Ignore:
Timestamp:
09/13/2003 03:01:40 PM (21 years ago)
Author:
Larry Lawrence <larry@…>
Branches:
10.0, 10.1, 11.0, 11.1, 11.2, 11.3, 12.0, 12.1, 6.0, 6.1, 6.2, 6.2.0, 6.2.0-rc1, 6.2.0-rc2, 6.3, 6.3-rc1, 6.3-rc2, 6.3-rc3, 7.10, 7.4, 7.5, 7.6, 7.6-blfs, 7.6-systemd, 7.7, 7.8, 7.9, 8.0, 8.1, 8.2, 8.3, 8.4, 9.0, 9.1, basic, bdubbs/svn, elogind, gnome, kde5-13430, kde5-14269, kde5-14686, kea, ken/TL2024, ken/inkscape-core-mods, ken/tuningfonts, krejzi/svn, lazarus, lxqt, nosym, perl-modules, plabs/newcss, plabs/python-mods, python3.11, qt5new, rahul/power-profiles-daemon, renodr/vulkan-addition, systemd-11177, systemd-13485, trunk, upgradedb, v5_0, v5_0-pre1, v5_1, v5_1-pre1, xry111/intltool, xry111/llvm18, xry111/soup3, xry111/test-20220226, xry111/xf86-video-removal
Children:
30f1425
Parents:
781e273
Message:

tripwire and pam edits

git-svn-id: svn://svn.linuxfromscratch.org/BLFS/trunk/BOOK@1056 af4574ff-66df-0310-9fd7-8a98e5e911e0

Location:
postlfs/security/pam
Files:
5 edited

Legend:

Unmodified
Added
Removed
  • postlfs/security/pam/linux_pam-config.xml

    r781e273 r8f44fa03  
    11<sect2>
    2 <title>Configuring <application>Linux_PAM</application></title>
     2<title>Configuring <application>Linux_<acronym>PAM</acronym></application>
     3</title>
    34
    45<sect3><title>Config files</title>
    5 <para><filename>/etc/pam.d</filename> or <filename>/etc/pam.conf</filename></para>
    6 </sect3>
     6<para><filename>/etc/pam.d</filename> or <filename>/etc/pam.conf</filename>
     7</para></sect3>
    78
    89<sect3><title>Configuration Information</title>
    910
    10 <para>Configuration information is placed in
    11 <filename>/etc/pam.d</filename> or <filename>/etc/pam.conf</filename>
    12 depending on the application that is using <acronym>PAM</acronym>. Below are example files of
    13 each type:
    14 </para>
     11<para>Configuration information is placed in <filename>/etc/pam.d</filename> or
     12<filename>/etc/pam.conf</filename> depending on the application that is using
     13<application><acronym>PAM</acronym></application>. Below are example files of
     14each type:</para>
    1515
    1616<screen># Begin /etc/pam.d/other
     
    3232# End /etc/pam.conf</screen>
    3333
    34 <para>The pam man page provides a good starting point for descriptions of
    35 fields and allowable entries.  The <ulink
    36 url="http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/pam/Linux-PAM-html/pam.html">Linux-PAM
    37 guide for system administrators</ulink> and two PAM hints located at <ulink url="http://hints.linuxfromscratch.org"/> are also available for further reading.</para>
    38 
     34<para>The <application><acronym>pam</acronym></application> man page provides a
     35good starting point for descriptions of fields and allowable entries.  The
     36<ulink url="http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/pam/Linux-PAM-html/pam.html">
     37Linux-PAM guide for system administrators</ulink> and two
     38<application><acronym>PAM</acronym></application> hints located at
     39<ulink url="&hints-root;"/> are also available for further reading.</para>
    3940</sect3>
    4041
  • postlfs/security/pam/linux_pam-desc.xml

    r781e273 r8f44fa03  
    22<title>Contents</title>
    33
    4 <para>The <application>Linux_PAM</application> package contains
    5 <command>unix-chkpwd</command>
    6 and <filename>libpam</filename> libraries.</para>
     4<para>The <application>Linux_<acronym>PAM</acronym></application> package
     5contains <command>unix-chkpwd</command> and <filename>libpam</filename>
     6libraries.</para>
    77
    88</sect2>
     
    1414
    1515<sect3><title>libpam libraries</title>
    16 <para><filename>libpam</filename> libraries provide the interfaces between applications and
    17 the <acronym>PAM</acronym> modules.</para></sect3>
     16<para><filename>libpam</filename> libraries provide the interfaces between
     17applications and the <acronym>PAM</acronym> modules.</para></sect3>
    1818
    1919</sect2>
  • postlfs/security/pam/linux_pam-exp.xml

    r781e273 r8f44fa03  
    88the mailspool directory <acronym>FHS</acronym> compliant.</para>
    99
    10 <para><command>--enable-read-both-confs</command>  : This switch lets the local administrator choose which configuration file setup to
    11 use.</para>
     10<para><command>--enable-read-both-confs</command>  : This switch lets the local administrator choose which configuration file setup to use.</para>
    1211
    1312<para><command>mv /lib/libpam.a /lib/libpam_misc.a /lib/libpamc.a
  • postlfs/security/pam/linux_pam-inst.xml

    r781e273 r8f44fa03  
    11<sect2>
    2 <title>Installation of <application>Linux_PAM</application></title>
     2<title>Installation of <application>Linux_<acronym>PAM</acronym></application>
     3</title>
    34
    4 <para>Install <application>Linux_PAM</application> by running the following commands:</para>
     5<para>Install <application>Linux_<acronym>PAM</acronym></application> by
     6running the following commands:</para>
    57
    68<para><screen><userinput><command>./configure --enable-static-libpam --with-mailspool=/var/mail \
  • postlfs/security/pam/linux_pam-intro.xml

    r781e273 r8f44fa03  
    11<sect2>
    2 <title>Introduction to <application>Linux_PAM</application></title>
     2<title>Introduction to <application>Linux_<acronym>PAM</acronym></application>
     3</title>
    34
    4 <para>The <application>Linux_PAM</application> package contains Pluggable Authentication Modules.
    5 This is useful to enable the local system administrator to choose how
    6 applications authenticate users.</para>
     5<para>The <application>Linux_<acronym>PAM</acronym></application> package
     6contains Pluggable Authentication Modules. This is useful to enable the local
     7system administrator to choose how applications authenticate users.</para>
    78
    89<sect3><title>Package information</title>
     
    1920</sect3>
    2021
    21 <sect3><title><application>Linux_PAM</application> dependencies</title>
     22<sect3><title><application>Linux_<acronym>PAM</acronym></application>
     23dependencies</title>
    2224<sect4><title>Optional</title>
    23 <para><ulink url="http://www.crypticide.org/users/alecm/security/cracklib,2.7.tar.gz">cracklib v2.7</ulink></para></sect4>
     25<para><ulink
     26url="http://www.crypticide.org/users/alecm/security/cracklib,2.7.tar.gz">
     27cracklib v2.7</ulink></para></sect4>
    2428</sect3>
    2529
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