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Restored Exim defaults, now all in spam

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6 comments

  • cPRex Jurassic Moderator
    Hey there! It's always possible your server's IP just has a poor reputation, but that would not have been a factor when your mail was routed through the SES system. I'd recommend checking your server's main IP address with a tool like Email Blacklist Check - IP Blacklist Check - See if your server is blacklisted to see if it shows up in any of the major blacklists there. Unless you've made custom changes to the machine, the port number would be 80 and 443, but you can confirm this in WHM >> Tweak Settings under the "Apache non-SSL IP/port" and "Apache SSL port" value. The anti-forgery methods are just the typical things we recommend - rDNS/PTR, DKIM, SPF, all those types of things. Do you have proper reverse DNS in place for the IP address that sends mail? This is something that would be setup by your host. There are online tools that will check the validity of your SPF and DIM, so you may want to scan your domain with those to ensure they are working as expected. I see the standard root access alert is seven lines so I'm not sure why that would be flagged as too short.
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  • adeyjones
    Hey @cPRex - I have checked the IP at mxtoolbox.com and that's all fine. I can confirm the ports are still set as default 80/443. Regarding rDNS, I remember someone on this forum helping me a couple of weeks ago setting up an rDNS on the elastic IP of one of my other servers in my AWS dashboard, i've just checked my elastic IP's and this one is the only one out of 4 which doesn't have a rDNS so I have done that now. Will see how I get on with that now. And the root access alert email I got did contain seven lines (though 2 are blank): Time: Thu Oct 13 10:18:06 2022 +0100 IP: xx.xx.xx.xx (GB/United Kingdom/-) User: root Log line: xx.xx.xx.xx - root [10/13/2022:09:18:02 -0000] "GET /favicon.ico HTTP/1.1" 200 0 " Maybe you'll need to stick a funky cPanel email signature on these so they're no longer seen as too short.
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  • cPRex Jurassic Moderator
    Just to confirm, was it the cPanel mailserver marking that message as too short, or was it the remote server? I can't tell from the previous output.
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  • adeyjones
    It was in the message header from the recipient server, however they're both WHM/cPanel servers (both mine), was an email from one of my servers (hence root access alert) being sent to my own account on another one of my servers.
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  • cPRex Jurassic Moderator
    Thanks for that - let me do some testing on this and I'll reply once I have more details.
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  • cPRex Jurassic Moderator
    Oh, I just realized those notifications are from LFD, which is part of CSF, so that's not something we could adjust on our end anyway. You'd need to poke CSF at Support " ConfigServer Services to have them tweak that specific notification.
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