now defunct), in
which all of the subscribers have alpha.c2.org nyms. Since
haqr@alpha.c2.org had this line in his addresses file, he was able to
post to the list with just "To: hpunks":
hpunks: hackerpunks@alpha.c2.org ((chain=2;alpha=haqr))
An address book entry can also expand to a list of addresses. For
example:
alice: alice@crypto.com ((encrypt-pgp))
bob: bwhite@got.net ((key=bobw@netcom.com))
eric: eric@ecsl.org ((encrypt-pgp))
friends: alice, bob, eric
Sending mail to friends would then do what you'd expect:
send encrypted mail to each of alice, bob, and eric's full e-mail
addresses.
S/MIME
Version 0.46 of premail contains limited support for S/MIME
messages. Basic message formatting works, but there are problems with
creating usable certificates, and there is still no support for an
encryption algorithm interoperable with RC2. However, a few hearty
souls may wish to experiment with the S/MIME functionality that is
present. This section explains how to do it.
First, you must install RIPEM 3.0b2 (or later). This is available
from the ripem export-controlled FTP site. You'll need
to get an account on the server in order to download any of the
export-controlled code - the GETTING_ACCESS
file on the site explains how.
Once you have RIPEM installed (and the ripem
configuration option pointing to the executable), create a public key
with this command:
premail -ripemkey
You will then be prompted for your e-mail address. Alternatively,
you can give your e-mail address as a command line argument to
premail -ripemkey.
After your key is created, you can send signed messages by adding
the ((ssign)) command. If you send a signed message to
another premail user, they will have your public key, and can send you
mail, by using ((encrypt=your@user.id)).
The default encryption is Triple-DES. If the recipient can't
handle it, then ((encrypt-des)) will fall back to plain DES,
which most users will be able to decrypt - probably including "export"
versions of S/MIME. Of course, the disadvantage of using plain DES is
that any competent spy organization will also be able to decrypt the
messages ;-).
Unfortunately, RIPEM 3.0b2 has some significant differences from
other S/MIME implementations in the way it handles public key
certificates. These prevent you from getting a VeriSign certificate
you can use. It is, however, possible to accept VeriSign class 1 beta
certificates by running the following (prompts and messages are in
normal font, what you type is in boldface; you can find out the
password by looking in the secrets file):
> rcerts -u your@user.id
Enter password to private key:
E - Enable standard issuers...
...other choices...
Enter choice:
e
...V - VeriSign something or other...
v
Enter the number of months the certificate will be valid, or blank to cancel:
12
Enter choice:
q
Debugging
If you run into trouble with premail, it might be of value to turn
on some of the debugging options. This can be done on the command
line, or in the .premailrc file. In the former case, add a
+debug=chvy argument to the command line. In the latter case,
try:
$config{'debug'} = 'chvy';
Here are the meanings of the debug options:
c: Print command line invocation.
h: Print headers of input message.
l: Debug output goes to log instead of stdout.
p: Print finished message, do PGP.
r: Print chain chosen (useful in debugging chain
selection).
y: Print finished message, don't do PGP.
v: Print all kinds of verbose info.
Note that +debug=p puts the encrypted message on stdout.
This may be useful for constructing reply blocks, among other things.
If there are problems with premail, then one of the best ways to
track them down is through the log. Try setting the debug
configuration option to chvl, setting the logfile
configuration option (for example, to ~/.premail/log), and
then examining the log. Also, if you're bringing bugs to my attention,
it helps a lot if you can send me relevant excerpts from the log.
Technical notes
This section covers a number of techincal notes related to the
operation of premail. This information should not be necessary for
ordinary use.
Multiple recipients
One of the tricky problems with mail encryption packages such as
premail is how to deal with multiple recipients. Based on experience
with previous versions, this version of premail tries very hard to
"get it right." However, as a consequence, the exact behavior can
sometimes be difficult to understand.
The hard part is when some of the recipients have encryption
specified and others don't. What premail does is to split the
recipients up into groups. If two recipients can receive the same
actual message, they are in the same group, otherwise not. For
example, recipients getting an encrypted and an unencrypted message
cannot be in the same group. However, multiple recipients appearing in
To: and Cc: fields that use the same encryption
method will be in the same group. A single message, encrypted to
multiple recipients, will be sent, which is considerably more
efficient than encrypting separately for each recipient.
One subtle point is the handling of Bcc: recipients. The
semantics of Bcc: specify that the mail be sent to each of
the Bcc: recipients, but that none of the other recipients be
able to find out their identity. However, encrypting to multiple
recipients would defeat this, because it is possible to indentify all
of the recipients of the encrypted message. Thus, each encrypted
Bcc: recipient gets its own group.
Each recipient of an anonymous message also gets its own group,
for similar reasons.
An attempt is made to make the headers in the message
received by the recipient be the same as if no encryption were used.
Specifically, the complete To: and Cc: header fields
will be present, but the Bcc: field will be missing. One
exception to this rule is anonymous messages, in which case the
recipient can't see any information about the other recipients.
Error handling
The goal is to handle errors in the same way as sendmail. Thus,
the exact handling depends on the setting of the -oe command
line option. The default (as in sendmail) is -oep, meaning
that the error message is printed to standard out, and the mail message is
appended to the dead letter file (the location of which is a
configuration option).
Another choice is -oem, in which case the error message
and the mail message are packaged together and mailed back to the
user. This is appropriate when the mailer has no way to deal with
error messages returned from premail.
One additional choice, not provided by sendmail, is -oed,
which prints the error message on standard out, but drops the mail
message. This is a good choice if the mailer can interpret a non-zero
return status code as indication of an error. This is the mode used by
Netscape (and is automatically selected when premail is invoked as
prezilla).
Security issues
In designing premail, usefulness and convenience were considered
more important than top security. Nonetheless, it can provide good
security, especially if you are aware of the security issues.
One overriding assumption was that your machine is secure, and
that the serious threats were those of eavesdroppers on the network
and e-mail forgers. In general, premail handles passive attacks quite
well, while containing a number of vulnerabilities to active attacks.
Here are some potential security pitfalls with premail:
- Stores secrets information on disk file.
- Stores (potentially sensitive) temporary files on disk.
- Does not check authenticity of remailer list, remailer public key
ring, or Mixmaster information gotten from the Web.
- Accessing the Web signals when anonymous mail is about to be sent,
perhaps aiding traffic analysis.
- Does not evaluate the trustworthiness of public keys used for
encryption and signature checking.
Useless features
Over the years, premail has accumulated a number of features of
dubious value. One of them is support for MOSS, a nice encryption
protocol that nevertheless failed to catch on. If you feel the urge to
use it, documentation is available in the release
notes for version 0.43.
One potentially cool feature is a server for decoding e-mail. This
would be a useful feature if there were any mailers which used
it. The protcol for the server was designed to be fast (much, much
faster than invoking premail -decode separately for each
message), as well as "crypto-neutral," meaning that it doesn't contain
any features designed just for crypto, and that it could be used for
other tasks, for example converting image formats or character sets.
Thus, a client designed to use this protocol would like be fully
exportable from the US. If you're interested in integrating support
for this protocol into a popular e-mail client, please get in touch
with me.
Related documents
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