I have tons of
Oct 19 06:30:50 mail postfix/smtpd[14043]: connect from unknown[151.237.190.118]
Oct 19 06:30:50 mail postfix/smtpd[14043]: lost connection after AUTH from unknown[151.237.190.118]
Oct 19 06:30:50 mail postfix/smtpd[14043]: disconnect from unknown[151.237.190.118]
Oct 19 06:30:50 mail postfix/smtpd[14043]: connect from unknown[151.237.190.118]
Oct 19 06:30:50 mail postfix/smtpd[14043]: lost connection after AUTH from unknown[151.237.190.118]
Oct 19 06:30:50 mail postfix/smtpd[14043]: disconnect from unknown[151.237.190.118]
Oct 19 06:30:51 mail postfix/smtpd[14043]: connect from unknown[151.237.190.118]
Oct 19 06:30:51 mail postfix/smtpd[14043]: lost connection after AUTH from unknown[151.237.190.118]
Oct 19 06:30:51 mail postfix/smtpd[14043]: disconnect from unknown[151.237.190.118]
in my logs. If you are on the same boat and want to block such attacks, you can use fail2ban:
1/ add following section to the end of your /etc/fail2ban/jail.local
[postfix-auth]
enabled = true
filter = postfix.auth
action = iptables-multiport[name=postfix, port="http,https,smtp,submission,pop3,pop3s,imap,imaps,sieve", protocol=tcp]
# sendmail[name=Postfix, [email protected]]
logpath = /var/log/mail.log
2/ create new file /etc/fail2ban/filter.d/postfix.auth.conf
[Definition]
failregex = lost connection after AUTH from (.*)\[<HOST>\]
ignoreregex =
3/ Restart fail2ban. Attacker will be blocked after five attempts.