Hi David,

Check out https://www.pixelgate.net/ I've known the owner for about 12 years. They are old school sand if you have a problem you will talk with a real system admin. No level one or level 2...

I have a VPS with him that runs Plesk. I've had the reseller accounts and found them to be ok, however Plesk on a VPS is really nice.

If you call ask for Bill and tell him Keith sent you.

Keith


On 2021-05-11 15:08, David Schwartz via PLUG-discuss wrote:
I have had a shared hosting WHM (“reseller”) type account for years,
and I’m constantly getting my Wordpress sites hacked.

I just discovered another new WP site got hacked. I’m so sick of this.
I notified my hosting provider and of course, they said they ran a
scan and found nothing.

It takes me just a couple of minutes to poke around using the cPanel
File Manager to find litter the hacker has left. This time they added
a new mailbox.

I’m sick and tired of the hosting providers being so damn
narrow-minded that they think scanning files looking for matching file
signatures is effective. They have found exactly NONE of the files
I’ve discovered over the past few years that hackers have left. NOT A
SINGLE ONE!

Also, as inept as they are, they do provide a lot of admin stuff I
don’t want to deal with, and I do not have any interest in
self-hosting on a dedicated machine (physical or virtual). It’s just a
headache I don’t want to deal with.

What I’d like to do is install a script or program that can scan
through my file tree from …/public_html/ down and look for changes in
the file system since the last scan, which is what tripwire does.

Installing tripwire usually requires root access, but that’s
impossible on a shared server.

All it would do is something like an ‘ls -ltra ~/public_html’ with a
CRC or hash of the file added to the lines. (Is there a flag in ls
that does that?) The output would be saved to a file.

Then you’d run a diff on that and the previous one, and send the
output to an email, then delete the prvious one. Or keep them all and
only compare the two latest ones. Whatever.


As an aside, I know that Windows has a way of setting up a callback
where you can get an event trigger somewhere whenever something in a
designated part of the file system has changed.

Is this possible in Linux?

-David Schwartz



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