This document explains how to configure Mutt-i, PGP and GnuPG in its diferents versions (2.6.x, 5.x and GnuPG) to quickly start using a mail reader with encryption and digital signing capabilities.
For this purpose, example configuration files will be included to help you starting with it. To obtain maximum performance and to use all the features of the programs that we will be using, it will be necesary to read its documentation and to reconfigure the example files.
Also, some problems derived from not using RFC2015 about PGP/MIME by many mail user agents in Linux and other operating systems will be comented.
An aditional procmail configuration example will be showed to enable our mail client to send a public key on request.
This document has been translated from the Spanish original by Andrés Seco AndresSH@ctv.es, and revised and corrected by Jordi Mallach Pérez jordi-sd@softhome.net and J.Horacio M.G. homega@ciberia.es. It was finished in October 1999. We would like to thanks Roland Rosenfeld roland@spinnaker.de, Christophe Pernod xtof.pernod@wanadoo.fr, Denis Alan Hainsworth denis@cs.brandeis.edu and Angel Carrasco acarrasco@jet.es for their corrections and suggestions.
This document is copyright © 1999 Andres Seco and J.Horacio
M.G.
, and it's free. You can distribute it under the terms of the
GNU General Public License, which you can get at
http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html. You can get unofficial
translated issues somewhere in the internet, as well as the Spanish
translated copy at
http://visar.csustan.edu/~carlos/gpl-es.html or Lucas
http://www.lucas.org.
Information and other contents in this document are the best of our knowledge. However, we may have make errors. So you should determine if you want to follow the instructions given in this document.
Nobody is responsible for any damage in your computers and any other loss derived from the use of the information contained herein.
THE AUTHORS AND MAINTAINERS ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY DAMAGE INCURRED DUE TO ACTIONS TAKEN BASED ON INFORMATION CONTAINED IN THIS DOCUMENT.
Of course, we are open to all type of suggestions and corrections on the content of this document.
This document does not deal with exchanging mail messages between local
machine and other nodes (inside a local area network or over the
internet). This exchange should be carried out by messages transfer agents
(MTAs) such as sendmail
http://www.sendmail.org, qmail
http://www.qmail.org, exim
http://www.exim.org, smail
ftp://ftp.planix.com/pub/Smail, etc.
In this document it is presupposed that this method of send/receive
messages outside of the local computer is already installed and working in
a correct way. If you can send a message and read your mail with the
mail
command from the command line in your computer,
$ mail -s <subject> <user@domain.net>
write here the text, and finish with an alone point in the next line
.
you must have installed any type of MTA that is doing the messages transfer. In other way, you can get documentation about setting it up in the manual pages of smail:
$ man smail
or the MTA that you have, and fetchmail:
$ man fetchmail
or in other similar document that makes reference to those programs.
Next file is a valid example to start using Mutt in a basic way,
including paths for alias file, sent messages and postponed messages. You
can further personalize it attending to the Mutt manual indications
and /usr/doc/mutt/
or /usr/doc/mutt-i/
.
Simple example of ~/.muttrc
:
set folder=~/Mail
set alias_file=.alias
set postponed=.postponed
set record=SendMessages
set signature=.signature
my_hdr From: Name Surname <Name@domain.com>
source =.alias
It is necesary that the directory ~/Mail
exists, that is
the one that appears as an "equal to" sign in the configuration file
.muttrc
(that is, =.alias
is to Mutt as
~/Mail/.alias
, and =.postponed
is to Mutt
~/Mail/.postponed
). Nevertheless it is possible to have
these files in another directory provided we indicate the complete path in
~/.muttrc
, and we have the necesary permissions to work in
this directory.
It is also necesary to personalize the my_hdr
line with the name and
electronic mail address you need. In the ~/Mail/.signature
file you caninclude the signature that will appear in all the messages
that are sent.
This configuration file can end up being made very big, so it is common to
separate some of its commands in different files. For the time being, the
PGP or GnuPG configuration lines are easily detachable, and the
keyboard macros that we will personalize. To do that, it will be necesary
to add the following lines to the ~/.muttrc
file:
source = ~/Mail/.mutt.macros
source = ~/Mail/.gnupgp.mutt
and to use the ~/Mail/.mutt.macros
and
~/Mail/.gnupgp.mutt
files to put in them the keyboard
macros and the PGP or GnuPG configuration that are commented
forward.
To get a more extensive and complete information over the use and configuration of Mutt, and about advanced features, see the Mutt manual http://www.mutt.org.
To use anyone of the versions of PGP with Mutt-i, first it will be necesary to configure PGP properly in the way that the public keys file (public keys ring) and the private keys file (private keys ring) will exist. It is convenient to previously test PGP from the command line to assure that it signs and encrypt correctly.
Remember that the PGP versions that exist for Unix are 2.6.3(i)
and 5.0(i)
, that we call PGP2 and PGP5 respectively forward. GnuPG is a new encrypt system, being developed in these days, in an advanced state of development, open source and free, in many aspects better than PGP (see GnuPG mini howto
http://www.dewinter.com/gnupg_howto).
We will also clarify that PGP, as being a program developed in the US, is restricted by certain exporting laws about programs that include cryptographic code; this is the reason for the existance of an international version to almost all binary versions, and it is noted with the "i" letter (pgp - pgpi).
PGP2 generates keys with the RSA http://www.rsa.com,algorithm and it uses IDEA http://www.ascom.ch as the encryption algorithm. Both are propietary algorithms and its use is restricted by its respectives patents.
To run it correctly, you must have it installed, as well as having a directory called ~/.pgp
, containing the configuration file pgp-i.conf
and the private and public keys rings files, pubring.pgp
and secring.pgp
respectively.
The keys generated by PGP5 are DSS/DH (Digital Signature Standard / Diffie-Helman). PGP5 uses CAST, Triple-DES, and IDEA as encrypt algorithms. PGP5 can work with encrypted or signed data with RSA (PGP2), and use that keys to sign or encrypt (with the keys generated with PGP2, because PGP5 can not generate that type of keys). In the other hand, PGP2 can not use the DSS/DH keys from PGP5; this creates incompatibility problems, because many users continue using PGP2 with Unix/Linux.
To run PGP5 correctly, in the ~/.pgp
directory you will
have the public and private key rings (pubring.pkr
and
secring.skr
respectively), and the configuration file pgp.cfg
.
In the case that you have installed the both versions of PGP (PGP2
installed and configured before PGP5), we will create the configuration
file ~/.pgp/pgp.cfg
of PGP5 as a simbolic link to the
~/.pgp/pgp-i.conf
configuration file,
~/.pgp$ ln -s pgp-i.conf pgp.cfg
adding the following lines at the end of the file
~/.pgp/pgp-i.conf
:
PubRing = "~/.pgp/pubring.pkr"
SecRing = "~/.pgp/secring.skr"
RandSeed = "~/.pgp/randseed.bin"
The files with the keys rings of the different versions can cohexist without any problem in the same directory.
GnuPG is a program with the same functions that the previous. The difference with PGP, GnuPG do not uses algorithms with restrictive patents. PGP is free for personal uses but not comercial jobs and its development is closed. GnuPG is free to be used in any job and it is open source, as our favorite operating system (also its implementation and development is made mainly in Linux).
The keys generated by GnuPG are of the type DSA/ElGamal (Digital Signature Algorithm, also known as DSS). Is totaly compatible with PGP, except with the use of restricted patents algorithms RSA and IDEA. Anyway, it is posible to implement certain compatibility with that (see GnuPG mini howto http://www.dewinter.com/gnupg_howto to get it interacting with PGP2 and PGP5).
The operation to carry out in the outgoing messages (sign, encrypt or
both) is chosen exactly before presing "y
" to send the
message, inside the option menu that is visible with the
"p
" option. Once you have choosen the operation to carry
out, only the line PGP in the message header showed in the screen
will change, but until you send the message with "y
" you
won't be asked to insert the pass phrase to activate the sign of the
message or the public keys to use to encrypt in the case that no receptors
were found in our public keys ring.
NOTE: In the case that the pass phrase was mistyped when it was asked
for, Mutt seems to be "hung", but that's not true, it is
waiting for it to be retyped. To do this, push the <Enter>
key
and delete the pass phrase from memory with <Ctrl>F
. Next we
repeat the message sending with ("y
") and retype the pass
phrase.
Through this procedure, Mutt will use PGP/MIME to send the message, and one more file will appear in the list of files to be sent with the sign (if we only select to sign) or it will encrypt the complete message (all its MIME parts) and it will only leave two MIME parts, the first with the PGP/MIME version and the second with the encrypted message (with all its MIME parts inside) and signed (if we selected to do it).
Note: By some reasons, if the receptor mail user agent can not use MIME, we may need that the sign will be included inside the message body. See section about application/pgp with PGP5 and with GnuPG.
Mutt will try to verify the sign or decrypt automatically the incoming messages that use PGP/MIME. See section Procmail notes and tips, in which it is commented how to change the MIME type automatically to the incoming messages that do not set its MIME type correctly.
In the next sections you can find modifications to the Mutt configuration file to use PGP2, PGP5, and GnuPG easily.
To do that, a new configuration file that we called .gnupgp.mutt
(that's our name, you can call it any other name setting the name of this
file into the main configuration file ~/.muttrc
).
This can be done including the complete path (its location) of the
configuration file .gnupgp.mutt
, in a line at the end of the
~/.muttrc
file. The directory in which we put this and
other optional configuration files can be anywhere, if we have correct
permissions (in a previous section we included it inside the
~/Mail/
) directory, or any other inside our home directory,
with any name:
~$ mkdir mutt.varios
in which we copy (or create) the optional configuration file
.gnupgp.mutt
, and next we set the origin of this file in the
.muttrc
file with the source
command, like the following:
source ~/mutt.varios/.gnupgp.mutt
Now Mutt will accept configuration variables in .gnupgp.mutt
as if it were in .muttrc
directly.
This method is a good way to avoid having a very big, unsorted
configuration file, and can be used to set any other group of
configuration variables in other separate file. For example, as before, if
we use vim as the default editor in Mutt, we can tell to
.muttrc
to use a different configuration file .vimrc
that we use
when using vim from the command line. First, copy
~/.vimrc
to our optional configuration files directory
~/mutt.varios/
and set it with other name (ex.
vim.mutt
):
$ cd /home/user
~$ cp .vimrc mutt.varios/vim.mutt
next change the configuration variables that we want to be different in
vim as the Mutt editor, and finally modify .muttrc
to
reflect this change:
set editor="/usr/bin/vim -u ~/mutt.varios/vim.mutt"
With this last line we are setting Mutt
to use an external editor,
Vim, with the needed configuration options.
There are some variables that we will use globally with the three public key encrypt programs with Mutt. These variables are boolean, and can be set (activated) or unset (deactivated).
In the configuration file (~/.muttrc
, or
~/mutt.varios/.gnupgp.mutt
, or whatever you use), the sign
(#) is a comment and will be ignored. So, we will use it from
here in advance to comment each variable:
# if this variables is set, Mutt will ask to sign all the
# outbound messages.
(1)
# if this variable is set, Mutt will ask to encrypt all the
# outbound messages.
(1)
# save an encrypted copy of all sent messages that we want to encrypt
# (need the general configuration variable set copy=yes
).
# when you answer a signed message, the response message will be
# signed too.
# when you answer an encrypted message, the response message
# will be encrypted too.
# Do you want to automatically verify incoming signed messages?
# Of course!
# delete pass phrase from the memory cache <n> seconds
# after typing it.
(2)
# what key do you want to use to sign outgoing messages?
# Note: it is posible to set it to the user id, but
# this can be confuse if you have the same user id with different keys.
# use "quoted-printable" when PGP requires it.
# Do not use 64 bits key ids, use 32 bits key ids.
# message integrity check algorithm, where
# <some> is something from the next:
(3)
In the three next sections the configuration variables to each of the PGP versions will be explained. The fourth section will explain how to modify the variables if you use more than one PGP version.
(1) as Mutt requires to type the passphrase every time you want to sign or select the receipts if you want to encrypt, it may be unconvenient to set this variable. Possibly you may want to unset this variable. This is specially true encrypting messages, as you don't have all the public keys of the message receipts.
(2) depending on the number of messages that we sign or decrypt, we would like to maintain the pass phrase in cache memory more or less time. This option avoid you from type the pass phrase each time you sign a new message or decrypt an incoming message. Warning: maintaining the pass phrase in cache memory is not secure, specially in network connected systems.
(3) this is only necesary with the key that we use to sign. When the key is selected from the compose menu, Mutt will calculate the algoritm.
To use PGP2 with Mutt-i you need to add the following lines to the
~/mutt.varios/.gnupgp.mutt
file:
set pgp_default_version=pgp2
set pgp_key_version=default
set pgp_receive_version=default
set pgp_send_version=default
set pgp_sign_micalg=pgp-md5
set pgp_v2=/usr/bin/pgp
set pgp_v2_pubring=~/.pgp/pubring.pgp
set pgp_v2_secring=~/.pgp/secring.pgp
As you know, the ~/.pgp/pubring.pgp
and secring.pgp
files must exist. More information on PGP2 with the man pgp
command.
To use PGP5 with Mutt-i you need to add the following lines to the
~/mutt.varios/.gnupgp.mutt
file:
set pgp_default_version=pgp5
set pgp_key_version=default
set pgp_receive_version=default
set pgp_send_version=default
set pgp_sign_micalg=pgp-sha1
set pgp_v5=/usr/bin/pgp
set pgp_v5_pubring=~/.pgp/pubring.pkr
set pgp_v5_secring=~/.pgp/secring.skr
As you know, the ~/.pgp/pubring.pkr
and secring.pkr
files must exist. More information on PGP 5 with the man pgp5
command.
To use GnuPG with Mutt-i you need to add the following lines to
the ~/mutt.varios/.gnupgp.mutt
file:
set pgp_default_version=gpg
set pgp_key_version=default
set pgp_receive_version=default
set pgp_send_version=default
set pgp_sign_micalg=pgp-sha1
set pgp_gpg=/usr/bin/gpg
set pgp_gpg_pubring=~/.gnupg/pubring.gpg
set pgp_gpg_secring=~/.gnupg/secring.gpg
As you know, the ~/.gnupg/pubring.gpg
and secring.gpg
files must exist. More information on GnuPG with the man gpg.gnupg
,
man gpgm
, and man gpg
commands.
If you want to use more than one PGP software you need to modify some of the variables that we have commented previously. Really, it is only to remove the redundant version variables.
If, for example, you want to use GnuPG as the default signing tool, all
menu commands in Mutt to use GnuPG/PGP would call to this program to
the signing, decrypting, encrypting, verifying, etc... operations
To do that you must set the configuration variable $set_pgp_default
once, so:
set pgp_default_version=gpg
now, to use the all three programs, the
~/mutt.varios/.gnupgp.mutt
file could be like this:
set pgp_default_version=gpg # default version to use
set pgp_key_version=default # default key to use
# in this case, gnupg defines it
set pgp_receive_version=default # default version to decrypt will be the default
set pgp_send_version=default # version defined in the first line (gpg)
set pgp_gpg=/usr/bin/gpg # where to find the GnuPG binary
set pgp_gpg_pubring=~/.gnupg/pubring.gpg # public key file to GnuPG
set pgp_gpg_secring=~/.gnupg/secring.gpg # secret key file to GnuPG
set pgp_v2=/usr/bin/pgp # where to find the PGP2 binary
set pgp_v2_pubring=~/.pgp/pubring.pgp # public key file to PGP2
set pgp_v2_secring=~/.pgp/secring.pgp # secret key file to PGP2
set pgp_v5=/usr/bin/pgp # where to find the PGP5 binary
set pgp_v5_pubring=~/.pgp/pubring.pkr # public key file to PGP5
set pgp_v5_secring=~/.pgp/secring.skr # secret key file to PGP5
Mutt is highly configurable and its working mode can be modified in a
very flexible manner if the configuration variables inside .muttrc
are well configured.
Here you can see some macros that help you to generate signed messages avoiding the PGP/MIME standard, to send it to receipts that don't support this type of signed messages following the PGP/MIME standard, and to edit the alias file and reload it without exiting Mutt (this last macro is not related to PGP/GnuPG, it is presented only as an example to show the macro power in Mutt).
It is possible to tell Mutt the key bindings you want to use with PGP/GnuPG. Even when some of this options are yet configured, we can change it or add others easily modifiying the configuration file.
Before existing PGP/MIME, the signature in a message was included in the message body. This is a very common form of sending signed messages in many mail user agents.
If we want to sign like this, we have two options, leave the MIME
type of the message or modify it as application/pgp
.
To implement this two forms of signing in Mutt, we will add the
following lines to the ~/mutt.varios/mutt.macros
file.
Previously, we have to set this option file path in the .muttrc
main
configuration file (see
Optional configuration files):
macro compose \Cp "F/usr/bin/pgps\ny"
macro compose S "F/usr/bin/pgps\ny^T^Uapplication/pgp; format=text; x-action=sign\n"
and now, pressing <Ctrl>p
or S
we can include the
signature into the message part that has the cursor on it, just before
send the message.
As in the previous case, but with GnuPG. The macros are:
macro compose \CP "Fgpg --clearsign\ny"
macro compose \CS "Fgpg --clearsign\ny^T^Uapplication/pgp; format=text; x-action=sign\n"
With this macro included in ~/mutt.varios/macros.mutt
you
can edit with vi (changing the line you can use other editor) the
alias file without exiting Mutt pressing <Alt>a
.
macro index \ea "!vi ~/Mail/.alias\n:source =.alias\n"
The next listing has been obtained from Roland Rosenfeld and it shows macros to change the default signing/encrypting software and to sign without PGP/MIME with GnuPG:
# ~/Mail/.muttrc.macros
# keyboard configuration file for Mutt-i
# copied, modified and translated from the original:
#
################################################################
# The ultimative Key-Bindings for Mutt #
# #
# (c) 1997-1999 Roland Rosenfeld <roland@spinnaker.rhein.de> #
# #
# $ Id: keybind,v 1.36 1999/02/20 19:36:28 roland Exp roland $ #
################################################################
#
# To use it, add the next line to ~/.muttrc:
# source ~/Mail/.muttrc.macros
#
# Generic keybindings
# (for all the Mutt menus, except the pager!)
# With the next three we can change the encrypting default selected software:
# <ESC>1 to use GnuPG
macro generic \e1 ":set pgp_default_version=gpg ?pgp_default_version\n"\
"Switch to GNU-PG"
# <ESC>2 to use PGP2
macro generic \e2 ":set pgp_default_version=pgp2 ?pgp_default_version\n"\
"Switch to PGP 2.*"
# <ESC>5 to use PGP5
macro generic \e5 ":set pgp_default_version=pgp5 ?pgp_default_version\n"\
"Switch to PGP 5.*"
#NOTE: Be careful with the last backspace at the end of the previous
macros. If you write that line and the next in the same line, do not write
it.
# index, OpMain, MENU_MAIN
# (Main menu)
# The next macro only runs from the main menu (the one that appears when
# you starts Mutt). The keys <CTRL>K permit us to extract the public keys
# from a message if it has (this is known because it has the K letter in
# the message line):
macro pager \Ck ":set pipe_decode pgp_key_version=pgp2\n\e\ek:set pgp_key_version=pgp5\n\e\ek:set pgp_key_version=gpg\n\e\ek:set pgp_key_version=default nopipe_decode\n"\ "Extract PGP keys to PGP2, PGP 5, and GnuPG keyrings"
# pager, OpPager, MENU_PAGER
# (Pager menu)
# It permits the same operations that previous, with the same key combinations,
# but in this case from the pager menu:
macro pager \e1 ":set pgp_default_version=gpg ?pgp_default_version\n"\
"switch to GNUPG"
macro pager \e2 ":set pgp_default_version=pgp2 ?pgp_default_version\n"\
"switch to PGP 2.*"
macro pager \e5 ":set pgp_default_version=pgp5 ?pgp_default_version\n"\
"switch to PGP 5.*"
# compose, OpCompose+OpGerneric, MENU_COMPOSE
# (Compose menu)
# The next operations are used from the compose menu.
# That is, after you have composed your message and you close it to send it,
# just before pressing the "Y" key that allows us to send it to the MTA.
# In this case, we create a menu that appears when you press "P".
# The options in this menu are going to be bound to MENU_PGP. This are the
# main use options (encryption and signing).
bind compose p pgp-menu
# As many programs can't use PGP/MIME (especially from M$), the <CTRL>P key
# will allow us to sign "as in the old times" (Application/PGP):
macro compose \CP "Fgpg --clearsign\ny"
# The next, <CTRL>S will allow us to sign using PGP/MIME with the private key
# that we have defined as default. This macro is not necesary, as we can
# do the same from the "P" menu:
macro compose \CS "Fgpg --clearsign\ny^T^Uapplication/pgp; format=text; x-action=sign\n"
You can add more macros, and some other are yet configured as default in newer versions of Mutt. Some other options include:
To see what other options are activated, you must go to the help menu (?) from the menu where you were.
As this is not the objetive of this Howto, we will comment that the securest way to get the public key from anybody is that he gives it to us directly by hand.
As many times this is not an easy method (how long they are) the people can send the public key by electronic mail, or searching it in a key server, but none of those methods assure that the obtained key is really from whom it seems to be. If you use other communication media considered "secure" (searching the owner in the phone listing and asking him to read his key "fingerprint" to contrast with the fingerprint from the key we have obtained from the non-secure path).
What we are going to see is a "tip" to put into the .procmailrc
from the Procmail mail processor to get back automatically your publick
key to the remitent when you get a message with a determined text in the
Subject
line:
:0 h
* ^Subject:[ ]+\/(|send)[ ]+key pub\>.*
| mutt -s "Re: $MATCH" `formail -rtzxTo:` </clau/mykey.asc
What it is said in the previous paragraph is: we have a copy in ASCII of
our public key, in any directory (in this case the /clau
directory) in a file named mykey.asc
; when procmail gets a
message that include "send key pub" in the Subject:
line, send
the file to the remitent.
IMPORTANT: what you have between the brackets is an space and a tab.
When you receive a signed message that uses PGP/MIME and you open it with your preferred MUA (Mutt, isn't it?), it recognizes the message as PGP/MIME and checks the signature if you have the remitent public key. These messages are the ones that have the "S" in the first part of the message line in Mutt:
36 S 05/09 Andres Seco Her ( 12K) Al fin
while the encrypted messages have the "P":
12 P 03/24 Andres Seco Her (6,3K) Re: FW: Re: Mutt - pgp/gnupg
But if the message is signed and has the "application/pgp" MIME type, when you open it Mutt doesn't check its sign, and this sign is into the message body, as here:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Date: Tue, 25 May 1999 13:04:26 +0200
From: La Corporación <bill@reboot.com>
Subject: Actualización S.O.
To: Sufrido Usuario <pepe@casa.es>
Sufrido usuario:
le comunicamos que puede usted adquirir la última actualización del
programa O.E. con la adquisición de nuestro sistema operativo reboot99
por el módico precio de ... etc.
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: 2.6.3ia
Charset: noconv
iKBGNpUBX0235VapRBUy1KklAQGl9wQA3SBMio0bbbajHAnyKMOlx3tcgNG7/UVC
AbqXcUnyGGOo13Nbas95G34Fee3wsXIFo1obEfgiRzqPzZPLWoZdAnyTlZyTwCHe
6ifVpLTuaXvcn9/76rXoI6u9svN2cqHCgHuNASKHaK9034uq81PSdW4QdGLgLoeB
vnGmxE+tGg32=
=Xidf
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
To verify it, you must save it and use the command line. But, it is
possible to convert this MIME messages type with Procmail to allow
Mutt to recognize it as PGP/MIME. You only need to add this
to .procmailrc
:
:0
* !^Content-Type: message/
* !^Content-Type: multipart/
* !^Content-Type: application/pgp
{
:0 fBw
* ^-----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE-----
* ^-----END PGP MESSAGE-----
| formail \
-i "Content-Type: application/pgp; format=text; x-action=encrypt"
:0 fBw
* ^-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
* ^-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
* ^-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
| formail \
-i "Content-Type: application/pgp; format=text; x-action=sign"
}
As you can see, this is valid to signed messages and to encrypted messages with application/pgp.
When you receive a public key block from a non PGP/MIME compliant
MUA, you must save the message body in your disk and then insert it into
your public key ring, but, including this lines into your .procmailrc
file, you can include it directly from mutt.
:0 fBw
* ^-----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
* ^-----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
| formail -i "Content-Type: application/pgp-keys; format=text;"
Thanks to Denis Alan for this procmail note.
In the first days, the PGP sign was included inside the text to sign.
Later, it was included the application/pgp
MIME type to show that
the next attach was the sign or the encrypted PGP message, and finally,
with the PGP/MIME specification, it was possible to isolate the sign from
the original affected, to not modify absolutelly and somebody that didn't
have PGP could view the message as it was originally (only for signed
messages), without any added text in the beginning or in the end from PGP.
The actual situation is that only a few mail user agents (MUAs) are capable to integrate PGP to use the PGP/MIME standard, and it is necesary to send messages using the old time PGP sign when you know that the recipient doesn't recognize PGP/MIME.
In Linux, the available mail user agents that are PGP/MIME compliant are mutt-i and pine. In Windows, only the Eudora mail client versions 3.x and 4.x can use PGP/MIME. If you know any other mail user agent that supports it, tell us by mail, to include it here.
To write this document we have used the next Mutt versions:
And the next PGP and GnuPG versions:
The original documentation from where this document has been obtained can be found in the man pages from "mutt", "pgp", "pgp5", "gnupg", "procmail", in the respectives directories in /usr/doc and in the world wide web sites:
The recommendations (request for comments, RFC) that are referenced in this document are:
and can be found in /usr/doc/doc-rfc and in various sites in the world wide web, like http://metalab.unc.edu and http://nic.mil. You can get information from RFCs in RFC-INFO@ISI.EDU