76dd11538f
methods used by login. Changes to "/usr/bin/login" to use it will be committed later today. The format of the file is described in pam(8). This sample file makes login behave in the traditional way. To wit, it enables authentication via S/Key and passwd/NIS lookups. KerberosIV authentication is present in the sample file but commented out. As a safety net and a transition aid, login will fall back on built-in passwd/NIS authentication if this configuration file is missing or if some other fatal PAM error occurs. This file will eventually replace "/etc/auth.conf", but not until I've finished converting the other utilities, such as passwd and su.
24 lines
888 B
Plaintext
24 lines
888 B
Plaintext
# Configuration file for Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM).
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#
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# This file controls the authentication methods that login and other
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# utilities use. See pam(8) for a description of its format.
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#
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# Note: the final entry must say "required" -- otherwise, things don't
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# work quite right. If you delete the final entry, be sure to change
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# "sufficient" to "required" in the entry before it.
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#
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# $FreeBSD$
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# If the user can authenticate with S/Key, that's sufficient.
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login auth sufficient pam_skey.so
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# Check skey.access to make sure it is OK to let the user type in
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# a cleartext password. If not, then fail right here.
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login auth requisite pam_cleartext_pass_ok.so
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# If you want KerberosIV authentication, uncomment the next line:
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#login auth sufficient pam_kerberosIV.so try_first_pass
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# Traditional getpwnam() authentication.
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login auth required pam_unix.so try_first_pass
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