Another possible thing, I don't know what the bug is or if it is fixed,
but few years ago Thunderbird (on CentOS 7) for me refused to connect to
Port 993 or Port 465 if I used a self-signed certificate even though the
same certificate worked when using STARTTLS and port 143 and 587. The
error wasn't an SSL error, it just would act like it was not connecting.
With CA signed certificates it did work on 993 and 465.
On 1/22/19 1:25 AM, Michael A. Peters wrote:
Comcast DNS servers enforce dnssec, AT&T does not (last I checked). If
by chance your zone has DNSSEC enabled but mis-configured then it is
possible the domain name you use for the dovecot server is not resolving
because of a dnssec validation failure.
I have never heard of comcast or any ISP blocking port 993. That would
seem to be a violation of net neutrality rules. I use comcast (consumer,
not business) and it does not block 993 (does block 25 but that it
should block for dynamic issued addresses)
Look at the domain name used in your e-mail client and make sure it
actually resolves. If it does not, check to see if DNSSEC validation is
the issue.
On 1/21/19 8:58 PM, Patrick Mahan wrote:
Yes, I am pretty sure about that. I originally was connected via AT&T
DSL but wanted the fast access of cable modem. I need permanent IPs
which required me to contract with Comcast buisness. Once I switched
over, I was no longer able to access my imap server, which was as I
mentioned, stunnel listening on the imaps port and forwarding to
dovecot listening on the imap port.
I was getting connection refused on my laptop (thunderbird) email
client when I was not at home. I validated that it was not because it
was reaching my email server. So who ever was rejecting it, I assumed
it was somewhere inside the comcast network. Once I switch to a
non-standard port, I was able to connect again.
Re needing to say ssl = yes, I thought that was implied for imaps?
I can go back to stunnel, just thought it was an unnecessary layer.
Thanks,
Patrick
On Mon, Jan 21, 2019 at 8:46 PM @lbutlr <krem...@kreme.com
<mailto:krem...@kreme.com>> wrote:
On 21 Jan 2019, at 20:17, Patrick Mahan <plma...@gmail.com
<mailto:plma...@gmail.com>> wrote:
> Due to comcast buisness ISP intercepting imaps
At you sure about that? I've been using comcast business for 7 years
and the do not block 143, 993 587 or 25. they do block 110, but
that's fine, I stopped supporting POP around 2001.
Other than 110, they block DHCP, NETBIOS, SNMP, and ports 445, 520,
and 1080. They will block port 25 on a individual basis, but I've no
idea what their criteria is for that.
> I need to have my clients connect to non-standard port (9999).
Previously I had been using stunnel to receive the imaps connection
and forward it to the imap port over 127.0.0.1. But I would like to
retire stunnel and have my imap clients connect remotely.
An stunnel or a reverse proxy is the best way to do this, honestly.
As for why your config isn't working, my only guess is maybe you
need to specify ssl?
inet_listener imaps {
port = 999
ssl = yes
}
?
-- If you write the word "monkey" a million times, do you
start to
think you're
Shakespeare? -- Steven Wright