Using TLS in Applications | D. Margolis |
Internet-Draft | M. Risher |
Intended status: Standards Track | Google, Inc |
Expires: June 7, 2018 | B. Ramakrishnan |
Yahoo!, Inc | |
A. Brotman | |
Comcast, Inc | |
J. Jones | |
Microsoft, Inc | |
December 4, 2017 |
SMTP MTA Strict Transport Security (MTA-STS)
draft-ietf-uta-mta-sts-12
SMTP Mail Transfer Agent Strict Transport Security (MTA-STS) is a mechanism enabling mail service providers to declare their ability to receive Transport Layer Security (TLS) secure SMTP connections, and to specify whether sending SMTP servers should refuse to deliver to MX hosts that do not offer TLS with a trusted server certificate.
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This Internet-Draft will expire on June 7, 2018.
Copyright (c) 2017 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved.
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The STARTTLS extension to SMTP [RFC3207] allows SMTP clients and hosts to negotiate the use of a TLS channel for encrypted mail transmission.
While this opportunistic encryption protocol by itself provides a high barrier against passive man-in-the-middle traffic interception, any attacker who can delete parts of the SMTP session (such as the "250 STARTTLS" response) or who can redirect the entire SMTP session (perhaps by overwriting the resolved MX record of the delivery domain) can perform downgrade or interception attacks.
This document defines a mechanism for recipient domains to publish policies specifying:
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].
We also define the following terms for further use in this document:
The DANE TLSA record [RFC7672] is similar, in that DANE is also designed to upgrade unauthenticated encryption or plaintext transmission into authenticated, downgrade-resistant encrypted transmission. DANE requires DNSSEC [RFC4033] for authentication; the mechanism described here instead relies on certificate authorities (CAs) and does not require DNSSEC, at a cost of risking malicious downgrades. For a thorough discussion of this trade-off, see Section 10, "Security Considerations".
In addition, MTA-STS provides an optional report-only mode, enabling soft deployments to detect policy failures; partial deployments can be achieved in DANE by deploying TLSA records only for some of a domain's MXs, but such a mechanism is not possible for the per-domain policies used by MTA-STS.
The primary motivation of MTA-STS is to provide a mechanism for domains to ensure transport security even when deploying DNSSEC is undesirable or impractical. However, MTA-STS is designed not to interfere with DANE deployments when the two overlap; in particular, senders who implement MTA-STS validation MUST NOT allow a "valid" or "report-only" MTA-STS validation to override a failing DANE validation.
MTA-STS policies are distributed via HTTPS from a "well-known" [RFC5785] path served within the Policy Domain, and their presence and current version are indicated by a TXT record at the Policy Domain. These TXT records additionally contain a policy id field, allowing sending MTAs to check the currency of a cached policy without performing an HTTPS request.
To discover if a recipient domain implements MTA-STS, a sender need only resolve a single TXT record. To see if an updated policy is available for a domain for which the sender has a previously cached policy, the sender need only check the TXT record's version id against the cached value.
The MTA-STS TXT record is a TXT record with the name _mta-sts at the Policy Domain. For the domain example.com, this record would be _mta-sts.example.com. MTA-STS TXT records MUST be US-ASCII, semicolon-separated key/value pairs containing the following fields:
An example TXT record is as below:
_mta-sts.example.com. IN TXT "v=STSv1; id=20160831085700Z;"
The formal definition of the _mta-sts TXT record, defined using [RFC7405], is as follows:
sts-text-record = sts-version 1*(field-delim sts-field) [field-delim] sts-field = sts-id / ; Note that sts-id record sts-extension ; is required. field-delim = *WSP ";" *WSP sts-version = %s"v=STSv1" sts-id = %s"id=" 1*32(ALPHA / DIGIT) ; id=... sts-extension = sts-ext-name "=" sts-ext-value ; name=value sts-ext-name = (ALPHA / DIGIT) *31(ALPHA / DIGIT / "_" / "-" / ".") sts-ext-value = 1*(%x21-3A / %x3C / %x3E-7E) ; chars excluding "=", ";", SP, and control chars
If multiple TXT records for _mta-sts are returned by the resolver, records which do not begin with v=STSv1; are discarded. If the number of resulting records is not one, senders MUST assume the recipient domain does not implement MTA-STS and skip the remaining steps of policy discovery. If the resulting TXT record contains multiple strings, then the record MUST be treated as if those strings are concatenated together without adding spaces.
The policy itself is a set of key/value pairs (similar to [RFC5322] header fields) served via the HTTPS GET method from the fixed [RFC5785] "well-known" path of .well-known/mta-sts.txt served by the mta-sts host at the Policy Domain. Thus for example.com the path is https://mta-sts.example.com/.well-known/mta-sts.txt.
The [RFC7231] "Content-Type" media type for this resource MUST be "text/plain". When fetching a policy, senders SHOULD validate that the media type is "text/plain" to guard against cases where webservers allow untrusted users to host non-text content (typically, HTML or images) at a user-defined path. Additional "Content-Type" parameters are ignored.
This resource contains the following newline-separated key/value pairs:
An example policy is as below:
version: STSv1 mode: enforce mx: mail.example.com mx: .example.net mx: backupmx.example.com max_age: 123456
The formal definition of the policy resource, defined using [RFC7405], is as follows:
sts-policy-record = *WSP sts-policy-field *WSP *(CRLF *WSP sts-policy-field *WSP) [CRLF] sts-policy-field = sts-policy-version / ; required once sts-policy-mode / ; required once sts-policy-max-age / ; required once 0*(sts-policy-mx *WSP CRLF) / ; required at least once, except when ; mode is "none" sts-policy-extension ; other fields field-delim = ":" *WSP sts-policy-version = sts-policy-version-field field-delim sts-policy-version-value sts-policy-version-field = %s"version" sts-policy-version-value = %s"STSv1" sts-policy-mode = sts-policy-mode-field field-delim sts-policy-mode-value sts-policy-mode-field = %s"mode" sts-policy-model-value = %s"testing" / %s"enforce" / %s"none" sts-policy-mx = sts-policy-mx-field field-delim sts-policy-mx-value sts-policy-mx-field = %s"mx" sts-policy-mx-value = 1*(ALPHA / DIGIT / "_" / "-" / ".") sts-policy-max-age = sts-policy-max-age-field field-delim sts-policy-max-age-value sts-policy-max-age-field = %s"max_age" sts-policy-max-age-value = 1*10(DIGIT) sts-policy-extension = sts-policy-ext-name ; additional field-delim ; extension sts-policy-ext-value ; fields sts-policy-ext-name = (ALPHA / DIGIT) *31(ALPHA / DIGIT / "_" / "-" / ".") sts-policy-ext-value = 1*(%x21-3A / %x3C / %x3E-7E) ; chars, excluding "=", ";", SP, and ; control chars
Parsers MUST accept TXT records and policy files which are syntactically valid (i.e. valid key/value pairs separated by semi-colons for TXT records) and but containing additional key/value pairs not specified in this document, in which case unknown fields SHALL be ignored. If any non-repeated field--i.e. all fields excepting mx--is duplicated, all entries except for the first SHALL be ignored. If any field is not specified, the policy SHALL be treated as invalid.
When fetching a new policy or updating a policy, the HTTPS endpoint MUST present a X.509 certificate which is valid for the mta-sts host (e.g. mta-sts.example.com) as described below, chain to a root CA that is trusted by the sending MTA, and be non-expired. It is expected that sending MTAs use a set of trusted CAs similar to those in widely deployed Web browsers and operating systems.
The certificate is valid for the mta-sts host with respect to the rules described in [RFC6125], with the following application-specific considerations:
The certificate MAY be checked for revocation via the Online Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP) [RFC6960], certificate revocation lists (CRLs), or some other mechanism.
Policies fetched via HTTPS are only valid if the HTTP response code is 200 (OK). HTTP 3xx redirects MUST NOT be followed, and HTTP caching (as specified in [RFC7234]) MUST NOT be used.
Senders may wish to rate-limit the frequency of attempts to fetch the HTTPS endpoint even if a valid TXT record for the recipient domain exists. In the case that the HTTPS GET fails, we suggest implementions may limit further attempts to a period of five minutes or longer per version ID, to avoid overwhelming resource-constrained recipients with cascading failures.
Senders MAY impose a timeout on the HTTPS GET and/or a limit on the maximum size of the response body to avoid long delays or resource exhaustion during attempted policy updates. A suggested timeout is one minute, and a suggested maximum policy size 64 kilobytes; policy hosts SHOULD respond to requests with a complete policy body within that timeout and size limit.
If a valid TXT record is found but no policy can be fetched via HTTPS (for any reason), and there is no valid (non-expired) previously-cached policy, senders MUST continue with delivery as though the domain has not implemented MTA-STS.
Conversely, if no "live" policy can be discovered via DNS or fetched via HTTPS, but a valid (non-expired) policy exists in the sender's cache, the sender MUST apply that cached policy.
Finally, to mitigate the risk of persistent interference with policy refresh, as discussed in-depth in Section 10, MTAs SHOULD proactivecly refresh cached policies before they expire; a suggested refresh frequency is once per day. To enable administrators to discover problems with policy refresh, MTAs SHOULD alert administrators (through the use of logs or similar) when such attempts fail, unless the cached policy mode is none.
When sending mail via a "smart host"--an intermediate SMTP relay rather than the message recipient's server--compliant senders MUST treat the smart host domain as the policy domain for the purposes of policy discovery and application.
When sending mail to a mailbox at a subdomain, compliant senders MUST NOT attempt to fetch a policy from the parent zone. Thus for mail sent to "user@mail.example.com", the policy can be fetched only from "mail.example.com", not "example.com".
When sending to an MX at a domain for which the sender has a valid and non-expired MTA-STS policy, a sending MTA honoring MTA-STS MUST validate:
This section does not dictate the behavior of sending MTAs when policies fail to validate; see Section 5, "Policy Application" for a description of sending MTA behavior when policy validation fails.
The certificate presented by the receiving MX MUST chain to a root CA that is trusted by the sending MTA and be non-expired. The certificate MUST have a CN-ID ([RFC6125]) or subject alternative name (SAN, [RFC5280]) with a DNS-ID matching the mx pattern. The MX's certificate MAY also be checked for revocation via OCSP [RFC6960], CRLs [RFC6818], or some other mechanism.
Because the mx patterns are not hostnames, however, matching is not identical to other common cases of X.509 certificate authentication (as described, for example, in [RFC6125]). Consider the example policy given above, with an mx pattern containing .example.com. In this case, if the MX server's X.509 certificate contains a SAN matching *.example.com, we are required to implement "wildcard-to-wildcard" matching.
To simplify this case, we impose the following constraints on wildcard certificates, identical to those in [RFC7672] section 3.2.3 and [RFC6125] section 6.4.3: wildcards are valid in DNS-IDs or CN-IDs, but must be the entire first label of the identifier (that is, *.example.com, not mail*.example.com). Senders who are comparing a "suffix" MX pattern with a wildcard identifier should thus strip the wildcard and ensure that the two sides match label-by-label, until all labels of the shorter side (if unequal length) are consumed.
Note that a wildcard must match a label; an mx pattern of .example.com thus does not match a SAN of example.com, nor does a SAN of *.example.com match an mx of example.com.
A simple pseudocode implementation of this algorithm is presented in Appendix B.
When sending to an MX at a domain for which the sender has a valid, non-expired MTA-STS policy, a sending MTA honoring MTA-STS applies the result of a policy validation failure one of two ways, depending on the value of the policy mode field:
When a message fails to deliver due to an enforce policy, a compliant MTA MUST NOT permanently fail to deliver messages before checking for the presence of an updated policy at the Policy Domain. (In all cases, MTAs SHOULD treat such failures as transient errors and retry delivery later.) This allows implementing domains to update long-lived policies on the fly.
An example control flow for a compliant sender consists of the following steps:
MTA-STS is intended to be used along with TLSRPT [I-D.ietf-uta-smtp-tlsrpt] in order to ensure implementing domains can detect cases of both benign and malicious failures, and to ensure that failures that indicate an active attack are discoverable. As such, senders who also implement TLSRPT SHOULD treat the following events as reportable failures:
To ensure that the server sends the right certificate chain, the SMTP client MUST have support for the TLS SNI extension [RFC6066]. When connecting to a HTTP server to retrieve the MTA-STS policy, the SNI extension MUST contain the name of the policy host (e.g. mta-sts.example.com). When connecting to an SMTP server, the SNI extension MUST contain the MX hostname.
HTTP servers used to deliver MTA-STS policies MUST have support for the TLS SNI extension and MAY rely on SNI to determine which certificate chain to present to the client. In either case, HTTP servers MUST respond with a certificate chain that matches the policy hostname or abort the TLS handshake if unable to do so.
SMTP servers MUST have support for the TLS SNI extension and MAY rely on SNI to determine which certificate chain to present to the client. If the client sends no SNI extension or sends an SNI extension for an unsupported server name, the server MUST simply send a fallback certificate chain of its choice. The reason for not enforcing strict matching of the requested SNI hostname is that MTA-STS TLS clients may be typically willing to accept multiple server names but can only send one name in the SNI extension. The server's fallback certificate may match a different name that is acceptable to the client, e.g., the original next-hop domain.
MTAs supporting MTA-STS MUST have support for TLS version 1.2 [RFC5246] or higher. The general TLS usage guidance in [RFC7525] SHOULD be followed.
Updating the policy requires that the owner make changes in two places: the _mta-sts TXT record in the Policy Domain's DNS zone and at the corresponding HTTPS endpoint. As a result, recipients should expect a policy will continue to be used by senders until both the HTTPS and TXT endpoints are updated and the TXT record's TTL has passed.
In other words, a sender who is unable to successfully deliver a message while applying a cache of the recipient's now-outdated policy may be unable to discover that a new policy exists until the DNS TTL has passed. Recipients should therefore ensure that old policies continue to work for message delivery during this period of time, or risk message delays.
Recipients should also prefer to update the HTTPS policy body before updating the TXT record; this ordering avoids the risk that senders, seeing a new TXT record, mistakenly cache the old policy from HTTPS.
Domain owners commonly delegate SMTP hosting to a different organization, such as an ISP or a Web host. In such a case, they may wish to also delegate the MTA-STS policy to the same organization which can be accomplished with two changes.
First, the Policy Domain must point the _mta-sts record, via CNAME, to the _mta-sts record maintained by the hosting organization. This allows the hosting organization to control update signaling.
Second, the Policy Domain must point the "well-known" policy location to the hosting organization. This can be done either by setting the mta-sts record to an IP address or CNAME specified by the hosting organization and by giving the hosting organization a TLS certificate which is valid for that host, or by setting up a "reverse proxy" (also known as a "gateway") server that serves as the Policy Domain's policy the policy currently served by the hosting organization.
For example, given a user domain user.example hosted by a mail provider provider.example, the following configuration would allow policy delegation:
DNS:
_mta-sts.user.example. IN CNAME _mta-sts.provider.example.
Policy:
> GET /.well-known/mta-sts.txt > Host: mta-sts.user.example < HTTP/1.1 200 OK # Response proxies content from # https://mta-sts.provider.example
Note that while sending MTAs MUST NOT use HTTP caching when fetching policies via HTTPS, such caching may nonetheless be useful to a reverse proxy configured as described in this section. An HTTPS policy endpoint expecting to be proxied for multiple hosted domains--as with a large mail hosting provider or similar--may wish to indicate an HTTP Cache-Control max-age response directive (as specified in [RFC7234]) of 60 seconds as a reasonable value to save reverse proxies an unnecessarily high-rate of proxied policy fetching.
In order to facilitate clean opt-out of MTA-STS by implementing policy domains, and to distinguish clearly between failures which indicate attacks and those which indicate such opt-outs, MTA-STS implements the none mode, which allows validated policies to indicate authoritatively that the policy domain wishes to no longer implement MTA-STS and may, in the future, remove the MTA-STS TXT and policy endpoints entirely.
A suggested workflow to implement such an opt out is as follows:
A new "well-known" URI as described in Section 3 will be registered in the Well-Known URIs registry as described below:
URI Suffix: mta-sts.txt Change Controller: IETF
IANA is requested to create a new registry titled "MTA-STS TXT Record Fields". The initial entries in the registry are:
Field Name | Description | Reference |
---|---|---|
v | Record version | Section 3.1 of RFC XXX |
id | Policy instance ID | Section 3.1 of RFC XXX |
New fields are added to this registry using IANA's "Expert Review" policy.
IANA is requested to create a new registry titled "MTA-STS Policy Fields". The initial entries in the registry are:
Field Name | Description | Reference |
---|---|---|
version | Policy version | Section 3.2 of RFC XXX |
mode | Enforcement behavior | Section 3.2 of RFC XXX |
max_age | Policy lifetime | Section 3.2 of RFC XXX |
mx | MX identities | Section 3.2 of RFC XXX |
New fields are added to this registry using IANA's "Expert Review" policy.
SMTP MTA Strict Transport Security attempts to protect against an active attacker who wishes to intercept or tamper with mail between hosts who support STARTTLS. There are two classes of attacks considered:
MTA-STS can thwart such attacks only if the sender is able to previously obtain and cache a policy for the recipient domain, and only if the attacker is unable to obtain a valid certificate that complies with that policy. Below, we consider specific attacks on this model.
SMTP MTA-STS relies on certificate validation via PKIX based TLS identity checking [RFC6125]. Attackers who are able to obtain a valid certificate for the targeted recipient mail service (e.g. by compromising a certificate authority) are thus able to circumvent STS authentication.
Since MTA-STS uses DNS TXT records for policy discovery, an attacker who is able to block DNS responses can suppress the discovery of an MTA-STS Policy, making the Policy Domain appear not to have an MTA-STS Policy. The sender policy cache is designed to resist this attack by decreasing the frequency of policy discovery and thus reducing the window of vulnerability; it is nonetheless a risk that attackers who can predict or induce policy discovery--for example, by inducing a sending domain to send mail to a never-before-contacted recipient while carrying out a man-in-the-middle attack--may be able to foil policy discovery and effectively downgrade the security of the message delivery.
Since this attack depends upon intercepting initial policy discovery, we strongly recommend implementers to prefer policy max_age values to be as long as is practical.
Because this attack is also possible upon refresh of a cached policy, we suggest implementers do not wait until a cached policy has expired before checking for an update; if senders attempt to refresh the cache regularly (for instance, by checking their cached version string against the TXT record on each successful send, or in a background task that runs daily or weekly), an attacker would have to foil policy discovery consistently over the lifetime of a cached policy to prevent a successful refresh.
Additionally, MTAs should alert administrators to repeated policy refresh failures long before cached policies expire (through warning logs or similar applicable mechanisms), allowing administrators to detect such a persistent attack on policy refresh. (However, they should not implement such alerts if the cached policy has a none mode, to allow clean MTA-STS removal, as described in Section 8.3.)
Resistance to downgrade attacks of this nature--due to the ability to authoritatively determine "lack of a record" even for non-participating recipients--is a feature of DANE, due to its use of DNSSEC for policy discovery.
We additionally consider the Denial of Service risk posed by an attacker who can modify the DNS records for a recipient domain. Absent MTA-STS, such an attacker can cause a sending MTA to cache invalid MX records, but only for however long the sending resolver caches those records. With MTA-STS, the attacker can additionally advertise a new, long-max_age MTA-STS policy with mx constraints that validate the malicious MX record, causing senders to cache the policy and refuse to deliver messages once the victim has resecured the MX records.
This attack is mitigated in part by the ability of a victim domain to (at any time) publish a new policy updating the cached, malicious policy, though this does require the victim domain to both obtain a valid CA-signed certificate and to understand and properly configure MTA-STS.
Similarly, we consider the possibility of domains that deliberately allow untrusted users to serve untrusted content on user-specified subdomains. In some cases (e.g. the service Tumblr.com) this takes the form of providing HTTPS hosting of user-registered subdomains; in other cases (e.g. dynamic DNS providers) this takes the form of allowing untrusted users to register custom DNS records at the provider's domain.
In these cases, there is a risk that untrusted users would be able to serve custom content at the mta-sts host, including serving an illegitimate MTA-STS policy. We believe this attack is rendered more difficult by the need for the attacker to also serve the _mta-sts TXT record on the same domain--something not, to our knowledge, widely provided to untrusted users. This attack is additionally mitigated by the aforementioned ability for a victim domain to update an invalid policy at any future date.
Even if an attacker cannot modify a served policy, the potential exists for configurations that allow attackers on the same domain to receive mail for that domain. For example, an easy configuration option when authoring an MTA-STS Policy for example.com is to set the mx equal to .example.com; recipient domains must consider in this case the risk that any user possessing a valid hostname and CA-signed certificate (for example, dhcp-123.example.com) will, from the perspective of MTA-STS Policy validation, be a valid MX host for that domain.
A host of risks apply to the PKI system used for certificate authentication, both of the mta-sts HTTPS host's certificate and the SMTP servers' certificates. These risks are broadly applicable within the Web PKI ecosystem and are not specific to MTA-STS; nonetheless, they deserve some consideration in this context.
Broadly speaking, attackers may compromise the system by obtaining certificates under fraudulent circumstances (i.e. by impersonating the legitimate owner of the victim domain), by compromising a Certificate Authority or Delegate Authority's private keys, by obtaining a legitimate certificate issued to the victim domain, and similar.
One approach commonly employed by Web browsers to help mitigate against some of these attacks is to allow for revocation of compromised or fraudulent certificates via OCSP [RFC6960] or CRLs [RFC6818]. Such mechanisms themselves represent tradeoffs and are not universally implemented; we nonetheless recommend implementors of MTA-STS to implement revocation mechanisms which are most applicable to their implementations.
Nicolas Lidzborski Google, Inc nlidz (at) google (dot com)
Wei Chuang Google, Inc weihaw (at) google (dot com)
Brandon Long Google, Inc blong (at) google (dot com)
Franck Martin LinkedIn, Inc fmartin (at) linkedin (dot com)
Klaus Umbach 1&1 Mail & Media Development & Technology GmbH klaus.umbach (at) 1und1 (dot de)
Markus Laber 1&1 Mail & Media Development & Technology GmbH markus.laber (at) 1und1 (dot de)
The owner of example.com wishes to begin using MTA-STS with a policy that will solicit reports from senders without affecting how the messages are processed, in order to verify the identity of MXs that handle mail for example.com, confirm that TLS is correctly used, and ensure that certificates presented by the recipient MX validate.
MTA-STS policy indicator TXT RR:
_mta-sts.example.com. IN TXT "v=STSv1; id=20160831085700Z;"
MTA-STS Policy file served as the response body at https://mta-sts.example.com/.well-known/mta-sts.txt:
version: STSv1 mode: report mx: mx1.example.com mx: mx2.example.com mx: mx.backup-example.com max_age: 12345678
Below is pseudocode demonstrating the logic of a compliant sending MTA.
While this pseudocode implementation suggests synchronous policy retrieval in the delivery path, in a working implementation that may be undesirable, and we expect some implementers to instead prefer a background fetch that does not block delivery if no cached policy is present.
func isEnforce(policy) { // Return true if the policy mode is "enforce". } func isNonExpired(policy) { // Return true if the policy is not expired. } func tryStartTls(connection) { // Attempt to open an SMTP connection with STARTTLS with the MX. } func isWildcardMatch(pat, host) { // Literal matches are true. if pat == host { return true } // Leading '.' matches a wildcard against the first part, i.e. // .example.com matches x.example.com but not x.y.example.com. if pat[0] == '.' { parts = SplitN(host, '.', 2) // Split on the first '.'. if len(parts) > 1 && parts[1] == pat[1:] { return true } } return false } func certMatches(connection, policy) { // Assume a handy function to return CN and DNS-ID SANs. for san in getDnsIdSansAndCnFromCert(connection) { for mx in policy.mx { // Return if the server certificate from "connection" matches the // "mx" host. if san[0] == '*' { // Invalid wildcard! if san[1] != '.' continue san = san[1:] } if isWildcardMatch(san, mx) || isWildcardMatch(mx, san) { return true } } } return false } func tryDeliverMail(connection, message) { // Attempt to deliver "message" via "connection". } func tryGetNewPolicy(domain) { // Check for an MTA-STS TXT record for "domain" in DNS, and return the // indicated policy. } func cachePolicy(domain, policy) { // Store "policy" as the cached policy for "domain". } func tryGetCachedPolicy(domain) { // Return a cached policy for "domain". } func reportError(error) { // Report an error via TLSRPT. } func tryMxAccordingTo(message, mx, policy) { connection := connect(mx) if !connection { return false // Can't connect to the MX so it's not an MTA-STS // error. } secure := true if !tryStartTls(connection) { secure = false reportError(E_NO_VALID_TLS) } else if !certMatches(connection, policy) { secure = false reportError(E_CERT_MISMATCH) } if secure || !isEnforce(policy) { return tryDeliverMail(connection, message) } return false } func tryWithPolicy(message, domain, policy) { mxes := getMxForDomain(domain) for mx in mxes { if tryMxAccordingTo(message, mx, policy) { return true } } return false } func handleMessage(message) { domain := ... // domain part after '@' from recipient policy := tryGetNewPolicy(domain) if policy { cachePolicy(domain, policy) } else { policy = tryGetCachedPolicy(domain) } if policy { return tryWithPolicy(message, domain, policy) } // Try to deliver the message normally (i.e. without MTA-STS). }