- New page: Dovecot IMAP vsz_limit OOM from a bloated/corrupt index.log (152M index on an empty folder killed IMAP children with error 83). - fail2ban IMAP self-ban: add permanent ignoreip-whitelist fix + dynamic-IP caveat. - firewalld mail ports: add 'submission/587 never added' variant + correct Fedora service name; note Ansible now manages the full mail-service set. - Index + SUMMARY updated with the new page.
4.4 KiB
| title | domain | category | tags | status | created | updated | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| firewalld: Mail Ports Wiped After Reload (IMAP + Webmail Outage) | troubleshooting | networking |
|
published | 2026-04-02 | 2026-06-05 |
firewalld: Mail Ports Wiped After Reload (IMAP + Webmail Outage)
If IMAP, SMTP, and webmail all stop working simultaneously on a Fedora/RHEL mail server, firewalld may have reloaded and lost its mail port configuration.
Symptoms
openssl s_client -connect mail.example.com:993returnsConnection refused- Webmail returns connection refused or times out
- SSH still works (port 22 is typically in the persisted config)
firewall-cmd --list-services --zone=publicshows onlyssh dhcpv6-client mdnsor similar — no mail services- Mail was working before a service restart or system event
Why It Happens
firewalld uses two layers of configuration:
- Runtime — active rules in memory (lost on reload or restart)
- Permanent — written to
/etc/firewalld/zones/public.xml(survives reloads)
If mail ports were added with firewall-cmd --add-service=imaps (without --permanent), they exist only in the runtime config. Any event that triggers a firewall-cmd --reload — including Fail2ban restarting, a system update, or manual reload — wipes the runtime config back to the permanent state, dropping all non-permanent rules.
Diagnosis
# Check what's currently allowed
firewall-cmd --list-services --zone=public
# Check nftables for catch-all reject rules
nft list ruleset | grep -E '(reject|accept|993|143)'
# Test port 993 from an external machine
openssl s_client -connect mail.example.com:993 -brief
If the only services listed are ssh and the port test shows Connection refused, the rules are gone.
Fix
Add all mail services permanently and reload:
firewall-cmd --permanent \
--add-service=smtp \
--add-service=smtps \
--add-service=smtp-submission \
--add-service=imap \
--add-service=imaps \
--add-service=http \
--add-service=https
firewall-cmd --reload
# Verify
firewall-cmd --list-services --zone=public
Expected output:
dhcpv6-client http https imap imaps mdns smtp smtp-submission smtps ssh
Variant: One port (587) fails while the rest work — service never added
A subtler version of this: IMAP (993) and implicit-TLS submission (465) work fine, but only STARTTLS submission on 587 fails — clients on 587 get "no route to host." This is not a reload wipe; the submission service was simply never added during initial setup (the box's mail ports were opened by hand and one was missed).
# Each mail service, individually — submission will be the odd one out
for s in smtp smtps submission imap imaps; do printf "%-12s " "$s"; firewall-cmd --query-service=$s; done
# Fix (Fedora 44 / firewalld names the 587 service `submission`, NOT `smtp-submission`)
firewall-cmd --permanent --zone=public --add-service=submission
firewall-cmd --reload
On majormail the full mail-service set is now managed declaratively in
roles/majormail/tasks/postfix.yml(smtp/smtps/submission/imap/imaps), so a hand-edit can't leave 587 behind again (MajorAnsible commitb75f14a). Seen 2026-06-05.
Key Notes
- Service name differs by distro/version: the 587 service is
submissionon current Fedora firewalld; older/other docs may saysmtp-submission. Verify withfirewall-cmd --get-services | tr ' ' '\n' | grep submission. - Always use
--permanentwhen adding services to firewalld on a server. Without it, the rule exists only until the next reload. - Fail2ban + firewalld: Fail2ban uses firewalld as its ban backend (
firewallcmd-rich-rules). When Fail2ban restarts or crashes, it may trigger afirewall-cmd --reload, resetting any runtime-only rules. - Verify after any firewall event: After Fail2ban restarts, system reboots, or
firewall-cmd --reload, always confirm mail services are still present withfirewall-cmd --list-services --zone=public. - Check the permanent config directly:
cat /etc/firewalld/zones/public.xml— if mail services aren't in this file, they'll be lost on next reload.