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author | Steve Langasek <steve.langasek@ubuntu.com> | 2019-01-03 17:53:41 -0800 |
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committer | Steve Langasek <steve.langasek@ubuntu.com> | 2019-01-03 18:17:08 -0800 |
commit | 212b52cf29c06cc209bc8ac0540dbab1acdf1464 (patch) | |
tree | 58da0bf39f5c4122e4a1b4da20fdeea52b97a671 /doc/man/PAM.8 | |
parent | 9c52e721044e7501c3d4567b36d222dc7326224a (diff) | |
parent | 56c8282d128fb484ffc77dff73abf42229b291d3 (diff) | |
download | pam-212b52cf29c06cc209bc8ac0540dbab1acdf1464.tar.gz pam-212b52cf29c06cc209bc8ac0540dbab1acdf1464.tar.bz2 pam-212b52cf29c06cc209bc8ac0540dbab1acdf1464.zip |
New upstream version 1.1.0
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/man/PAM.8')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/man/PAM.8 | 218 |
1 files changed, 187 insertions, 31 deletions
diff --git a/doc/man/PAM.8 b/doc/man/PAM.8 index 1872d09a..1aedd522 100644 --- a/doc/man/PAM.8 +++ b/doc/man/PAM.8 @@ -1,48 +1,204 @@ .\" Title: pam -.\" Author: -.\" Generator: DocBook XSL Stylesheets v1.73.1 <http://docbook.sf.net/> -.\" Date: 04/16/2008 +.\" Author: [FIXME: author] [see http://docbook.sf.net/el/author] +.\" Generator: DocBook XSL Stylesheets v1.74.0 <http://docbook.sf.net/> +.\" Date: 03/02/2009 .\" Manual: Linux-PAM Manual .\" Source: Linux-PAM Manual +.\" Language: English .\" -.TH "PAM" "8" "04/16/2008" "Linux-PAM Manual" "Linux-PAM Manual" +.TH "PAM" "8" "03/02/2009" "Linux-PAM Manual" "Linux-PAM Manual" +.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- +.\" * (re)Define some macros +.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- +.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +.\" toupper - uppercase a string (locale-aware) +.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +.de toupper +.tr aAbBcCdDeEfFgGhHiIjJkKlLmMnNoOpPqQrRsStTuUvVwWxXyYzZ +\\$* +.tr aabbccddeeffgghhiijjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz +.. +.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +.\" SH-xref - format a cross-reference to an SH section +.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +.de SH-xref +.ie n \{\ +.\} +.toupper \\$* +.el \{\ +\\$* +.\} +.. +.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +.\" SH - level-one heading that works better for non-TTY output +.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +.de1 SH +.\" put an extra blank line of space above the head in non-TTY output +.if t \{\ +.sp 1 +.\} +.sp \\n[PD]u +.nr an-level 1 +.set-an-margin +.nr an-prevailing-indent \\n[IN] +.fi +.in \\n[an-margin]u +.ti 0 +.HTML-TAG ".NH \\n[an-level]" +.it 1 an-trap +.nr an-no-space-flag 1 +.nr an-break-flag 1 +\." make the size of the head bigger +.ps +3 +.ft B +.ne (2v + 1u) +.ie n \{\ +.\" if n (TTY output), use uppercase +.toupper \\$* +.\} +.el \{\ +.nr an-break-flag 0 +.\" if not n (not TTY), use normal case (not uppercase) +\\$1 +.in \\n[an-margin]u +.ti 0 +.\" if not n (not TTY), put a border/line under subheading +.sp -.6 +\l'\n(.lu' +.\} +.. +.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +.\" SS - level-two heading that works better for non-TTY output +.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +.de1 SS +.sp \\n[PD]u +.nr an-level 1 +.set-an-margin +.nr an-prevailing-indent \\n[IN] +.fi +.in \\n[IN]u +.ti \\n[SN]u +.it 1 an-trap +.nr an-no-space-flag 1 +.nr an-break-flag 1 +.ps \\n[PS-SS]u +\." make the size of the head bigger +.ps +2 +.ft B +.ne (2v + 1u) +.if \\n[.$] \&\\$* +.. +.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +.\" BB/BE - put background/screen (filled box) around block of text +.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +.de BB +.if t \{\ +.sp -.5 +.br +.in +2n +.ll -2n +.gcolor red +.di BX +.\} +.. +.de EB +.if t \{\ +.if "\\$2"adjust-for-leading-newline" \{\ +.sp -1 +.\} +.br +.di +.in +.ll +.gcolor +.nr BW \\n(.lu-\\n(.i +.nr BH \\n(dn+.5v +.ne \\n(BHu+.5v +.ie "\\$2"adjust-for-leading-newline" \{\ +\M[\\$1]\h'1n'\v'+.5v'\D'P \\n(BWu 0 0 \\n(BHu -\\n(BWu 0 0 -\\n(BHu'\M[] +.\} +.el \{\ +\M[\\$1]\h'1n'\v'-.5v'\D'P \\n(BWu 0 0 \\n(BHu -\\n(BWu 0 0 -\\n(BHu'\M[] +.\} +.in 0 +.sp -.5v +.nf +.BX +.in +.sp .5v +.fi +.\} +.. +.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +.\" BM/EM - put colored marker in margin next to block of text +.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +.de BM +.if t \{\ +.br +.ll -2n +.gcolor red +.di BX +.\} +.. +.de EM +.if t \{\ +.br +.di +.ll +.gcolor +.nr BH \\n(dn +.ne \\n(BHu +\M[\\$1]\D'P -.75n 0 0 \\n(BHu -(\\n[.i]u - \\n(INu - .75n) 0 0 -\\n(BHu'\M[] +.in 0 +.nf +.BX +.in +.fi +.\} +.. +.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- +.\" * set default formatting +.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- .\" disable hyphenation .nh .\" disable justification (adjust text to left margin only) .ad l -.SH "NAME" -PAM, pam - Pluggable Authentication Modules for Linux +.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- +.\" * MAIN CONTENT STARTS HERE * +.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- +.SH "Name" +PAM, pam \- Pluggable Authentication Modules for Linux .SH "DESCRIPTION" .PP This manual is intended to offer a quick introduction to -\fBLinux\-PAM\fR\. For more information the reader is directed to the -\fBLinux\-PAM system administrators\' guide\fR\. +\fBLinux\-PAM\fR\&. For more information the reader is directed to the +\fBLinux\-PAM system administrators\' guide\fR\&. .PP \fBLinux\-PAM\fR -is a system of libraries that handle the authentication tasks of applications (services) on the system\. The library provides a stable general interface (Application Programming Interface \- API) that privilege granting programs (such as +is a system of libraries that handle the authentication tasks of applications (services) on the system\&. The library provides a stable general interface (Application Programming Interface \- API) that privilege granting programs (such as \fBlogin\fR(1) and -\fBsu\fR(1)) defer to to perform standard authentication tasks\. +\fBsu\fR(1)) defer to to perform standard authentication tasks\&. .PP -The principal feature of the PAM approach is that the nature of the authentication is dynamically configurable\. In other words, the system administrator is free to choose how individual service\-providing applications will authenticate users\. This dynamic configuration is set by the contents of the single +The principal feature of the PAM approach is that the nature of the authentication is dynamically configurable\&. In other words, the system administrator is free to choose how individual service\-providing applications will authenticate users\&. This dynamic configuration is set by the contents of the single \fBLinux\-PAM\fR configuration file -\fI/etc/pam\.conf\fR\. Alternatively, the configuration can be set by individual configuration files located in the -\fI/etc/pam\.d/\fR -directory\. The presence of this directory will cause +\FC/etc/pam\&.conf\F[]\&. Alternatively, the configuration can be set by individual configuration files located in the +\FC/etc/pam\&.d/\F[] +directory\&. The presence of this directory will cause \fBLinux\-PAM\fR to \fIignore\fR -\fI/etc/pam\.conf\fR\. +\FC/etc/pam\&.conf\F[]\&. .PP From the point of view of the system administrator, for whom this manual is provided, it is not of primary importance to understand the internal behavior of the \fBLinux\-PAM\fR -library\. The important point to recognize is that the configuration file(s) +library\&. The important point to recognize is that the configuration file(s) \fIdefine\fR the connection between applications (\fBservices\fR) and the pluggable authentication modules -(\fBPAM\fRs) that perform the actual authentication tasks\. +(\fBPAM\fRs) that perform the actual authentication tasks\&. .PP \fBLinux\-PAM\fR separates the tasks of @@ -54,49 +210,49 @@ management; \fBpassword\fR management; and \fBsession\fR -management\. (We highlight the abbreviations used for these groups in the configuration file\.) +management\&. (We highlight the abbreviations used for these groups in the configuration file\&.) .PP Simply put, these groups take care of different aspects of a typical user\'s request for a restricted service: .PP \fBaccount\fR \- provide account verification types of service: has the user\'s password expired?; is this user permitted access to the requested service? .PP -\fBauth\fRentication \- authenticate a user and set up user credentials\. Typically this is via some challenge\-response request that the user must satisfy: if you are who you claim to be please enter your password\. Not all authentications are of this type, there exist hardware based authentication schemes (such as the use of smart\-cards and biometric devices), with suitable modules, these may be substituted seamlessly for more standard approaches to authentication \- such is the flexibility of -\fBLinux\-PAM\fR\. +\fBauth\fRentication \- authenticate a user and set up user credentials\&. Typically this is via some challenge\-response request that the user must satisfy: if you are who you claim to be please enter your password\&. Not all authentications are of this type, there exist hardware based authentication schemes (such as the use of smart\-cards and biometric devices), with suitable modules, these may be substituted seamlessly for more standard approaches to authentication \- such is the flexibility of +\fBLinux\-PAM\fR\&. .PP \fBpassword\fR -\- this group\'s responsibility is the task of updating authentication mechanisms\. Typically, such services are strongly coupled to those of the +\- this group\'s responsibility is the task of updating authentication mechanisms\&. Typically, such services are strongly coupled to those of the \fBauth\fR -group\. Some authentication mechanisms lend themselves well to being updated with such a function\. Standard UN*X password\-based access is the obvious example: please enter a replacement password\. +group\&. Some authentication mechanisms lend themselves well to being updated with such a function\&. Standard UN*X password\-based access is the obvious example: please enter a replacement password\&. .PP \fBsession\fR -\- this group of tasks cover things that should be done prior to a service being given and after it is withdrawn\. Such tasks include the maintenance of audit trails and the mounting of the user\'s home directory\. The +\- this group of tasks cover things that should be done prior to a service being given and after it is withdrawn\&. Such tasks include the maintenance of audit trails and the mounting of the user\'s home directory\&. The \fBsession\fR -management group is important as it provides both an opening and closing hook for modules to affect the services available to a user\. +management group is important as it provides both an opening and closing hook for modules to affect the services available to a user\&. .SH "FILES" .PP -\fI/etc/pam\.conf\fR +\FC/etc/pam\&.conf\F[] .RS 4 the configuration file .RE .PP -\fI/etc/pam\.d\fR +\FC/etc/pam\&.d\F[] .RS 4 the \fBLinux\-PAM\fR -configuration directory\. Generally, if this directory is present, the -\fI/etc/pam\.conf\fR -file is ignored\. +configuration directory\&. Generally, if this directory is present, the +\FC/etc/pam\&.conf\F[] +file is ignored\&. .RE .SH "ERRORS" .PP Typically errors generated by the \fBLinux\-PAM\fR system of libraries, will be written to -\fBsyslog\fR(3)\. +\fBsyslog\fR(3)\&. .SH "CONFORMING TO" .PP -DCE\-RFC 86\.0, October 1995\. Contains additional features, but remains backwardly compatible with this RFC\. +DCE\-RFC 86\&.0, October 1995\&. Contains additional features, but remains backwardly compatible with this RFC\&. .SH "SEE ALSO" .PP |