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The module takes a number of configuration options. Password changing
is not implemented, as the RADIUS protocol does not support it.
The pam configuration can be:
...
auth sufficient pam_radius_auth.so [options]
...
account sufficient pam_radius_auth.so
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 'options' section is optional, and can contain one or more of
the following strings. Note that not all of these options are
relevant in for all uses of the module.
debug - print out extensive debugging information via pam_log.
These messages generally end up being handled by
sylog(), and go to /var/log/messages. Depending on
your host operating system, the log messages may be
elsewhere.
You should generally use the debug option when first
trying to install the module, as it will help
enormously in tracking down problems.
use_first_pass - Instead of prompting the user for a password, retrieve
the password from the previous authentication module.
If the password does not exist, return failure.
If the password exists, try it, returning success/failure
as appropriate.
try_first_pass - Instead of prompting the user for a password, retrieve
the password from the previous authentication module.
If the password exists, try it, and return success if it
passes.
If there was no previous password, or the previous password
fails authentication, prompt the user with
"Enter RADIUS password: ", and ask for another password.
Try this password, and return success/failure as appropriate.
This is the default for authentication.
skip_passwd - Do not prompt for a password, even if there was none
retrieved from the previous layer.
Send the previous one (if it exists), or else send a NULL
password.
If this fails, exit.
If an Access-Challenge is returned, display the challenge
message, and ask the user for the response.
Return success/failure as appropriate.
The password sent to the next authentication module will
NOT be the response to the challenge. If a password from
a previous authentication module exists, it is passed on.
Otherwise, no password is sent to the next module.
conf=foo - set the configuration filename to 'foo'.
Default is /etc/raddb/server
client_id=bar - send a NAS-Identifier RADIUS attribute with string
'bar'. If the client_id is not specified, the PAM_SERVICE
type is used instead. ('login', 'su', 'passwd', etc.)
This feature may be disabled by using 'client_id='.
i.e. A blank client ID.
retry = # - How many times to re-send a packet if there is no
response. Once the retry count has been reached,
the module fails, and PAM continues to the next module.
use_authtok - force the use of a previously entered password.
This is needed for pluggable password strength checking
i.e. try cracklib to be sure it's secure, then go update
the RADIUS server.
ruser - If PAM_USER is root, Use the value of PAM_RUSER instead
of PAM_USER to determine the username to authenticate via
RADIUS. This is to allow 'su' to act like 'sudo'.
localifdown - This option tells pam_radius to return PAM_IGNORE instead
of PAM_AUTHINFO_UNAVAIL if RADIUS auth failed due to
network unavailability. PAM_IGNORE tells the pam stack
to continue down the stack regardless of the control flag.
accounting_bug - When used, the accounting response vector is NOT
validated. This option will probably only be necessary
on REALLY OLD (i.e. Livingston 1.16) servers.
prompt=string - Specifies the prompt, without the ': ', that PAM should
display when prompting for the password. This is useful
when using hardware tokens as part of multi-factor
authentication and presenting the same prompt twice would
confuse users. Use prompt=TokenCode (or some other
relevant string different from Password) in this
situation.
force_prompt - Request a new password and not using the previously entered
password. This usefull for multi-factor authentication
when used with a Token.
max_challenge=# - configure maximum number of challenges that a server
may request. This is a workaround for broken servers
and disabled by default.
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