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pam (1.7.0-1) unstable; urgency=medium
Starting with pam 1.7.0, pam_limits does not automatically reset the
limits of logged in users. This means that systemd, rather than pam will
set the defaults for things like number of open files and other resource
limits. If limits are configured in /etc/security/limits.conf or
/etc/security/limits.d/*.conf, these values will be respected. To
restore the previous behavior, add the set_all option to pam_limits.
For example in /etc/pam.d/ssh, replace:
session required pam_limits.so
with:
session required pam_limits.so set_all
-- Sam Hartman <hartmans@debian.org> Tue, 14 Jan 2025 15:47:56 -0700
pam (1.5.3-7) unstable; urgency=medium
Starting with PAM version 1.5.3, Debian supports usergroups for default
umask of users logging in. If the primary group name of a user
matches their primary user name (user pat's default group is also
called pat), then files will be group writable by default. To disable
this use a group name that differs from the user name or add
nousergroups to the pam_umask line in
/etc/pam.d/common-session and
/etc/pam.d/common-session-noninteractive:
session optional pam_umask.so nousergroups
-- Sam Hartman <hartmans@debian.org> Mon, 08 Apr 2024 16:15:58 -0600
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