6.28. pam_securetty - limit root login to special devices
pam_securetty.so
[ debug ]
pam_securetty is a PAM module that allows root logins only if the user is logging in on a "secure" tty, as defined by the listing in the securetty
file. pam_securetty checks at first, if /etc/securetty
exists. If not and it was built with vendordir support, it will use %vendordir%/securetty
. pam_securetty also checks that the securetty
files are plain files and not world writable. It will also allow root logins on the tty specified with console=
switch on the kernel command line and on ttys from the /sys/class/tty/console/active
.
This module has no effect on non-root users and requires that the application fills in the PAM_TTY item correctly.
For canonical usage, should be listed as a required authentication method before any sufficient authentication methods.
-
debug
-
Print debug information.
-
noconsole
-
Do not automatically allow root logins on the kernel console device, as specified on the kernel command line or by the sys file, if it is not also specified in the
securetty
file.
- PAM_SUCCESS
-
The user is allowed to continue authentication. Either the user is not root, or the root user is trying to log in on an acceptable device.
- PAM_AUTH_ERR
-
Authentication is rejected. Either root is attempting to log in via an unacceptable device, or the
securetty
file is world writable or not a normal file. - PAM_BUF_ERR
-
Memory buffer error.
- PAM_CONV_ERR
-
The conversation method supplied by the application failed to obtain the username.
- PAM_INCOMPLETE
-
The conversation method supplied by the application returned PAM_CONV_AGAIN.
- PAM_SERVICE_ERR
-
An error occurred while the module was determining the user's name or tty, or the module could not open the
securetty
file. - PAM_USER_UNKNOWN
-
The module could not find the user name in the
/etc/passwd
file to verify whether the user had a UID of 0. Therefore, the results of running this module are ignored.
pam_securetty was written by Elliot Lee <[email protected]>.