Metadata-Version: 2.3
Name: rtty-soda
Version: 0.3.13
Summary: A CLI tool for Unix-like environments to encrypt a RTTY session using NaCl
Keywords: cli,encryption,libsodium,nacl,rtty
Author: Theo Saveliev
Author-email: Theo Saveliev <89431871+theosaveliev@users.noreply.github.com>
License: MIT
Classifier: Development Status :: 4 - Beta
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.14
Classifier: Operating System :: POSIX
Classifier: Environment :: Console
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Topic :: Security :: Cryptography
Classifier: Topic :: Utilities
Requires-Dist: brotli>=1.2.0,<2.0.0
Requires-Dist: pynacl>=1.6.0,<2.0.0
Requires-Dist: scsu>=1.1.1,<2.0.0
Requires-Dist: click>=8.3.0,<9.0.0 ; extra == 'cli'
Requires-Dist: click-aliases>=1.0.5,<2.0.0 ; extra == 'cli'
Requires-Python: >=3.14, <4.0
Project-URL: github, https://github.com/theosaveliev/rtty-soda
Project-URL: issues, https://github.com/theosaveliev/rtty-soda/issues
Provides-Extra: cli
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown

# rtty-soda

A CLI tool for Unix-like environments to encrypt a RTTY session using NaCl.


#### Features

- Public Key encryption (Curve25519-XSalsa20-Poly1305)
- Secret Key encryption (XSalsa20-Poly1305)
- Key derivation (Argon2id-Blake2b)
- Text compression (brotli, zstd, zlib, bz2, lzma)
- Custom encodings:
  - Base10 (Decimal)
  - Base26 (Latin)
  - Base31 (Cyrillic)
  - Base36 (Latin with numbers)
  - Base64 (RFC 4648)
  - Base94 (ASCII printable)
  - Binary


## Installation
#### Package manager

1. [Install uv](https://docs.astral.sh/uv/getting-started/installation/)
2. Install rtty-soda:
   ```
   % uv tool install "rtty-soda[cli]"
   ```
3. Remove rtty-soda:
   ```
   % uv tool uninstall rtty-soda
   ```

#### Docker

```
% docker run -it --rm -h rtty-soda -v .:/app/host nett/rtty-soda:0.3.13
% docker run -it --rm -h rtty-soda -v .:/app/host nett/rtty-soda:0.3.13-tools
```


## Getting help

All commands have `[-h | --help]` option.

```
% soda
Usage: soda [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...

Options:
  --version   Show the version and exit.
  -h, --help  Show this message and exit.

Commands:
  decrypt-password (dp)  Decrypt Message (Password).
  decrypt-public (d)     Decrypt Message (Public).
  decrypt-secret (ds)    Decrypt Message (Secret).
  encode                 Encode File.
  encrypt-password (ep)  Encrypt Message (Password).
  encrypt-public (e)     Encrypt Message (Public).
  encrypt-secret (es)    Encrypt Message (Secret).
  genkey                 Generate Private Key.
  kdf                    Key Derivation Function.
  pubkey                 Get Public Key.
```

Some commands have aliases, so `% soda encrypt-password ...` and `% soda ep ...`
are equivalent.


## Public Key encryption
#### Key generation

```
% soda genkey | tee alice | soda pubkey - | tee alice_pub
yne1z/r40qE3wXjeWIUInJ/lcO4+1jXH6F9nWW3u+mc=

% soda genkey | tee bob | soda pubkey - | tee bob_pub
p+SR1SY1b0FSLHtn8IP0tySLM2rPmTVPmBpIdleOWCc=

% soda genkey -h
Usage: soda genkey [OPTIONS]

  Generate Private Key.

  Encoding: base10 | base26 | base31 | base36 | base64 | base94 | binary

Options:
  -e, --encoding TEXT      [default: base64]
  -o, --output-file FILE   Write output to file.
  -g, --group-len INTEGER  [default: 0]
  --line-len INTEGER       [default: 80]
  --padding INTEGER        [default: 0]
  -v, --verbose            Show verbose output.
  -h, --help               Show this message and exit.
```

#### Encryption

Alice sends the message to Bob:

```
% cat message
A telegraph key is a specialized electrical switch used by a trained operator to
transmit text messages in Morse code in a telegraphy system.
The first telegraph key was invented by Alfred Vail, an associate of Samuel Morse.
(c) Wikipedia

% soda encrypt-public alice bob_pub message | tee encrypted | cut -c 1-80
fhHAyQJ/z4cdhB23jQ8lBmfadvwmJBa+OuZ13dzCsj02SMfXLhYmW9FcI3Uf9vOx0icAsPmLvGI+S1Wj

% soda encrypt-public -h
Usage: soda encrypt-public [OPTIONS] PRIVATE_KEY_FILE PUBLIC_KEY_FILE
                           MESSAGE_FILE

  Encrypt Message (Public).

  Encoding: base10 | base26 | base31 | base36 | base64 | base94 | binary

  Compression: brotli | zstd | zlib | bz2 | lzma | raw

Options:
  -t, --text                Treat message as text (binary if not specified).
  --key-encoding TEXT       [default: base64]
  -e, --data-encoding TEXT  [default: base64]
  -c, --compression TEXT    [default: brotli]
  -o, --output-file FILE    Write output to file.
  -g, --group-len INTEGER   [default: 0]
  --line-len INTEGER        [default: 80]
  --padding INTEGER         [default: 0]
  -v, --verbose             Show verbose output.
  -h, --help                Show this message and exit.
```

#### Decryption

```
% soda decrypt-public bob alice_pub encrypted
A telegraph key is a specialized electrical switch used by a trained operator to
transmit text messages in Morse code in a telegraphy system.
The first telegraph key was invented by Alfred Vail, an associate of Samuel Morse.
(c) Wikipedia
```


## Secret Key encryption

Alice and Bob share a key for symmetric encryption:

```
% soda genkey > shared
% soda encrypt-secret shared message -o encrypted
% soda decrypt-secret shared encrypted -o message
```

Another day, they share a password:

```
% echo qwerty | soda encrypt-password - message -p interactive -o encrypted
% echo qwerty | soda decrypt-password - encrypted -p interactive -o message
```


## Key derivation

The KDF function derives the key from the password.
It accepts different profiles: interactive, moderate, and sensitive.

```
% echo qwerty | soda kdf - -p interactive
HqbvUXflAG+no3YS9njezZ3leyr8IwERAyeNoG2l41U=

% soda kdf -h
Usage: soda kdf [OPTIONS] PASSWORD_FILE

  Key Derivation Function.

  Encoding: base10 | base26 | base31 | base36 | base64 | base94 | binary

  Profile: interactive | moderate | sensitive

Options:
  -e, --encoding TEXT      [default: base64]
  -p, --profile TEXT       [default: sensitive]
  -o, --output-file FILE   Write output to file.
  -g, --group-len INTEGER  [default: 0]
  --line-len INTEGER       [default: 80]
  --padding INTEGER        [default: 0]
  -v, --verbose            Show verbose output.
  -h, --help               Show this message and exit.
```

![KDF diagram](https://github.com/theosaveliev/rtty-soda/raw/main/diagram/kdf.png)


## Text compression

That works as follows:
1. The plaintext is prepared:
   - In binary mode (default), the message is read as bytes
   - In text mode (`-t, --text`), the message is read as a string, stripped, and encoded with SCSU, reducing the size of Unicode messages by 15–50%
2. The plaintext is compressed with the compression lib
3. The 16-byte MAC and 24-byte nonce are added
4. The result is encoded with Base64, which adds ~33% overhead

```
% soda es shared message -t -v -c brotli > /dev/null
Plaintext: 238
Ciphertext: 216
Overhead: 0.908
Groups: 1
% soda es shared message -t -v -c zstd > /dev/null
Plaintext: 238
Ciphertext: 276
Overhead: 1.160
Groups: 1
% soda es shared message -t -v -c zlib > /dev/null
Plaintext: 238
Ciphertext: 280
Overhead: 1.176
Groups: 1
% soda es shared message -t -v -c bz2 > /dev/null
Plaintext: 238
Ciphertext: 336
Overhead: 1.412
Groups: 1
% soda es shared message -t -v -c lzma > /dev/null
Plaintext: 238
Ciphertext: 320
Overhead: 1.345
Groups: 1
% soda es shared message -t -v -c raw > /dev/null
Plaintext: 238
Ciphertext: 372
Overhead: 1.563
Groups: 1
```


## Encoding

The rtty-soda supports various encodings:

```
% soda encrypt-public alice bob_pub message --data-encoding base36 --group-len 5 --text
44F8K AUMW0 QDKPJ OKUEF ZJQTG DAI2Q 224BZ CXLCU E3CXN Q46KU 610Z5 0QZYG 9ZZXB
3SOPU MG4GU 9D9B4 V738Q PWVFY O0818 U6OBJ NCSQK O86JF LOTYN IPPRK LP7UY B3Z4L
IIOTG VM33S G1912 46TLA RVDF0 U4JGI GC3V6 MO1YO ZIVOW 6P1WV NCVDV KZHDC L8CZD
YFLV5 L7VTI NPE1Y S3B91 1ILIG ATHPN PFEKK 7SBRA GL1AK KRMM7 MY3
```


## Environment variables

Common options can be set in the environment variables:

```
% cat ~/.soda/bin.env
SODA_TEXT=0
SODA_KEY_ENCODING=binary
SODA_DATA_ENCODING=binary
SODA_COMPRESSION=brotli
SODA_KDF_PROFILE=sensitive
SODA_GROUP_LEN=0
SODA_LINE_LEN=0
SODA_PADDING=0
SODA_VERBOSE=0
```


## Alternative usage

- Password source
  ```
  % echo "A line from a book or a poem" | soda kdf - -e base94 -p interactive
  x\R9"~8Ujh^_uh:Ty<!t(ZNzK=5w^ukew~#-x!n
  ```

- WireGuard keyer
  ```
  % echo "A line from a book or a poem" | soda kdf - -p interactive -o privkey
  % cat privkey
  uIoBJdgaz8ZP3/n/9KzdUNvFi7DxbUQdQ9t8ujwGnMk=
  % soda pubkey privkey
  F2B674kXVcTznnRPWCVasx1miCT+yUtXQ3P5Ecee4zI=
  % cat privkey | wg pubkey
  F2B674kXVcTznnRPWCVasx1miCT+yUtXQ3P5Ecee4zI=
  ```

- Secure storage
  ```
  % echo "A remarkable example of misplaced confidence" > sensitive_data
  % echo "Blessed with opinions, cursed with thought" > data_password
  % soda ep data_password sensitive_data -e binary -p interactive -o encrypted_data
  % echo "Too serious to be wise" > offset_password
  % soda kdf offset_password -e base10 -p interactive -g 10 | head -1
  6174465709 4962164854 2541023297 3274271197 5950333784 2118297875 9632383288
  % sudo dd if=./encrypted_data of=/dev/sdb1 bs=1 seek=6174465709
  85+0 records in
  85+0 records out
  85 bytes transferred in 0.005787 secs (14688 bytes/sec)
  ```

  ![dd diagram](https://github.com/theosaveliev/rtty-soda/raw/main/diagram/dd.png)


## Compatibility

During the initial development (versions prior to 1.0.0),
I can break backwards compatibility.


## Releases

This project follows a rolling release cycle.
Each version bump represents where I completed a full test cycle.
When testing passes successfully, I commit and release - so every release is a verified stable point.