How to config postfix in Zimbra - postfix-mta

I am developing a content filtering app for zimbra. I have a problem with the config postfix MTA.
In main.cf
content-filter:smpt-amavis[127.0.0.1]:1024 by content-filter:myfilter
and add master.cf myfilter service to pipe email to script php.
But when I restart zimbra, everything returns to default,
content-filter:smtp-amavis
How my config change when I restart zimbra. Could anyone help me, please. Thanks so much.

did you check the master.cf.in ???
https://wiki.zimbra.com/wiki/Adding_additional_SMTP_listener_ports
You must edit the master.cf.in because this is the file readed by zimbra to update the config file (master.cf). If you try to edit directly the master.cf, when restart de service the changes will be erased (because he read the master.cf.in to update changes)

Related

Password protect wordpress on Bitnami

I'm new to Bitnami and currently using a Google Cloud Platform for my VMs.
I'm trying to password protect a wordpress installation for 1 of my VMs. It's a dev site so only going to be using the IP address to access the site.
However following the instructions I found here, I am unable to write in the opt/bitnami/apache2/ folder. Everytime I try to run the commands in the above linked instruction, I get the following error
/opt/bitnami/apache2/bin/htpasswd.bin: cannot create file opt/bitnami/apache2/wordpress_users
I've tried to manually change the permissions on the folder and it doesn't work. I can't seem to run any commands with SU because there is no password provided for shell access (using only a ssh cert file)
Can anyone can offer help as to what I'm doing wrong or what I'm missing?
Thanks
Bitnami developer here,
It is not necessary to modify permission for the apache2 folder nor the htpasswd.bin file. The bitnami user does not have a password by default but is allowed to run commands with higher privileges using sudo. Could you please try to revert the permission changes and run the command with sudo?
cd /opt/bitnami
sudo apache2/bin/htpasswd -cb apache2/wordpress_users your_desired_username your_desired_password
Let me know if you have any other issue or if it worked for you.
Best regards,
Gonzalo
Bitnami developer here,
Sorry I didn't mentioned that you need to change to the /opt/bitnami directory first as I thought you already did it. Also, you have to run command with sudo because root is the owner of the apache2 folder.
Apart from that, I'm glad you could fix your issue!
Best regards,
Gonzalo
Thanks for the idea but it didn't work, I tried with sudo having my apache2/ folder set to 755 and ownership back to it's original setting.
On the other hand.... I manage to solve my problem. Seems that in the original on how to call your command there is a part missing! Well it's missing for me cause by adding the fullpath to the original file I was able to successfully get a password in place and things are now working perfectly
$ opt/bitnami/apache2/bin/htpasswd -cb apache2/wordpress_users username password
Took me too long to get that working... Thanks for the help, without you I wouldn't have made a typo that made me rethink the error! Thanks again

Usergrid: Unable to Login to local Usergrid

I setup Usergrid on my local machine, however even after modifying the 'usergrid-default.properties' file and adding:
# SysAdmin login
usergrid.sysadmin.login.name=superuser
usergrid.sysadmin.login.email=
usergrid.sysadmin.login.password=superpassword
usergrid.sysadmin.login.allowed=false
I am not able to login to the local instance. Even with the test/test password it is not allowing me in. IS there a trick I am missing?
-S
You may need to change the name of your properties file.
Try changing
usergrid-custom.properties
to
usergrid-deployment.properties
then restart tomcat.
Place "usergrid-custom.properties" in Tomcat's lib/ directory. Ensure that there are no spaces before or after the credentials in this file. Remove the ROOT/ directory in webapps/ and restart Tomcat.
usergrid.sysadmin.login.allowed = true

Wordpress can't write to file

I've moved my wordpress installation from a managed VPS to a new centos server.
Now I've a problem with writing to files directly from the wordpress admin panel.
Folders/files are set with 755/644. User owner is "wwwuser", group is "apache" (I use this one to access to the documentroot via ftp).
I think that the problem is that in /etc/httpd/conf/http.conf I've user and group setted both to "apache", in fact everything works if I change permissions to 775/664, which should mean that when the group owner is setted to apache everything work, right?
So my question is, should I change all permissions to 775 or there's another solution, which doesn't lead to security issues? Is it safe to make all folders and files 775 and 664? What if I change "apache" to "wwwuser" from /etc/httpd/conf/http.conf?
Edit: is it possible that the problem is that in phpinfo, environment pwd is set to /home/wwwuser/test and not to /home/wwwuser/?
I would advise to not change the user Apache is running under (to not edit the Apache config file) but to set apache as the owner of the files.
chown -R apache /path/to/your/app/files
I think it's the easiest solution. If you choose to change the permissions, you shouldn't have to change the permissions for everyone (other): you could change to 774 but I don't see why 775.
By default Apache is running under the apache user on CentOS.
This is a very common problem you are facing right now. Some times files/directories created/uploaded with FTP may have been assign a different users/usergroup. As #Céline Aussourd stated, if you have installed plugin from WordPress then all files and directories will get the default user/usergroup.
Now easiest way to identify which user should be assigned to your files is create a single test file using CPanel file manager called "test.php" and access it from web if it is working then check its user/usergroup and change all your setup files to that user/usergroup all together with
chown -R {user} /path/to/your/worpress/root
Replace {user} with apache web user.
UPDATE: (To install plugin without FTP details)
Please add following line to your wp-config.php after define('WP_DEBUG', false); line.
define('FS_METHOD', direct);
Remove plugin and re-install it, this time it wont ask you for FTP details and will write files directly.
For me, the solution was to add the mod_suexec apache module

vagrant/puphpet: adding a custom nginx default conf file

i use Puphpet to create a local testing vagrant /VM servers and my question is:
I ssh into the VM to change my etc/nginx/conf.d/default.conf config file, but every now and then when either i have to to or choose to i destroy the said vm to mainly re-create or because of issue, i need to repeat the above process of having to update a few config files.
Is there a way say within the vagrantfile or the comman.yaml (puphpet) file to actually add this automatically so i don't need to do this at all.
You could create a shell script in puphpet/files/exec-once[1] to replace your default.conf file.

open_bir restriction in effect at Wordpress [duplicate]

I'm getting this error on an avatar upload on my site. I've never gotten it before and nothing was changed recently for me to begin getting this error...
Warning: is_writable() [function.is-writable]:
open_basedir restriction in effect.
File(/) is not within the allowed path(s):
Modify the open_basedir settings in your hosting account and set them to none. Find the open_basedir setting given under 'PHP Settings' area of your Plesk/cPanel. Set it to 'none' from the dropdown given there.
I have shown them in the Plesk panel picture.
To resolve this error, you must edit the file httpd.conf.
Way before it can be seen in phpinfo in apache2handler section directive Server Root.
For example, in my case this way - / etc / httpd / httpd.conf.
Open the file httpd.conf, find the mention of the parameter open_basedir. And set it to none. (php_admin_value open_basedir none)
If you're running this with php file.php. You need to edit php.ini
Find this file:
: locate php.ini
/etc/php/php.ini
And append file's path to open_basedir property:
open_basedir = /srv/http/:/home/:/tmp/:/usr/share/pear/:/usr/share/webapps/:/etc/webapps/:/run/media/andrew/ext4/protected
For me the problem was bad/missing config values for the Plesk server running the whole thing.
I just followed the directions here:
http://davidseah.com/blog/2007/04/separate-php-error-logs-for-multiple-domains-with-plesk/
You can configure PHP to have a separate error log file for each VirtualHost definition. The trick is knowing exactly how to set it up, because you can’t touch the configuration directly without breaking Plesk.
Every domain name on your (dv) has its own directory in /var/www/vhosts. A typical directory has the following top level directories:
cgi-bin/
conf/
error_docs/
httpdocs/
httpsdocs/
...and so on
You’ll want to create a vhost.conf file in the domain directory’s conf/ folder with the following lines:
php_value error_log /path/to/error_log
php_flag display_errors off
php_value error_reporting 6143
php_flag log_errors on
Change the first value to match your actual installation (I used /tmp/phperrors.log). After you’re done editing the vhost.conf file, test the configuration from the console with:
apachectl configtest
…or if you don’t have apachectl (as Plesk 8.6 doesn’t seem to)…
/etc/init.d/httpd configtest
And finally tell Plesk that you’ve made this change.
/usr/local/psa/admin/bin/websrvmng -a
Laravel
If you have this problem when using Laravel.
Only go to folder bootstrap/cache and rename config.php to anything you want and reload site.
If used ispconfig3:
Go to Website section -> Options -> PHP open_basedir:
In this field has described allowed paths and each path is separated
with ":"
/var/www/clients/client2/web3/image:/var/www/clients/client2/web3/web:/var/www/...
and so on
So here must put the path that you want to have access, in my case is:
/var/www/clients/client2/web3/image:
The problem appears because:
When a script tries to access the filesystem, for example using include, or fopen(), the location of the file is checked. When the file is outside the specified directory-tree, PHP will refuse to access it.
The path you're refering to is incorect, and not withing the directoryRoot of your workspace. Try building an absolute path the the file you want to access, where you are now probably using a relative path...
if you have this kind of problem with ispconfig3 and got an error like this
open_basedir restriction in effect.
File(/var/www/clients/client7/web15) is not within the allowed
path(s):.........
To solve it (in my case) , just set PHP to SuPHP in the Website's panel of ispconfig3
Hope it helps someone :)
I had this problem # one of my wordpress sites after updating and/or moving :)
Check in database table 'wp_options' the 'upload_path' and edit it properly...
For Plesk, you can change or set the openbase dir settings via the panel
https://support.plesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/360006170513-How-to-add-custom-or-additional-path-to-the-open-basedir-option-for-Plesk-domain-
Edit the php.ini or .user.ini that is located within the main directory
open_basedir = none
If you are running a PHP IIS stack and have this error, it is usually a quick permission fix.
If you administer the windows server yourself and have access, try this FIRST:
Navigate to the folder that is giving you grief on writing to and right click it > open properties > security.
See what users have access to the folder, which ones have read only and which have full. Do you have a group that is blocking write?
The fix will be specific to your IIS setup, are you using Anonymous Authentication with specific user IUSR or with the Application Pool identity?
At any rate, you are going to end up adding a new full write permission for one of IUSR, IIS_IUSRS, or your application pool identity - like I said, this is going to vary depending on your setup and how you want to do it, you can go down the google rabbit hole on this one (one such post - IIS_IUSRS and IUSR permissions in IIS8) For me, i use anon with my app pool identity so i can get away with MACHINE_NAME\IIS_IUSRS with full read/write on any temp or upload folders.
I do not need to add anything extra to my open_basedir = in the php.ini.
In addition to #yogihosting's answer, if you are using DirectAdmin, then follow these steps:
Go to the DirectAdmin's login page. Usually, its port is 2222.
Login as administrator. Its username is admin by default.
From the "Access Level" on the right panel, make sure you are on "Admin Level". If not, change to it.
From the "Extra Features" section, click on "Custom HTTPD Configurations".
Choose the domain you want to change.
Enter the configurations you want to change in the textarea at the top of the page. You should consider the existing configuration file and modify values based on it. For example, if you see that open_basedir is set inside a <Directory>, maybe you should surround your change in the related <Directory> tag:
<Directory "/path/to/directory">
php_admin_value open_basedir none
</Directory>
After making necessary changes, click on the "Save" button.
You should now see your changes saved to the configuration file if they were valid.
There is another way of editing the configuration file, however:
Caution: Be careful, and use the following steps at your own risk, as you may run into errors, or it may lead to downtime. The recommended way is the previous one, as it prevents you from modifying configuration file improperly and show you the error.
Login to your server as root.
Go to /usr/local/directadmin/data/users. From the listed users, go to one related to the domain you want to change.
Here, there is an httpd.conf file. Make a backup from it:
cp httpd.conf httpd.conf.back
Now edit the configuration file with your editor of choice. For example, edit existing open_basedir to none. Do not try to remove things, or you may experience downtime. Save the file after editing.
Restart the Apache web server using one of the following ways (use sudo if needed):
httpd -k graceful
apachectl -k graceful
apache2 -k graceful
If your encounter any errors, then replace the main configuration file with the backed-up file, and restart the web server.
Again, the first solution is the preferred one, and you should not try the second method at the first time. As it is noted in the caution, the advantage of the first way is that it prevents saving your bad-configured stuff.
Hope it helps!
I am using an Apache vhost-File to run PHP with application-specific ini-options on my windows-server. Therefore I use the -d option of the php-command.
I am setting the open_basedir for every application as one of these options.
I needed to set multiple urls as open_basedir, including an UNC-Path, and the syntax for this case was a bit hard to find. You have to seperate the paths with semicolons and if your first path starts with a driveletter you might have to start the list with a semicolon too. At least that's what works for me.
Example:
php.exe -d open_basedir=;d:/www/applicationRoot;//internal.unc.path/ressource/
I uploaded my codeigniter project on Directadmin panel. I was getting same error.
Then I change in php settings.
open_basedir =
session.save_path = ./temp/
Then it worked for me.
As most do not find a solution, the solutions are broad for WordPress most even don't know fully why things are they are.
I've found out you will have to enable IP for your server in especially when using Cerber in some cases it can think you are not uploading .png instead you are uploading .js files.
The server IP needs to be whitelisted. Even the uploaders in some rare cases.
A great to know is to have a tmp folder 755 in your base directory, you actually do not need a folder called tmp.: "Also remember / properly inedited as below:
open_basedir = "/home/user/site.com/:/tmp"
upload_tmp_dir = /home/user/site.com/tmp
The best option for quick setup is in Cpanel where you use the MultiPHP INI Editor you can actually save and both .htaccess and php.ini will be updated as well as settings being initiated at the same time on site.
It's NOT recommended to have basedir as "none" since you are enabling root files that can be edited with just a single file editor in WordPress. If that truly is possible.
Check \httpdocs\bootstrap\cache\config.php file in plesk to see if there are some unwanted paths.
Just search
open_basedir =
in php.ini and disable it. That's the simplest solution to solve this issue.
Before Changes open_basedir =
After Changes ;open_basedir =
P.s - After changes don't forget to restart your server.
Enjoy ;)
Modify the open_basedir settings in your PHP configuration (See Runtime Configuration).
The open_basedir setting is primarily used to prevent PHP scripts for a particular user from accessing files in another user's account. So usually, any files in your own account should be readable by your own scripts.
Example settings via .htaccess if PHP runs as Apache module on a Linux system:
<DirectoryMatch "/home/sites/site81/">
php_admin_value open_basedir "/home/sites/site81/:/tmp/:/"
</DirectoryMatch>

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