PHP and Apache has a history of not being able to track which users are sending out mail through the PHP mail function from the nobody user causing leaks in formmail scripts and malicious users to spam from your server without you knowing who or where.
Watching your exim_mainlog doesn’t exactly help, you see th email going out but you can’t track from which user or script is sending it. This is a quick and dirty way to get around the nobody spam problem on your Linux server.
If you check out your PHP.ini file you’ll notice that your mail program is set to: /usr/sbin/sendmail and 99.99% of PHP scripts will just use the built in mail(); function for PHP – so everything will go through /usr/sbin/sendmail =)
Requirements:
We assume you’re using Apache 1.3x, PHP 4.3x and Exim. This may work on other systems but we’re only tested it on a Cpanel/WHM Red Hat Enterprise system.
Time:
10 Minutes, Root access required.
Step 1)
Login to your server and su – to root.
Step 2)
Turn off exim while we do this so it doesn’t freak out.
/etc/init.d/exim stop
Step 3)
Backup your original /usr/sbin/sendmail file. On systems using Exim MTA, the sendmail file is just basically a pointer to Exim itself.
mv /usr/sbin/sendmail /usr/sbin/sendmail.hidden
Step 4)
Create the spam monitoring script for the new sendmail.
pico /usr/sbin/sendmail
Paste in the following:
#!/usr/local/bin/perl
# use strict;
use Env;
my $date = `date`;
chomp $date;
open (INFO, “>>/var/log/spam_log”) || die “Failed to open file ::$!”;
my $uid = $>;
my @info = getpwuid($uid);
if($REMOTE_ADDR) {
print INFO “$date – $REMOTE_ADDR ran $SCRIPT_NAME at $SERVER_NAME n”;
}
else {
print INFO “$date – $PWD – @infon”;
}
my $mailprog = ‘/usr/sbin/sendmail.hidden’;
foreach (@ARGV) {
$arg=”$arg” . ” $_”;
}
open (MAIL,”|$mailprog $arg”) || die “cannot open $mailprog: $!n”;
while ( ) {
print MAIL;
}
close (INFO);
close (MAIL);
Step 5)
Change the new sendmail permissions
chmod +x /usr/sbin/sendmail
Step 6)
Create a new log file to keep a history of all mail going out of the server using web scripts
touch /var/log/spam_log
chmod 0777 /var/log/spam_log
Step 7)
Start Exim up again.
/etc/init.d/exim start
Step
Monitor your spam_log file for spam, try using any formmail or script that uses a mail function – a message board, a contact script.
tail – f /var/log/spam_log
Sample Log Output
Mon Apr 11 07:12:21 EDT 2005 – /home/username/public_html/directory/subdirectory – nobody x 99 99 Nobody / /sbin/nologin
Log Rotation Details
Your spam_log file isn’t set to be rotated so it might get to be very large quickly. Keep an eye on it and consider adding it to your logrotation.
pico /etc/logrotate.conf
FIND:
# no packages own wtmp — we’ll rotate them here
/var/log/wtmp {
monthly
create 0664 root utmp
rotate 1
}
ADD BELOW:
# SPAM LOG rotation
/var/log/spam_log {
monthly
create 0777 root root
rotate 1
}
Notes:
You may also want to chattr + i /usr/sbin/sendmail so it doesn’t get overwritten.