Op 6 dec. 2010 om 00:26 heeft Dan Yefimov <dan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> het volgende geschreven: > On 06.12.2010 1:11, Henk te Sligte wrote: >> I know about the first parameter, the xsh script has "xsh" by default, >> so that's what I am using. Obviously, I did create my own in >> /etc/pam.d, which is described in my first mail. >> I figured from the examples, xsh.c would spawn a shell with the new >> logged in user, because it got the credentials from PAM. Why else is >> there the system() call in xsh.c (From the examples, in the release >> build)? >> > Did you think about your example being incomplete? Please read the PAM documentation carefully instead of arguing with me. The fact is that PAM job is only user authentication, everything other, like applying UID, GID, supplementary GIDs, is the application job, whether you agree with that or not. > -- > > Sincerely Yours, Dan. > > _______________________________________________ > Pam-list mailing list > Pam-list@xxxxxxxxxx > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/pam-list I am sorry, I wasn't trying to argue with you, I guess I just misinterpreted the examples, and I can't always find the right English words when I try to clarify my question. I am fairly new in this particular area, and thought PAM could also apply UID's and other stuff. I was wrong apparently :). Thanks for the help, and I'll keep the documentation right next to me. Greetings, Henk te Sligte _______________________________________________ Pam-list mailing list Pam-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/pam-list