Below is a sample PAM application configuration file:
#%PAM-1.0
auth required pam_securetty.so
auth required pam_unix.so shadow nullok
auth required pam_nologin.so
account required pam_unix.so
password required pam_cracklib.so retry=3
password required pam_unix.so shadow nullok use_authtok
session required pam_unix.so |
The first line is a comment as denoted by the hash mark
(#) at the beginning of the line.
Lines two through four stack three modules for login authentication.
auth required pam_securetty.so |
This module makes sure that if the user is trying
to log in as root, the tty on which the user is logging in is listed in
the /etc/securetty file, if
that file exists.
auth required pam_unix.so shadow nullok |
This module prompts the user for a password and then checks the password
using the information stored in /etc/passwd and, if
it exists, /etc/shadow. The
pam_unix.so module automatically detects and uses
shadow passwords to authenticate users. Refer to Section 6.5 Shadow Passwords for more information.
The argument nullok instructs the
pam_unix.so module to allow a blank password.
auth required pam_nologin.so |
This is the final authentication step. It verifies whether the file
/etc/nologin exists. If
nologin does exist and the user is not root,
authentication fails.
| Note |
---|
| In this example, all three auth
modules are checked, even if the first
auth module fails. This prevents
the user from knowing at what stage their authentication
failed. Such knowledge in the hands of an attacker could allow them
to more easily deduce how to crack the system.
|
account required pam_unix.so |
This module performs any necessary account verification. For example, if
shadow passwords have been enabled, the account component of the
pam_unix.so module checks to see if the account
has expired or if the user has not changed the password within the grace
period allowed.
password required pam_cracklib.so retry=3 |
If a password has expired, the password component of the
pam_cracklib.so module prompts for a new
password. It then tests the newly created password to see whether it can
easily be determined by a dictionary-based password cracking program. If
it fails this test the first time, it gives the user two more chances to
create a strong password, as specified in the retry=3
argument.
password required pam_unix.so shadow nullok use_authtok |
This line specifies that if the program changes the user's password, it
should use the password component of the
pam_unix.so module to do so. This only happens if
the auth portion of the
pam_unix.so module has determined that the password
needs to be changed.
The argument shadow tells the module
to create shadow passwords when updating a user's password.
The argument nullok instructs the
module to allow the user to change their password
from a blank password, otherwise a null password is
treated as an account lock.
The final argument on this line, use_authtok,
provides a good example of the importance of order when stacking PAM
modules. This argument tells the module not to prompt the user for a new
password. Instead, it accepts any password that was recorded by a
previous password module. In this way, all new passwords must pass the
pam_cracklib.so test for secure passwords before
being accepted.
session required pam_unix.so |
The final line specifies that the session component of the
pam_unix.so module manages the session. This
module logs the username and the service type to
/var/log/messages at the beginning and end of
each session. It can be supplemented by stacking it with other session
modules for more functionality.
The next sample configuration file illustrates
auth module stacking for the
rlogin program.
#%PAM-1.0
auth required pam_nologin.so
auth required pam_securetty.so
auth required pam_env.so
auth sufficient pam_rhosts_auth.so
auth required pam_stack.so service=system-auth |
First, pam_nologin.so checks to see if
/etc/nologin exists. If it does, no one can log
in except for root.
auth required pam_securetty.so |
The pam_securetty.so module prevents the root user
from logging in on insecure terminals. This effectively disallows all
root rlogin attempts due to the application's
limited security safeguards.
| Tip |
---|
| To log in remotely as the root user, use OpenSSH instead. For more
information, refer to Chapter 20 SSH Protocol.
|
This line loads the pam_env.so module, which
sets the environmental variables specified in
/etc/security/pam_env.conf.
auth sufficient pam_rhosts_auth.so |
The pam_rhosts_auth.so module authenticates the
user using .rhosts in the user's home
directory. If this succeeds, PAM immediately considers the
authentication to have succeeded. If
pam_rhosts_auth.so fails to authenticate the
user, the authentication attempt is ignored.
auth required pam_stack.so service=system-auth |
If the pam_rhosts_auth.so module fails to
successfully authenticate the user, the
pam_stack.so module performs normal password
authentication.
The argument service=system-auth indicates that the
user must now pass through the PAM configuration for system
authentication as found in /etc/pam.d/system-auth.
| Tip |
---|
| To prevent PAM from prompting for a password when the
securetty result fails, change the
pam_securetty.so module from
required to
requisite.
|