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PAM.CONF(5)		  FreeBSD File Formats Manual		   PAM.CONF(5)

NAME
     pam.conf -- PAM policy file format

DESCRIPTION
     The PAM library searches for policies in the following files, in decreas-
     ing order of preference:

     1.	  /etc/pam.d/service-name

     2.	  /etc/pam.conf

     3.	  /usr/local/etc/pam.d/service-name

     4.	  /usr/local/etc/pam.conf

     If	none of	these locations	contains a policy for the given	service, the
     "other" policy is used instead, if	it exists.

     Entries in	per-service policy files must be of one	of the two forms be-
     low:

	   facility control-flag module-path [arguments	...]
	   facility include other-service-name

     Entries in	pam.conf-style policy files are	of the same form, but are pre-
     fixed by an additional field specifying the name of the service they ap-
     ply to.

     In	both cases, blank lines	and comments introduced	by a `#' sign are ig-
     nored, and	the normal shell quoting rules apply.  The precise details of
     how the file is tokenized are described in	openpam_readword(3).

     The facility field	specifies the facility the entry applies to, and is
     one of:

     auth	   Authentication functions (pam_authenticate(3),
		   pam_setcred(3))

     account	   Account management functions	(pam_acct_mgmt(3))

     session	   Session handling functions (pam_open_session(3),
		   pam_close_session(3))

     password	   Password management functions (pam_chauthtok(3))

     The control-flag field determines how the result returned by the module
     affects the flow of control through (and the final	result of) the rest of
     the chain,	and is one of:

     required	   If this module succeeds, the	result of the chain will be
		   success unless a later module fails.	 If it fails, the rest
		   of the chain	still runs, but	the final result will be fail-
		   ure regardless of the success of later modules.

     requisite	   If this module succeeds, the	result of the chain will be
		   success unless a later module fails.	 If the	module fails,
		   the chain is	broken and the result is failure.

     sufficient	   If this module succeeds, the	chain is broken	and the	result
		   is success.	If it fails, the rest of the chain still runs,
		   but the final result	will be	failure	unless a later module
		   succeeds.

     binding	   If this module succeeds, the	chain is broken	and the	result
		   is success.	If it fails, the rest of the chain still runs,
		   but the final result	will be	failure	regardless of the suc-
		   cess	of later modules.

     optional	   If this module succeeds, the	result of the chain will be
		   success unless a later module fails.	 If this module	fails,
		   the result of the chain will	be failure unless a later mod-
		   ule succeeds.

     There are two exceptions to the above: sufficient and binding modules are
     treated as	optional by pam_setcred(3), and	in the PAM_PRELIM_CHECK	phase
     of	pam_chauthtok(3).

     The module-path field specifies the name or full path of the module to
     call.  If only the	name is	specified, the PAM library will	search for it
     in	the following locations:

     1.	  /usr/lib

     2.	  /usr/local/lib

     The remaining fields, if any, are passed unmodified to the	module if and
     when it is	invoked.

     The include form of entry causes entries from a different chain (speci-
     fied by other-system-name)	to be included in the current one.  This al-
     lows one to define	system-wide policies which are then included into ser-
     vice-specific policies.  The system-wide policy can then be modified
     without having to also modify each	and every service-specific policy.

     Take care not to introduce	loops when using include rules,	as there is
     currently no loop detection in place.

MODULE OPTIONS
     Some PAM library functions	may alter their	behavior when called by	a ser-
     vice module if certain module options were	specified, regardless of
     whether the module	itself accords them any	importance.  One such option
     is	debug, which causes the	dispatcher to enable debugging messages	before
     calling each service function, and	disable	them afterwards	(unless	they
     were already enabled).  Other special options include:

     authtok_prompt=prompt, oldauthtok_prompt=prompt, user_prompt=prompt
		   These options can be	used to	override the prompts used by
		   pam_get_authtok(3) and pam_get_user(3).

     echo_pass	   This	option controls	whether	pam_get_authtok(3) will	allow
		   the user to see what	they are typing.

     try_first_pass, use_first_pass
		   These options control pam_get_authtok(3)'s use of cached
		   authentication tokens.

SEE ALSO
     pam(3)

STANDARDS
     X/Open Single Sign-On Service (XSSO) - Pluggable Authentication Modules,
     June 1997.

AUTHORS
     The OpenPAM library was developed for the FreeBSD Project by ThinkSec AS
     and Network Associates Laboratories, the Security Research	Division of
     Network Associates, Inc. under DARPA/SPAWAR contract N66001-01-C-8035
     ("CBOSS"),	as part	of the DARPA CHATS research program.

     The OpenPAM library is maintained by Dag-Erling Smorgrav <des@des.no>.

FreeBSD	13.0		       February	24, 2019		  FreeBSD 13.0

NAME | DESCRIPTION | MODULE OPTIONS | SEE ALSO | STANDARDS | AUTHORS

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