pam_unix(8) - phpMan

Command: man perldoc info search(apropos)  


PAM_UNIX(8)                              Linux-PAM Manual                             PAM_UNIX(8)



NAME
       pam_unix - Module for traditional password authentication

SYNOPSIS
       pam_unix.so [...]

DESCRIPTION
       This is the standard Unix authentication module. It uses standard calls from the system's
       libraries to retrieve and set account information as well as authentication. Usually this
       is obtained from the /etc/passwd and the /etc/shadow file as well if shadow is enabled.

       The account component performs the task of establishing the status of the user's account
       and password based on the following shadow elements: expire, last_change, max_change,
       min_change, warn_change. In the case of the latter, it may offer advice to the user on
       changing their password or, through the PAM_AUTHTOKEN_REQD return, delay giving service to
       the user until they have established a new password. The entries listed above are
       documented in the shadow(5) manual page. Should the user's record not contain one or more
       of these entries, the corresponding shadow check is not performed.

       The authentication component performs the task of checking the users credentials
       (password). The default action of this module is to not permit the user access to a
       service if their official password is blank.

       A helper binary, unix_chkpwd(8), is provided to check the user's password when it is
       stored in a read protected database. This binary is very simple and will only check the
       password of the user invoking it. It is called transparently on behalf of the user by the
       authenticating component of this module. In this way it is possible for applications like
       xlock(1) to work without being setuid-root. The module, by default, will temporarily turn
       off SIGCHLD handling for the duration of execution of the helper binary. This is generally
       the right thing to do, as many applications are not prepared to handle this signal from a
       child they didn't know was fork()d. The noreap module argument can be used to suppress
       this temporary shielding and may be needed for use with certain applications.

       The maximum length of a password supported by the pam_unix module via the helper binary is
       PAM_MAX_RESP_SIZE - currently 512 bytes. The rest of the password provided by the
       conversation function to the module will be ignored.

       The password component of this module performs the task of updating the user's password.
       The default encryption hash is taken from the ENCRYPT_METHOD variable from /etc/login.defs

       The session component of this module logs when a user logins or leave the system.

       Remaining arguments, supported by others functions of this module, are silently ignored.
       Other arguments are logged as errors through syslog(3).

OPTIONS
       debug
           Turns on debugging via syslog(3).

       audit
           A little more extreme than debug.

       nullok
           The default action of this module is to not permit the user access to a service if
           their official password is blank. The nullok argument overrides this default.

       try_first_pass
           Before prompting the user for their password, the module first tries the previous
           stacked module's password in case that satisfies this module as well.

       use_first_pass
           The argument use_first_pass forces the module to use a previous stacked modules
           password and will never prompt the user - if no password is available or the password
           is not appropriate, the user will be denied access.

       nodelay
           This argument can be used to discourage the authentication component from requesting a
           delay should the authentication as a whole fail. The default action is for the module
           to request a delay-on-failure of the order of two second.

       use_authtok
           When password changing enforce the module to set the new password to the one provided
           by a previously stacked password module (this is used in the example of the stacking
           of the pam_cracklib module documented below).

       not_set_pass
           This argument is used to inform the module that it is not to pay attention to/make
           available the old or new passwords from/to other (stacked) password modules.

       nis
           NIS RPC is used for setting new passwords.

       remember=n
           The last n passwords for each user are saved in /etc/security/opasswd in order to
           force password change history and keep the user from alternating between the same
           password too frequently. Instead of this option the pam_pwhistory module should be
           used.

       shadow
           Try to maintain a shadow based system.

       md5
           When a user changes their password next, encrypt it with the MD5 algorithm.

       bigcrypt
           When a user changes their password next, encrypt it with the DEC C2 algorithm.

       sha256
           When a user changes their password next, encrypt it with the SHA256 algorithm. The
           SHA256 algorithm must be supported by the crypt(3) function.

       sha512
           When a user changes their password next, encrypt it with the SHA512 algorithm. The
           SHA512 algorithm must be supported by the crypt(3) function.

       blowfish
           When a user changes their password next, encrypt it with the blowfish algorithm. The
           blowfish algorithm must be supported by the crypt(3) function.

       rounds=n
           Set the optional number of rounds of the SHA256, SHA512 and blowfish password hashing
           algorithms to n.

       broken_shadow
           Ignore errors reading shadow information for users in the account management module.

       minlen=n
           Set a minimum password length of n characters. The max. for DES crypt based passwords
           are 8 characters.

       no_pass_expiry
           When set ignore password expiration as defined by the shadow entry of the user. The
           option has an effect only in case pam_unix was not used for the authentication or it
           returned authentication failure meaning that other authentication source or method
           succeeded. The example can be public key authentication in sshd. The module will
           return PAM_SUCCESS instead of eventual PAM_NEW_AUTHTOK_REQD or PAM_AUTHTOK_EXPIRED.

       Invalid arguments are logged with syslog(3).

MODULE TYPES PROVIDED
       All module types (account, auth, password and session) are provided.

RETURN VALUES
       PAM_IGNORE
           Ignore this module.

EXAMPLES
       An example usage for /etc/pam.d/login would be:

           # Authenticate the user
           auth       required   pam_unix.so
           # Ensure users account and password are still active
           account    required   pam_unix.so
           # Change the users password, but at first check the strength
           # with pam_cracklib(8)
           password   required   pam_cracklib.so retry=3 minlen=6 difok=3
           password   required   pam_unix.so use_authtok nullok md5
           session    required   pam_unix.so



SEE ALSO
       login.defs(5), pam.conf(5), pam.d(5), pam(8)

AUTHOR
       pam_unix was written by various people.



Linux-PAM Manual                            04/01/2020                                PAM_UNIX(8)

Generated by $Id: phpMan.php,v 4.55 2007/09/05 04:42:51 chedong Exp $ Author: Che Dong
On Apache
Under GNU General Public License
2024-04-24 18:19 @18.190.217.134 CrawledBy Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)
Valid XHTML 1.0!Valid CSS!