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NAME

       gen-auth - generate various authentication strings

USAGE

       gen-auth [--help|--version] | <type> ...

DESCRIPTION

       gen-auth is tool to assist in all kinds of authentication / encoding / decoding / encrypting tasks.  It
       began life as an smtp-specific tool, but has drifted in functionality over time.

       The program actions are broken down into types of encoding to generate.  Each <type> then takes its own
       specific args.  The arguments are expected in a specific order on the command line.  Every argument that
       isn't available on the command line will be prompted for.  One benefit to this is arguments corresponding
       to passwords will not be echoed to the terminal when prompted for.

TYPES

       The program action is controlled by the first argument.  The meaning of the following arguments is
       specified by this type

       PLAIN <username> <password>
           This  type  generates a PLAIN (RFC 2595) authentication string.  It accepts supplemental arguments of
           username and password.  It generates a Base64 encoded string "\0<username>\0<password>".

       LOGIN <username> <password>
           This method accepts username and password as supplemental args.  It simply returns each string Base64
           encoded.  This provides only minimal advantages over using ENCODE twice.  One advantage is hiding the
           password if you provide it on STDIN

       CRAM-MD5 <username> <password> <challenge>
           CRAM-MD5 (RFC 2195) accepts three supplemental arguments.  The first is the username and  the  second
           is  the  password.   The  third  is  the challenge string provided by the server.  This string can be
           either Base64 encoded or not.  The RFC states that all (unencoded) challenge strings  must  start  w/
           '<'.  This is used to whether the string is Base64 encoded or not.

           CRAM-MD5  uses  the  challenge  and  the supplied password to generate a digest.  it then returns the
           Base64 encoded version of the string md5("<username> <challenge>")

           This authentication method requires the Digest::MD5 perl module to be installed.

       CRAM-SHA1 <username> <password> <challenge>
           This behaves the same as CRAM-MD5 but uses SHA1 digesting rather than MD5.

           This authentication method requires the Digest::SHA1 perl module to be installed.

       NTLM/SPA/MSN <username> <password> <domain> <challenge>
           Although it may be advertised as one of the above types, this method of authentication if refered  to
           singularly  as  NTLM.   This  is  a  multi-step  authentication  type.  The first 3 arguments must be
           supplied up front.  They are username, password, and domain, in that order.  These three strings  are
           used to generate an "Auth Request" string.  This string should be passed verbatim to the server.  The
           server  will  then respond with a challenge.  This challenge is the fourth argument.  After receiving
           the server challenge, gen-auth will produce an "Auth Response".  Posting this response to the  server
           completes the NTLM authentication transaction.

           This  authentication  method requires the Authen::NTLM perl module to be installed.  See EXAMPLES for
           an example of this transaction.  Note also that 'domain' is often blank from  client  or  ignored  by
           server.

       HTTP-BASIC <username> <password>
           Returns  the  value  base64("<username>:<password>").  Used for HTTP Basic authentication (RFC 2617).
           Used by adding a header "Authorization: Basic <string>" to a  HTTP  request  where  <string>  is  the
           output of this command.

       APOP <challenge> <password>
           This  implements the APOP authentication for the POP3 protocol as described in RFC 1939.  <challenge>
           is the challenge string presented by the POP3 server in  the  greeting  banner.   <password>  is  the
           "secret"  (usually  a  password)  used  to  authenticate  the  user.   This  method  returns a digest
           md5("<challenge><password>").  This can be used to authenticate to a POP3 server  in  a  string  like
           "APOP <user> <digest>" where <digest> is the string generated by this command.

           APOP required the Digest::MD5 perl module.

       ENCODE <string>
           Simply Base64 encodes a plaintext string.  Provided as a convenience function.

       DECODE <string>
           Decodes a Base64 encoded string.  Provided as a convenience function.

       MD5/MD5-HEX <string>
           Provides an MD5 digest of the supplied string in hex.

       MD5-BASE64 <string>
           Provides an MD5 digest of the supplied string in Base64.

       ENCRYPT <string>
           Returns a crypt(3) string generated from the input string.

       SALTENCRYPT <string> <salt>
           Same as ENCRYPT but you provide the salt as the second argument.  See crypt(3) man page for details.

       ROT13 <string>
           This  performs  a  rot13  action  on <string>.  This implementation only performs the action on ASCII
           65-90,97-123.  Any other character value is left untouched.  Therefore this method is  primarily  for
           LOCALE=C, ASCII only.  Feel free to send patches if you care to have it work in another setting.

       ATBASH <string>
           This  performs  an  atbash action on <string>.  Atbash mirrors a string such that 'a'=='z', 'b'=='y',
           etc.  See the comments on locale and character set under ROT13.

OPTIONS

       -s  Supresses echo on all input fields read from standard input.  If this option is  not  used,  echo  is
           suppressed on fields which are known to be password fields but this may not be secure enough.

       --help
           this screen.

       --version
           version info.

EXAMPLES

       generate a PLAIN AUTH string for user 'tim', password 'tanstaaftanstaaf'
             > gen-auth plain tim tanstaaftanstaaf
             Auth String: AHRpbQB0YW5zdGFhZnRhbnN0YWFm

       generate a CRAM-MD5 string for user 'tim', password 'tanstaaftanstaaf', challenge
       '<1896.697170952@postoffice.reston.mci.net>', using prompt to hide password
             > gen-auth cram-md5
             username: tim
             password:
             challenge: PDE4OTYuNjk3MTcwOTUyQHBvc3RvZmZpY2UucmVzdG9uLm1jaS5uZXQ+
             dGltIGI5MTNhNjAyYzdlZGE3YTQ5NWI0ZTZlNzMzNGQzODkw

       use the DECODE method to ensure we provided the correct output in our last example
             > gen-auth decode dGltIGI5MTNhNjAyYzdlZGE3YTQ5NWI0ZTZlNzMzNGQzODkw
             tim b913a602c7eda7a495b4e6e7334d3890

       use the NTLM (MSN) method to authenticate to a mail server using user 'tim', password 'tanstaaftanstaaf',
       and domain MAIL.  Both the gen-auth transaction and SMTP transaction are shown to demonstrate the
       interaction between the two.
             AUTH MSN
             334 NTLM supported
             TlRMTVNTUAABAAAAB7IAAAMAAwAgAAAABAAEACMAAAB0aW1NQUlM
             334 TlRMTVNTUAACAAAAAAAAAAAoAAABggAA9RH5KZlXvygAAACAAAAAZL//4sQAAAAC
             TlRMTVNTUAADAAAAGAAYAEAAAAAYABgAWAAAAAAAAAAwAAAABgAGAHAAAAAGAAYAdgAAAAAAAAA8AAAAAYIAAK3lcO8PldNxIrkbvgKGJRR5owQePUtYaTtLVgfQiVQBywW2yZKyp+VFGqYfgDtdEHQAaQBtAHQAaQBtAA==
             235 Authentication succeeded

             > gen-auth spa
             username: tim
             password:
             domain: MAIL
             Auth Request: TlRMTVNTUAABAAAAB7IAAAMAAwAgAAAABAAEACMAAAB0aW1NQUlM
             challenge: TlRMTVNTUAACAAAAAAAAAAAoAAABggAA9RH5KZlXvygAAACAAAAAZL//4sQAAAAC
             Auth Response: TlRMTVNTUAADAAAAGAAYAEAAAAAYABgAWAAAAAAAAAAwAAAABgAGAHAAAAAGAAYAdgAAAAAAAAA8AAAAAYIAAK3lcO8PldNxIrkbvgKGJRR5owQePUtYaTtLVgfQiVQBywW2yZKyp+VFGqYfgDtdEHQAaQBtAHQAaQBtAA==

REQUIRES

       MIME::Base64
           Required for all functionality

       Digest::MD5
           Required for MD5, MD5-BASE64, CRAM-MD5, APOP

       Digest::SHA1
           Required for CRAM-SHA1

       Authen::NTLM
           Required for NTLM/MSN/SPA

EXIT CODES

       0 - no errors occurred
       1 - unrecognized type specified

CONTACT

       proj-gen-auth@jetmore.net

perl v5.34.0                                       2022-12-12                                        GEN-AUTH(1)