Ben Collins wrote:
Ok correction on this. In the /etc/security/su.allow just put root (who
they are
allowed to su to). and the add this line:
###
auth sufficient pam_listfile.so onerr=fail sense=allow \
file=/etc/security/su.allow item=user apply=you
###
This
On Sat, Sep 18, 1999 at 09:44:58AM +0200, Andreas Kurth wrote:
Ben Collins wrote:
Ok correction on this. In the /etc/security/su.allow just put root (who
they are
allowed to su to). and the add this line:
###
auth sufficient pam_listfile.so onerr=fail sense=allow \
Ben Collins wrote:
The only way to manage this, is to set up a group wheel, use the
auth required pam_wheel.so line, add user you to group
wheel and do it the above way leaving out the apply=you option.
It shouldn't according to the docs (yes I read that particular caveat, but
Hi,
one of the latest potato changes was setting up login and su to use
pam-support. Configuration of login and su has now to be done
editing the /etc/pam.d/ files.
On my privat machine I am used to let trusted users (myself only)
use su without having to type the root password. This was
On Fri, Sep 17, 1999 at 06:29:02PM +0200, Andreas Kurth wrote:
Hi,
one of the latest potato changes was setting up login and su to use
pam-support. Configuration of login and su has now to be done
editing the /etc/pam.d/ files.
On my privat machine I am used to let trusted users (myself
Ben Collins wrote:
Or you can add this to your /etc/pam.d/su file after the rootok module:
###
auth sufficient pam_listfile.so onerr=fail sense=allow \
file=/etc/security/su.allow item=user
###
The create the file /etc/security/su.allow (preferably mode 600)
Package: libpam-modules
Version: 0.69-6
Severity: normal
On Fri, Sep 17, 1999 at 09:12:27PM +0200, Andreas Kurth wrote:
Ben Collins wrote:
Or you can add this to your /etc/pam.d/su file after the rootok module:
###
auth sufficient pam_listfile.so onerr=fail sense=allow \
On Fri, Sep 17, 1999 at 11:57:59AM -0400, Ben Collins wrote:
Package: libpam-modules
Version: 0.69-6
Severity: normal
On Fri, Sep 17, 1999 at 09:12:27PM +0200, Andreas Kurth wrote:
Ben Collins wrote:
Or you can add this to your /etc/pam.d/su file after the rootok module:
###
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