diff --git a/testssl.sh b/testssl.sh index 2975d13..697b9a0 100755 --- a/testssl.sh +++ b/testssl.sh @@ -22933,20 +22933,18 @@ run_rating() { pr_headlineln " Rating (experimental) " outln + [[ -n "$STARTTLS_PROTOCOL" ]] && set_grade_cap "T" "STARTTLS is prone to MITM downgrade attacks. A secure TLS upgrade can only be ensured client-side. You should use TLS only (=implicit TLS) rather than STARTTLS as per RFC 8314, for other than SMTP and SIEVE" - if [[ -n "$STARTTLS_PROTOCOL" ]]; then - read -r -d '' grade_cap_reason <<'EOF' -TL;DR: E-mail transfer via port 25 is broken and the amendments suggested so far are duct tape. So please do not expect testssl.sh to shut up. + # TL;DR: STARTTLS connections are inherently insecure. A MITM can always intercept the connection, unless the client checks e.g. the + # certificate accordingly. A secure STARTTLS client is the key but we can't test for it. For other than SMTP and SIEVE (there's no implicit TLS port) + # you should use implicit TLS as per RFC 8314. Especially e-mail transfer via port 25 is broken and amendments so far are duct tape. -Explanation: For other than SMTP you should use TLS as per RFC 8314. For SMTP however there's this thing named reality: A mail server cannot -just switch to the mail submission port 587 only and continue to receive mail from everyone. Even if you advertise this via SRV record (RFC 6186). -For STARTTLS there's no way to tell for testssl.sh whether it is secure. A MitM can always intercept the connection, unless the client checks -the certificate accordingly (it's getting better but some just don't). TLSA Records/DANE and MTA-STS (RFC-8461) on the server side can help too. -But as said, it's useless unless the client MTA checks all that which no tool can check. -EOF - # We can't use newlines in the message, as the grade-sorting function will mess up the reason - set_grade_cap "T" "$(tr '\n' ' ' <<<$grade_cap_reason)" - fi + # Explanation: There are active MitM attacks possible when using STARTTLS like https://github.com/tintinweb/striptls or + # https://github.com/libcrack/starttlsstrip. It depends on the client only whether it can detect such downgrade attack. + # As some SMTP servers are still misconfigured with wrong certificates it's is still common practice for SMTP client MTAs to + # accept those wrong certificates -- delivering e-mails is more important. There is an e-mail submission port 587 but a mail server + # cannot just switch to it and continue to receive mail from everyone. Even if you advertise this via SRV record (RFC 6186). + # TLSA Records/DANE and MTA-STS (RFC-8461) on the server side can help too, pr_bold " Rating specs"; out " (not complete) "; outln "SSL Labs's 'SSL Server Rating Guide' (version 2009q from 2020-01-30)" pr_bold " Specification documentation "; pr_url "https://github.com/ssllabs/research/wiki/SSL-Server-Rating-Guide"