pam-auth-update (8) Linux Manual Page
pam-auth-update – manage PAM configuration using packaged profiles
Synopsis
pam-auth-update [–package [–remove profile [profile…]]] [–force]
Description
pam-auth-update is a utility that permits configuring the central authentication policy for the system using pre-defined profiles as supplied by PAM module packages. Profiles shipped in the /usr/share/pam-configs/ directory specify the modules, with options, to enable; the preferred ordering with respect to other profiles; and whether a profile should be enabled by default. Packages providing PAM modules register their profiles at install time by calling pam-auth-update –package. Selection of profiles is done using the standard debconf interface. The profile selection question will be asked at `medium’ priority when packages are added or removed, so no user interaction is required by default. Users may invoke pam-auth-update directly to change their authentication configuration.
The script makes every effort to respect local changes to /etc/pam.d/common-*. Local modifications to the list of module options will be preserved, and additions of modules within the managed portion of the stack will cause pam-auth-update to treat the config files as locally modified and not make further changes to the config files unless given the –force option.
If the user specifies that pam-auth-update should override local configuration changes, the locally-modified files will be saved in /etc/pam.d/ with a suffix of .pam-old.
Options
- –package
- Indicate that the caller is a package maintainer script; lowers the priority of debconf questions to `medium’ so that the user is not prompted by default.
- –enable profile [profile…]
- Enable the specified profiles in system configuration. This is used to enable profiles that are not on by default.
- –remove profile [profile…]
- Remove the specified profiles from the system configuration. pam-auth-update –remove should be used to remove profiles from the configuration before the modules they reference are removed from disk, to ensure that PAM is in a consistent and usable state at all times during package upgrades or removals.
- –force
- Overwrite the current PAM configuration, without prompting. This option must not be used by package maintainer scripts; it is intended for use by administrators only.
Files
/etc/pam.d/common-*
- Global configuration of PAM, affecting all installed services.
/usr/share/pam-configs/
- Package-supplied authentication profiles.
Author
Steve Langasek <steve.langasek [at] canonical.com>
Copyright
Copyright (C) 2008 Canonical Ltd.
