What Is The Secure Port Of Whm And Cpanel?
Dec 5, 2008what is the secure port of whm and cpanel?
View 6 Replieswhat is the secure port of whm and cpanel?
View 6 RepliesI was looking at staminus dedicated hosting offers, and after I asked them about secure port packages prices. I would like to know, after I purchase a dedicated server, how to install secure port? Does it work like a protected DNS?
View 6 Replies View RelatedOne failure cited by a recent PCI compliance report was that of the Plesk non-https login at port 8880. I believe we can resolve this by adding a firewall rule to block access to this port but wanted to check first if this will have any negative consequences elsewhere. Or is there a better way to achieve PCI compliance on this point?
View 2 Replies View RelatedHow secure is Cpanel? What's its recent history in regards to security?
View 14 Replies View RelatedI`m going to use FTPS for one of my accounts on a cPanel Server.
Should I assign a dedicated IP to that account, then install SSL on FTP.DOMAIN.COM?
I am really getting confused now. Some people tell me it is possible to set up a simple subdomain and add a SSL-certificate to this, while others tell me I have to set up a new account for the subdomain (subdomain.domain.com) in WHM and assign it to it's own IP-adress.
So, my queston is what is the best way to set up a secure subdomain, like [url]? I have already purchased a SSL-certificate for secure.domain.com.
I've used many webhosts over the years and have run into various issues from which I've compiled my key wants:
Reliability - availability of mail & web are both just as important - I've had a few hosts who have great HTTP uptime, but mail can go down for hours and is not covered by any SLA. Prefer clustered solutions using a NAS, or at the least RAID-1 (or 10). I recognise downtime is inevitable, I care more about the impact of single component failure and recovery time.
Control Panel/Security - I'd prefer the host to have a custom control panel (i.e. not cPanel/WHM, Plesk/Parallels, DirectAdmin, H-Sphere etc). I really like DreamHost's panel, in particular their model of arbitrary combinations of shell users and domains underneath them. I like to use this to separate installs of untrusted software (such as MovableType, Wordpress, Gallery, Joomla) into their own user accounts so that if one gets compromised it doesn't hose everything. Need multiple domain hosting.
Disk - 2GB sufficient, 3-4GB preferable.
Bandwidth - 10GB or more (I don't really use more than 2GB but prefer not to worry about overage)
Price - I'm happy to pay US$20-30 for a premium service.
Support - I'm technically savvy and only need for support to be responsive to technical questions & issues (i.e. reporting downtime).
To provide some background - I'm currently a customer of both DreamHost and Media Temple (gs). DH sucks because their uptime is completely unpredictable, I have kept it only because their user/domain model is convenient for toying with untrusted software. (mt) was to be the ideal host but reliability of their (gs) service is crap despite all the claims about superior architecture. Additionally they don't allow separation of users/domains and I don't want to host multiple 3rd party apps in the one account. To their credit (mt)'s support is extremely responsive and the company as a whole are very transparent about outages but they simply have too many technology issues.
I'm runnung a server with Apache2 (Apache/2.2.16 (Debian 6.0))
I would like Apache2 listen on port 8080 for IPv4 and on port 80 for IPv6.
This is what I have now:
/etc/apache2/ports.conf
Currently I am using Linux + cPAnel and using the port 25 for email sevrer. Currently we facing 1 problem is, some user's ISP is not support port. May I know how can I add additional port into server and allow users to send mail by different port?
View 1 Replies View RelatedI have an office internal website and I opened a port in the gateway of my office (7080) to this website (server )'s 80 port. That makes this website open to public as office has static IP. And then when I view the site from home . it's fine. But when I tried to login, the site is using a pop-up, I guess it's http authentciation, login, I was redirected to a url without my port number any more, that stops my access to the site as obviously I would.
How can I keep my connection/port number ...?
I am managing a server and just learning how to do everything. It is a linux server running WHM/Cpanel. I need web scripts on this server to be able to connect to external SMTP servers. Therefore I need to open up port 25 (if it is not already).
How do I open ports on my server? Hopefully by using WHM/Cpanel (I am not too familiar with using the command line).
Here's an interesting article I wrote on how to use mod_proxy to allow your customers to access cPanel using port 80, in case other ports are blocked by a firewall.
[url]
Here's my story: The landlord provides the internet for the house and it goes through a server which has squid installed. Squid in turn seems to block the internal port (or whatever the exact term for that is) for phpmyadmin or webmail in cpanel so I cannot access them.
At my reseller account at Hostgator they said they redirected that port to port80 via mod rewrite and that now works for me. I wonder how I would do the same thing on a dedicated server. I can't see what Hostgator did since it's happening out of my sight somewhere. Otherwise I would just replicate that on my box.
Is anyone successfully using cPanel with smtp port 587 and have a working email account?
After deciding that Plesk wasn't for me due to the lack of reference material in this and other forums, I had my hosting company, ServInt, delete my old vps and install a new one with cPanel.
Everything went fine until I configured my email. Just like with Plesk, I cannot access the smtp server via Outlook. I can ping it successfully, but it either terminates the connection or doesn't recognize the correct user name and password. With Plesk, it was a simple matter of enabling the use of port 587.
Not so with cPanel, at least for me. Even though the Exim service is enabled and another instance is enabled on port 587, I still can't connect. Thought it might be CFS, which is new to me with this install, so made sure it was disabled. Opened up a ticket with ServInt and even their techs can't get it functioning, so _they've_ opened up a ticket with cPanel.
Hence the title of this post, I can't beleive that I'm the only one whose had this problem before because blocking port 587 has been done by BellSouth/AT&T for many years now.
Nothing like having your company email down for over 6 hours to keep you up at night.
about the NIC and switch,
there are giga port vs mega port,
in your experience,do they really be different?
I recently changed my SSH port, but locked myself out when my APF firewall was installed.
Where would I got to add a custom port inside the APF's config file?
if it is possible to block external access to Cpanel through port 2082?
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