1PAM(3)                         Linux-PAM Manual                         PAM(3)
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NAME

6       pam - Pluggable Authentication Modules Library
7

SYNOPSIS

9       #include <security/pam_appl.h>
10
11       #include <security/pam_modules.h>
12
13       #include <security/pam_ext.h>
14

DESCRIPTION

16       PAM is a system of libraries that handle the authentication tasks of
17       applications (services) on the system. The library provides a stable
18       general interface (Application Programming Interface - API) that
19       privilege granting programs (such as login(1) and su(1)) defer to to
20       perform standard authentication tasks.
21
22   Initialization and Cleanup
23       The pam_start(3) function creates the PAM context and initiates the PAM
24       transaction. It is the first of the PAM functions that needs to be
25       called by an application. The transaction state is contained entirely
26       within the structure identified by this handle, so it is possible to
27       have multiple transactions in parallel. But it is not possible to use
28       the same handle for different transactions, a new one is needed for
29       every new context.
30
31       The pam_end(3) function terminates the PAM transaction and is the last
32       function an application should call in the PAM context. Upon return the
33       handle pamh is no longer valid and all memory associated with it will
34       be invalid. It can be called at any time to terminate a PAM
35       transaction.
36
37   Authentication
38       The pam_authenticate(3) function is used to authenticate the user. The
39       user is required to provide an authentication token depending upon the
40       authentication service, usually this is a password, but could also be a
41       finger print.
42
43       The pam_setcred(3) function manages the user's credentials.
44
45   Account Management
46       The pam_acct_mgmt(3) function is used to determine if the user's
47       account is valid. It checks for authentication token and account
48       expiration and verifies access restrictions. It is typically called
49       after the user has been authenticated.
50
51   Password Management
52       The pam_chauthtok(3) function is used to change the authentication
53       token for a given user on request or because the token has expired.
54
55   Session Management
56       The pam_open_session(3) function sets up a user session for a
57       previously successful authenticated user. The session should later be
58       terminated with a call to pam_close_session(3).
59
60   Conversation
61       The PAM library uses an application-defined callback to allow a direct
62       communication between a loaded module and the application. This
63       callback is specified by the struct pam_conv passed to pam_start(3) at
64       the start of the transaction. See pam_conv(3) for details.
65
66   Data Objects
67       The pam_set_item(3) and pam_get_item(3) functions allows applications
68       and PAM service modules to set and retrieve PAM informations.
69
70       The pam_get_user(3) function is the preferred method to obtain the
71       username.
72
73       The pam_set_data(3) and pam_get_data(3) functions allows PAM service
74       modules to set and retrieve free-form data from one invocation to
75       another.
76
77   Environment and Error Management
78       The pam_putenv(3), pam_getenv(3) and pam_getenvlist(3) functions are
79       for maintaining a set of private environment variables.
80
81       The pam_strerror(3) function returns a pointer to a string describing
82       the given PAM error code.
83

RETURN VALUES

85       The following return codes are known by PAM:
86
87       PAM_ABORT
88           Critical error, immediate abort.
89
90       PAM_ACCT_EXPIRED
91           User account has expired.
92
93       PAM_AUTHINFO_UNAVAIL
94           Authentication service cannot retrieve authentication info.
95
96       PAM_AUTHTOK_DISABLE_AGING
97           Authentication token aging disabled.
98
99       PAM_AUTHTOK_ERR
100           Authentication token manipulation error.
101
102       PAM_AUTHTOK_EXPIRED
103           Authentication token expired.
104
105       PAM_AUTHTOK_LOCK_BUSY
106           Authentication token lock busy.
107
108       PAM_AUTHTOK_RECOVERY_ERR
109           Authentication information cannot be recovered.
110
111       PAM_AUTH_ERR
112           Authentication failure.
113
114       PAM_BUF_ERR
115           Memory buffer error.
116
117       PAM_CONV_ERR
118           Conversation failure.
119
120       PAM_CRED_ERR
121           Failure setting user credentials.
122
123       PAM_CRED_EXPIRED
124           User credentials expired.
125
126       PAM_CRED_INSUFFICIENT
127           Insufficient credentials to access authentication data.
128
129       PAM_CRED_UNAVAIL
130           Authentication service cannot retrieve user credentials.
131
132       PAM_IGNORE
133           The return value should be ignored by PAM dispatch.
134
135       PAM_MAXTRIES
136           Have exhausted maximum number of retries for service.
137
138       PAM_MODULE_UNKNOWN
139           Module is unknown.
140
141       PAM_NEW_AUTHTOK_REQD
142           Authentication token is no longer valid; new one required.
143
144       PAM_NO_MODULE_DATA
145           No module specific data is present.
146
147       PAM_OPEN_ERR
148           Failed to load module.
149
150       PAM_PERM_DENIED
151           Permission denied.
152
153       PAM_SERVICE_ERR
154           Error in service module.
155
156       PAM_SESSION_ERR
157           Cannot make/remove an entry for the specified session.
158
159       PAM_SUCCESS
160           Success.
161
162       PAM_SYMBOL_ERR
163           Symbol not found.
164
165       PAM_SYSTEM_ERR
166           System error.
167
168       PAM_TRY_AGAIN
169           Failed preliminary check by password service.
170
171       PAM_USER_UNKNOWN
172           User not known to the underlying authentication module.
173

SEE ALSO

175       pam_acct_mgmt(3), pam_authenticate(3), pam_chauthtok(3),
176       pam_close_session(3), pam_conv(3), pam_end(3), pam_get_data(3),
177       pam_getenv(3), pam_getenvlist(3), pam_get_item(3), pam_get_user(3),
178       pam_open_session(3), pam_putenv(3), pam_set_data(3), pam_set_item(3),
179       pam_setcred(3), pam_start(3), pam_strerror(3)
180

NOTES

182       The libpam interfaces are only thread-safe if each thread within the
183       multithreaded application uses its own PAM handle.
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187Linux-PAM Manual                  05/18/2017                            PAM(3)
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