I had csf firewall installed, and due to my own stupidity, attempted to login with the wrong password one too many times, which added my IP to iptables, locking me out. I had to SSH into a linux box at school, and then ssh into my server to stop the iptables service so I could get into my server.
I removed every trace of my IP that I could find in csf, but sometime in the middle of the night, iptables reloads some rules from somewhere that blocks me again. I also tried doing iptables -F to clear all rules, but again, sometime in the middle of the night, rules are reloaded and I get blocked. I even uninstalled csf to no avail. I just want to remove my IP once and for all.
When I add a new site via New Account in WHM and once the domain resolves, the cPanel 'Great Success' page shows. I have verified the site is resolving properly.
This is a brand new installation and the only changes I have made is I updated apache via WHM.
My fedora server is running apf firewall. When I turn it off, clients can connect.
When I turn it on, it says MSG: Contacting Server.
I have already added ports 6100 and 3784 to /etc/apf/conf.apf by adding the ports to the lines, EG_TCP_CPORTS, EG_UDP_CPORTS, IG_TCP_CPORTS, and IG_UDP_CPORTS
I've been having an issue with one of my sites were someone has been adding malicious code to the index file. I don't know what has been compromised and am looking for a way to stop this.
I have a dedicated server have already upgraded MySQL to the latest version as I though that might work but it hasn't.
I just added a new PHP Handler with PHP Verison 5.5.18 as cgi and i always get an error when activating. I used the samte setting and php ini as the Buildin Ones
I tried to set up a site with a "dedicated" IP without SSL, and ran into this problem again. The new IPs (v4 or v6) are not reachable, pingable, or trace routable from outside the container, even from its PCS hardware node.This is what I get after adding the address in PPA:
By contrast, if I add an IP address through PVA, it is pingable. Note the differences, namely that PVA's ifcfg-eth0:0 has "BOOTPROTO=static" and the IPs double quoted. For those testing at home also note that PVA removed the existing IPv6 addresses (that it didn't know about).
I recently realized that domainkeys headers are not added to mail messages that are generated on our server. We are using MailEnable Enterprise 8.60 (upgraded on the Stardart edition, that is installed with Plesk).
I thought the problem could be related with this upgrade and created a new VM and tried that out. Installed Windows Server 2012 R2 Std, enabled DNS and IIS with ASP.NET versions, applied all updates, installed Plesk 12 and Upgraded to MailEnabled Enterprise. On the new server mails are going with the correct domainkeys headers.
Now I think that the problem was generated because of the Migration. On the old server Plesk 11.5 was installed and we didn't have any domainkeys issues. When we created our new server, with the same steps I wrote below, and migrated our backup to the new server, domainkeys headers weren't there anymore.
I couldn't find any documentation about this issue. Is there any commands to reset the settings related to domainkeys or may be it's a curruption in the psd database?
server with many IP (100-200) and possible buying +20-50 each month. Configuration - CPU: 1.5-2ghz, RAM: 512-1024mb, HDD: 40-80gb. Location - any. Traffic - 1-2tb. OS - CentOS preff.
I am having a pretty weird problem about ip s at my server. I have a dedi at netdirekt and they gave me like 4 free ips,
all of the sites are at main ip, but today i created a new account and also add 1 of those ips to server and i changed ip of the site.
After that problem started, when i try to ping site it shows ip of the site (new ip), but it gives request timed out. Also sometimes it says, 89.149.218.46 : Destination host unreachable.
If i change the ip of the new site to main ip, site loads well but when i change it to new ip it doesn't load plus gives that ping problem
My story starts with my getting burned by fumiNET (the first *grrr*)...
Burstnet reactivates my server (for an additional payment of course). The server seems fine but I thought that I might do better with a BurstNET reseller (better service). So...
I sign up with a reseller, and since I got my new server I've been plagued with email bounces, rejections, etc. Seems that my server (via the reseller) was supplied with a bunch of banned IPs (in other words, crap IPs). (the second *grrrr*)
I've reported to the providers abuse department, but was told that I have to handle this. (third *grrrr* - or is it just continued from the second?)
I've had it. I'm ready to fold up shop. As it is the sites keep me busy - but then...
- I get screwed by fumiNET (losing a big chunk of money) - the hassle of trying to get my fumiNET server back up (thanks BurstNET) - transferring to the reseller for better service, and finding out that perhaps BurstNET service was better than the reseller's
I'm open if anyone has suggestions. Some that I've come up with myself...
- finding yet another server provider (recommendations welcome) - drinking large quantities of Guinness (worth it regardless) - pulling the plug on the server and getting shared hosting to hold some minimal content - forgetting the whole damn thing and getting a job as a [pick one]: store clerk, street cleaner, used car salesman
I'm upgrading to a new server but when I change IP's on the nameservers I dont want to have data loss due to DNS cache, so I want to forward the old server IP's to the new server IP's, how do I do that?
We require a server with 10+ IP addresses (Each one with a separate OS and external IP Address, i.e myip.dk)
This is to be used as an added security level for our employees logging into our system from outside the office. Our system monitors the IP Address and we need to restrict access to certain items depending on the IP. We basically would like to set up multiple VPS on one server.
Can you confirm how this would work?I know we can buy a Windows VPS for around £15, but we need multiple of these (10-20)and figure our own server might be the way forward.
how to configure linux so that it allows for two ip addresses on one machine?
I know this is possible because my server administrator setup one of my servers to have two different ip addresses so that I could have a static and dynamic http daemon (two different daemons but listening on different ips).
I've been carrying some weird hours lately, so I'm able to see activity on my sites that I normally don't see.
Certain IPs are trying to diddle their things into my server and need the boot. It's not consistent (ie not happening every 5, 10 mins)... it's periodically throughout the months. I'll see an IP I blocked 2 months ago just randomly show up at 4:30am and try accessing the same files it was probing during it's last visit. Assuming this is just some sort of bot, can I block it permanently?
I know APF has a collection system that purges an IP list to keep it from bloating, and I had PSM do some hardening so I'm not entirely sure about the workings of APF firewall. So far my IP blocks are blank (which is a good sign!), but I'd like to add some nuisances to it, to keep their crap from appearing in my error logs anymore as "Denied by Server Configuration"
My question is: Can I block people at server level permanently? I do not want their IP being taken out with the purge list that comes by every so often.
There are lots of hosts who can give you IPs on different blocks. You should easily be able to find one hosting account that can do this. Of course, you'll need to get a low-end dedicated or colo server to do that, but the IP address thing is no big deal. With the money you would be spending, you're well within the range of a low-end dedicated anyway.
Hi Eric,
I know this thread is old BUT...
This comment interests me a lot, and I hope that somebody can clarify for me that does 50 IPs on one dedicated server require multiple routers (like 2x IPs per router?) to manage all of the IP's communicating with the dedicated server?
Our dedicated server runs our virtual machines for us and the NAT option is terrible...the virtual machines work REALLY well when they use a Bridged connection. The problem is that our virtual machines have to acquire an IP address somehow, and the hosting provider we currently use says they only give one IP address to our server which is fine if the NAT within the software worked really well...is there a webhost that can provide a setup where they have a router hooked to our dedicated server so if we need more local IP's they can be given/assigned by the router. This would then allow us to run our virtual machines much better. Does anybody know of a dedicated server host that will do this?
We would like to offer root servers to customers, but we worry that they change the IP address to another IP address in our network and make troubles like this. I think, if a customer takes the same IP like our gateway router, our whole network is not reachable anymore. How can I avoid this?
We are interested to buy different C class IPs so we can host many related sites on the same server. Our hosting provider does not sell different C class IPs. I wanted to know if there is anyway to buy IP addresses from somewhere else, lets say from other hosting companies, or private providers, who would forward the IP to our server. Did you ever hear of such service?