Provided by: libmail-dkim-perl_0.44-1_all bug

NAME

       Mail::DKIM::ARC::Signer - generates a DKIM signature for a message

SYNOPSIS

         use Mail::DKIM::ARC::Signer;
         use Mail::DKIM::TextWrap;  #recommended

         # create a signer object
         my $signer = Mail::DKIM::ARC::Signer->new(
                         Algorithm => "rsa-sha1",
                         Chain => "none",    # or pass|fail
                         Domain => "example.org",
                         Selector => "selector1",
                         KeyFile => "private.key",
                         Headers => "x-header:x-header2",
                    );

         # read an email from a file handle
         $signer->load(*STDIN);

         # NOTE: any email being ARC signed must have an Authentication-Results
         # header so that the ARC seal can cover those results copied into
         # an ARC-Authentication-Results header.

         # or read an email and pass it into the signer, one line at a time
         while (<STDIN>)
         {
             # remove local line terminators
             chomp;
             s/\015$//;

             # use SMTP line terminators
             $signer->PRINT("$_\015\012");
         }
         $signer->CLOSE;

         die "Failed" $signer->result_details() unless $signer->result() eq 'sealed';

         # Get all the signature headers to prepend to the message
         # ARC-Seal, ARC-Message-Signature and ARC-Authentication-Results
         # in that order.
         print $signer->as_string;

DESCRIPTION

       This class is the part of Mail::DKIM responsible for generating ARC Seals for a given
       message. You create an object of this class, specifying the parameters for the ARC-
       Message-Signature you wish to create.

       You also need to pass the 'Chain' value (pass or fail) from validation of the previous
       ARC-Seals on the message.

       Next, you feed it the entire message using "PRINT()", completing with "CLOSE()".

       Finally, use the "as_string()" method to get the new ARC headers.

       Note: you can only seal a message which has already had an Authentication-Results header
       added, either by using "PRINT()" to pre-feed it into this module, or by adding a message
       which has already been authenticated by your inbound scanning mechanisms.

       It is not necessary to ARC-Seal a message which already has DKIM signatures if you are not
       modifying the message and hence breaking the existing DKIM-Signature or top ARC-Message-
       Signature on the email.

   Pretty Signatures
       Mail::DKIM includes a signature-wrapping module (which inserts linebreaks into the
       generated signature so that it looks nicer in the resulting message. To enable this
       module, simply call

         use Mail::DKIM::TextWrap;

       in your program before generating the signature.

CONSTRUCTOR

   new()
       Construct an object-oriented signer.

         # create a signer using the default policy
         my $signer = Mail::DKIM::ARC::Signer->new(
                         Algorithm => "rsa-sha1",
                         Chain => "none",    # or pass|fail
                         Domain => "example.org",
                         Selector => "selector1",
                         KeyFile => "private.key",
                         Headers => "x-header:x-header2",
                    );

       Key rather than using "KeyFile", use "Key" to use an already-loaded Mail::DKIM::PrivateKey
           object.

       Headers
           A colon separated list of headers to sign, this is added to the list of default
           headers as shown in in the DKIM specification.

           For each specified header all headers of that type which are present in the message
           will be signed, but we will not oversign or sign headers which are not present.

           If you require greater control over signed headers please use the extended_headers()
           method instead.

           The list of headers signed by default is as follows

               From Sender Reply-To Subject Date
               Message-ID To Cc MIME-Version
               Content-Type Content-Transfer-Encoding Content-ID Content-Description
               Resent-Date Resent-From Resent-Sender Resent-To Resent-cc
               Resent-Message-ID
               In-Reply-To References
               List-Id List-Help List-Unsubscribe List-Subscribe
               List-Post List-Owner List-Archive

METHODS

   PRINT()
       Feed part of the message to the signer.

         $signer->PRINT("a line of the message\015\012");

       Feeds content of the message being signed into the signer.  The API is designed this way
       so that the entire message does NOT need to be read into memory at once.

       Please note that although the PRINT() method expects you to use SMTP-style line
       termination characters, you should NOT use the SMTP-style dot-stuffing technique described
       in RFC 2821 section 4.5.2.  Nor should you use a <CR><LF>.<CR><LF> sequence to terminate
       the message.

   CLOSE()
       Call this when finished feeding in the message.

         $signer->CLOSE;

       This method finishes the canonicalization process, computes a hash, and generates a
       signature.

   extended_headers()
       This method overrides the headers to be signed and allows more control than is possible
       with the Headers property in the constructor.

       The method expects a HashRef to be passed in.

       The Keys are the headers to sign, and the values are either the number of headers of that
       type to sign, or the special values '*' and '+'.

       * will sign ALL headers of that type present in the message.

       + will sign ALL + 1 headers of that type present in the message to prevent additional
       headers being added.

       You may override any of the default headers by including them in the hashref, and disable
       them by giving them a 0 value.

       Keys are case insensitive with the values being added upto the highest value.

           Headers => {
               'X-test'  => '*',
               'x-test'  => '1',
               'Subject' => '+',
               'Sender'  => 0,
           },

   add_signature()
       Used by signer policy to create a new signature.

         $signer->add_signature(new Mail::DKIM::Signature(...));

       Signer policies can use this method to specify complete parameters for the signature to
       add, including what type of signature. For more information, see Mail::DKIM::SignerPolicy.

   algorithm()
       Get or set the selected algorithm.

         $alg = $signer->algorithm;

         $signer->algorithm("rsa-sha1");

   domain()
       Get or set the selected domain.

         $alg = $signer->domain;

         $signer->domain("example.org");

   load()
       Load the entire message from a file handle.

         $signer->load($file_handle);

       Reads a complete message from the designated file handle, feeding it into the signer.  The
       message must use <CRLF> line terminators (same as the SMTP protocol).

   headers()
       Determine which headers to put in signature.

         my $headers = $signer->headers;

       This is a string containing the names of the header fields that will be signed, separated
       by colons.

   key()
       Get or set the private key object.

         my $key = $signer->key;

         $signer->key(Mail::DKIM::PrivateKey->load(File => "private.key"));

       The key object can be any object that implements the sign_digest() method.  (Providing
       your own object can be useful if your actual keys are stored out-of-process.)

       If you use this method to specify a private key, do not use "key_file()".

   key_file()
       Get or set the filename containing the private key.

         my $filename = $signer->key_file;

         $signer->key_file("private.key");

       If you use this method to specify a private key file, do not use "key()".

   message_originator()
       Access the "From" header.

         my $address = $signer->message_originator;

       Returns the "originator address" found in the message, as a Mail::Address object.  This is
       typically the (first) name and email address found in the From: header. If there is no
       From: header, then an empty Mail::Address object is returned.

       To get just the email address part, do:

         my $email = $signer->message_originator->address;

       See also "message_sender()".

   message_sender()
       Access the "From" or "Sender" header.

         my $address = $dkim->message_sender;

       Returns the "sender" found in the message, as a Mail::Address object.  This is typically
       the (first) name and email address found in the Sender: header. If there is no Sender:
       header, it is the first name and email address in the From: header. If neither header is
       present, then an empty Mail::Address object is returned.

       To get just the email address part, do:

         my $email = $dkim->message_sender->address;

       The "sender" is the mailbox of the agent responsible for the actual transmission of the
       message. For example, if a secretary were to send a message for another person, the
       "sender" would be the secretary and the "originator" would be the actual author.

   selector()
       Get or set the current key selector.

         $alg = $dkim->selector;

         $dkim->selector("alpha");

   signatures()
       Access list of generated signature objects.

         my @signatures = $dkim->signatures;

       Returns all generated signatures, as a list.

   as_string()
       Returns the new ARC headers

         my $pre_headers = $signer->as_string();

       The headers are separated by \015\012 (SMTP line separator) including a trailing
       separator, so can be directly injected in front of the raw message.

AUTHOR

       Bron Gondwana, <brong@fastmailteam.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       Copyright (C) 2017 FastMail Pty Ltd

       This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
       terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.6 or, at your option, any later version of
       Perl 5 you may have available.