Provided by: kuvert_2.2.6_amd64 bug

NAME

       kuvert - Automatically sign and/or encrypt emails based on the recipients

SYNOPSIS

       kuvert [-d] [-o] [-r|-k] [-c configfile]

DESCRIPTION

       Kuvert is a tool to protect the integrity and secrecy of your outgoing email independent
       of your mail client and with minimal user interaction.

       It reads mails from its queue (or accepts SMTP submissions), analyzes the recipients and
       decides to whom it should encrypt and/or sign the mail. The resulting mail is coerced into
       the PGP-MIME framework defined in RFC3156 and finally sent to your outbound mail server.
       Kuvert uses GnuPG for all cryptographic tasks and is designed to interface cleanly with
       external secret caching tools.

GETTING STARTED

       If no configuration file (~/.kuvert) exists or if that is empty, then kuvert will hand all
       emails directly on to sendmail, without any modifications whatsoever.

       To let kuvert perform encryption/signing operations, at a minimum you need to set the
       "defaultaction" option (to a value other than its default, "none").

OPTIONS

       After startup kuvert periodically scans its queue directory and processes mails from
       there; depending on your GnuPG passphrase setup kuvert may daemonize itself. In either
       case, kuvert runs forever until actively terminated.

       Kuvert's behaviour is configured primarily using a configuration file, with exception of
       the following commandline options:

       -d  Enables debugging mode: extra debugging information is written to STDERR.  (This is
           independent of normal logging.)

       -o  Enables one-shot mode: kuvert does not loop forever but processes only the current
           queue contents and then exits. Kuvert does also not start an SMTP listener in this
           mode.

       -r  Tells a running kuvert daemon to reload the configuration file and the gpg keyring.
           This is equivalent to sending a SIGUSR1 to the respective process.

       -k  Tells a running kuvert daemon to terminate cleanly. This is equivalent to sending a
           SIGTERM to the respective process.

       -c <configfile>
           Tells kuvert to use the given config file instead of ~/.kuvert.

OPERATION

       At startup kuvert reads its configuration file and your gnugp keyring and remembers the
       association of email addresses to keys.

       Kuvert then works as a wrapper around your mail transfer agent (MTA): you author your
       emails like always but instead of sending them out directly you submit them to kuvert.

       Periodically kuvert scans its queue and processes any email therein.  If your keyring
       contains a key for a recipient, kuvert will encrypt and sign the email to that recipient.
       If no key is available, kuvert will only (clear/detached-)sign the email. Subsequently,
       the email is sent onwards using your MTA program or SMTP.

       Emails to be processed can have any valid MIME structure; kuvert unpacks the MIME
       structure losslessly and repacks the (encrypted/signed) mail into a PGP/MIME object as
       described in RFC3156. The mail's structure is preserved. Signature and encryption cover
       all of the mail content with the exception of the top-level headers: for example the
       "Subject" header will be passed in clear, whereas any body or attached MIME object will be
       signed/encrypted.

       The encrypt-or-sign decision can be overridden on a per-address basis using the
       configuration file or, even more fine-grainedly, by using directives in the actual email.
       Kuvert can also be told not to modify an email at all.

   Submitting Emails to Kuvert
       Kuvert primarily relies on mails being dumped into its queue directory.  Kuvert operates
       on files with numeric file names only. Anything that you store in its queue directory with
       such a filename will be treated as containing a single RFC2822-formatted email.

       However, no mainstream MUA supports such a drop-your-files-somewhere scheme, and therefore
       kuvert comes with a helper program called kuvert_submit (see kuvert_submit(1))  which
       mimics sendmail's mail submission behaviour but feeds to the kuvert queue. If your MUA can
       be instructed to run a program for mail submission, kuvert_submit can be used.

       Alternatively, you can send your email to kuvert via SMTP. Kuvert comes with a built-in
       receive-only mail server, which feeds to the queue directory.  As allowing others to
       submit emails for your signature would be silly and dangerous, kuvert's mail server only
       listens on the localhost IP address and requires that your MUA uses SMTP Authentication to
       ensure that only your submissions are accepted. If your MUA supports SMTP AUTH PLAIN or
       LOGIN and can be told to use localhost and a specific port for outbound email, then you
       can use this mechanism.

   Transporting Emails Onwards
       Kuvert can send outbound emails either by running a local MTA program or by speaking SMTP
       to some (fixed) outbound mail server of your choice.

   Recipients, Identities and the SMTP Envelope
       In general kuvert identifies recipients using the To, Cc, Bcc and Resent-To headers of the
       queued email. If the mechanism you used to submit the mail to kuvert did explicitely set
       recipients, then these override the headers within the email.

       This is the case if kuvert_submit is called with a list of recipients and no -t option and
       for SMTP submission.

       If kuvert enqueues email via inbound SMTP, the SMTP envelope overrides the email headers:
       recipients that are present in the envelope but not the headers are treated as Bcc'd, and
       recipients listed in the headers but not the envelope are ignored. Any Resent-To header is
       ignored for SMTP-submitted email.

       Only if no overriding recipients are given, kuvert checks the mail for a Resent-To header.
       If present, the email is sent out immediately to the Resent-To addresses without further
       processing. (This is the standard "bounce" behaviour for MUAs that don't pass recipients
       on to an MSP/MTA directly.)

       When sending outbound email, kuvert usually uses the From header from the queued email as
       identity. If the email was queued via SMTP, the envelope again overrides the mail headers.

       Note that kuvert sets the envelope sender using "-f" if sending email via a local MTA
       program; if you are not sufficiently trusted by your MTA to do such, your mail may get an
       X-Authentication-Warning header tacked on that indicates your username and the fact that
       the envelope was set explicitely.

   Passphrase Handling
       Kuvert does not handle your precious keys' passphrases. You can either elect to use gpg-
       agent as an (on-demand or caching) passphrase store, or you can tell kuvert what program
       it should run to query for a passphrase when required. Such a query program will be run in
       a pipeline to GnuPG, and kuvert will not access, store or cache the passphrases
       themselves: there are better options available for secret caching, for example the Linux
       in-kernel keystorage (keyctl(1)).

   How Kuvert Decides What (Not) To Do
       For each recipient, kuvert can be told to apply one of five different action overrides:

       none
           The email is sent as-is (except for configuration directive removal).

       signonly
           The email is (clear/detached-) signed.

       fallback
           The email is encrypted and signed if there is a key available for this recipient or
           only signed if not.

       fallback-all
           The email is encrypted and signed if keys are available for all recipients, or only
           signed otherwise. Recipients whose action is set to "none" and Bcc'd recipients are
           not affected by this action.

           The fallback-all action is an "all-or-nothing" action as far as encryption is
           concerned and ensures that no mix of encrypted or unencrypted versions of this email
           are sent out: if we can we use encryption for everybody, or otherwise everybody gets
           it signed (or even unsigned).  (Bcc'd recipients are the exception.)

       mustencrypt
           The mustencrypt action is an "all-or-nothing" action and ensures that any emails
           involving such addresses are only sent out if the email can be encrypted for every
           recipient.

           The email is rejected and not sent to anybody at all, if any addresses are present
           that have the mustencrypt directive set but where no key is known.  Bcc'd recipients
           are included in this decision.

           This action overrides fallback-all.

   Specifying Actions
       Kuvert uses four sources for action specifications: directives in the individual email
       addresses, action directives in the configuration file, an X-Kuvert header in your email,
       and finally the default action given in the configuration file.

       1.  First kuvert looks for action directives in your configuration file.  Such directives
           are given as action plus regular expression to be matched against an address, and the
           first matching directive is used.

       2.  If no matching directive is found, the default action given in the configuration file
           is applied.

       3.  Kuvert now checks for the presence of an X-Kuvert header: its content must be an
           action keyword, which is applied to all recipients of this email except the ones whose
           action at this stage is "none".  (In other words: if you specify "no encryption and no
           signing" for some addresses, then this cannot be overridden in a blanket fashion.)

       4.  Kuvert then analyzes each recipient email address. If an address has the format
            Some Text "action=someaction" <user@some.host>", kuvert strips the quoted part and
           overrides the addressee's action with someaction.

       5.  If any "mustencrypt" recipient action is present, but no key is known (or given in an
           override, see section "Key Selection"), then the whole mail is rejected and not sent
           to anybody.

       6.  Finally kuvert checks if any recipient has action "fallback-all". If so, kuvert

           a)  checks if any recipients (except Bcc'd) have action "signonly" or "none". If this
               is the case, all "fallback" and "fallback-all" actions are downgraded to
               "signonly".

           b)  checks if keys for all recipients (except Bcc'd) are available. If not, all
               "fallback" and "fallback-all" actions are downgraded to "signonly".

       7.  Recipients which are given in a Bcc: header are always treated independently and
           separately from all others (except for mustencrypt): any "fallback-all" action is
           downgraded to "fallback" for Bcc'd addresses, and if encryption is used, the email is
           encrypted separately so that no record of the Bcc'd recipient is visible in the email
           as sent out to the "normal" recipients. Also, any Bcc: header is removed before
           sending an email onwards.

   Key Selection
       Kuvert depends on the order of keys in your keyring to determine which key (of potentially
       many) with a given address should be used for encryption.  By default kuvert uses the last
       key that it encounters for a given address.  For people who have multiple keys for a
       single address this can cause problems, and therefore kuvert has override mechanisms for
       encryption key selection: You can specify a key to encrypt to for an address in the
       configuration file (see below), or you can override the key selection for and within a
       single mail:

       If the recipient address is given in the format

        Some Name "key=keyid" <user@some.host>

       Kuvert will strip the double-quoted part and use this particular key for this recipient
       and for this single email. The keyid must be given as the hex key identifier. This
       mechanism overrides whatever associations your keyring contains and should be used with
       caution.  Note that both key and action overrides can be given concurrently as a single
       comma-separated entry like this:

        Some Name "action=fallback,key=0x12345" <user@some.host>

       The signing key can be overridden in a similar fashion: if the From address contains a
       "key=keyid" stanza, kuvert will use this key for signing this single email.

CONFIGURATION

       The kuvert configuration file is plain text, blank lines and lines that start with "#" are
       ignored.

       The configuration has of two categories: options and address/action specifications.

   Address and Action
       Address+action specifications are given one per line.  Such lines must start with some
       whitespace, followed by an address regexp, followed by some whitespace and the action
       keyword.  For actions "fallback" and "fallback-all" kuvert also allows you to specify a
       single key identifier like this: "fallback,0x42BD645D".  The remainder of the line is
       ignored.

       The address regexp is a full Perl regular expression and will be applied to the raw SMTP
       address (i.e. not to the comment or name in the email address), case-insensitively. The
       regular expression may need to be anchored with ^ and $; kuvert does not do that for you.
       You must give just the core of the regexp (no m// or //), like in this example:

        # don't confuse mailing list robots
        ^.*-request@.*$  none

       The action keyword must be one of "none", "signonly", "fallback", "fallback-all" or
       "mustencrypt"; see section "How Kuvert Decides What (Not) To Do" for semantics. Order of
       action specifications in the config file is significant: the search terminates on first
       match.

   Options
       Options are given one per line, and option lines must start with the option name followed
       by some whitespace. All options are case-sensitive.  Depending on the option content, some
       or all of the remainder of the option line will be assigned as option value. Inline
       comments are not supported.

       In the following list of options angle brackets denote required arguments like this:

        defaultkey <hexkeyid>

       Options that have boolean arguments recognize "1", "on" and "t" as true and "0", "off",
       "f" as false (plus their upper-case versions).  Other options have more restricted
       argument types; kuvert generally sanity-checks options at startup.

   Known Options
       syslog <syslog facility or blank>
           Whether kuvert should use syslog for logging, and if so, what facility to use.
           Default: nothing. This is independent of the logfile option below.  kuvert uses your
           locale's encoding for all messages sent to syslog.

       logfile <path or blank>
           Whether kuvert should write log messages to a file, appending to it.  Default: not
           set. This is independent of the syslog option above.  kuvert uses your locale's
           encoding for saving data to the logfile.

       mail-on-error <email address or blank>
           If kuvert encounters serious or fatal errors, an email is sent back to this address if
           set. Default: undef. This email is sent in addition to the normal logging via syslog
           or logfile.

       queuedir <path>
           Where kuvert and its helper programs store mails to be processed.  Default:
           ~/.kuvert_queue. The directory is created if necessary. The directory must be owned by
           the user running kuvert and have mode 0700.

       tempdir <path>
           Where kuvert stores temporary files. Default: a directory called kuvert.<username> in
           $TMPDIR or /tmp. The directory is created if necessary, and must be owned by the user
           running kuvert and have mode 0700.  This directory is completely emptied after
           processing an email.

       identify <boolean>
           Whether kuvert should add an X-Mailer header to outbound emails.  Default: false. The
           X-Mailer header consists of the program name and version.

       preamble <boolean>
           Whether kuvert should include an explanatory preamble in the generated MIME mail.
           Default: true

       interval <number>
           This sets the queue checking interval in seconds. Default: 60 seconds.

       msserver <hostname-or-address>
           Mail Submission Server for outbound email. Default: unset.  If this is set, kuvert
           will use SMTP to send outbound emails.  If not set, kuvert uses the mail submission
           program on the local machine.  See msp below.

       msport <portnumber>
           The TCP port on which the Mail Submission Server listens. Default: 587.  Ignored if
           msserver is not set.

       ssl <string>
           Whether SSL or STARTTLS are to be used for outbound SMTP submission.  The value must
           be either "starttls" to use STARTTLS or "ssl" for raw SSL.  SSL encryption is not used
           if this option is unset.

       ssl-cert <client cert path.pem>
       ssl-key <client key path.pem>
       ssl-ca <ca cert path.pem>
           If an SSL client certificate is to be presented to the SMTP server, set both ssl-cert
           and ssl-key. If your system-wide CA certificate setup doesn't include the certificate
           your SMTP server uses, set ssl-ca to point to a PEM file containing all the relevant
           CA certificates. All these are ignored if the ssl option isn't set.

       msuser <username>
           The username to use for SMTP authentication at the Mail Submission Server.  SMTP Auth
           is not attempted if msuser isn't set. Ignored if msserver is not set.

       mspass <password>
           The password for SMTP authentication. Ignored if msserver or msuser are not set.

       mspass-from-query-secret <boolean>
           Whether the mspass should be retrieved using the query-secret program instead of
           giving the mspass in the config file. Ignored if msserver or msuser are not set. If
           this option is set, the query-secret program will be used to ask for the "smtp-
           password" when the first mail is processed. The password will be cached if
           authentication succeeds or you will be asked again, until authentication succeeds.

       msp <program-path and args>
           Defines the program kuvert should use to deliver email.  Default: "/usr/sbin/sendmail
           -om -oi -oem".  This is ignored if msserver is set. The argument must include the full
           path to the program, and the program must accept the common mail transfer agent
           arguments as defined in the Linux Standards Base (see
           <http://refspecs.linux-foundation.org/LSB_2.0.0/LSB-Core/LSB-Core.html#BASELIB-SENDMAIL-1>).

       gpg <program-path>
           Defines which custom GnuPG executable kuvert should use.  If this option is given the
           argument must be a full path to an executable.  Default: "gpg", i.e. anywhere in the
           path.

       can-detach <boolean>
           Indicates to kuvert that it can background itself on startup, detaching from the
           terminal. Default: false.

           Detaching works only if your chosen mechanism for passphrase entry doesn't require
           interaction via the original terminal. This is the case if you delegate passphrase
           handling to gpg-agent and configure it for X11 pinentry, or if your secret-query
           program is an X11 program with its own window.

       maport <portnumber>
           Kuvert can accept email for processing via SMTP. This option sets the TCP port kuvert
           listens on (localhost only). Default: 2587.  Ignored if ma-user and ma-pass are not
           both set. If you want to use this mechanism, tell your mail program to use localhost
           or 127.0.0.1 as outgoing mail server and enable SMTP Authentication (see below).

       ma-user <username>
           This option sets the required SMTP authentication username for accepting mails via
           SMTP. Default: undef.  Kuvert does not listen for SMTP submissions unless both ma-user
           and ma-pass are set.  Kuvert does not accept emails for processing via SMTP unless you
           prove your identity with SMTP Authentication (or anybody on your local machine could
           use kuvert to send emails signed by you!). Kuvert currently supports only AUTH PLAIN
           and LOGIN (which is not a major problem as we listen on the loopback interface only).
           This option sets the username kuvert recognizes as yours.  This can be anything and
           doesn't have to be a real account name.

       ma-pass <password>
           This option sets the password your mail user agent must use for SMTP Authentication if
           submitting mails via SMTP. Default: unset.  Kuvert does not listen for SMTP
           submissions unless both ma-user and ma-pass are set. This password does not have to be
           (actually shouldn't be) your real account's password. Note that using SMTP submission
           requires that you protect your kuvert configuration file with strict permissions (0600
           is suggested).

       defaultkey <hexkeyid>
           Specifies a default key to use as signing key. Default: unset, which means GnuPG gets
           to choose (usually the first available secret key).  Can be overridden in the From:
           address, see section "Key Selection".

       defaultaction <action>
           Which action is to be taken if no overrides are found for a recipient.  Default: none.
           See section "How Kuvert Decides What (Not) To Do" for recognized actions.

       alwaystrust <boolean>
           Whether gpg should be told to trust all keys for encryption or not.  Default: false.

       use-agent <boolean>
           Whether kuvert should delegate all passphrase handling to the gpg-agent and call gpg
           with appropriate options. Default: false.  If not set, kuvert will ask the user (or
           some nominated passphrase store) for passphrases on demand.

       query-secret <program-path and args with %s>
           Tells kuvert which program to use for passphrase retrieval.  Default: "/bin/sh -c
           'stty -echo; read -p \"Passphrase %s: \" X; \ stty echo; echo $X'" Ignored if use-
           agent is set. Kuvert does not store passphrases internally but rather runs the
           indicated program in a pipeline with gpg when signing.  If you use a passphrase store
           (like the Linux-kernel keyutils or secret-agent or the like), enter your retrieval
           program here.  The program is run with kuvert's environment, the first %s in the
           argument spec is replaced with the hex keyid and the passphrase is expected on stdout.
           The exit code is ignored. If can-detach is not set, the program has access to kuvert's
           terminal.  Note that the default query program prohibits kuvert from backgrounding
           itself.

       flush-secret <program-path and args with %s>
           This program is called to invalidate an external passphrase cache if kuvert is
           notified by gpg of the passphrase being invalid. Default: undef.  Ignored if use-agent
           is set. The program is run with kuvert's environment and with the first %s of its
           argument spec being replaced by the hex keyid in question. Its exit code is ignored.
           If can-detach is not set, the program has access to kuvert's terminal.

DIAGNOSTICS

       Kuvert usually logs informational messages to syslog and/or its own logfile, both of which
       can be disabled and adjusted.

       If kuvert detects a fault that makes successful processing of a particular email
       impossible, kuvert will report that on STDERR (if not detached) and also email an error
       report if the option mail-on-error is enabled. Such partially or completely unprocessed
       mails are left in the queue but are renamed (the name is prefixed with "failed."); it is
       up to you to either remove such leftovers or rename them to something all-numeric once the
       problem has been resolved.

       The behaviour is similar if fatal problems are encountered; after alerting kuvert will
       terminate with exit code 1.

ENVIRONMENT AND SIGNALS

       Kuvert itself uses only on environment variable: $TMPDIR provides the fallback location
       for kuvert's temporary directory.

       Kuvert passes its complete environment to child processes, namely gpg and any passphrase-
       query programs.

       On reception of SIGUSR1, kuvert reloads its configuration file and keyring.  Any one of
       SIGHUP, SIGINT, SIGQUIT and SIGTERM causes kuvert to terminate cleanly, invalidating the
       passphrases if a query program is used.  All other signals are ignored.

FILES

       ~/.kuvert
           The configuration file read by kuvert and kuvert_submit.

       ~/.kuvert_queue
           The default queue directory.

       /tmp/kuvert.pid.<uid>
           holds the pid of a running kuvert daemon.

SEE ALSO

       gpg(1), kuvert_submit(1), RFC3156, RFC4880, RFC2015

AUTHOR

       Alexander Zangerl <az@snafu.priv.at>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENCE

       copyright 1999-2014 Alexander Zangerl <az@snafu.priv.at>

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of
       the GNU General Public License version 2 as published by the Free Software Foundation.