$Id: TLS,v 1.2 2010/10/20 13:07:13 pseudo Exp $ TLS support Last revised: Oct 17, 2010 _____________________________________________________________________ TLS support This document provides information about TLS support which is a new eggdrop feature since version 1.8.0. Contents: 1. About 2. Installation 3. Usage 3a. IRC 3b. Botnet 3c. Secure DCC 3d. Scripts 4. Keys, certificates and authentication 5. SSL settings 1. About Eggdrop can be optionally compiled with TLS support. This requires OpenSSL 0.9.8 or more recent installed on your system. TLS support includes encryption for IRC, DCC, botnet, telnet and scripted connections as well as certificate authentication for users and bots. 2. Installation ./configure and install as usual, the configure script will detect if your system meets the requirements and will enable TLS automatically. You can override the autodetection and manually disable TLS with ./configure --disable-tls. You can't forcefully enable it though. The configure script will look for OpenSSL at the default system locations. If you have it installed at a non-standard location or locally in your home directory, you'll need to specify the paths to header and library files with the --with-sslinc and --with-ssllib options. You can also use these if you want to override the default OpenSSL installation with a custom one, as they take precedence over any system-wide paths. 3. Usage By default, without additional configuration, TLS support will provide opportunistic encryption for botnet links. For other connection types, TLS must be requested explicitly. Secure connections are created the same way as plaintext ones. The only difference is that you must prefix the port number with a plus sign. A port number that could be normally omitted, would have to be included to enable TLS. Scripts can also switch a regular, plaintext connection to TLS, using the starttls Tcl command. 3a. IRC To connect to IRC using SSL, specify the port number and prefix it with a plus sign. Example: .jump irc.server.com +6697. The same goes for the server list in the config file. 3b. Botnet Botnet links between TLS-enabled bots will automatically switch to SSL. In this case however, the nickname and password will be sent before SSL negotiation takes place (the password is not send as cleartext anyway). If one of the bots doesn't support TLS, the connection will fall back to plain text. To require SSL explicitly, you need to open a ssl telnet port on your hub and prefix the port number with + when adding it on your leafs. For SSL-only bot links, all communication is encrypted, including sending the nickname and password. If SSL negotiation fails, the connection is deliberately aborted and no clear text is ever sent. 3c. Secure DCC Eggdrop supports the SDCC protocol, allowing you to establish DCC chat and file transfers over SSL. Example: /ctcp bot schat Note, that currently the only IRC client supporting SDCC is KVIrc. For information on how to initiate secure DCC chat from KVIrc (rather than from the bot with /ctcp bot chat), consult the KVIrc documentation. 3d. Scripts Scripts can open or connect to SSL ports the usual way specifying the port with a plus sign. Alternatively, the connection could be established as plaintext and later switched on with the starttls Tcl command. (Note that the other side should also switch to SSL at the same time - the synchronization is the script's job, not eggdrop's.) 4. Keys, certificates and authentication You need a private key and a digital certificate whenever your bot will act as a server in a connection of any type. Common examples are hub bots and SSL listening ports. General information about certificates and public key infrastructure can be obtained from Internet. This document only contains eggdrop-specific information on the subject. The easy way to create a key and a certificate is to type 'make sslcert' after compiling your bot. This will generate a 2048-bit private key (eggdrop.key) and a certificate (eggdrop.crt) after you fill in the required fields. To authenticate with a certificate instead of using password, you should make a ssl certificate for yourself and enable ssl-cert-auth in the config file. Then either connect to the bot using SSL and type ".fprint +" or enter your certificate fingerprint with .fprint SHA1-FINGERPRINT. To generate a ssl certificate for yourself, you can run the following command from the eggdrop source directory: openssl req -new -x509 -nodes -keyout my.key -out my.crt -config ssl.conf When asked about bot's handle, put your handle instead. How to use your new certificate to connect to eggdrop, depends on your irc client. To connect to your bot from the command line, you can use the OpenSSL ssl client: openssl s_client -cert my.crt -key my.key -connect host:sslport 5. SSL Settings There are some new settings allowing control over certificate verification and authorization. ssl-privatekey file containing Eggdrop's private key, required for the certificate. ssl-certificate Specify the filename where your SSL certificate is located. if your bot will accept SSL connections, it must have a certificate. ssl-verify-depth maximum verification depth when checking certificate validity. Determines the maximum certificate chain length to allow. ssl-capath ssl-cafile specify the location of certificate authorities certificates. These are used for verification. Both can be active at the same time. If you don't set this, validation of the issuer won't be possible and depending on verification settings, the peer certificate might fail verification. ssl-ciphers specify the list of ciphers (in order of preference) allowed for use with ssl. ssl-cert-auth enables or disables certificate authorization for partyline/botnet. This works only for SSL connections (SDCC or telnet over SSL). A setting of 1 means optional authorization: If the user/bot has a fingerprint set and it matches the certificate SHA1 fingerprint, access is granted, otherwise ordinary password authentication takes place. If you set this to 2 however, users without a fingerprint set or with a fingerprint not matching the certificate, will not be allowed to enter the partyline with SSL. In addition to this user and bot certificates will be required to have an UID field matching the handle of the user/bot. ssl-verify-dcc ssl-verify-bots ssl-verify-server ssl-verify-clients control ssl certificate verification. A value of 0 disables verification completely. A value of 1 enables full verification. Higher values enable specific exceptions like allowing self-signed or expired certificates. Details are documented in eggdrop.conf. _____________________________________________________________________ Copyright (C) 2010 Eggheads Development Team