cPanel required ports list

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by dino on 05-07-2008

Cpanel required ports list

Port Service Protocol Direction Notes
20 ftp tcp inbound/outbound
21 ftp tcp,udp inbound/outbound
22 ssh tcp inbound
25 smtp tcp inbound/outbound
26 smtp tcp inbound/outbound
37 rdate tcp outbound
43 whos tcp outbound
53 DNS tcp/udp inbound/outbound Inbound only needed if you run your own DNS server
80 http tcp inbound/outbound
110 pop3 tcp inbound
113 ident tcp outbound
143 imap4 tcp inbound
443 https tcp inbound
465 smtp tcp/ssl, tcp/udp inbound/outbound
873 rsync tpc/udp outbound
993 imap4 ssl tcp inbound
995 pop3 ssl tcp inbound
2082 cpanel tcp inbound
2083 cpanel ssl tcp inbound
2086 whm tcp inbound
2087 whm ssl tcp inbound
2089 cp license tcp outbound
2095 webmail tcp inbound
2096 webmail ssl tcp inbound
3306 mysql tcp inbound Only if you need to connect remotely
6666 chat tcp inbound

DoS: looking at open connections

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by dino on 05-07-2008

Here is a command line to run on your server if you think your server is under attack. It prints our a list of open connections to your server and sorts them by ammount.

RedHat: netstat -ntu | awk ‘{print $5}’ | cut -d: -f1 | sort | uniq -c | sort -n

BSD: netstat -na |awk ‘{print $5}’ |cut -d “.” -f1,2,3,4 |sort |uniq -c |sort -n

You can also check for connections by running the following command.
netstat -plan | grep :80 | awk ‘{print $4 }’ | sort -n | uniq -c | sort

These are few step to be taken when you feel the server is under attack:
——————————————————————————-
Step 1: Check the load using the command “w”.
Step 2: Check which service is utilizing maximum CPU by “nice top”.
Step 3: Check which IP is taking maximum connection by netstat -anpl|grep :80|awk {’print $5′}|cut -d”:” -f1|sort|uniq -c|sort -n
Step 4: Then block the IP using firewall (APF or iptables “apf -d < IP>” )
——————————————————————————-

You can also implement security features in your server like:

1) Install apache modules like mod_dosevasive and mod_security in your server.
2) Configure APF and IPTABLES to reduce the DDOS
3) Basic server securing steps :
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http://www.linuxdevcenter.com/pub/a/linux/2006/03/23/secure-your-server.html?page=1
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4) Configure sysctl parameters in your server to drop attacks.

You can block the IP which is attacking your server using Ipsec from command prompt.
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>> netsh ipsec static add filterlist name=myfilterlist
>> netsh ipsec static add filter filterlist=myfilterlist srcaddr=a.b.c.d dstaddr=Me
>> netsh ipsec static add filteraction name=myaction action=block
>> netsh ipsec static add policy name=mypolicy assign=yes
>> netsh ipsec static add rule name=myrule policy=mypolicy filterlist=myfilterlist filteraction=myaction
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