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205 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
205 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
=begin html
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<a href="https://travis-ci.org/TLINDEN/pcp"><img
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src="https://travis-ci.org/TLINDEN/pcp.svg?branch=master"
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alt="build status"/></a>
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<a href="https://ci.appveyor.com/project/TLINDEN/pcp"><img
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src="https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/7e833vup5pqhse83?svg=true"
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alt="build status"/></a>
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=end html
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=head1 DESCRIPTION
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B<Pretty Curved Privacy> (pcp1) is a commandline utility which can
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be used to encrypt files. B<pcp1> uses elliptic curve cryptography
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for encryption (CURVE25519 by Dan J. Bernstein). While CURVE25519
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is not a worldwide accepted standard it hasn't been compromised by
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the NSA - which might be better, depending on your point of view.
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B<Caution>: since CURVE25519 is not an accepted standard, B<pcp1> has
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to be considered experimental software. In fact, I wrote it just
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to learn about the curve and see how it works.
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Beside some differences it works like B<GNUPG>. So, if you already
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know how to use gpg, you'll feel almost at home.
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=head1 QUICKSTART
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Lets say, Alicia and Bobby want to exchange encrypted messages.
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Here's what they need to do.
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First, both have to create a secret key:
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Alicia Bobby
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pcp1 -k pcp1 -k
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After entering their name, email address, and a passphrase to protect
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the key, it will be stored in their B<vault file> (by default ~/.pcpvault).
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Now, both of them have to export the public key, which has to be
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imported by the other one. With B<pcp> you can export the public
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part of your primary key, but the better solution is to export
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a derived public key especially for the recipient:
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Alicia Bobby
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pcp1 -p -r Bobby -O alicia.pub pcp1 -p -r Alicia -O bobby.pub
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They've got to exchange the public key somehow (which is not my
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problem at the moment, use ssh, encrypted mail, etc). Once exchanged,
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they have to import it:
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Alicia Bobby
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pcp1 -K -I bobby.pub pcp1 -K -I alicia.pub
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They will see a response when this is done:
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key 0x29A323A2C295D391 added to .pcpvault.
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Now, Alicia finally writes the secret message, encrypts it, and
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sends it to Bobby, who in turn decrypts it:
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Alicia Bobby
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echo "Love you, honey" > letter
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pcp1 -e -r Bobby -I letter -O letter.asc
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cat letter.asc | mail bobby@foo.bar
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pcp1 -d -I letter.asc | less
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And that's it.
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Please note the big difference to B<GPG> though: both Alicia
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AND Bobby have to enter the passphrase for their secret key!
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That's the way CURVE25519 works: you encrypt a message using
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your secret key and the recipients public key and the recipient
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does the opposite, he uses his secret key and your public key
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to actually decrypt the message.
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Oh - and if you're wondering why I named them Alicia and Bobby:
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I was just sick of Alice and Bob. We're running NSA-free, so we're
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using other sample names as well.
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=head1 FILES AND PIPES
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Pcp behaves like any other unix tool. If not otherwise specified
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it will read input from standard input (STDIN) and print output
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to standard output (STDOUT). For instance:
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pcp1 -e -O output
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will read the text to be encrypted from standard input, because B<-I>
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has not been specified. It works the same with B<-O>:
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pcp1 -e -I myfile
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In this case the encrypted result will be written to standard output.
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Therefore it is possible to use pcp within pipes. Another more
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realistic example:
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ssh remote cat file | pcp1 -ez | mailx -s 'as requested' bob@somewhere
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Here we encrypt a file symmetrically without downloading it from a
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remote ssh server and sending the encrypted result via email to
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someone.
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The behavior is the same with any other functionality where files are involved
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like importing or exporting keys. However, there's one exception:
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If the option B<-X> (B<--password-file>) has been used and is set
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to B<->, then this will take precedence over any other possible use
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of standard input. So if you want to encrypt something and don't
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specify an input file you cannot use B<-X ->, and vice versa. IF
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you use B<-X -> the passphrase will be read from standard input, which
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then can't be used further for input files elsewhere. Pcp will exit
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with an error in such a case.
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=head1 INSTALLATION
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There are currently no packages available, so B<pcp> has to be
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compiled from source. Follow these steps:
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First, you will need libsodium:
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git clone git://github.com/jedisct1/libsodium.git
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cd libsodium
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./autogen.sh
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./configure && make check
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sudo make install
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sudo ldconfig
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cd ..
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Next, pcp:
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git clone git://github.com/tlinden/pcp.git
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cd pcp
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./configure
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sudo make install
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cd ..
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Optionally, you might run the unit tests:
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make test
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=head1 DOCUMENTATION
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To learn how to use B<pcp>, read the manpage:
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man pcp1
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=head1 COPYRIGHT
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Copyright (c) 2013-2015 by T.v.Dein <tom AT vondein DOT org>
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=head1 ADDITIONAL COPYRIGHTS
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=over
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=item B<ZeroMQ Z85 encoding routine>
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Copyright (c) 2007-2013 iMatix Corporation
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Copyright (c) 2009-2011 250bpm s.r.o.
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Copyright (c) 2010-2011 Miru Limited
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Copyright (c) 2011 VMware, Inc.
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Copyright (c) 2012 Spotify AB
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=item B<Tarsnap readpass helpers>
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Copyright 2009 Colin Percival
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=item B<jen_hash() hash algorithm>
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Bob Jenkins, Public Domain.
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=item B<UTHASH hashing macros>
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Copyright (c) 2003-2013, Troy D. Hanson
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=item B<Random art image from OpenSSH keygen>
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Copyright (c) 2000, 2001 Markus Friedl. All rights reserved.
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Comitted by Alexander von Gernler in rev 1.7.
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=back
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Every incorporated source code is opensource and licensed
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under the B<GPL> as well.
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=head1 AUTHORS
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I<T.v.Dein <tom AT vondein DOT org>>
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=head1 LICENSE
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Licensed under the GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE version 3.
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=head1 HOME
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The homepage of Pretty Curved Privacy can be found on
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http://www.daemon.de/PrettyCurvedPrivacy. The source is
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on Github: https://github.com/TLINDEN/pcp
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=cut
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