| V. Samar. Uni ed login with pluggable authentication modules (PAM). 3rd ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security, pages 1-10, March 1996. |
....gured access control list. We also consider frameworks designed with the purpose of providing authentication and or access control, without addressing group communication issues. Therefore, they are complementary to our work. One of these frameworks is the Pluggable Authentication Module (PAM) [23] which provides authentication services to UNIX system services (like login, ftp, etc) PAM allows an application not only to choose how to authenticate users, but also to switch dynamically between the authentication mechanisms without (rewriting and) recompiling a PAM aware application. Other ....
....the user. When it nishes, the Server Authentication Module gets noti ed, so it can call the Sess session report auth result function to inform the Spread daemon that a decision was taken and to pass control back to it. PAM. Another popular method of authentication is the modular PAM [23] system which is standard on Solaris and many Linux systems. Here the authentication module will act as a client to a PAM system and request authentication through the standard PAM function calls. To make authentication through PAM work, the module must provide a way for PAM to communicate and ....
Samar, V., and Schemers, R. Unied login with Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM). OSF-RFC 86.0, October 1995.
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V. Samar. Uni ed login with pluggable authentication modules (PAM). 3rd ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security, pages 1-10, March 1996.
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