I've looked for this example for a long time, to demonstrate
some people why it's a really BAD idea to use ${.OBJDIR}
instead of ".". I hope these people are reading this. :-)
Approved by: des
chpass(8). The relations between libc, libpam, chpass, passwd, and
vipw are a mess and probably should be cleaned up.
Submitted by: Peter Pentchev <roam@ringlet.net>
applications linked with Linux-PAM will still work.
Remove pam_get_pass(); OpenPAM has pam_get_authtok().
Remove pam_prompt(); OpenPAM has pam_{,v}{error,info,prompt}().
Remove pam_set_item(3) man page as OpenPAM has its own.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
o The new options-processing API
o The new DEBUG-logging API
Add man(1) pages for ALL modules. MDOC-Police welcome
to check this.
Audit, clean up while I'm here.
Move common stuff into Makefile.inc, and tidy up all the Makefiles
as a result.
Build new modules.
Put a commented-out dependancy on libpam for the (shared) modules.
I can't bring this in just yet, as the dependancy (modules->libpam)
is reversed for the static case (libpam->modules).
non-threaded programs. This provides threaded programs with the
needed exception frame symbols.
parts submitted by: Max Khon <fjoe@iclub.nsu.ru>
PR: 23252
simple enough to be trusted.
Add account management functionality to the pam_unix module.
These changes should make it possible to use PAM in some ports.
Submitted by: Max Khon <fjoe@iclub.nsu.ru>
modules for FreeBSD's standard authentication methods. Although
the Linux-PAM modules are present in the contrib tree, we don't
use any of them.
The main library "libpam" is composed of sources taken from three
places. First are the standard Linux-PAM libpam sources from the
contrib tree. Second are the Linux-PAM "libpam_misc" sources, also
from the contrib tree. In Linux these form a separate library.
But as Mike Smith pointed out to me, that seems pointless, so I
have combined them into the libpam library. Third are some additional
sources from the "src/lib/libpam" tree with some common functions
that make it easier to write modules. Those I wrote myself.
This work has been donated to FreeBSD by Juniper Networks, Inc.