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Security level checks

chasquid tracks per-domain TLS support, and uses it to prevent connection downgrading.

Incoming and outgoing connections are tracked independently, but the principle of operation is the same: once a domain shows it can establish secure connections, chasquid will reject lower-security connections from/to its servers.

This is very different from other MTAs, and has some tradeoffs.

Outgoing connections

An outgoing connection has one of 3 security levels, which are (in order):

  1. Plain: connection is plain-text (the server does not support TLS).
  2. TLS insecure: TLS connection established, but the certificate itself was not valid.
  3. TLS secure: TLS connection established, with a valid certificate.

When establishing an outgoing connection, chasquid will always attempt to negotiate up to the TLS secure level. After the negotiation, it will compare which level it got, with the previously recorded value for this domain:

If there is no previously recorded value for this domain, a plain level is assumed.

Certificate validation

A certificate is considered valid if it satisfies all of the following conditions:

  1. The certificate is properly signed by one of the system roots.
  2. The name used to contact the server (e.g. the name from the MX record) is declared in the certificate.

This is the standard method used in other services such as HTTPS; however, there is no standard to do certificate validation on SMTP.

chasquid chooses to implement validation this way, which is also consistent with MTA-STS and HTTPS, but it is not universally agreed upon. It's also why the "TLS insecure" state exists, instead of the connection being rejected directly.

Tradeoffs

Almost all other MTAs do TLS negotiation but accept all certificates, even self-signed or expired ones. chasquid operates differently, as described above.

The main advantage is that, with domains where secure connections were previously established, chasquid will detect connection downgrading (caused by malicious interception such as STARTTLS blocking, as well as misconfiguration such as incorrectly configured or expired certificates), and avoid communicating insecurely.

The main disadvantage is that if a domain changes the configuration to a lower security level, chasquid will fail the delivery (returning a message to the sender explaining why). Because there is no formal standard for TLS certificate validation, and most MTAs will deliver email in this situation, the domain owners might not see this as a problem and thus require manual intervention on the chasquid side to explicitly allow it.

MTA-STS

MTA-STS is a relatively new standard which defines a mechanism enabling mail service providers to declare their ability to receive TLS connections, amongst other things.

It is supported by chasquid, out of the box, and in practice it means that for domains that advertise MTA-STS support, the secure level will be enforced even if the domain was previously unknown.

Incoming connections

Incoming connections from authenticated users are always done over TLS (chasquid will never accept authentication over plaintext connections). This section applies only to incoming connections from other SMTP servers.

An incoming connection from another SMTP server is first checked through SPF. If the result of the check is negative (fail, softfail, neutral, or error), then the following is skipped. This prevents a malicious agent from raising the level and interfering with legitimate plaintext delivery.

After the SPF check has passed, the connection is assigned one of the 2 security levels, which are (in order):

  1. Plain: connection is plain-text (client did not do TLS negotiation).
  2. TLS client: connection is over TLS.

At this point, chasquid will compare the level with the previously recorded value for this domain:

If there is no previously recorded value for this domain, a plain level is assumed.

Tradeoffs

Almost all other MTAs accept server to server connections regardless of the security level, because there is no way for a domain to advertise that it will always negotiate TLS when sending email. chasquid operates differently, assuming that once a server negotiates TLS, it will always attempt to do so.

The main advantage is that, with domains that had previously used TLS for incoming connections, chasquid will detect connection downgrading (caused by malicious interception such as STARTTLS blocking), and avoid communicating insecurely.

The main disadvantage is that if a domain changes the configuration and is unable to negotiate TLS, chasquid will reject the connection and not receive incoming email from this server. This is unusual nowadays, but because other MTAs will accept the connection anyway, domain owners might not even notice there is a problem, and might require manual intervention on the chasquid side to explicitly allow it.

Accepting lower security levels {#manual-override}

If a domain changes its configuration to a lower security level and is causing chasquid to fail delivery, you can use chasquid-util domaininfo-remove <domain> to make the server forget about that domain.

Then, the next time there is a connection, there is no high security expectation so it will proceed just fine, regardless of the level that was negotiated.