I meant in the firewall itself. Usually when you set up a server none of thr ports are open in the firewall. At some point you opened 110 and 995.
Original Message From: d...@newideatest.site Sent: May 4, 2021 2:41 AM To: dovecot@dovecot.org; ml+dove...@valo.at Subject: Re: disable pop3 ports? On 5/4/2021 3:18 AM, Christian Kivalo wrote: > > > On 2021-05-04 10:29, Dan Egli wrote: >> For gentoo, there is only one package. And here's your output: >> >> # 2.3.13 (89f716dc2): /etc/dovecot/dovecot.conf >> # Pigeonhole version 0.5.13 (cdd19fe3) >> # OS: Linux 5.11.16-gentoo-x86_64 x86_64 Gentoo Base System release >> 2.7 xfs >> # Hostname: jupiter.newideatest.site > >> >> >> and yet if I do doveconf protocols: >> # doveconf protocols >> protocols = imap pop3 lmtp > In dovecot.conf i have a line that enables the protocols. > > # Enable installed protocols > !include_try /usr/share/dovecot/protocols.d/*.protocol > > This is on debian where every protocol is a separate package to install. > This could also just be: > protocols = imap lmtp pop3 > > Remove pop3 from there and you should be good. You can even have the > config in place. > > The other option to disable the pop3 listeners is to set the port = 0 > > From 10-master.conf (when using split config files) > service pop3-login { > inet_listener pop3 { > port = 0 > } > inet_listener pop3s { > port = 0 > ssl = yes > } > } > > This disables pop3 listeners even when the pop3 protocol is enabled. > I would have thought that commenting them out would do that too. But I can uncomment them and add a port = 0, see if that helps. -- Dan Egli From my Test Server