Add documentation on publishing OpenPGP records in DNS.
* Taken from Dan Mahoney's post at http://www.gushi.org/make-dns-cert/HOWTO.html * Re-markdown-ified with http://html2markdown.com/, the source of which lives here: https://github.com/domchristie/to-markdownfix/24-enc-to-file
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<!--
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Livejournal Introduction:
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I recently wrestled with something, learned quite a lot, and came up with a document that I'm really rather proud of, that
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shares knowledge that's not all out there in one place anywhere else. Along the way I've written some software that I'm
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releasing, that makes all of what I've learned a lot easier, and may help make the world a little more secure. I'd like to
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share it here.
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This is going to be a technical post. For that I apologize. The target of this post is anyone who has a GPG key that they'd
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like to expand to a greater audience, and who controls DNS for any of the email domains they publish. Anyone that I host DNS
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or mail for is also welcome to do this, if you use PGP, as part of the goal of writing this is to encourage adoption and use
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of these methods
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<lj-cut text="This will be long and technical">
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-->
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# The complete guide to publishing PGP keys in DNS
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## Introduction
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Publishing PGP keys is a pain. There are many disjoint keyservers, three or
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four _networks_ of which, which do (or don't) share information with each
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other. Some are corporate, some are private. And it's a crapshoot as to
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whose key is going to be on which, or worse, which will have the latest copy
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of a person's key.
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For a long time, GPG has had a way to publish keys in DNS, but it hasn't been
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well documented. This document hopes to change that.
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After reading this, you should:
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* Know the three ways to publish a key
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* Have at least a couple tools to do so
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* Have learned a bit more about DNS
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The target audience for this guide is a technical one. It's expected you
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understand what DNS is, and what an RFC and a resource record is.
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There are three ways to publish a PGP key in DNS. Most modern versions of GPG
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can retrieve from all three, although it's not enabled by default. There are
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no compile-time options you need to enable it, and it's simple to turn on. Of
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the three key-publishing methods, there are two that you probably shouldn't
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use at the same time, and there are advantages and disadvantages to each,
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which I hope to outline below, both in general and for each method.
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### Advantages to DNS publishing of your keys
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* It's universal. Your DNS is your own, and you don't have to worry about
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which network of vastly-disconnectedkeyservers is caching your key.
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* Using DNS does not stop you from publishing via other means.
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* If you run an organization, you can easily publish all your employee-keys
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via this method, and in the same step,define a signing-policy, such that a
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person need only assign trust to your organization's "keysigning key" (or
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theCEO's key, or the CTO's), without the trouble of running a keyserver.
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* DNSSEC can be (somewhat) used as an additional trust-path vector. More on
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this in the notes at the bottom.
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* You do not have to be searching DNS for keys in order to publish. On the
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same note, you do not have to be publishing in this manner to search
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forothers there.
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### Disadvantages to DNS publishing
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* If you don't control your own DNS (or have a good relationship with your DNS
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admin), this isn't going to beas easy or even possible. Ideally, you want
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to be running BIND.
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* With two of the three methods listed here, you're going to need to be able
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to put a CERT record into your DNS. Mostweb-enabled DNS tools probably will
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not give you this ability. The third uses TXT records, which SPF has caused
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to befairly universal in web-interfaces. However, it's also the least
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standards-defined of the three.
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* Using at least some of these methods, it's not always a "set it and forget
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it" procedure. You may need toperiodically re-export your key and
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re-publish it, especially if you gain new signatures.
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* Using some of these methods, you're going to be putting some pretty large,
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pretty unwiedly lines in your DNS zones. Not everyone will easily be able
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to retrieve them, but again, you can still publish other ways.
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* Using some of these methods, DNS is just a means to an end: you still need
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to publish your key elsewhere, like a webpage,and the DNS records just point
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at it.
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* Initial verifications of most of these seem to imply that only DSA keys are
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supported, although I welcome feedback. Itseems the community is trying to
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get RSA keys to make a comeback. They're the only type supported by the
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gpg2.0 card, andthey are the default keytype. There was a while where they
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weren't, though. Since writing this document, I've discoveredthat "new" RSA
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keys work, but ancient RSA keys with no subkeys tend to misbehave.
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### Turning on key-fetching via DNS
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Inside your GPG "options" file, find the "auto-key-locate" line, and add
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"cert" and/or "pka" to the options.
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auto-key-locate cert pka (as well as other methods, like keyserver URLs)
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Don't be surprised if a lot of people don't use this method.
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Note that you can also turn on two options during signature verification.
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They are specified in a "verify-options" clause in your config file, or on the
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command line, and they are (right from the GPG manpage):
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pka-lookups
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Enable PKA lookups to verify sender addresses. Note that
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PKA is based on DNS, and so enabling this option may dis-
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close information on when and what signatures are veri-
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fied or to whom data is encrypted. This is similar to the
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"web bug" described for the auto-key-retrieve feature.
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And:
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pka-trust-increase
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Raise the trust in a signature to full if the signature
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passes PKA validation. This option is only meaningful if
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pka-lookups is set.
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You can also use the same options on the command line (as you'll see in this
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document).
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## Types of PGP Key Records
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### DNS PKA Records
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Relevant RFCs: None that I can find.
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Other Docs: The GPG source and mailing lists.
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#### Advantages
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* It's a TXT record. Easy to put in a zonefile with most management software.
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* No special tools required to generate, just three simple pieces of data.
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* Since it uses a special subzone, you can manage the _pka namespace in a
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separate zonefile.
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* GPG has an option, when verifying a signature, to look up these records
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(--verify-options pka-lookups), so it's doubly useful, both from a
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distribution and a verification point.
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#### Disadvantages
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* As with IPGP certs, you're at the mercy of the URL. This doesn't put your
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key in DNS, just the location of it, and the fingerprint. Some clients may
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not be able to support https or http 1.1.
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* Not RFC standard.
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#### Howto
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1. Figure out which key you want to export:
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%gpg --list-keys danm@prime.gushi.org
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Warning: using insecure memory!
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pub 1024D/624BB249 2000-10-02 <-- I'm going to use this one.
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uid Daniel P. Mahoney <danm@prime.gushi.org>
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uid Daniel Mahoney (Secondary Email) <gushi@gushi.org>
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sub 2048g/DE20C529 2000-10-02
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pub 1024R/309C17C5 1997-05-08
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uid Daniel P. Mahoney <danm@prime.gushi.org>
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2. Export the key to a file (I use keyid.pub.asc, but it can be anything)
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%gpg --export --armor 624BB249 > 624BB249.pub.asc
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Warning: using insecure memory!
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%
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3. Get the fingerprint for your key:
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%gpg --list-keys --fingerprint 624BB249
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gpg: WARNING: using insecure memory!
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gpg: please see http://www.gnupg.org/faq.html for more information
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pub 1024D/624BB249 2000-10-02
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Key fingerprint = C206 3054 5492 95F3 3490 37FF FBBE 5A30 624B B249 <-- That bit is your fingerprint.
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uid Daniel P. Mahoney <danm@prime.gushi.org>
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uid Daniel Mahoney (Secondary Email) <gushi@gushi.org>
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sub 2048g/DE20C529 2000-10-02
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4. Copy the file somewhere, like your webspace. It need not live on the same
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server. It needs to be accessable by the url you create in the next step.
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%cp 624BB249.pub.asc public_html/danm.pubkey.txt
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5. Make up your text record. The format is:
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danm._pka.prime.gushi.org. TXT "v=pka1;fpr=C2063054549295F3349037FFFBBE5A30624BB249;uri=http://prime.gushi.org/danm.pubkey.txt"
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We'll take this in several parts. The record label is simply the email
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address with "._pka." replacing the "@". danm@prime.gushi.org becomes
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danm._pka.prime.gushi.org. Don't forget the trailing dot, if you're using the
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fully qualified name. I recommend sticking with fully-qualified, for
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simplicity.
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The body of the record is also simple. The v portion is just a version.
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There's only one version as far as I can tell, 'pka1'. The fpr is the
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fingerprint, with all whitespace stripped, and in uppercase. The uri is the
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location a key can be retrieved from. All the "names" are lowercase,
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separated by semicolons.
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6. Publish the above record in your DNS. Bump your serial number and reload
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your nameserver. If you're using DNSSEC, re-sign your zone.
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#### Testing
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Most of the tests we're going to do for these are essentially the same
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activity. See if our DNS server is handing out an answer, and then see if GPG
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can retrieve it.
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1. A simple dig:
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%dig +short danm._pka.prime.gushi.org. TXT
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"v=pka1\;fpr=C2063054549295F3349037FFFBBE5A30624BB249\;uri=http://prime.gushi.org/danm.pubkey.txt"
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(The backslashes before the semicolons are normal). Other than that, it seems
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to make sense and match what I put in.)
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2. Test it with GPG. Rather than messing around with, and adding-from and
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deleting from live keyrings, you can do:
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%echo "foo" | gpg --no-default-keyring --keyring /tmp/gpg-$$ --encrypt --armor --auto-key-locate pka -r you@you.com
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(where you@you.com is the address of your primary key.) The /tmp/gpg-$$
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creates a random file named after your PID. What you should see, and what I
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see, is something like this:
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gpg: WARNING: using insecure memory!
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gpg: please see http://www.gnupg.org/faq.html for more information
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gpg: keyring `/tmp/gpg-39996' created
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gpg: requesting key 624BB249 from http server prime.gushi.org
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gpg: key 624BB249: public key "Daniel P. Mahoney <danm@prime.gushi.org>" imported
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gpg: public key of ultimately trusted key CF45887D not found
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gpg: 3 marginal(s) needed, 1 complete(s) needed, PGP trust model
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gpg: depth: 0 valid: 1 signed: 0 trust: 0-, 0q, 0n, 0m, 0f, 1u
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gpg: Total number processed: 1
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gpg: imported: 1
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gpg: automatically retrieved `danm@prime.gushi.org' via PKA
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gpg: DE20C529: There is no assurance this key belongs to the named user
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pub 2048g/DE20C529 2000-10-02 Daniel P. Mahoney <danm@prime.gushi.org>
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Primary key fingerprint: C206 3054 5492 95F3 3490 37FF FBBE 5A30 624B B249
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Subkey fingerprint: CE40 B786 81E2 5CB9 F7D3 1318 9488 EB58 DE20 C529
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It is NOT certain that the key belongs to the person named
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in the user ID. If you *really* know what you are doing,
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you may answer the next question with yes.
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Use this key anyway? (y/N) y
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-----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE-----
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Version: GnuPG v1.4.10 (FreeBSD)
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hQIOA5SI61jeIMUpEAf/UotgWP8VQC9VTY36HaZeXO1CTFk90x0qlPrAhJk9YaoA
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2eHNKZSoHKqaLjzTbaWnWHnNZu0IllIS+qrAwNeIAhswfzDoc8Q9+/4sGSR3LmxA
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8SEwrJIvLmGVbqJEtnH8TTHIEao/lpL/d+ul4nLfbXRn0NW+MsaCAi8UsjbLlJeV
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n4p0GQlpDoZCE55DTwMzfWMT84YVwuXTesuN+i7sSyJn2hT1rXuK1BCVcsgTcKdy
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QhIo3EfKBlfFp74yiU7QCmlAujD6U6a93mmxezPIHVx/WGXgPExVRGgEzfT/tUcI
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IQ2xMDUv4BF05hgm04GPGCbBY431j4UkdWWI6bvMLwgA2i01NmflH/6Z8+ss6J1M
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e3RWnR7TPl5lDkXFBtLGAzO+HrsC5A32SbkTw+WsljCQLifJ2EalfoJ1QGY4Sp3v
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H2YunwZLVPTc+D2JnrXfqNmi5zYZio8by3c8L0CgWdMwZ7PPxZpTOLN77/MIjBkJ
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EBb8Z6SZCgzTIhN5z56ZgWFvmSKf1vKkeUcrgxMs+DnA+XqBMJ9w520JwoTLjJza
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syrlYVhd+ktY21DYB9OJ5MZx2HMAtkUDRAzW1zoLcehk1kdZNzhpjU5hqSjT8/GN
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trKFeqkmKemrq2GvMNyJyrEOB8e7KgbmXa95YKH0Wh2D4SWpXukegyCspmY4tDE+
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uckaFSao+48g8D6vs1irGSxBRjyhD/jPDblrgpo=
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=NbgW
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-----END PGP MESSAGE-----
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The "insecure memory" warning is a silly warning that the only way to turn off is to run GPG setuid root.
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You can see in the output that the key comes from PKA.
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The "it is NOT certain" warning has nothing to do with the fact that it came
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from DNS. You will get that warning every time you use that key (or any gpg
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key) until you have edited it and assigned ownertrust to it, or until the key
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is signed with a trusted signature, either from your personal web of trust, or
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from a signing service like the pgp.com directory.
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3. Ask other people to run it for you and send you the resulting blob. You should be able to decrypt it with your private key.
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### PGP CERT Records
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Also known as: The "big" CERT record.
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Relevant RFCs: [RFC 2538](http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc2538.html),
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[RFC 4398](http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc4398.html), specifically sections 2.1
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and 3.3
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#### Advantages
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* DNS is all you need. You don't have to host the key elsewhere. As a DNS
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nerd, this strikes me as very cool.
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* Suprisingly easy to verify with dig, if you have a base64 converter handy
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(openssl includes one)
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#### Disadvantages
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* These records can get big. Really big. Especially if you have photo-ids on your keys. You can play with export-options to shrink it somewhat. Big dns packets may require EDNS, or dns-over-tcp, which not everyone supports, but support is becoming more widespread as a result of DNSSEC awareness.
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* Requires the make-dns-cert tool, which isn't built by default.
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* Requires you to have some control over your actual zonefile. Most control panels won't cut it.
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* Make-dns-cert currently generates a very ugly record for this.
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#### How to
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1. As before, the first step is to figure out which key we want.
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%gpg --list-keys danm@prime.gushi.org
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Warning: using insecure memory!
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pub 1024D/624BB249 2000-10-02 <-- I'm going to use this one.
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uid Daniel P. Mahoney <danm@prime.gushi.org>
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uid Daniel Mahoney (Secondary Email) <gushi@gushi.org>
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sub 2048g/DE20C529 2000-10-02
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pub 1024R/309C17C5 1997-05-08
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uid Daniel P. Mahoney <danm@prime.gushi.org>
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2. We export the key, but this time, it needs to be binary.
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%gpg --export 624BB249 > 624BB249.pub.bin
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Warning: using insecure memory!
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3. We run make-dns-cert on it. make-dns-cert comes with no manual or docs,
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but running with -h gives you all the clue you need.
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make-dns-cert
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-f fingerprint
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-u URL
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-k key file
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-n DNS name
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So then,
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make-dns-cert -n danm.prime.gushi.org. -k 624BB249.pub.bin
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<pre>`%make-dns-cert -n danm.prime.gushi.org. -k 624BB249.pub.bin
|
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danm.prime.gushi.org. TYPE37 \# 1298 0003 0000 00 9901A20439D8DAF1110400F770EC6AA006076334BEC6DB6FBB237DC194BC0AB8
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302C8953F04C28FC2085235D4F10EFA027234FBD63D142CCADD5213AD2B79A22C89ED9B4138370D8220D0F987F993A5364A4A7AC3D42F3765C384
|
||||
71DDD0FF3372E4AE6F7BEE1E18EF464A0BEB5BBE860A08238891455EBE7CB53D567E981F78ADBD263206B0493ADCB74DD00A0FF0E9A1CD245415E
|
||||
CEF59435162AFCE4CDD14BC70400EA38FF501256E773DEA299404854D99F4EDB2757AA911A9C77C68AB8D6622E517A556C43D21F0523C568F016C
|
||||
D0DB89EF435F0D53B4E07434213F899E6578955DC2C147931E7B6901C9FD8A02705417D69A879B3CC196D2AC2EAEF311192EE89ABAF5A60942167
|
||||
B4625735FCBDFB5DE0E3AC1236A53FA4D7CDD7D75F5DE85AF50400867D9546B28B79AF10541053CF4AB06A6171BFD21458BFD12AF1AE2B2401CAD
|
||||
8851661F8AF6602F80EDAC99C79616BE1F910F4156242003779C68D7A079A8B18F89DD293E1B247E7420471300A4A0730AA61DE281CCC211FC405
|
||||
A0A8A79877999FF9042AD892AB927DA371E8883BBB370AB7A97841408C3486BB18598CF2559BB42844616E69656C20502E204D61686F6E6579203
|
||||
C64616E6D407072696D652E67757368692E6F72673E884E04101102000E050239D8DAF1040B030102021901000A0910FBBE5A30624BB249FA2E00
|
||||
9B057503ED498695AE5ED73CA1B98EBAEE13F717E500A0921E0D92724459100266FEBBC29E911C8B0F530BB43244616E69656C204D61686F6E657
|
||||
920285365636F6E6461727920456D61696C29203C67757368694067757368692E6F72673E8860041311020020050245D49FD7021B23060B090807
|
||||
030204150208030416020301021E01021780000A0910FBBE5A30624BB249158400A082C8AF43DA8B85F740D6B1A6E9FF0B4490520B8C00A08F77D
|
||||
21FBF86C842963E8090DC0646D1DD7F95C9B9020D0439D8DAF4100800F64257B7087F081772A2BAD6A942F305E8F95311394FB6F16EB94B3820DA
|
||||
01A756A314E98F4055F3D007C6CB43A994ADF74C648649F80C83BD65E917D4A1D350F8F5595FDC76524F3D3D8DDBCE99E1579259CDFDB8AE744FC
|
||||
5FC76BC83C5473061CE7CC966FF15F9BBFD915EC701AAD35B9E8DA0A5723AD41AF0BF4600582BE5F488FD584E49DBCD20B49DE49107366B336C38
|
||||
0D451D0F7C88B31C7C5B2D8EF6F3C923C043F0A55B188D8EBB558CB85D38D334FD7C175743A31D186CDE33212CB52AFF3CE1B1294018118D7C84A
|
||||
70A72D686C40319C807297ACA950CD9969FABD00A509B0246D3083D66A45D419F9C7CBD894B221926BAABA25EC355E9320B3B00020207FF5E1A3C
|
||||
C5DA00E1E94EC8EF6C7FE9B49D944C71D8BBC817DD8E64A7344B9E48392E0B833B3B1DB7E6D5A38BE2826DEF0060F78C6417871EAF1CFBCBC47D2
|
||||
7E93718D975E0A3A36D868C021D6B771740CE2918307D69D614BBF0632DC31932EA31397A7F3B04618C9A76C2F38265C7037E303EDD8AEF03D069
|
||||
208E3FE9C4EA77D83E6311ED36C013D58C54E914B263A459E22D463A0288510C4752B99C163EEA0A55686979691AB0D9F9AA0C06C834446D7A723
|
||||
EC534D819301382621ACF8930C74E9FD28C8797718AEC2C30CF601E24194B799234104A3D6239657B1D4AD545BDAA637F61541435CB51B4D138FB
|
||||
F55E1A9FD2EED860E4459D6795B6FCCA23155A8846041811020006050239D8DAF4000A0910FBBE5A30624BB249415A009E37BCFDC64E76CBF6A86
|
||||
82B85EA161BD1DFB793DF00A0C471BC7B9723535CD855D8FF1EB93F01E251B698
|
||||
%
|
||||
|
||||
The program prints that all on **one line**.
|
||||
|
||||
Immediately, we notice a few things.
|
||||
|
||||
* The record type isn't "CERT", it's "TYPE37". This confused me for a while until I discovered [RFC3597](http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc3597.html) Basically, it's a way that a DNS server can handle a resource record it doesn't know about, by giving it some special fields like the "#", as well as a length (which is the 1298 you see there).
|
||||
|
||||
* The rest of the record is on one line. I wrapped it for the purposes of brevity. If I were using this in a zonefile, I would need to be careful that I wrapped it on a byte-boundary (every two characters is a byte). If I miss the boundary, named will refuse to load it, dnssec-signzone won't touch it, etc.
|
||||
|
||||
4. So the thing is ugly and you don't want to touch it. The easiest way to work with it is to drop all that into a file:
|
||||
|
||||
%make-dns-cert -n danm.prime.gushi.org. -k 624BB249.pub.bin > 624BB249.big.cert
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
5. And then either read it into your editor, or tack it on like this:
|
||||
|
||||
%cat 624BB249.big.cert >> your.zonefile
|
||||
|
||||
Be sure to make a backup first. Either way, you never have to copy/paste the raw hex and worry about newlines being inserted where you don't want them.
|
||||
|
||||
6. Before you reload your zone, you might want to use named-checkzone on it first:
|
||||
|
||||
prime# named-checkzone gushi.org gushi.org.hosts
|
||||
zone gushi.org/IN: loaded serial 2009102909
|
||||
OK
|
||||
prime#
|
||||
|
||||
7. Voice of experience: You may want to dial the TTL (which controls how long servers will cache your data) way down on the record above. It's not hard, just put a number before the TYPE37, with a space, i.e:
|
||||
|
||||
danm.prime.gushi.org. 30 TYPE37
|
||||
|
||||
This way if it all goes terribly wrong, or you need to make changes, it won't be cached for very long.
|
||||
|
||||
8. If it looks okay, bump your serial number and reload.
|
||||
|
||||
#### Testing
|
||||
|
||||
1. As above, you can dig, but you won't be able to easily read the results:
|
||||
|
||||
prime# dig +short danm.prime.gushi.org CERT
|
||||
;; Truncated, retrying in TCP mode.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
PGP 0 0
|
||||
mQGiBDnY2vERBAD3cOxqoAYHYzS+xttvuyN9wZS8CrgwLIlT8Ewo/CCF
|
||||
I11PEO+gJyNPvWPRQsyt1SE60reaIsie2bQTg3DYIg0PmH+ZOlNkpKes
|
||||
PULzdlw4Rx3dD/M3Lkrm977h4Y70ZKC+tbvoYKCCOIkUVevny1PVZ+mB
|
||||
94rb0mMgawSTrct03QCg/w6aHNJFQV7O9ZQ1Fir85M3RS8cEAOo4/1AS
|
||||
Vudz3qKZQEhU2Z9O2ydXqpEanHfGirjWYi5RelVsQ9IfBSPFaPAWzQ24
|
||||
nvQ18NU7TgdDQhP4meZXiVXcLBR5Mee2kByf2KAnBUF9aah5s8wZbSrC
|
||||
6u8xEZLuiauvWmCUIWe0Ylc1/L37XeDjrBI2pT+k183X119d6Fr1BACG
|
||||
fZVGsot5rxBUEFPPSrBqYXG/0hRYv9Eq8a4rJAHK2IUWYfivZgL4DtrJ
|
||||
nHlha+H5EPQVYkIAN3nGjXoHmosY+J3Sk+GyR+dCBHEwCkoHMKph3igc
|
||||
zCEfxAWgqKeYd5mf+QQq2JKrkn2jceiIO7s3CrepeEFAjDSGuxhZjPJV
|
||||
m7QoRGFuaWVsIFAuIE1haG9uZXkgPGRhbm1AcHJpbWUuZ3VzaGkub3Jn
|
||||
PohOBBARAgAOBQI52NrxBAsDAQICGQEACgkQ+75aMGJLskn6LgCbBXUD
|
||||
7UmGla5e1zyhuY667hP3F+UAoJIeDZJyRFkQAmb+u8KekRyLD1MLtDJE
|
||||
YW5pZWwgTWFob25leSAoU2Vjb25kYXJ5IEVtYWlsKSA8Z3VzaGlAZ3Vz
|
||||
aGkub3JnPohgBBMRAgAgBQJF1J/XAhsjBgsJCAcDAgQVAggDBBYCAwEC
|
||||
HgECF4AACgkQ+75aMGJLskkVhACggsivQ9qLhfdA1rGm6f8LRJBSC4wA
|
||||
oI930h+/hshClj6AkNwGRtHdf5XJuQINBDnY2vQQCAD2Qle3CH8IF3Ki
|
||||
utapQvMF6PlTETlPtvFuuUs4INoBp1ajFOmPQFXz0AfGy0OplK33TGSG
|
||||
SfgMg71l6RfUodNQ+PVZX9x2Uk89PY3bzpnhV5JZzf24rnRPxfx2vIPF
|
||||
RzBhznzJZv8V+bv9kV7HAarTW56NoKVyOtQa8L9GAFgr5fSI/VhOSdvN
|
||||
ILSd5JEHNmszbDgNRR0PfIizHHxbLY7288kjwEPwpVsYjY67VYy4XTjT
|
||||
NP18F1dDox0YbN4zISy1Kv884bEpQBgRjXyEpwpy1obEAxnIByl6ypUM
|
||||
2Zafq9AKUJsCRtMIPWakXUGfnHy9iUsiGSa6q6Jew1XpMgs7AAICB/9e
|
||||
GjzF2gDh6U7I72x/6bSdlExx2LvIF92OZKc0S55IOS4Lgzs7Hbfm1aOL
|
||||
4oJt7wBg94xkF4cerxz7y8R9J+k3GNl14KOjbYaMAh1rdxdAzikYMH1p
|
||||
1hS78GMtwxky6jE5en87BGGMmnbC84JlxwN+MD7diu8D0Gkgjj/pxOp3
|
||||
2D5jEe02wBPVjFTpFLJjpFniLUY6AohRDEdSuZwWPuoKVWhpeWkasNn5
|
||||
qgwGyDREbXpyPsU02BkwE4JiGs+JMMdOn9KMh5dxiuwsMM9gHiQZS3mS
|
||||
NBBKPWI5ZXsdStVFvapjf2FUFDXLUbTROPv1Xhqf0u7YYORFnWeVtvzK
|
||||
IxVaiEYEGBECAAYFAjnY2vQACgkQ+75aMGJLsklBWgCeN7z9xk52y/ao
|
||||
aCuF6hYb0d+3k98AoMRxvHuXI1Nc2FXY/x65PwHiUbaY
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
It's still ugly, but it's not AS ugly because it's base64, which includes
|
||||
spaces, at least, and is easier to search for a pattern. Base64 can also be
|
||||
easily wrapped on any boundary, which is nice.
|
||||
|
||||
You can run your existing exported key through a base64 converter, like the
|
||||
one built into the openssl binary, if you want to compare:
|
||||
|
||||
%cat 624BB249.pub.bin | openssl enc -base64
|
||||
mQGiBDnY2vERBAD3cOxqoAYHYzS+xttvuyN9wZS8CrgwLIlT8Ewo/CCFI11PEO+g
|
||||
JyNPvWPRQsyt1SE60reaIsie2bQTg3DYIg0PmH+ZOlNkpKesPULzdlw4Rx3dD/M3
|
||||
Lkrm977h4Y70ZKC+tbvoYKCCOIkUVevny1PVZ+mB94rb0mMgawSTrct03QCg/w6a
|
||||
(...etc...)
|
||||
OPv1Xhqf0u7YYORFnWeVtvzKIxVaiEYEGBECAAYFAjnY2vQACgkQ+75aMGJLsklB
|
||||
WgCeN7z9xk52y/aoaCuF6hYb0d+3k98AoMRxvHuXI1Nc2FXY/x65PwHiUbaY
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Now, while you could compare things byte-by-byte here, what I've done as a
|
||||
"casual check" is just pick random strings in the text and see if they match
|
||||
up. For example, you can see that "reaIsie2" is present in both. They both
|
||||
start with and end with similar strings on every line. The real test, of
|
||||
course, is to see if GPG recognizes it as a valid key.
|
||||
|
||||
By the way, since I use DNSSEC, dnssec-signzone rewrites this record into the
|
||||
proper "presentation format" for me, which is base64. If you want a similar
|
||||
function, you can use named-compilezone to get some of the same effects, or
|
||||
you can use the shell script I provide later in this document, with which you
|
||||
don't even need make-dns-cert.
|
||||
|
||||
2. Testing with gpg
|
||||
|
||||
As above, the command to test this is remarkably simple:
|
||||
|
||||
%rm /tmp/gpg-*
|
||||
%echo "foo" | gpg --no-default-keyring --keyring /tmp/gpg-$$ --encrypt --armor --auto-key-locate cert -r danm@prime.gushi.org
|
||||
gpg: keyring `/tmp/gpg-39996' created
|
||||
gpg: key 624BB249: public key "Daniel P. Mahoney <danm@prime.gushi.org>" imported
|
||||
gpg: Total number processed: 1
|
||||
gpg: imported: 1
|
||||
gpg: automatically retrieved `danm@prime.gushi.org' via DNS CERT
|
||||
gpg: DE20C529: There is no assurance this key belongs to the named user
|
||||
pub 2048g/DE20C529 2000-10-02 Daniel P. Mahoney <danm@prime.gushi.org>
|
||||
Primary key fingerprint: C206 3054 5492 95F3 3490 37FF FBBE 5A30 624B B249
|
||||
Subkey fingerprint: CE40 B786 81E2 5CB9 F7D3 1318 9488 EB58 DE20 C529
|
||||
It is NOT certain that the key belongs to the person named
|
||||
in the user ID. If you *really* know what you are doing,
|
||||
you may answer the next question with yes.
|
||||
Use this key anyway? (y/N) y
|
||||
-----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE-----
|
||||
Version: GnuPG v1.4.10 (FreeBSD)
|
||||
hQIOA5SI61jeIMUpEAf/Sx7MKWm+e9EpUTSrDaBp4nJfDcBeqbYJulPRbDZz7eVW
|
||||
2+ol6sG0jWjuirbG1YppZccEr9mgqaQujdSXb/bleD8POS0TEWuf3aPswFQvHf90
|
||||
NLEzHt6BnfLoeobXXxyCflNaGX8zW+XgJtwZqAc2+jietuz8MOUhrf5m17CsW/wZ
|
||||
IuEqwaek+K1irJp+w3rhaE08Jzb/S4CCifeW9J3mK57chQoPOu7Nz3rY666YKp/3
|
||||
9T9StOgmFiNpvtFPNy4N7hHMHvbQwRsKlnkl+a7n0Aq2+OF4d1+/k2EE4uSGgcz0
|
||||
oHvee8DnuOx3P92mO4Jz5/0O0lwBD7I51iOjzUurTAgAiIM5sHV8/QFCVzH9Ule+
|
||||
gd8Wo5momcphkU/AXpce5Xgi/Vm4oGQ0x0queii8afUrzkpeN5SuwgQfAdOPiXW5
|
||||
2bo527jBllxOxjeBasfky82XheTnLzbAQNvQNTEM9zE7zCl1LQJUZEJ1hVzcOevI
|
||||
s+cm/AaGII9VkrAtSt3aLSRZuRJHFmhGvYd2Hz5WzcV1YFjXXP1eLwfetDBlaeB9
|
||||
/K5v4hZBkIZPbHX0DcLVrP96mCIT4wCBYSJw+I6n0E6Fz3IfybQG2HMfqWp966/c
|
||||
00ijx/aRDh42Dr/fTropuzzFzQr7weYDa1JnN3Zoftv6Zb/n+NcrmMiDCH8jJV6E
|
||||
uMkaeeB5Mv7ssDQ9kPhO989CHFcznrE1lgOxjX8=
|
||||
=NTLY
|
||||
-----END PGP MESSAGE-----
|
||||
|
||||
Okay, as above, try to decrypt that with your private key.
|
||||
|
||||
### IPGP CERT Records
|
||||
|
||||
Also known as: The "little" or "short" CERT record. (These terms are purely my
|
||||
own).
|
||||
|
||||
Relevant RFCs: [RFC 2538](http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc2538.html),
|
||||
[RFC 4398](http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc4398.html), specifically sections 2.1
|
||||
and 3.3
|
||||
|
||||
IPGP certs are interesting. It's basically the same pieces of infomation that
|
||||
are in the PKA record, as above, except that it's supported by an RFC.
|
||||
Despite the RFC compliance, I am not sure if any non-gpg client knows to look
|
||||
for them. However, because it's a DNS cert, make-dns-cert encodes the
|
||||
information in binary, and your DNS server will see it in base64. So
|
||||
verifying it visually is harder than verifying either of the above.
|
||||
|
||||
#### Advantages
|
||||
|
||||
* Small, easy-to-transmit records.
|
||||
* Can use the same uri as the PKA record.
|
||||
|
||||
#### Disadvantages
|
||||
|
||||
* Relies on the URI scheme. I haven't yet been able to get a definitive list
|
||||
of what uri schemes are supported, although I've seen http and finger. I've
|
||||
also seen reports that unless gpg is compiled against curl, http 1.1 is not
|
||||
supported (what this actually means is that any host that supports SSL will
|
||||
probably work, because of some of the nuances of SSL).
|
||||
* With PGP certs and IPGP certs, GPG will only parse the first key it gets, so
|
||||
if you publish both, and one doesn't work, there's no failover. I've argued
|
||||
that this should be fixed.
|
||||
* Requires make-dns-cert, which is not built in GPG by default. (But see "A
|
||||
Better Way" below)
|
||||
* Requires publication in your main DNS zone.
|
||||
* Despite being RFC compliant, GPG has additional trust vectors for PKA but
|
||||
not this, despite the fact that they share basically the same information.
|
||||
* Harder to verify with dig.
|
||||
|
||||
#### Howto
|
||||
|
||||
1. Note that some of these steps are redundant. If you're already doing a PKA
|
||||
key, skip to step 5.
|
||||
|
||||
2. Dig:
|
||||
|
||||
%gpg --list-keys danm@prime.gushi.org
|
||||
Warning: using insecure memory!
|
||||
pub 1024D/624BB249 2000-10-02 <-- I'm going to use this one.
|
||||
uid Daniel P. Mahoney <danm@prime.gushi.org>
|
||||
uid Daniel Mahoney (Secondary Email) <gushi@gushi.org>
|
||||
sub 2048g/DE20C529 2000-10-02
|
||||
pub 1024R/309C17C5 1997-05-08
|
||||
uid Daniel P. Mahoney <danm@prime.gushi.org>
|
||||
|
||||
3. Export the key to a file (I use keyid.pub.asc, but it can be anything)
|
||||
|
||||
%gpg --export --armor 624BB249 > 624BB249.pub.asc
|
||||
Warning: using insecure memory!
|
||||
%
|
||||
|
||||
4. Get the fingerprint for your key:
|
||||
|
||||
%gpg --list-keys --fingerprint 624BB249
|
||||
gpg: WARNING: using insecure memory!
|
||||
gpg: please see http://www.gnupg.org/faq.html for more information
|
||||
pub 1024D/624BB249 2000-10-02
|
||||
Key fingerprint = C206 3054 5492 95F3 3490 37FF FBBE 5A30 624B B249 <-- That bit is your fingerprint.
|
||||
uid Daniel P. Mahoney <danm@prime.gushi.org>
|
||||
uid Daniel Mahoney (Secondary Email) <gushi@gushi.org>
|
||||
sub 2048g/DE20C529 2000-10-02
|
||||
|
||||
5. As above, run make-dns-cert. This time we use the -n, -f, and -u options:
|
||||
|
||||
%make-dns-cert -n danm.prime.gushi.org. -f C2063054549295F3349037FFFBBE5A30624BB249 -u http://prime.gushi.org/danm.pubkey.txt
|
||||
danm.prime.gushi.org. TYPE37 \# 64 0006 0000 00 14 C2063054549295F3349037FFFBBE5A30624BB249 687474703A2F2F7072696D652E67757368692E6F72672F64616E6D2E7075626B65792E747874
|
||||
%
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
6. Put the above in DNS. All on one line. Optionally add a TTL.
|
||||
|
||||
7. IMPORTANT: make sure you don't have any other CERT records with the same
|
||||
label (i.e. a "big" cert, as above). While it won't break things, you have
|
||||
no control over which (of multiple) people will get.
|
||||
|
||||
8. Reload your zone, and test. Testing will probably look VERY MUCH like the
|
||||
above, but here are the steps anyway:
|
||||
|
||||
#### Testing
|
||||
|
||||
1. Dig:
|
||||
|
||||
%dig +short danm.prime.gushi.org CERT
|
||||
6 0 0 FMIGMFRUkpXzNJA3//u+WjBiS7JJaHR0cDovL3ByaW1lLmd1c2hpLm9y Zy9kYW5tLnB1YmtleS50eHQ=
|
||||
|
||||
Sadly, I haven't come across an easy way to decipher it yet, but there's
|
||||
always gpg.
|
||||
|
||||
2. GPG:
|
||||
|
||||
Since we're fetching the same kind of record, the command is exactly the same
|
||||
as before:
|
||||
|
||||
%echo "foo" | gpg --no-default-keyring --keyring /tmp/gpg-$$ --encrypt --armor --auto-key-locate cert -r danm@prime.gushi.org
|
||||
gpg: WARNING: using insecure memory!
|
||||
gpg: please see http://www.gnupg.org/faq.html for more information
|
||||
gpg: keyring `/tmp/gpg-39996' created
|
||||
gpg: requesting key 624BB249 from http server prime.gushi.org
|
||||
gpg: key 624BB249: public key "Daniel P. Mahoney <danm@prime.gushi.org>" imported
|
||||
gpg: public key of ultimately trusted key CF45887D not found
|
||||
gpg: 3 marginal(s) needed, 1 complete(s) needed, PGP trust model
|
||||
gpg: depth: 0 valid: 1 signed: 0 trust: 0-, 0q, 0n, 0m, 0f, 1u
|
||||
gpg: Total number processed: 1
|
||||
gpg: imported: 1
|
||||
gpg: automatically retrieved `danm@prime.gushi.org' via DNS CERT
|
||||
gpg: DE20C529: There is no assurance this key belongs to the named user
|
||||
pub 2048g/DE20C529 2000-10-02 Daniel P. Mahoney <danm@prime.gushi.org>
|
||||
Primary key fingerprint: C206 3054 5492 95F3 3490 37FF FBBE 5A30 624B B249
|
||||
Subkey fingerprint: CE40 B786 81E2 5CB9 F7D3 1318 9488 EB58 DE20 C529
|
||||
It is NOT certain that the key belongs to the person named
|
||||
in the user ID. If you *really* know what you are doing,
|
||||
you may answer the next question with yes.
|
||||
Use this key anyway? (y/N) y
|
||||
-----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE-----
|
||||
Version: GnuPG v1.4.10 (FreeBSD)
|
||||
hQIOA5SI61jeIMUpEAgApZurJi3hZmDaUFjB2j93eX/lTl96xq6T//sz6nT6jcTx
|
||||
IPnq1RN8IrIQPjDBByHdqOZBT5hhblr9xi7NKIIv3W4q4L0z0fJx7NERPZNvn/H0
|
||||
DkTwfDgAvCRxcKjenpLSwKZFwLjyfS7wjlDr3HFX7Tila0hbzplHslvgTE0QMcd7
|
||||
7oNmEyOL3z+yZr/afQGp2wpzDv4YB9zOiNHcHcenqX0yrtiqKozZ9VAldi53rb/q
|
||||
f38lwInbveyAcEQkE2iFwhRsbMR4VLcsBoxY6D9brsBprt23ey8Rnv+bQ9IAR0VN
|
||||
/WYzU4zUUqb8HmpNFXQLEgH8A2BENw+bxkVYHjSfWQf/cBSGAzfBQQVJ7qp4tN0Z
|
||||
FRVe51dokbU4NM9tGBdCzFHWARVkQX/Ulekd4F3sxBR/sum1UOT2xl2THVBz7/Pq
|
||||
UCrTRPA0uH4dIbL5JpfGZhqsJ079+wmUWUtJIiO2wXi7ePEA/DrBC6p7jlmjyYN/
|
||||
AeSKcPoTeLX+zryV5bECx4RO6S56EEcy0Ns0pASGMsgUnKL6Adrv3Y6ea3ZAOQMn
|
||||
H9Uo28BKTKNUvUaBpN8cV8jIbKYPPW9i04kvEQRqs5rdamERCY1vVTqYTrcLsNqz
|
||||
fF3KopX+V82X1oE2QuGdFfd8mK57ZXJL3VRUrfohQjhfYNKzougiP46rQQv79MYT
|
||||
j8kazWyJUuufm6NVco1/35Zdp1UhHu8qTgXxrjo=
|
||||
=zY9G
|
||||
-----END PGP MESSAGE-----
|
||||
%
|
||||
|
||||
Strangely, the output doesn't say what PKA does (a PKA retrieval has a line
|
||||
about fetching via HTTP), however, by checking my webserver logs, I can see it
|
||||
retrieved it from there:
|
||||
|
||||
%tail -200 /usr/local/apache/logs/prime.gushi.org.log | grep pubkey | tail -1
|
||||
prime.gushi.org 72.9.101.130 - - [28/Oct/2009:23:50:43 -0400] "GET /danm.pubkey.txt HTTP/1.1" 200 4337 "-" "-"
|
||||
%
|
||||
|
||||
As usual, test decryption, etc. You're done.
|
||||
|
||||
## Further Steps
|
||||
|
||||
* Figure out which of these are useful to you, and use them.* When someone
|
||||
asks for your public key, tell them to run the above command instead of
|
||||
mailing them your key or sending them a keyserver URL.
|
||||
|
||||
* Consider using the pka-related verify-options.
|
||||
|
||||
* Look into embracing DNSSEC. With a signed root, there's a good trust-path
|
||||
vector here. Who knows, maybe some day GPG will be dnssec-aware so it will
|
||||
give more credit to a secure DNS transaction. Without a signed root, there
|
||||
are still ways to have those who care about security use it, through
|
||||
services such as [ISC's DLV registry](http://dlv.isc.org).
|
||||
|
||||
* On DNSSEC: At present, GPG cannot see the difference between an insecure
|
||||
response (one from an unsigned zone) and a correctly validated one from a
|
||||
signed zone. (In a signed zone, an unsigned or malformed will simply get a
|
||||
SERVFAIL dns response). Look into sponsoring development of GPG to make it
|
||||
as an application more aware of this.
|
||||
|
||||
## A better way to generate records
|
||||
|
||||
In reading over a lot of these commands, I've come across a few problems with
|
||||
the tools involved. They either require you to assemble large records by
|
||||
hand, or manipulate huge files.
|
||||
|
||||
DNS has also come a long way since these tools were written, and RFCs have
|
||||
solidified that have determined the "presentation format" (i.e. the "master
|
||||
file format") of what CERT records should look like.
|
||||
|
||||
On top of everything, the make-dns-cert tool is not built by default, and is
|
||||
not present in most binary distributions (RPM's, deb packages, FreeBSD's
|
||||
ports).
|
||||
|
||||
Thus, I took it upon myself to rewrite make-dns-cert as a shell script.
|
||||
|
||||
### Advantages
|
||||
|
||||
* Extracts your key for you (takes a keyid as the argument).
|
||||
* Formats all three record types for you, you can pipe it right into your zone
|
||||
file.
|
||||
* Takes email address as an argument, generates record label.
|
||||
* No compiling needed.
|
||||
* Should work with most systems. Requires openssl and sed, a few other
|
||||
standard utilities.
|
||||
* Generates base64-ified CERT records, split into easy, manageable pieces.
|
||||
* Generates DNS-friendly comments, so repeating tasks are easy to reference.
|
||||
* (Eventually) available as a tarball, or as a paste-and-go script.
|
||||
* Arguments are in logical DNS record order `emailaddress keyid [url]`.
|
||||
* Will generate an IPGP CERT record without a URI (this is legal per RFC4398).
|
||||
|
||||
You can see sample output
|
||||
[here](http://www.gushi.org/make-dns-cert/sample-output.txt), and you can view
|
||||
the script itself
|
||||
[here](http://www.gushi.org/make-dns-cert/make-dns-cert.sh.txt). Depending on
|
||||
your MIME settings, you can probably get a download link if you go
|
||||
[here](http://www.gushi.org/make-dns-cert/make-dns-cert.sh). If you see the
|
||||
script rather than getting a download prompt, you can just save-as.
|
||||
|
||||
README, Changelog, TODO coming soon.
|
||||
|
||||
## Other notes
|
||||
|
||||
I'm not 100 percent sure (mainly because I haven't tried), but with IPGP cert,
|
||||
and PKA, I believe I could in theory point at a keyserver directly, for
|
||||
example, specify a uri of
|
||||
[http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0xB0307039309C17C5](http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0xB0307039309C17C5).
|
||||
I'm a bit dubious about the question marks and equals-signs, or if I might
|
||||
have to uri-encode things. It's something to be tried.
|
||||
|
||||
I'm trying to convince the GPG people that this would be much better adopted
|
||||
if the make-dns-cert tool was built/included by default, or if its function
|
||||
were included in gpg rather than a third-party tool. This is analagous as to
|
||||
how dnssec-keygen is used to generate SSHFP DNS records.
|
||||
|
||||
It doesn't do any actual cryptography, just some binary conversion, so in
|
||||
theory it could be rewritten in pure-perl, so there's nothing to compile.
|
||||
|
||||
I've made the argument to the GPG developers that if multiple CERT records are
|
||||
available, all should be tried if one fails. So far, if multiple exist, only
|
||||
the first received is parsed, and of course, DNS round-robins the answers by
|
||||
default.
|
||||
|
||||
It took me quite a lot of trial and error to realize that there's a difference
|
||||
between "modern" RSA keys, like this:
|
||||
|
||||
%gpg --list-keys --fingerprint gushi@prime.gushi.org
|
||||
pub 2048R/CF45887D 2009-10-29
|
||||
Key fingerprint = FCB0 485E 050D DDFA 83C6 76E3 E722 3C05 CF45 887D
|
||||
uid Gushi Test <gushi@prime.gushi.org>
|
||||
sub 2048R/C9761244 2009-10-29
|
||||
|
||||
and ancient RSA keys like this pgp2.6.2 monster:
|
||||
|
||||
%gpg --list-keys --fingerprint danm@prime.gushi.org
|
||||
pub 1024R/309C17C5 1997-05-08
|
||||
Key fingerprint = 04 4B 1A 2E C4 62 95 73 73 A4 EA D0 08 A4 45 76
|
||||
uid Daniel P. Mahoney <danm@prime.gushi.org>
|
||||
|
||||
Note the lack of a subkey there. Note the weird fingerprint. I have not been
|
||||
able to get this key to properly export with gpg. If someone knows the Deep
|
||||
Magic, let me know.
|
||||
|
||||
## References
|
||||
|
||||
### Blog posts and list threads
|
||||
|
||||
While researching this I came across little more than a few blog posts, and a
|
||||
few short discussions on the gpg-devel mailing list.
|
||||
|
||||
* [A blog entry](http://www.df7cb.de/blog/2007/openpgp-dns.html) that seems to
|
||||
have things mostly right.
|
||||
|
||||
* [GPG Mailing List Discussion](http://lists.gnupg.org/pipermail/gnupg-users/2006-April/028314.html)
|
||||
which seems to date towhen these features were first added.
|
||||
|
||||
* [My own thread](http://www.mail-archive.com/gnupg-users@gnupg.org/msg12336.html)
|
||||
on the gnupg-users mailing list that led upto this doc.
|
||||
|
||||
* [A slideshow of a talk given on PKA](ftp://ftp.g10code.com/people/werner/talks/pka-intro.ps.gz)
|
||||
(really the only doc I couldfind with regard to PKA). Note that this is a
|
||||
postscript doc, for reasons I cannot fathom.
|
||||
|
||||
### RFCs
|
||||
|
||||
* [RFC 3597](http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc3597.html) defines the odd format of
|
||||
the records that make-dns-cert generates, if itconfuses you.
|
||||
|
||||
* [RFC 2538](http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc2538.html), which was superseded by
|
||||
[RFC4398](http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc4398.html), defines the format for a
|
||||
CERT record.
|
||||
|
||||
## Todo
|
||||
|
||||
* At least one GPG enthusiast has suggested to me that any tools I write to
|
||||
handle keys should simply be able to insert themusing nsupdate. I don't
|
||||
disagree, but there's a complicated metric there as some of these require
|
||||
manipulation of a site'smain zone, or at the very least, many subzones. In
|
||||
doing this I'd also like to find out a bit about how to do nsupdate
|
||||
withsig(0) and KEY records, which with the right policies would mean I could
|
||||
do this without touching named.conf. That may be the subject of a whole
|
||||
other howto.
|
||||
|
||||
* (Done) I need to get the shell script cleaned up a bit more, and generate
|
||||
proper docs, and start tracking it with version control.
|
||||
|
||||
* I should probably get the gumption up to formally license all this stuff.
|
||||
For right now, I declare it under the
|
||||
[ISCLicense](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISC_license).
|
||||
|
||||
* I'd like to track down the full list of supported URI types for PKA/IPGP
|
||||
CERT records. There doesn't seem to be a defined standard for it.
|
||||
|
||||
## Epilogue
|
||||
|
||||
### About the author
|
||||
|
||||
Dan Mahoney is a Systems Admin in the Bay Area, California. In his spare time
|
||||
he enjoys thinking for those brief fleeting moments what he would do if he had
|
||||
more free time. Keyid 624BB249, or email address danm@prime.gushi.org.
|
||||
|
||||
### About this Document
|
||||
|
||||
This document was written in [gnu nano](http://nano-editor.org), and HTML was
|
||||
generated using [Markdown](http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown).
|
||||
|
||||
Markdown rocks.
|
||||
|
||||
Originally published on my livejournal at
|
||||
[http://gushi.livejournal.com/524199.html](http://gushi.livejournal.com/524199.html),
|
||||
its main home is at
|
||||
[http://www.gushi.org/make-dns-cert/HOWTO.html](http://www.gushi.org/make-dns-cert/HOWTO.html),
|
||||
which is where later versions will be published.
|
||||
|
||||
Free to use, comments to the above email address are welcome.
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue