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Weary Guest
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Posted: Wed Apr 24, 2002 7:03 am Post subject: Pam |
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Hi,
I've just installed Gentoo, and i'd like to know the following:
What is pam?
Why am I using it?
Why is no-one else using it? (as far as I know)
Where is the man-page?
Thanks, Weary |
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lude Retired Dev
Joined: 18 Apr 2002 Posts: 114 Location: New York, NY
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Posted: Wed Apr 24, 2002 9:55 am Post subject: Re: Pam |
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Weary wrote: | What is pam?
Why am I using it?
Why is no-one else using it? (as far as I know)
Where is the man-page? |
Pam is a set of 'Pluggable Authentication Modules', it allows different methods of loggin in (console, ssh, XFree, card scanners, etc.) To check against the same passwd file.
You're using it because it works.
Just about all major distros use this, Redhat, Mandrake, and Debian included.
The docs are in /usr/share/doc/pam-0.75-r6/ |
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Guest
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Posted: Thu Apr 25, 2002 7:14 am Post subject: Re: Pam |
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lude wrote: | Weary wrote: | What is pam?
Why am I using it?
Why is no-one else using it? (as far as I know)
Where is the man-page? |
Pam is a set of 'Pluggable Authentication Modules', it allows different methods of loggin in (console, ssh, XFree, card scanners, etc.) To check against the same passwd file.
You're using it because it works.
Just about all major distros use this, Redhat, Mandrake, and Debian included.
The docs are in /usr/share/doc/pam-0.75-r6/ |
Thanks...It appears pam is indeed installed on a lot of systems, but as far as I can see none use it? (checked debian and redhat systems)
The documents were clear at least |
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klieber Bodhisattva
Joined: 17 Apr 2002 Posts: 3657 Location: San Francisco, CA
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Posted: Thu Apr 25, 2002 12:01 pm Post subject: Re: Pam |
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Anonymous wrote: | Thanks...It appears pam is indeed installed on a lot of systems, but as far as I can see none use it? (checked debian and redhat systems) |
To say they don't use it is inaccurate -- they may not use it for their default authentication system, but many people certainly do use PAM and redhat/debian, etc. PAM is a lot more flexible and extensible than the default simple /etc/passwd authentication.
You might find the User Authentication HOWTO useful. It discusses many methods of user authentication.
--kurt _________________ The problem with political jokes is that they get elected |
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