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author | toma <toma@283d02a7-25f6-0310-bc7c-ecb5cbfe19da> | 2009-11-25 17:56:58 +0000 |
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committer | toma <toma@283d02a7-25f6-0310-bc7c-ecb5cbfe19da> | 2009-11-25 17:56:58 +0000 |
commit | 4aed2c8219774f5d797760606b8489a92ddc5163 (patch) | |
tree | 3f8c130f7d269626bf6a9447407ef6c35954426a /README.pam | |
download | tdebase-4aed2c8219774f5d797760606b8489a92ddc5163.tar.gz tdebase-4aed2c8219774f5d797760606b8489a92ddc5163.zip |
Copy the KDE 3.5 branch to branches/trinity for new KDE 3.5 features.
BUG:215923
git-svn-id: svn://anonsvn.kde.org/home/kde/branches/trinity/kdebase@1054174 283d02a7-25f6-0310-bc7c-ecb5cbfe19da
Diffstat (limited to 'README.pam')
-rw-r--r-- | README.pam | 72 |
1 files changed, 72 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/README.pam b/README.pam new file mode 100644 index 000000000..544b4e83f --- /dev/null +++ b/README.pam @@ -0,0 +1,72 @@ +KDE can be configured to support the PAM ("Pluggable Authentication +Modules") system for password checking by the display manager kdm and +by the screen saver kscreensaver (for unlocking the display). + +PAM is a flexible application-transparent configurable user-authentication +system found on FreeBSD, Solaris, and Linux (and maybe other unixes). + +Information about PAM may be found on its homepage + http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/pam/ +(Despite the location, this information is NOT Linux-specific.) + + +Known Solaris Issues: +-------------------- + +For compiling PAM support on Solaris, PAM_MESSAGE_NONCONST must +be defined. This should now be handled automatically by the +configure script. + + +Using PAM +--------- + +By default, PAM is automatically used, if it is found. Use +./configure --without-pam to disable it. + +If PAM is found, KDE usually uses the PAM service "kde". You may +override it for all KDE programs by using --with-pam=<service> and/or +individually by using --with-<prog>-pam=<service>, where <prog> is +one of kdm, kcp and kss (for kdm, kcheckpass and kscreensaver). + +"make install" will attempt to create suitable service definitions; either +by putting files into /etc/pam.d/ or by adding text to /etc/pam.conf. The +services are just copies of the "login" service. +You may want to edit these definitions to meet your needs. +There are also two example service definitions in this directory - +kde.pamd and kscreensaver.pamd - but don't just copy them! +If the services are misconfigured, you will NOT be able to login via KDM +and/or unlock a locked screen! + +If there is ever any doubt about which PAM service a program was +compiled with, it can be determined by examining the PAM-generated +entries in the system log associated with kdm logins or kscreensaver +authentication failures. + + +PAM configuration files have four types of entries for each service: + +type used by kdm used by kscreensaver +---- ----------- -------------------- +auth x x +account x +password x +session x + +There may be more than one entry of each type. Check existing PAM +configuration files and PAM documentation on your system for guidance as +to what entries to make. If you call a PAM service that is not +configured, the default action of PAM is likely to be denial of service. + +Note: kdm implements PAM "session" support, which is not implemented in +certain PAM-aware xdm's that it may be replacing (e.g., the Red Hat +Linux 5.x xdm did not implement it). This may be configured to carry out +actions when a user opens or closes an kdm session, if a suitable PAM +module is available (e.g., mount and unmount user-specific filesystems). + +Note 2: Screensavers typically only authenticate a user to allow her to +continue working. They may also renew tokens etc., where supported. +See the Linux PAM Administrators guide, which is part of the PAM +distribution, for more details. + + |