How to Configure Your Firewall for cPanel & WHM Services
Valid for versions 116 through 118
Last modified: September 16, 2024
Overview
cPanel & WHM installs and manages many different services on your system, most of which require an external connection in order to function properly. Because of this, your firewall must allow cPanel & WHM to open the ports on which these services run.
This document lists the ports that cPanel & WHM uses, and which services use each of these ports, to allow you to better configure your firewall.
- We strongly recommend that you only open ports for services that you use.
- When you work with firewall rules, always make certain to include a way to log back in to your server, and always maintain console access to your server.
- When you install a new third-party firewall on a system using
nftables
, the system will ignore rules you add with the Host Access Control interface (WHM » Home » Security Center » Host Access Control).
Ports
We strongly recommend that you use the SSL version of each service whenever possible:
- The use of non-SSL services can allow attackers to intercept sensitive information, such as login credentials.
- Always ensure that valid SSL certificates exist for your services in WHM’s Manage Service SSL Certificates interface (WHM » Home » Service Configuration » Manage Service SSL Certificates).
For more information on how to access cPanel & WHM services, read our How to Log in to Your Server or Account documentation.
cPanel & WHM uses the following ports:
Port | Service | TCP | UDP | Inbound | Outbound | Localhost | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 |
CPAN | The Show Available Modules setting in cPanel’s Perl Modules interface (cPanel » Home » Software » Perl Modules) uses this port to improve the speed with which it appears. | |||||
7 |
Razor | SpamAssassin uses the collaborative Razor spam-tracking database. | |||||
20 |
FTP | Instead of FTP, we recommend that you use the more-secure SFTP service via SSH. | |||||
21 |
FTP | Instead of FTP, we recommend that you use the more-secure SFTP service via SSH. | |||||
22 |
SSH | You must open this port before you use WHM’s Transfer Tool interface (WHM » Home » Transfers » Transfer Tool) when you authenticate root users with SSH keys. |
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25 |
SMTP | ||||||
26 |
SMTP | cPanel & WHM only uses this port if you specify it in WHM’s Service Manager interface (WHM » Home » Service Configuration » Service Manager). | |||||
37 |
rdate |
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43 |
whois |
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53 |
DNS | cPanel & WHM uses this port for the following functions:
|
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80 |
httpd |
This port serves the HTTP needs of services on the server.
Important:
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110 |
POP3 | ||||||
113 |
ident |
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143 |
IMAP | ||||||
443 |
httpd |
This port serves the HTTPS needs of services on the server.
Note:
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465 |
SMTP, SSL/TLS |
Important:
cPanel & WHM strongly recommends that you enable Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol version 1.2 on your server.
|
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579 |
cPHulk | This port should only accept connections on the 127.0.0.x IPv4 address. Your system does not require that this port accept external traffic. |
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587 |
Exim | ||||||
783 |
Apache SpamAssassin™ | ||||||
873 |
rsync | ||||||
953 |
PowerDNS | This port should only accept connections on the 127.0.0.1 IPv4 address. Your system does not require that this port accept external traffic.
Note:
You must use this port when you run PowerDNS nameservers.
|
|||||
993 |
IMAP SSL | ||||||
995 |
POP3 SSL | ||||||
2077 |
WebDAV | cPanel’s Web Disk interface (cPanel » Home » Files » Web Disk) uses these ports. | |||||
2078 |
WebDAV SSL | ||||||
2079 |
CalDAV and CardDAV |
Important:
This port is insecure and could expose your server to security risks. We strongly recommend that you use port
2080 instead.
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2080 |
CalDAV and CardDAV (SSL) | ||||||
2082 |
cPanel and cPanel Licensing |
Note:
To disable insecure logins via this port and only allow SSL logins, set the Choose the closest matched domain for which that the system has a valid certificate when redirecting from non-SSL to SSL URLs. Formerly known as “Always redirect to SSL/TLS” setting to On in WHM’s Tweak Settings interface (WHM » Home » Server Configuration » Tweak Settings). This will redirect users to secure ports with the
/cpanel , /whm , and /webmail aliases.
|
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2083 |
cPanel SSL and cPanel Licensing | ||||||
2086 |
WHM and cPanel Licensing |
Note:
To disable insecure logins via this port and only allow SSL logins, set the Choose the closest matched domain for which that the system has a valid certificate when redirecting from non-SSL to SSL URLs. Formerly known as “Always redirect to SSL/TLS” setting to On in WHM’s Tweak Settings interface (WHM » Home » Server Configuration » Tweak Settings). This will redirect users to secure ports with the
/cpanel , /whm , and /webmail aliases.
|
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2087 |
WHM SSL and cPanel Licensing | ||||||
2089 |
cPanel Licensing |
Important:
You must configure your system to permit outbound TCP connections from source ports
4 and 1020 to destination port 2089 . This will allow the server to contact the WebPros International, LLC license servers.
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2091 |
Exchange ActiveSync (EAS) SSL/TLS | This port allows users of Android™ devices to synchronize their calendars, contacts, and email via the EAS protocol.
Note:
This functionality is only available if you install both the Calendars and Contacts Server and Z-Push - ActiveSync Support plugins. |
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2095 |
Webmail |
Note:
To disable insecure logins via this port and only allow SSL logins, set the Choose the closest matched domain for which that the system has a valid certificate when redirecting from non-SSL to SSL URLs. Formerly known as “Always redirect to SSL/TLS” setting to On in WHM’s Tweak Settings interface (WHM » Home » Server Configuration » Tweak Settings). This will redirect users to secure ports with the
/cpanel , /whm , and /webmail aliases.
|
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2096 |
Webmail SSL and cPanel Licensing | ||||||
2195 |
Apple Push Notification service (APNs) | cPanel & WHM only uses this port for the Apple® Push Notification Service (APNs). For more information, read our How to Set Up iOS Push Notifications documentation. | |||||
2703 |
Razor | SpamAssassin uses the collaborative Razor spam-tracking database. | |||||
3306 |
MySQL® | MySQL uses this port for remote database connections. | |||||
6277 |
DCC | For more information, read the Apache® DCC and NetTestFirewallIssues documentation. | |||||
11371 |
apt | Servers running the Ubuntu® operating system use this port to download apt repository GPG keys. |
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24441 |
Pyzor | For more information, read Apache’s Pyzor and NetTestFirewallIssues documentation. |
The License Callback Mechanism
The License Callback Mechanism immediately updates a server after the license changes in either Manage2 or the cPanel Store. It cannot make any changes to the server. It only alerts the server that a change as been made to the license. The license callback mechanism tries the following ports until one succeeds:
Service | Port | Inbound | Outbound |
---|---|---|---|
cPanel | 2082 |
||
cPanel SSL | 2083 |
||
WHM | 2086 |
||
WHM SSL | 2087 |
||
Webmail SSL | 2096 |
At least one port in the above table must be open for the license callback mechanism to work. The server only accepts requests to this API from cPanel & WHM. The license system does not send any other information to the customer’s server.
Example configurations
- We do not recommend that you use these examples for your personal configurations. Instead, make certain that your firewall rules match the way in which you use cPanel & WHM’s services.
- AlmaLinux OS, CloudLinux™, and Rocky Linux™ servers have additional requirements. For more information, read the AlmaLinux, Rocky Linux, and CloudLinux firewall management section below.
- We recommend the
nftables
utility for servers that run the AlmaLinux, Rocky Linux, or CloudLinux operating systems. We recommend theiptables
utility on servers that run the Ubuntu operating system.
AlmaLinux, Rocky Linux, and CloudLinux firewall management
We strongly recommend that you use the nftables
framework for the firewall of servers that run the Rocky Linux, CloudLinux, or AlmaLinux operating systems.
Use the nftables
framework instead of the iptables
utility or legacy services in those operating systems. You can configure nftables
with the nft
command line tool. You will find the nftables
ruleset for your server in the /etc/sysconfig/nftables.conf
file.
For example, to block traffic for a single IPv4 address, run the following command, where 198.51.100.1
is the IPv4 address that you wish to block:
nft add rule filter INPUT ip saddr 198.51.100.1 drop
To block traffic for a single IPv6 address, run the following command, where 2001:0db8:0:0:1:0:0:1
is the IPv6 address that you wish to block:
nft add rule ip6 filter INPUT ip6 saddr [2001:0db8:0:0:1:0:0:1] drop
For more information about the nftables
framework and the nft
tool, read Red Hat’s Getting Started with nftables documentation.
The cpanel service
The /usr/local/cpanel/scripts/configure_firewall_for_cpanel
script clears all existing rule entries from your server’s iptables
utility. If you use custom rules for your firewall, export those rules before you run the script and then re-add them afterward.
cPanel & WHM also includes the cpanel
service, which manages all of the rules in the /etc/firewalld/services/cpanel.xml
file. This allows TCP access for the server’s ports.
To replace your server’s existing iptables
rules with the rules in the /etc/firewalld/services/cpanel.xml
file, perform the following steps:
- Run the
yum install firewalld
command to ensure that you have installed thefirewalld
service daemon on your system. - Run the
systemctl start firewalld.service
command to start thefirewalld
service. - Run the
systemctl enable firewalld
command to start thefirewalld
service when the server starts. - Run the
iptables-save > backupfile
command to save your existing firewall rules. - Run the
/usr/local/cpanel/scripts/configure_firewall_for_cpanel
script. - Run the
iptables-restore < backupfile
command to incorporate your old firewall rules into the new firewall rules file.
Ubuntu firewall management
We recommend that servers that run the Ubuntu operating systems use the iptables
utility instead of the ufw
utility that Ubuntu installs by default. The iptables
utility offers more customization settings for your packet-filtering rules.
This utility requires that you understand the TCP/IP stack. For more information about the use of iptables
, visit the iptables site, or run the man iptables
command from the command line.
For example, to block traffic for a single IPv4 address, run the following command, where 198.51.100.1
is the IPv4 address that you wish to block:
iptables -I INPUT -s 198.51.100.1 -j DROP
To block traffic for a single IPv6 address, run the following command, where 2001:0db8:0:0:1:0:0:1
is the IPv6 address that you wish to block:
ip6tables -I INPUT -s 2001:0db8:0:0:1:0:0:1 -j DROP
Adding rules with the CSF and APF utilities
The following examples explain how to add rules with ConfigServer Security & Firewall (CSF) and Advanced Policy Firewall (APF).
CSF and APF do not function with the firewalld
utility. If you install CSF or APF, you must remove the firewalld
utility. To do this, run the yum remove firewalld
command.
We recommend the nftables
utility for servers that run the AlmaLinux, Rocky Linux, or CloudLinux operating systems. We recommend the iptables
utility on servers that run the Ubuntu operating system.
ConfigServer Security & Firewall
ConfigServer provides the free WHM plugin CSF, which allows you to modify your server’s iptables
rules in WHM. For information about how to install and configure CSF, read our Additional Security Software documentation.
Advanced Policy Firewall
APF acts as a front-end interface for the iptables
utility, and allows you to open or close ports without the use of the iptables
syntax.
The following example provides two rules that you can add to the /etc/apf/conf.apf
file to allow HTTP and HTTPS access to your system:
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