All posts by preemptive

August 2011: I ordered. HP canceled any new webOS hardware. My phone arrived. webOS has many innovative features and has a community capable of developing this open system to even greater heights. I hope to see it continue as an option for the discerning mobile device user.

Guide: Fixing Yahoo mail.

If you connect your webOS email app to Yahoo mail, you may have noticed that you stopped receiving mail late last week (around the 26th of February). The typical error message is, “Requested encryption not supported by server”. On Yahoo’s forums, there were complaints from general users about a problem that seemed to occur on the 25th and it seemed possible it was an issue at Yahoo’s end. Forum user, markar did some research and suggested a solution. This seems to work for most users, so this article will detail some steps. There are implications of this process and it maybe useful in solving similar, future problems.

In this guide you will:

  • Check the certificate chain.
  • Download OpenSSL for windows
  • Request the certificates and save them as files.
  • Transfer, install and trust the certificates

Disclaimer

Note that this fix seems to work and as such, suggests what the problem might be, but it is not entirely clear what the exact issue is. This method involves installing security certificates on your device to enable it to connect to the server. New certificates are usually accepted by existing, ‘root’ certificates (installed by the manufacturer) via a cryptographic process. Installing manually is possible, but you should be sure of the source and validity of the certificates to avoid compromising your device’s security. I don’t know enough to assure you of this and I’m just ‘some person’ on the internet. Do this at your own risk. Follow the thread to see if there are new insights. Currently, this does not seem to work on 1.x devices, though it’s not clear why.

Check with Digicert

Digicert is a Certificate Authority (issuer). It offers a tool to query internet servers for information on certificates. You can see from the settings in the email app that the server webOS contacts for email is palm.imap.mail.yahoo.com or imap.mail.yahoo.com if you’ve set it up as a generic account. The server is accessed via port 993, so that is appended to the address in the form, palm.imap.mail.yahoo.com:993. The Digicert page will accept addresses in this form and return a report on the certificate chain and it’s validity. Hopefully, you will see the server certificate for *imap.mail.yahoo.com. The ‘*’ indicates a wild card so the certificate should match to any sub domain including ‘palm.’. You will also see two intermediate certificates that are part of a chain of certification (or trust).

The method

Linux and other open source systems use OpenSSL (Secure Sockets Layer) to perform needed cryptographic security operations. Linux-based webOS itself uses it. Proprietary systems might have their own version of SSL.

1. Instructions for querying OpenSSL on Linux are here, but the process is basically the same as follows.
2. If you are running windows, the most commonly installed desktop OS, you will first have to download openSSL for windows. Here is an archive of 32 & 64bit versions.
3. After unzipping, You’ll find openssl.exe in the bin folder. Run it for a command line interface. You will see the prompt, OpenSSL>
4. Type this command: s_client -showcerts -connect imap.mail.yahoo.com:993 (enter).
5. You should see a response that includes three blocks of code. These are the certificates.
6. To get a copy of the output, right-click on the OpenSSL window icon (top left) for an edit menu. Select all and copy it.
7. Open a text editor (notepad will do), paste in the text, then select each block in turn from (and including) the header and footer lines.
—–BEGIN CERTIFICATE—–
(data here)
—–END CERTIFICATE—–

Paste each block into a new file & save them separately as, “yahoo1.pem”, “yahoo2.pem”, “yahoo3.pem”. Any name will do, but the .pem suffix makes it a certificate file webOS will recognise. If you wish to make backups, the proper description and expiry date might make a good naming scheme.
8. You can now transfer these files to each of your webOS devices via USB. The downloads folder is as good a place as any. The rest of the process takes place on the device.
9. Certificate Manager is in the app menu of the ‘Device info’ app. When you press the button at the bottom left, it may find the certificates. You can tap on each one and continue. If you just get a card that says, “Your document list is empty.”, don’t panic.
10. You can use Internalz Pro (available in Preware) to open each certificate in turn. On opening, Certificate Manager will be opened and it will ask if you want to trust the certificate. Tap “Trust”.
11. To send mail, you need the certificate chain for the smtp servers. The expiry dates may differ, but the process is the same, so repeat from step 4. You’ll see the address to use for this is palm.smtp.mail.yahoo.com:465 (or whatever is shown in the email account settings).
12. Restart your device. It’s possible you may need to re-enter your password in the email app.

Your email should now work.

Big thanks to markar for the instructions!

Implications

It is possible for some servers to offer dual certificates so an older (and vulnerable) SHA1 certificate is presented as a fallback, but this will not always be the case and will likely soon be deprecated. Apparently Google is pushing for this upgrade: SHA1-deprecation: What you need to know.

Although the version of OpenSSL (0.9.8j & k) in webOS should support SHA256, it is not enabled by default. It is not clear if webOS enables it. The problem may be that webOS does not perform the algorithmic check to install presented SHA256 certificates. The solution would be to somehow enable this or upgrade the OpenSSL version. A work around is to manually trust certificates as above.

The process began by querying the server about it’s certificate chain, revealing a server certificate & two intermediates. The root certificate was not displayed. These are usually issued with the OS or as updates. webOS has had no updates for some time…

The problems then are that the root certificates on webOS may be out of date. Even if they are replaced, it could be that the system will not authenticate them. Solutions are of course to update the root certificates and the version of OpenSSL in webOS. The first may be easier than the latter. This work around will hopefully suffice as the community narrows down the issues and possibly fixes them.
UPDATE: A fix for OpenSSL is now available from forum user, Thibaud! Read and install carefully. It should be used in conjunction with this root cert updater app from forum user, frantid.

Yahoo Expiry dates

These are dates for the diary. If something breaks again, if it happens at these dates, we will know what to do.

UPDATE: Note that Grabber5.0’s Cert Grabber app will now update Yahoo IMAP & SMTP certificates in addition to Google ones, but this isn’t needed if you’ve done the updates above.
IMAP *.imap.mail.yahoo.com Valid from 24/Feb/2015 to 24/Feb/2016 Valid to 25/01/2018 Issuer: Symantec Class 3 Secure Server CA – G4
SMTP *.smtp.mail.yahoo.com Valid from 26/Jan/2015 to 26/Jan/2016 Valid to 13/01/2017 Issuer: Symantec Class 3 Secure Server CA – G4
POP legacy.pop.mail.yahoo.com ,Valid from 04/Nov/2014 to 04/Nov/2015 Issuer: VeriSign Class 3 Secure Server CA – G3

Request for assistance

Please follow the thread. If you can improve the above process or add information and fixes, please post there. I have also decided to start a general thread on these issues which is here.

News Crumbs – 14th February 2015

This weeks toasting menu: Welsh Rarebit because, why wouldn’t you? While it heats up, here are your news crumbs. There’s nothing cheesey about these items:

That’s it for now, I smell toasting cheese…

News Crumbs – 9th JANUARY 2015

It is said that a watched pot never boils, but will a webOS toaster send a pop-up toaster alert to a webOS watch when the toast is ready? Only time will tell…

Whatever you use to measure time, make the most of yours in 2015 with our best wishes for the New Year.

TCL Relaunches the Palm Brand

So Alcatel (sorry, TCL) have confirmed what we knew – they bought the Palm branding. Unsurprisingly, they officially announced it at CES. What IS a bit more surprising is the announcement that they are somehow bringing back the spirit of Palm in the silicon valley and also engaging with “Palm’s very own community”.

I don’t know if that is meant to be those on webOS Nation and the other dedicated forums around the world or the various engineers of Palm’s past who have moved onto various projects including webOS TV, Android and Pebble watches.

TCL have wisely avoided use of the term, “In the coming months”, but, “The exact timeline of the rollpout of the Palm project will be communicated at a later date.”

I wish TCL/Palm well in their goal to be an innovative company. I suspect that to get the interest of the community of people who have stuck with Palm products for this long, their new devices will need to run PalmOS, webOS or something else; something new that’s equally innovative.

At the moment it doesn’t appear that webOS features in their plans. Perhaps their best bet for a community is to grow a new one around a genuinely ground-breaking product?

Here’s Derek Kessler’s article at webOS Nation.

The discussion thread – Remember, My New Palm may be reading your ideas for the future!

Here’s the original press release from TCL.