Am 2015-11-07 04:22, schrieb paul.sz...@sydney.edu.au:
Dear Michael,
I wonder how that line came to be missed on my machines ...
If you restore the previous state and you ran
dpkg-reconfigure libpam-runtime, what do you get?
Running
dpkg-reconfigure libpam-runtime
asks me nicely:
PAM configuration
Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM) determine how authentication,
authorization, and password changing are handled on the system, as
well as allowing configuration of additional actions to take when
starting user sessions.
Some PAM module packages provide profiles that can be used to
automatically adjust the behavior of all PAM-using applications on
the
system. Please indicate which of these behaviors you wish to enable.
PAM profiles to enable:
[*] Unix authentication
[ ] Register user sessions in the systemd control group hierarchy
[ ] GNOME Keyring Daemon - Login keyring management
[ ] Inheritable Capabilities Management
<Ok> <Cancel>
There is no indication that I should, or must, select "do systemd".
The default should be, that all those 3 are selected. So definitely
something odd.