• Our team is looking to connect with folks who use email services provided by Plesk, or a premium service. If you'd like to be part of the discovery process and share your experiences, we invite you to complete this short screening survey. If your responses match the persona we are looking for, you'll receive a link to schedule a call at your convenience. We look forward to hearing from you!
  • The BIND DNS server has already been deprecated and removed from Plesk for Windows.
    If a Plesk for Windows server is still using BIND, the upgrade to Plesk Obsidian 18.0.70 will be unavailable until the administrator switches the DNS server to Microsoft DNS. We strongly recommend transitioning to Microsoft DNS within the next 6 weeks, before the Plesk 18.0.70 release.
  • The Horde component is removed from Plesk Installer. We recommend switching to another webmail software supported in Plesk.

Plesk 12.5 backup password: can it be recovered?

southy

Basic Pleskian
Dear all,

I have a OpenVZ container that's dead. Can not be recovered due to various reasons.
However I can access its file system via the host. I have full access to the file system, but no running services.
So I can extract all backups as well as /var/vhost/www/*, the maildirs and everything else that's a file.
Just there are no services running and it will not start any more.
That means I can not access anything in a database via sql client.

Now my problem is: The backups are password-protected and the password is lost with the machine, so I can retrieve the data, but mailboxes will have a new password set by plesk.

Can I somehow recover / copy the settings of the original mailbox so that the restored backup on the new machine will get the same password as on the old machine? Where does dovecoat store its passwords?

Can I somehow extract the plesk backup password hash somewhere from a file and put it somewhere else, say in the environment variable? (probably not as it will be a hash only)...

Can I extract the password of a DB user from the DB file? Probably not, will be a hash only. But can`t I extract the hash and replace the new hash on the new machine with the old one?

Hoping for some ideas,

Southy
 
Thanks for the feedback, I didn't know that methoad and didn't think of it.
However I have already recovered everything at the price of lost passwords - only abaout 20 users affected in this case, so it's bearable.

Next time I know where to look. Thank you!
 
Back
Top