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Archive for the ‘Linux’ Category

Downgrapde to php 5.2 cpanel

Saturday, March 1st, 2014

PHP 5.2 was removed from EasyApache due to its End of Life status. You can read about that here.

While downgrading to PHP 5.2 is not advised and is really kind of a terrible idea (given that 5.2 has been End of Life for years), cPanel provided some documentation on a way to downgrade PHP to this unsupported and end of life version here.

As outlined in that documentation you should run these commands on your server:

cd /var/cpanel/easy/apache/custom_opt_mods/
wget http://docs.cpanel.net/twiki/pub/EasyApache/EasyApacheCustomModules/custom_opt_mod-PHP5217.tar.gz
tar -C /var/cpanel/easy/apache/custom_opt_mods -xzf custom_opt_mod-PHP5217.tar.gz

Then recompile Apache using EasyApache. If you want no php except 5.2 then on the ‘PHP Version’ screen chose ‘none’, and continue. On step 4, the ‘Short Options List’ page you will see ‘PHP 5.2.17 support (no FastCGI)’ listed. Check that box and continue your EasyApache like normal.

 

reference

https://encylia.com/2014/02/23/using-php-5-2-with-cpanelwhm-11-40-and-the-new-easyapache/

details about Exim mail server

Wednesday, December 11th, 2013

Here are some useful things to know for managing an Exim 4 server. This assumes a prior working knowledge of SMTP, MTAs, and a UNIX shell prompt.

Message-IDs and spool files

The message-IDs that Exim uses to refer to messages in its queue are mixed-case alpha-numeric, and take the form of: XXXXXX-YYYYYY-ZZ. Most commands related to managing the queue and logging use these message-ids.

There are three — count ’em, THREE — files for each message in the spool directory. If you’re dealing with these files by hand, instead of using the appropriate exim commands as detailed below, make sure you get them all, and don’t leave Exim with remnants of messages in the queue. I used to mess directly with these files when I first started running Exim machines, but thanks to the utilities described below, I haven’t needed to do that in many months.

Files in /var/spool/exim/msglog contain logging information for each message and are named the same as the message-id.

Files in /var/spool/exim/input are named after the message-id, plus a suffix denoting whether it is the envelope header (-H) or message data (-D).

These directories may contain further hashed subdirectories to deal with larger mail queues, so don’t expect everything to always appear directly in the top /var/spool/exim/input or /var/spool/exim/msglog directories; any searches or greps will need to be recursive. See if there is a proper way to do what you’re doing before working directly on the spool files.

Basic information

Print a count of the messages in the queue:

root@localhost# exim -bpc

Print a listing of the messages in the queue (time queued, size, message-id, sender, recipient):

root@localhost# exim -bp

Print a summary of messages in the queue (count, volume, oldest, newest, domain, and totals):

root@localhost# exim -bp | exiqsumm

Print what Exim is doing right now:

root@localhost# exiwhat

Test how exim will route a given address:

root@localhost# exim -bt alias@localdomain.com
user@thishost.com
    <-- alias@localdomain.com
  router = localuser, transport = local_delivery
root@localhost# exim -bt user@thishost.com
user@thishost.com
  router = localuser, transport = local_delivery
root@localhost# exim -bt user@remotehost.com
  router = lookuphost, transport = remote_smtp
  host mail.remotehost.com [1.2.3.4] MX=0

Run a pretend SMTP transaction from the command line, as if it were coming from the given IP address. This will display Exim’s checks, ACLs, and filters as they are applied. The message will NOT actually be delivered.

root@localhost# exim -bh 192.168.11.22

Display all of Exim’s configuration settings:

root@localhost# exim -bP

Searching the queue with exiqgrep

Exim includes a utility that is quite nice for grepping through the queue, called exiqgrep. Learn it. Know it. Live it. If you’re not using this, and if you’re not familiar with the various flags it uses, you’re probably doing things the hard way, like piping `exim -bp` into awk, grep, cut, or `wc -l`. Don’t make life harder than it already is.

First, various flags that control what messages are matched. These can be combined to come up with a very particular search.

Use -f to search the queue for messages from a specific sender:

root@localhost# exiqgrep -f [luser]@domain

Use -r to search the queue for messages for a specific recipient/domain:

root@localhost# exiqgrep -r [luser]@domain

Use -o to print messages older than the specified number of seconds. For example, messages older than 1 day:

root@localhost# exiqgrep -o 86400 [...]

Use -y to print messages that are younger than the specified number of seconds. For example, messages less than an hour old:

root@localhost# exiqgrep -y 3600 [...]

Use -s to match the size of a message with a regex. For example, 700-799 bytes:

root@localhost# exiqgrep -s '^7..$' [...]

Use -z to match only frozen messages, or -x to match only unfrozen messages.

There are also a few flags that control the display of the output.

Use -i to print just the message-id as a result of one of the above two searches:

root@localhost# exiqgrep -i [ -r | -f ] ...

Use -c to print a count of messages matching one of the above searches:

root@localhost# exiqgrep -c ...

Print just the message-id of the entire queue:

root@localhost# exiqgrep -i

Managing the queue

The main exim binary (/usr/sbin/exim) is used with various flags to make things happen to messages in the queue. Most of these require one or more message-IDs to be specified in the command line, which is where `exiqgrep -i` as described above really comes in handy.

Start a queue run:

root@localhost# exim -q -v

Start a queue run for just local deliveries:

root@localhost# exim -ql -v

Remove a message from the queue:

root@localhost# exim -Mrm <message-id> [ <message-id> ... ]

Freeze a message:

root@localhost# exim -Mf <message-id> [ <message-id> ... ]

Thaw a message:

root@localhost# exim -Mt <message-id> [ <message-id> ... ]

Deliver a message, whether it’s frozen or not, whether the retry time has been reached or not:

root@localhost# exim -M <message-id> [ <message-id> ... ]

Deliver a message, but only if the retry time has been reached:

root@localhost# exim -Mc <message-id> [ <message-id> ... ]

Force a message to fail and bounce as “cancelled by administrator”:

root@localhost# exim -Mg <message-id> [ <message-id> ... ]

Remove all frozen messages:

root@localhost# exiqgrep -z -i | xargs exim -Mrm

Remove all messages older than five days (86400 * 5 = 432000 seconds):

root@localhost# exiqgrep -o 432000 -i | xargs exim -Mrm

Freeze all queued mail from a given sender:

root@localhost# exiqgrep -i -f luser@example.tld | xargs exim -Mf

View a message’s headers:

root@localhost# exim -Mvh <message-id>

View a message’s body:

root@localhost# exim -Mvb <message-id>

View a message’s logs:

root@localhost# exim -Mvl <message-id>

Add a recipient to a message:

root@localhost# exim -Mar <message-id> <address> [ <address> ... ]

Edit the sender of a message:

root@localhost# exim -Mes <message-id> <address>

Access control

Exim allows you to apply access control lists at various points of the SMTP transaction by specifying an ACL to use and defining its conditions in exim.conf. You could start with the HELO string.

# Specify the ACL to use after HELO
acl_smtp_helo = check_helo

# Conditions for the check_helo ACL:
check_helo:

    deny message = Gave HELO/EHLO as "friend"
    log_message = HELO/EHLO friend
    condition = ${if eq {$sender_helo_name}{friend} {yes}{no}}

    deny message = Gave HELO/EHLO as our IP address
    log_message = HELO/EHLO our IP address
    condition = ${if eq {$sender_helo_name}{$interface_address} {yes}{no}}

    accept

NOTE: Pursue HELO checking at your own peril. The HELO is fairly unimportant in the grand scheme of SMTP these days, so don’t put too much faith in whatever it contains. Some spam might seem to use a telltale HELO string, but you might be surprised at how many legitimate messages start off with a questionable HELO as well. Anyway, it’s just as easy for a spammer to send a proper HELO than it is to send HELO im.a.spammer, so consider yourself lucky if you’re able to stop much spam this way.

Next, you can perform a check on the sender address or remote host. This shows how to do that after the RCPT TO command; if you reject here, as opposed to rejecting after the MAIL FROM, you’ll have better data to log, such as who the message was intended for.

# Specify the ACL to use after RCPT TO
acl_smtp_rcpt = check_recipient

# Conditions for the check_recipient ACL
check_recipient:

    # [...]

    drop hosts = /etc/exim_reject_hosts
    drop senders = /etc/exim_reject_senders

    # [ Probably a whole lot more... ]

This example uses two plain text files as blacklists. Add appropriate entries to these files – hostnames/IP addresses to /etc/exim_reject_hosts, addresses to /etc/exim_reject_senders, one entry per line.

It is also possible to perform content scanning using a regex against the body of a message, though obviously this can cause Exim to use more CPU than it otherwise would need to, especially on large messages.

# Specify the ACL to use after DATA
acl_smtp_data = check_message

# Conditions for the check_messages ACL
check_message:

    deny message = "Sorry, Charlie: $regex_match_string"
    regex = ^Subject:: .*Lower your self-esteem by becoming a sysadmin

    accept

Fix SMTP-Auth for Pine

If pine can’t use SMTP authentication on an Exim host and just returns an “unable to authenticate” message without even asking for a password, add the following line to exim.conf:

  begin authenticators

  fixed_plain:
  driver = plaintext
  public_name = PLAIN
  server_condition = "${perl{checkuserpass}{$1}{$2}{$3}}"
  server_set_id = $2
>  server_prompts = :

This was a problem on CPanel Exim builds awhile ago, but they seem to have added this line to their current stock configuration.

Log the subject line

This is one of the most useful configuration tweaks I’ve ever found for Exim. Add this to exim.conf, and you can log the subject lines of messages that pass through your server. This is great for troubleshooting, and for getting a very rough idea of what messages may be spam.

log_selector = +subject

Reducing or increasing what is logged.

Disable identd lookups

Frankly, I don’t think identd has been useful for a long time, if ever. Identd relies on the connecting host to confirm the identity (system UID) of the remote user who owns the process that is making the network connection. This may be of some use in the world of shell accounts and IRC users, but it really has no place on a high-volume SMTP server, where the UID is often simply “mail” or whatever the remote MTA runs as, which is useless to know. It’s overhead, and results in nothing but delays while the identd query is refused or times out. You can stop your Exim server from making these queries by setting the timeout to zero seconds in exim.conf:

rfc1413_query_timeout = 0s

Disable Attachment Blocking

To disable the executable-attachment blocking that many Cpanel servers do by default but don’t provide any controls for on a per-domain basis, add the following block to the beginning of the /etc/antivirus.exim file:

if $header_to: matches "example\.com|example2\.com"
then
  finish
endif

It is probably possible to use a separate file to list these domains, but I haven’t had to do this enough times to warrant setting such a thing up.

Searching the logs with exigrep

The exigrep utility (not to be confused with exiqgrep) is used to search an exim log for a string or pattern. It will print all log entries with the same internal message-id as those that matched the pattern, which is very handy since any message will take up at least three lines in the log. exigrep will search the entire content of a log entry, not just particular fields.

One can search for messages sent from a particular IP address:

root@localhost# exigrep '<= .* \[12.34.56.78\] ' /path/to/exim_log

Search for messages sent to a particular IP address:

root@localhost# exigrep '=> .* \[12.34.56.78\]' /path/to/exim_log

This example searches for outgoing messages, which have the “=>” symbol, sent to “user@domain.tld”. The pipe to grep for the “<=” symbol will match only the lines with information on the sender – the From address, the sender’s IP address, the message size, the message ID, and the subject line if you have enabled logging the subject. The purpose of doing such a search is that the desired information is not on the same log line as the string being searched for.

root@localhost# exigrep '=> .*user@domain.tld' /path/to/exim_log | fgrep '<='

Generate and display Exim stats from a logfile:

root@localhost# eximstats /path/to/exim_mainlog

Same as above, with less verbose output:

root@localhost# eximstats -ne -nr -nt /path/to/exim_mainlog

Same as above, for one particular day:

root@localhost# fgrep YYYY-MM-DD /path/to/exim_mainlog | eximstats

Bonus!

To delete all queued messages containing a certain string in the body:

root@localhost# grep -lr 'a certain string' /var/spool/exim/input/ | \
                sed -e 's/^.*\/\([a-zA-Z0-9-]*\)-[DH]$/\1/g' | xargs exim -Mrm

Note that the above only delves into /var/spool/exim in order to grep for queue files with the given string, and that’s just because exiqgrep doesn’t have a feature to grep the actual bodies of messages. If you are deleting these files directly, YOU ARE DOING IT WRONG! Use the appropriate exim command to properly deal with the queue.

If you have to feed many, many message-ids (such as the output of an `exiqgrep -i` command that returns a lot of matches) to an exim command, you may exhaust the limit of your shell’s command line arguments. In that case, pipe the listing of message-ids into xargs to run only a limited number of them at once. For example, to remove thousands of messages sent from joe@example.com:

root@localhost# exiqgrep -i -f '<joe@example.com>' | xargs exim -Mrm

Speaking of “DOING IT WRONG” — Attention, CPanel forum readers

I get a number of hits to this page from a link in this post at the CPanel forums. The question is:

Due to spamming, spoofing from fields, etc., etc., etc., I am finding it necessary to spend more time to clear the exim queue from time to time. […] what command would I use to delete the queue

The answer is: Just turn exim off, because your customers are better off knowing that email simply isn’t running on your server, than having their queued messages deleted without notice.

Or, figure out what is happening. The examples given in that post pay no regard to the legitimacy of any message, they simply delete everything, making the presumption that if a message is in the queue, it’s junk. That is total fallacy. There are a number of reasons legitimate mail can end up in the queue. Maybe your backups or CPanel’s “upcp” process are running, and your load average is high — exim goes into a queue-only mode at a certain threshold, where it stops trying to deliver messages as they come in and just queues them until the load goes back down. Or, maybe it’s an outgoing message, and the DNS lookup failed, or the connection to the domain’s MX failed, or maybe the remote MX is busy or greylisting you with a 4xx deferral. These are all temporary failures, not permanent ones, and the whole point of having temporary failures in SMTP and a mail queue in your MTA is to be able to try again after awhile.

Exim already purges messages from the queue after the period of time specified in exim.conf. If you have this value set appropriately, there is absolutely no point in removing everything from your queue every day with a cron job. You will lose legitimate mail, and the sender and recipient will never know if or why it happened. Do not do this!

If you regularly have a large number of messages in your queue, find out why they are there. If they are outbound messages, see who is sending them, where they’re addressed to, and why they aren’t getting there. If they are inbound messages, find out why they aren’t getting delivered to your user’s account. If you need to delete some, use exiqgrep to pick out just the ones that should be deleted.

Reload the configuration

After making changes to exim.conf, you need to give the main exim pid a SIGHUP to re-exec it and have the configuration re-read. Sure, you could stop and start the service, but that’s overkill and causes a few seconds of unnecessary downtime. Just do this:

root@localhost# kill -HUP `cat /var/spool/exim/exim-daemon.pid`

You should then see something resembling the following in exim_mainlog:

pid 1079: SIGHUP received: re-exec daemon
exim 4.52 daemon started: pid=1079, -q1h, listening for SMTP on port 25 (IPv4)

Read The Fucking Manual

The Exim Home Page

Documentation For Exim

The Exim Specification – Version 4.5x

Exim command line arguments

is deprecated. mysql is now updated by the rpm.versions system when you run upcp

Sunday, November 17th, 2013

is deprecated. mysql is now updated by the rpm.versions system when you run upcp

the solutions

–It’s generally recommended to troubleshoot an issue before reinstalling MySQL to resolve –it. However, if necessary, you can remove the existing MySQL RPMs and then run the –following command:

/usr/local/cpanel/scripts/check_cpanel_rpms –fix

–It’s also a good idea to backup your MySQL data before reinstalling it:

cp -Rf /var/lib/mysql /var/lib/mysql-backup

–You can remove the backed up directory after you ensure MySQL was reinstalled –successfully.

–remove the existing MySQL RPMs

–You can run the following command to get a list of the MySQL RPMs installed on your –system:

rpm -qa|grep MySQL

–Then, you can remove the RPMs that start with the version of your MySQL. For instance, –if you have MySQL 5.5 installed, you would run a command such as this for each MySQL55 –RPM:

rpm -e MySQL55-server-5.5.32-1.cp1136.x86_64

thanks all, done, test it and working fine, fixed the issue

reference

http://forums.cpanel.net/f354/scripts-mysqlup-deprecated-mysql-now-updated-rpm-versions-system-when-you-run-upcp-356561.html

How do I enable remote access to MySQL database server?

Saturday, November 16th, 2013

* bind-address : local IP address to bind to. If you wish mysql listen on all IPs, don’t use this option.

For example if you want to allow access to database called ‘foo’ for user ‘bar’ and remote IP 192.168.0.1 then you need to type following commands at “mysql>” prompt:

mysql> GRANT ALL ON foo.* TO bar@’192.168.0.1′ IDENTIFIED BY ‘PASSWORD’;
mysql> REVOKE GRANT OPTION ON foo.* FROM bar@’192.168.0.1′;

references

http://kb.parallels.com/en/1134

Check the Mail log on Plesk Server

Wednesday, August 21st, 2013

The Plesk mail logs are kept in /usr/local/psa/var/log/maillog

The best command to use for viewing the logs in real time is

tail -f /usr/local/psa/var/log/maillog

If you are not familiar with Linux commands such as vi, tail, cat etc you can see the manual for any command by typing man such as man tail

Thank you.

install virtualmin (webmin) in centos (vps)

Thursday, May 9th, 2013

1- cd /et/ then run the below command

wget http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/webadmin/webmin-1.620-1.noarch.rpm

2- and then run the below command :

rpm -U webmin-1.620-1.noarch.rpm

reference

http://www.webmin.com/rpm.html

thank you.

Exim : retry time not reached for any host after a long failure period

Friday, December 14th, 2012

The issue is because of the corrupted exim db files.

Goto /var/spool/exim/db and delete files: retry , retry.lockfile , wait-remote_smtp, wait-remote_smtp.lockfile

/etc/init.d/exim restart

How to Install LiteSpeed on a WHM / cPanel Server

Sunday, September 30th, 2012

How to Install LiteSpeed on a WHM/cPanel Server

– Go buy a license from LiteSpeed and note down the license key. (They also do a free 14 day trial).

– Login to SSH as ‘root’ on the server running cPanel.

– Copy/paste the following command and hit enter:

cd /usr/src; wget http://www.litespeedtech.com/packages/cpanel/lsws_whm_plugin_install.sh; chmod 700 lsws_whm_plugin_install.sh; ./lsws_whm_plugin_install.sh; rm -f lsws_whm_plugin_install.sh

– Login to WHM and click the ‘LiteSpeed Web Server’ button.

– Click ‘Install LiteSpeed’ and let it run through the installation procedure, this is completely automated.

– Enter your license information & assign an administrator password (Don’t tick the box to start LiteSpeed immediately!)

– Click ‘Build matching PHP Binary’ – this will take 10-20mins (Apache will stay running)

– Click ‘Switch to LiteSpeed’

– Click ‘Admin Web Console’ and login with the details you setup in step 5.

Final stages of setup (Most of which is in LiteSpeed admin)

– Configuration > General > Index Files > Edit

Set the following:

Index Files: index.html, index.php, index.php5, index.htm

Auto Index: Yes

Auto Index URI => /_autoindex/default.php

Hit ‘Save’

In SSH Type:

ln -sf /usr/local/lib/php/autoindex /usr/local/lsws/share/autoindex

Now back to LiteSpeed Admin:

– Configuration > Log > Server Log > Edit

Set the following:

Log Level: Info

Debug Level: None

Hit ‘Save’

Now click ‘Actions > Graceful Restart’ to make these changes permanent.

Optional LiteSpeed Installation Procedures

Want your users to be able to have their own PHP.INI file?

In LiteSpeed Admin:

– Configuration > External App – then hit ‘Edit’ next to ‘LSAPI App / lsphp5 / uds://tmp/lshttpd/lsphp5.sock’ if you’re running PHP5 (or the one for lsphp4 if running PHP4)

In ‘Environment’ add the following line:

PHPRC=$VH_ROOT/

Then hit ‘Save’

Now click ‘Actions > Graceful Restart’ to make these changes permanent.

This will allow them to have their very own php.ini in the root folder of their hosting account which overrides the /usr/local/lib/php.ini file, this is a security risk though so be careful.

Want your users to be able to use Frontpage Extensions?

Run this command from SSH:

sed -rie ‘s/(safe_)?chmod\(( )?0600,( )?(“\$\{myuid\}”,)?( )?”\$(\{)?homedir(\})?\/public_html\$\{subweb\}\/_vti_pvt\/service.pwd”( )?\);/\1chmod(\20644,\3\4\5?$\6homedir\7\/public_html${subweb}\/_vti_pvt\/service.pwd”\8);/’ /scripts/fp-auth /usr/local/frontpage/version5.0/apache-fp/fp-auth /usr/local/cpanel/bin/convertfppassthrough /scripts/fixfrontpageperm

Then run this command from SSH:

/scripts/fixfrontpageperm

Forgot your LiteSpeed admin pass?

Run this within SSH to reset your LiteSpeed Admin Pass: /usr/local/lsws/admin/misc/admpass.sh

References

http://www.evohosting.co.uk/blog/web-development/how-to-install-litespeed-on-a-whm-cpanel-server/

check Inodes

Friday, August 31st, 2012

use this command for Inodes total
find * | wc -l

use this command to find which folder have max Inodes
for d in *; do echo -n “$d: “; find $d -type f | wc -l; done | sort -nk2 | tail -20

Comprase and Extract file in Linux

Sunday, August 19th, 2012

Comprase

tar -zcvf filename.tar.gz filename

Extract

tar -zxvf filename.tar.gz filename