PGP Universal Server 2.7 User guide

Category
Software
Type
User guide
PGP Universal Server
Administrator's Guide
Version Information
PGP Universal Server Administrator's Guide. PGP Universal Server Version 2.7.0. Released December 2007.
Copyright Information
Copyright © 1991–2007 by PGP Corporation. All Rights Reserved. No part of this document can be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any
means, electronic or mechanical, for any purpose, without the express written permission of PGP Corporation.
Trademark Information
PGP, Pretty Good Privacy, and the PGP logo are registered trademarks of PGP Corporation in the US and other countries. IDEA is a trademark of
Ascom Tech AG. Windows and ActiveX are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation. AOL is a registered trademark, and AOL Instant
Messenger is a trademark, of America Online, Inc. Red Hat and Red Hat Linux are trademarks or registered trademarks of Red Hat, Inc. Linux is a
registered trademark of Linus Torvalds. Solaris is a trademark or registered trademark of Sun Microsystems, Inc. AIX is a trademark or registered
trademark of International Business Machines Corporation. HP-UX is a trademark or registered trademark of Hewlett-Packard Company. SSH and
Secure Shell are trademarks of SSH Communications Security, Inc. Rendezvous and Mac OS X are trademarks or registered trademarks of Apple
Computer, Inc. All other registered and unregistered trademarks in this document are the sole property of their respective owners.
Licensing and Patent Information
The IDEA cryptographic cipher described in U.S. patent number 5,214,703 is licensed from Ascom Tech AG. The CAST-128 encryption algorithm,
implemented from RFC 2144, is available worldwide on a royalty-free basis for commercial and non-commercial uses. PGP Corporation has secured a
license to the patent rights contained in the patent application Serial Number 10/655,563 by The Regents of the University of California, entitled Block
Cipher Mode of Operation for Constructing a Wide-blocksize block Cipher from a Conventional Block Cipher. Some third-party software included in PGP
Universal Server is licensed under the GNU General Public License (GPL). PGP Universal Server as a whole is not licensed under the GPL. If you would
like a copy of the source code for the GPL software included in PGP Universal Server, contact PGP Support (
http://www.pgp.com/support). PGP
Corporation may have patents and/or pending patent applications covering subject matter in this software or its documentation; the furnishing of this
software or documentation does not give you any license to these patents.
Acknowledgments
This product includes or may include:
• The Zip and ZLib compression code, created by Mark Adler and Jean-Loup Gailly, is used with permission from the free Info-ZIP implementation,
developed by zlib (
http://www.zlib.net). • Libxml2, the XML C parser and toolkit developed for the Gnome project and distributed and copyrighted
under the MIT License found at
http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.html. Copyright © 2007 by the Open Source Initiative. • bzip2 1.0, a
freely available high-quality data compressor, is copyrighted by Julian Seward, © 1996-2005. • Application server (
http://jakarta.apache.org/), web
server (
http://www.apache.org/), Jakarta Commons (http://jakarta.apache.org/commons/license.html) and log4j, a Java-based library used to parse
HTML, developed by the Apache Software Foundation. The license is at
www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.txt. • Castor, an open-source, data-
binding framework for moving data from XML to Java programming language objects and from Java to databases, is released by the ExoLab Group
under an Apache 2.0-style license, available at
http://www.castor.org/license.html. • Xalan, an open-source software library from the Apache Software
Foundation that implements the XSLT XML transformation language and the XPath XML query language, is released under the Apache Software
License, version 1.1, available at
http://xml.apache.org/xalan-j/#license1.1. • mx4j, an open-source implementation of the Java Management Extensions
(JMX), is released under an Apache-style license, available at
http://mx4j.sourceforge.net/docs/ch01s06.html. • jpeglib version 6a is based in part on
the work of the Independent JPEG Group. (
http://www.ijg.org/) • libxslt the XSLT C library developed for the GNOME project and distributed under the
MIT License
http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.html. • PCRE version 4.5 Perl regular expression compiler, copyrighted and distributed by
University of Cambridge. ©1997-2006. The license agreement is at
http://www.pcre.org/license.txt. • BIND Balanced Binary Tree Library and Domain
Name System (DNS) protocols developed and copyrighted by Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. (
http://www.isc.org) • Free BSD implementation of
daemon developed by The FreeBSD Project, © 1994-2006. • Simple Network Management Protocol Library developed and copyrighted by Carnegie
Mellon University © 1989, 1991, 1992, Networks Associates Technology, Inc, © 2001- 2003, Cambridge Broadband Ltd. © 2001- 2003, Sun
Microsystems, Inc., © 2003, Sparta, Inc, © 2003-2006, Cisco, Inc and Information Network Center of Beijing University of Posts and
Telecommunications, © 2004. The license agreement for these is at
http://net-snmp.sourceforge.net/about/license.html. • NTP version 4.2 developed
by Network Time Protocol and copyrighted to various contributors. • Lightweight Directory Access Protocol developed and copyrighted by OpenLDAP
Foundation. OpenLDAP is an open-source implementation of the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP). Copyright © 1999-2003, The
OpenLDAP Foundation. The license agreement is at
http://www.openldap.org/software/release/license.html. • Secure shell OpenSSH version 4.2.1
developed by OpenBSD project is released by the OpenBSD Project under a BSD-style license, available at
http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-
bin/cvsweb/src/usr.bin/ssh/LICENCE?rev=HEAD. • PC/SC Lite is a free implementation of PC/SC, a specification for SmartCard integration is released
under the BSD license. • Postfix, an open source mail transfer agent (MTA), is released under the IBM Public License 1.0, available at
http://www.opensource.org/licenses/ibmpl.php. • PostgreSQL, a free software object-relational database management system, is released under a
BSD-style license, available at
http://www.postgresql.org/about/licence. • PostgreSQL JDBC driver, a free Java program used to connect to a
PostgreSQL database using standard, database independent Java code, (c) 1997-2005, PostgreSQL Global Development Group, is released under a
BSD-style license, available at
http://jdbc.postgresql.org/license.html. • 21.vixie-cron is the Vixie version of cron, a standard UNIX daemon that runs
specified programs at scheduled times. Copyright © 1993, 1994 by Paul Vixie; used by permission. • JacORB, a Java object used to facilitate
communication between processes written in Java and the data layer, is open source licensed under the GNU Library General Public License (LGPL)
available at
http://www.jacorb.org/lgpl.html. Copyright © 2006 The JacORB Project. • TAO (The ACE ORB) is an open-source implementation of a
CORBA Object Request Broker (ORB), and is used for communication between processes written in C/C++ and the data layer. Copyright (c) 1993-2006
by Douglas C. Schmidt and his research group at Washington University, University of California, Irvine, and Vanderbilt University. The open source
software license is available at
http://www.cs.wustl.edu/~schmidt/ACE-copying.html. • libcURL, a library for downloading files via common network
services, is open source software provided under a MIT/X derivate license available at
http://curl.haxx.se/docs/copyright.html. Copyright (c) 1996 -
2007, Daniel Stenberg. • libuuid, a library used to generate unique identifiers, is released under a BSD-style license, available at
http://thunk.org/hg/e2fsprogs/?file/fe55db3e508c/lib/uuid/COPYING. Copyright (C) 1996, 1997 Theodore Ts'o. • libpopt, a library that parses command
line options, is released under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License available at
http://directory.fsf.org/libs/COPYING.DOC. Copyright ©
2000-2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4
PGP Universal Server Introduction
Export Information
Export of this software and documentation may be subject to compliance with the rules and regulations promulgated from time to time by the Bureau
of Export Administration, United States Department of Commerce, which restricts the export and re-export of certain products and technical data.
Limitations
The software provided with this documentation is licensed to you for your individual use under the terms of the End User License Agreement provided
with the software. The information in this document is subject to change without notice. PGP Corporation does not warrant that the information meets
your requirements or that the information is free of errors. The information may include technical inaccuracies or typographical errors. Changes may be
made to the information and incorporated in new editions of this document, if and when made available by PGP Corporation.
i
Contents
Introduction 15
What is PGP Universal Server? 15
PGP Universal Server Product Family 16
Who Should Read This Guide 16
Improvements in This Version of PGP Universal Server 16
PGP Universal Server 17
PGP Messaging 17
PGP Keys 18
PGP Desktop 18
PGP Desktop Email 19
PGP NetShare 20
PGP Whole Disk Encryption 20
Using the PGP Universal Server with the Command Line 22
Symbols 22
Getting Assistance 23
Getting product information 23
Contact information 23
The Big Picture 25
Important Terms 25
PGP Products 25
PGP Universal Server Concepts 25
PGP Universal Server Features 26
PGP Universal Server User Types 28
Installation Overview 29
Adding the PGP Universal Server to Your Network
35
Server Placement 35
Gateway Placement 36
Internal Placement 37
Using a Mail Relay 38
Microsoft Exchange Server 38
Lotus Domino Server 39
Configuration Examples 39
Internal Placement Configuration 40
Gateway Placement Configuration 41
Non-mailstream Placement Configuration 42
Cluster Configuration 43
Clustered Proxy and Keyserver Configuration 44
Gateway Cluster with Load Balancer 46
Gateway and Internal Placement Cluster 47
ii
PGP Universal Server Contents
Encircled Configuration 49
Large Enterprise Configuration 50
Spam Filters and PGP Universal Server 51
Exchange with PGP Client Software 52
Lotus Domino Server with PGP Client Software 53
Unsupported Configurations 53
Open Ports 55
TCP Ports 55
UDP Ports 57
Naming your PGP Universal Server
59
Considering a Name for Your PGP Universal Server 59
Methods for Naming a PGP Universal Server 60
Installing the PGP Universal Server 61
About the Installation Procedure 61
System Requirements 62
Installation Materials 62
Installation Options 62
Standard Installation Procedure 63
PGP Installation Procedure 64
Setting Up the PGP Universal Server 65
About the Setup Assistant 65
Preparing for Setup after pgp Install 66
Hardware 66
System Information 66
Connect to the PGP Universal Server 67
iii
PGP Universal Server Contents
Initial Configuration with Setup Assistant 67
Primary or Secondary Configuration 76
Restoring From a Server Backup 86
Migrating the Keys from a PGP Keyserver 87
Understanding the Administrative Interface 89
System Requirements 89
Logging In 89
Managing Alerts 92
Logging In For the First Time 93
Administrative Interface Map 94
Icons 95
Licensing Your Software 101
Overview 101
License Changes for PGP Universal Server 2.5 and Later 101
Manual and Automatic Licensing 102
Licensing a PGP Universal Server 103
Licensing the Mail Proxy Feature 103
Operating in Learn Mode 105
Purpose of Learn Mode 105
Checking the Logs 106
Managing Learn Mode 106
Managed Domains 109
About Managed Domains 109
Adding Managed Domains 110
Deleting Managed Domains 111
Managing Organization Keys
113
About Organization Keys 113
Organization Key 113
Inspecting the Organization Key 114
Regenerating the Organization Key 116
Importing an Organization Key 117
Organization Certificate 119
Inspecting the Organization Certificate 119
Exporting the Organization Certificate 120
Deleting the Organization Certificate 121
Generating the Organization Certificate 122
Importing the Organization Certificate 124
iv
PGP Universal Server Contents
Additional Decryption Key (ADK) 125
Importing the ADK 126
Inspecting the ADK 127
Deleting the ADK 128
Verified Directory Key 129
Importing the Verified Directory Key 129
Inspecting the Verified Directory Key 130
Deleting the Verified Directory Key 131
Managing Trusted Keys and Certificates 133
Overview 134
Trusted Keys 135
Trusted Certificates 135
Adding a Trusted Key or Certificate 135
Inspecting and Changing Trusted Key Properties 137
Deleting Trusted Keys and Certificates 138
Searching for Trusted Keys and Certificates 138
Recovering Encrypted Data in an Enterprise Environment 139
Using Key Reconstruction 139
Recovering Encryption Key Material without Key Reconstruction 140
Encryption Key Recovery of CKM Keys 140
Encryption Key Recovery of GKM Keys 141
Encryption Key Recovery of SCKM Keys 141
Encryption Key Recovery of SKM Keys 142
Using an Additional Decryption Key for Data Recovery 142
Setting Mail Policy 145
Overview 146
How Policy Chains Work 147
Mail Policy and Dictionaries 148
Mail Policy and Key Searches 149
Mail Policy and Cached Keys 149
Migrating Settings from Version 2.0.x 149
Understanding the Pre-Installed Policy Chains 150
Mail Policy Outside the Mailflow 151
Building Valid Chains and Rules 152
Using Valid Processing Order 152
Creating Valid Groups 153
Creating a Valid Rule 154
Using the Rule Interface 155
The Conditions Card 156
The Actions Card 158
Managing Policy Chains 158
Mail Policy Best Practices 159
v
PGP Universal Server Contents
Restoring Mail Policy to Default Settings 159
Editing Policy Chain Settings 159
Adding Policy Chains 160
Deleting Policy Chains 162
Exporting Policy Chains 163
Printing Policy Chains 163
Managing Rules 163
Adding Rules to Policy Chains 163
Deleting Rules from Policy Chains 164
Enabling and Disabling Rules 164
Changing the Processing Order of the Rules 165
Adding Key Searches 165
Choosing Condition Statements, Conditions, and Actions 166
Condition Statements 166
Conditions 166
Actions 174
Working with Common Access Cards 181
Applying Key Not Found Settings to External Users 183
Overview 183
Bounce the Message 184
PDF Messenger 184
Certified Delivery with PDF Messenger 185
Send Unencrypted 186
Smart Trailer 186
PGP Universal Web Messenger 190
Changing Policy Settings 192
Changing User Delivery Method Preference 192
Using Dictionaries with Policy 195
Overview 195
Default Dictionaries 197
Editing Default Dictionaries 198
User-Defined Dictionaries 201
Adding a User-Defined Dictionary 201
Editing a User-Defined Dictionary 203
Deleting a Dictionary 204
Exporting a Dictionary 205
Searching the Dictionaries 205
Keyservers, SMTP Servers, and Mail Policy
207
Overview 207
Keyservers 208
Adding or Editing a Keyserver 209
Deleting a Keyserver 211
vi
PGP Universal Server Contents
SMTP Servers 212
Adding or Editing an SMTP Server 212
Deleting an SMTP Server 214
Managing Keys in the Key Cache
215
Overview 215
Changing Cached Key Timeout 216
Purging Keys from the Cache 217
Trusting Cached Keys 217
Viewing Cached Keys 217
Searching the Key Cache 218
Configuring Mail Proxies 219
Overview 219
PGP Universal Server and Mail Proxies 220
Mail Proxies in an Internal Placement 220
Mail Proxies in a Gateway Placement 222
Changes in Proxy Settings from PGP Universal Server 2.0 to 2.5 and later 223
Mail Proxies Card 224
Creating New or Editing Existing Proxies 224
Creating or Editing a POP/IMAP Proxy 225
Creating or Editing an Outbound SMTP Proxy 227
Creating or Editing an Inbound SMTP Proxy 230
Creating or Editing a Unified SMTP Proxy 231
Email in the Mail Queue 235
Overview 235
Deleting Messages from the Mail Queue 236
Specifying Mail Routes
237
Overview 237
Managing Mail Routes 238
Adding a Mail Route 238
Editing a Mail Route 239
Deleting a Mail Route 239
Customizing System Message Templates 241
Overview 241
Templates and Message Size 242
PDF Messenger Templates 242
Templates for New PGP Universal Web Messenger Users 243
vii
PGP Universal Server Contents
Editing a Message Template 243
Setting Internal User Policy
245
Overview 246
Managing Internal User Policies 247
Adding a New Internal User Policy 247
Editing Internal User Policies 248
Editing the Excluded Users Policy 258
Deleting Internal User Policies 259
Downloading Client Software 259
Directory Synchronization 262
Choosing a Key Mode For Key Management 262
Disabling Key Generation 266
Adding PGP Desktop Solutions to Existing PGP Universal Gateway Email Environments266
Changing Key Modes 266
X.509 Certificate Management in Lotus Notes Environments 268
Trusting Certificates Created by PGP Universal Server 269
Setting the Lotus Notes Key Settings in PGP Universal Server 270
Technical Deployment Information 271
Customizing the Windows Preinstallation Environment for PGP Whole Disk Encryption 272
Introduction 272
Creating a Windows PE CD 274
Customizing the Vista Installation Package to Upgrade Encrypted Operating Systems to
Windows Vista
277
Using PGP Whole Disk Encryption with IBM Lenovo ThinkPad Systems 280
Using PGP Whole Disk Encryption with the Microsoft Windows XP Recovery Console 281
Pgppe Commands 281
Using Directory Synchronization to Manage Users 285
Overview 285
Enabling Directory Synchronization 287
Testing the LDAP Connection 290
Excluding Users 290
Including Only Some Users 292
Matching Attributes 292
Base DN and Bind DN 294
Understanding User Enrollment Methods 296
Before Creating a Client Installer 296
Email Enrollment 297
Directory Enrollment 299
viii
PGP Universal Server Contents
Serving PGP Admin 8 Preferences 301
Configuring PGP Desktop Installations
303
Establishing PGP Desktop Settings for Your PGP Desktop Clients 303
PGP Desktop Licensing 304
Configuring PGP Desktop Settings 305
General Tab 309
Licensing Tab 313
Messaging & Keys Tab 316
File & Disk Tab 318
WDE Tab 322
PGP Desktop Installer Policies 326
Creating PGP Desktop Installers 327
Creating an Installer with No Policy Settings 327
Creating an Installer with Auto-Detect Policy 328
Creating an Installer with Preset Policy 329
Controlling PGP Desktop Components 331
PGP Whole Disk Encryption Administration 332
How Does Single Sign-On Work? 332
Enabling Single Sign-On 333
Managing Clients Remotely Using a PGP WDE Administrator Active Directory Group 335
Managing Clients Locally Using the PGP WDE Administrator Key 337
Setting External User Policy 339
Overview 340
Managing External User Policies 341
Regrouping External Users 341
Adding a New External User Policy 341
Editing External User Policies 342
Deleting External User Policies 352
Configuring PGP Universal Web Messenger 353
Overview 353
High Availability Mode 354
Customizing PGP Universal Web Messenger 355
Adding a New Template 356
Troubleshooting Customization 361
Changing the Active Template 365
Deleting a Template 365
Editing a Template 365
Downloading Template Files 366
Restoring to Factory Defaults 366
ix
PGP Universal Server Contents
Configuring the PGP Universal Web Messenger Service 367
Configuring the PGP Verified Directory
373
Overview 373
Enabling the PGP Verified Directory 374
Configuring the PGP Verified Directory 375
Managing Internal User Accounts 379
Overview 379
Certificate Revocation Lists 380
Adding Internal Users Manually 381
Deleting Internal Users 383
Approving Pending Keys 383
Searching for Internal Users 384
Exporting PGP Whole Disk Login Failure Data 385
Internal User Settings 385
Changing Internal User Settings 386
Exporting an Internal User’s X.509 Certificate 387
Revoking the PGP Key of an Internal User 387
Exporting the PGP Key of an Internal User 388
Deleting the PGP Key of an Internal User 389
Deleting a PGP Desktop Key Reconstruction Block 389
Using Whole Disk Recovery Tokens 390
Deleting Whole Disk Recovery Tokens 391
Viewing PGP Whole Disk Encryption Status 391
Viewing Internal User Log Entries 392
Key Reconstruction Blocks 393
Managing External User Accounts 395
Overview 395
Importing External Users 396
Deleting External Users 397
Searching for External Users 397
Exporting Delivery Receipts 398
External User Settings 399
Changing External User Settings 400
Viewing External User Log Entries 401
Exporting an External User’s X.509 Certificate 401
Exporting the PGP Key of an External User 402
Deleting the PGP Key of an External User 402
Changing the Passphrase of an External User 403
x
PGP Universal Server Contents
Managing PGP Verified Directory User Accounts 405
Overview 405
Importing Verified Directory Users 406
PGP Verified Directory User Settings 408
Changing PGP Verified Directory User Settings 409
Approving Pending Keys 409
Deleting the PGP Key of a PGP Verified Directory User 410
Viewing PGP Verified Directory User Log Entries 410
Deleting PGP Verified Directory Users 410
Exporting PGP Verified Directory Users 411
Searching for PGP Verified Directory Users 411
Managing Administrator Accounts 413
Overview 413
Creating a New Administrator 414
Importing SSH v2 Keys 416
Deleting Administrators 416
Inspecting and Changing the Settings of an Administrator 417
Daily Status Email 417
PGP Universal Satellite 419
Overview 419
Technical Information 420
Distributing the PGP Universal Satellite Software 421
Configuration 422
Deployment Mode 422
Key Mode 422
Satellite Configurations 423
Switching Key Modes 428
Binding 428
Pre-Binding 429
Manual Binding 430
Policy and Key or Certificate Retrieval 431
Retrieving Lost Policies 431
Retrieving Lost Keys or Certificates 433
xi
PGP Universal Server Contents
PGP Universal Satellite for Mac OS X 435
Overview 435
System Requirements 436
Obtaining the Installer 436
Installation 436
Updates 437
Files 437
User Interface 438
About PGP Universal Server 439
Help 440
Show Log 440
Clear Log 441
Policies 441
Preferences 448
Purge Caches 449
Hide and Quit PGP Universal Satellite 449
PGP Universal Satellite for Windows 453
Overview 453
System Requirements 454
Obtaining the Installer 454
Installation 455
Updates 457
Files 458
MAPI Support 458
External MAPI Configuration 459
Internal MAPI Configuration 460
Using MAPI 461
Lotus Notes Support 461
External Lotus Notes Configuration 461
Internal Lotus Notes Configuration 463
Using Lotus Notes 464
Notes IDs 464
User Interface 464
The Policy Tab 465
The Log Tab 467
The Satellite Tray Icon 469
xii
PGP Universal Server Contents
Configuring the Integrated Keyserver 473
Overview 473
Configuring the Keyserver Service 473
Managing the Certificate Revocation List Service 479
Overview 479
Enabling and Disabling the CRL Service 480
Editing CRL Service Settings 480
System Graphs
483
Overview 483
CPU Usage 483
Message Activity 484
Whole Disk Encryption 485
Recipient Statistics 487
Recipient Domain Statistics 487
System Logs 489
Overview 489
Filtering the Log View 490
Searching the Log Files 491
Exporting a Log File 491
Enabling External Logging 492
Shutting Down and Restarting Services and Power 495
Overview 496
PGP Universal Server 498
Setting the Time 498
Updating Software 499
Licensing a PGP Universal Server 500
Downloading the Release Notes 500
xiii
PGP Universal Server Contents
Shutting Down and Restarting the PGP Universal Server Software Services 501
Shutting Down and Restarting the PGP Universal Server Hardware 501
Configuring SNMP Monitoring 503
Overview 503
Downloading the Custom MIB File 504
Configuring the SNMP Service 505
Setting Network Interfaces 509
Overview 510
Connecting to a Proxy Server 511
Changing Interface Settings 512
Adding Interface Settings 512
Deleting Interface Settings 513
Editing Global Network Settings 513
Assigning a Certificate 513
Working with Certificates 514
Importing an Existing Certificate 515
Generating a Certificate Request 518
Adding a Pending Certificate 519
Inspecting a Certificate 520
Exporting a Certificate 521
Deleting a Certificate 522
Clustering your PGP Universal Servers 523
Overview 523
Clustering and PGP Universal Web Messenger 524
Cluster Status 525
Creating Clusters 527
Deleting Clusters 529
Changing Network Settings in Clusters 529
Managing Secondary Settings in Clusters 530
Protecting PGP Universal Server with Ignition Keys
531
Overview 531
Ignition Keys and Clustering 533
xiv
PGP Universal Server Contents
Preparing Hardware Tokens to be Ignition Keys 533
Configuring a Hardware Token Ignition Key 535
Configuring a Soft-Ignition Passphrase Ignition Key 535
Deleting Ignition Keys 536
Backing Up and Restoring System and User Data 537
Overview 537
Creating Backups 538
Scheduling Backups 538
Performing On-Demand Backups 539
Configuring the Backup Location 539
Restoring From a Backup 541
Restoring On-Demand 541
Restoring Configuration 542
Restoring from a Different Version 546
Updating PGP Universal Server Software 549
Overview 549
Inspecting Update Packages 550
Establishing Software Update Settings 550
Checking for New Updates 551
Uploading Update Packages 551
Manually Installing an Update 551
Index 553
15
This Administrator’s Guide describes both the PGP Universal Server and PGP
Universal Satellite. It tells you how to get them up and running on your network,
how to configure them, and how to maintain them. This section provides a high-
level overview of PGP Universal Server.
In This Chapter
What is PGP Universal Server? ................................................................15
PGP Universal Server Product Family ......................................................16
Who Should Read This Guide ..................................................................16
Improvements in This Version of PGP Universal Server..........................16
Using the PGP Universal Server with the Command Line.......................22
Symbols....................................................................................................22
Getting Assistance ...................................................................................23
What is PGP Universal Server?
PGP Universal Server provides multiple encryption solutions managed from a
single console.
PGP Universal Server with PGP Universal Gateway Email gives you secure
messaging: it transparently protects your enterprise messages with little or no
user interaction.
The PGP Universal Server also replaces the PGP Keyserver product with a built-
in keyserver, and the PGP Admin product with PGP Desktop configuration and
deployment capabilities.
It automatically creates and maintains a Self-Managing Security Architecture
(SMSA) by monitoring authenticated users and their email traffic. You can also
send protected messages to addresses that are not part of the SMSA. The PGP
Universal Server encrypts, decrypts, signs, and verifies messages automatically,
providing strong security through policies you control.
PGP Universal Satellite, a client-side feature of PGP Universal Server, extends
PGP security for email messages all the way to the computer of the email user,
it allows external users to become part of the SMSA, and it gives end users the
option to create and manage their keys on their own computer (if allowed by
the PGP administrator).
1
Introduction
16
PGP Universal Server Introduction
PGP Universal Server Product Family
PGP Universal Server functions as a management console for a variety of
encryption solutions. You can purchase any of the PGP Desktop applications or
bundles and use PGP Universal Server to create and manage client installations.
You can also purchase a license that enables PGP Gateway Email to encrypt
email in the mailstream.
The PGP Universal Server can manage any combination of PGP encryption
applications. PGP encryption applications are:
 PGP Universal Gateway Email provides automatic email encryption in the
gateway, based on centralized mail policy. This product requires
administration by the PGP Universal Server.
 PGP Desktop Email provides encryption at the desktop level for mail, files,
and AOL Instant Messenger traffic. This product can be managed by the
PGP Universal Server.
 PGP Whole Disk Encryption provides encryption at the desktop level for
an entire disk. This product can be managed by the PGP Universal Server.
 PGP NetShare provides transparent file encryption and sharing among
desktops. This product can be managed by the PGP Universal Server.
Who Should Read This Guide
This Administrator’s Guide is for the person or persons who will be
implementing and maintaining your organization’s PGP Universal Server
environment. These are the PGP administrators.
This guide is also intended for anyone else who wants to learn about how PGP
Universal Server works.
Improvements in This Version of PGP Universal Server
This release of PGP Universal Server introduces the following new features:
 PGP Universal Server (on page
17)
 PGP Messaging (on page
17)
 PGP Keys (on page
18)
 PGP Desktop (on page
18)
 PGP Desktop Email (on page
19)
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PGP Universal Server 2.7 User guide

Category
Software
Type
User guide

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