Table of Contents
pam_sss.so is the PAM interface to the System Security Services daemon (SSSD). Errors and results are logged through syslog(3) with the LOG_AUTHPRIV facility.
quiet
Suppress log messages for unknown users.
forward_pass
If forward_pass
is set the entered
password is put on the stack for other PAM modules to use.
use_first_pass
The argument use_first_pass forces the module to use a previous stacked modules password and will never prompt the user - if no password is available or the password is not appropriate, the user will be denied access.
use_authtok
When password changing enforce the module to set the new password to the one provided by a previously stacked password module.
retry=N
If specified the user is asked another N times for a password if authentication fails. Default is 0.
Please note that this option might not work as
expected if the application calling PAM handles the user
dialog on its own. A typical example is
sshd with
PasswordAuthentication
.
If a password reset by root fails, because the corresponding SSSD provider does not support password resets, an individual message can be displayed. This message can e.g. contain instructions about how to reset a password.
The message is read from the file
pam_sss_pw_reset_message.LOC
where LOC stands for a
locale string returned by setlocale(3). If there is no matching file the content of
pam_sss_pw_reset_message.txt
is displayed. Root
must be the owner of the files and only root may have read and write
permissions while all other users must have only read
permisssions.
These files are searched in the directory
/etc/sssd/customize/DOMAIN_NAME/
. If no matching
file is present a generic message is displayed.