Difference between revisions of "Spam"
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If its not there, check your RPM database to make sure you installed it and check to see where it is installed on your system: | If its not there, check your RPM database to make sure you installed it and check to see where it is installed on your system: | ||
− | rpm -ql qmhandle | + | rpm -ql qmhandle |
If you do not get any results from this command, you did not install our RPM. | If you do not get any results from this command, you did not install our RPM. | ||
Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
If you did install our rpm your output should look like this: | If you did install our rpm your output should look like this: | ||
− | /usr/bin/qmhandle.pl | + | /usr/bin/qmhandle.pl |
− | /usr/share/doc/qmhandle-1.3.2 | + | /usr/share/doc/qmhandle-1.3.2 |
− | /usr/share/doc/qmhandle-1.3.2/HISTORY | + | /usr/share/doc/qmhandle-1.3.2/HISTORY |
− | /usr/share/doc/qmhandle-1.3.2/README | + | /usr/share/doc/qmhandle-1.3.2/README |
If you installed a third party rpm of qmhandle, you'll need to contract that rpm maintainer for assistance, or remove their rpm and install ours. | If you installed a third party rpm of qmhandle, you'll need to contract that rpm maintainer for assistance, or remove their rpm and install ours. |
Revision as of 15:57, 21 July 2010
Finding the source of spam
1) Set up atomic archive
wget -q -O - http://www.atomicorp.com/installers/atomic.sh |sh
2) Install qmhandle
yum install qmhandle
If you installed qmhandle correctly it will be installed here:
/usr/bin/qmhandle.pl
If its not there, check your RPM database to make sure you installed it and check to see where it is installed on your system:
rpm -ql qmhandle
If you do not get any results from this command, you did not install our RPM.
If you did install our rpm your output should look like this:
/usr/bin/qmhandle.pl /usr/share/doc/qmhandle-1.3.2 /usr/share/doc/qmhandle-1.3.2/HISTORY /usr/share/doc/qmhandle-1.3.2/README
If you installed a third party rpm of qmhandle, you'll need to contract that rpm maintainer for assistance, or remove their rpm and install ours.
3) List messages
/usr/bin/qmhandle.pl -l
4) Find a spam message number, and dump its contents
/usr/bin/qmhandle.pl -m<MESSAGE NUMBER> |less ex: qmhandle.pl -m5245547 |less
5) Identify the UID sending the message. Look for "invoked by uid"
ex: Received: (qmail 12392 invoked by uid 48); 4 Jul 2007 09:35:34 -0400
6) Identify who the user ID belongs to.
grep 48 /etc/passwd
7) If the userid maps to apache, then the source is a web application, php, ruby, mod_perl. If the userid is popuser, the the source is a compromised smtp_auth account. If the userid maps to a user account, then this is a compromised cgi-bin application, or some other application that uses suexec. It could also indicate a cron job.