OpenPAM is an open source PAM library that focuses on simplicity, correctness, and cleanliness. https://openpam.org/
Go to file
Dag-Erling Smørgrav 298995257d Tag OpenPAM Lycopsida. Embarrassingly enough, I forgot to commit this
before rolling the release.


git-svn-id: svn+ssh://svn.openpam.org/svn/openpam/tags/openpam-20111218@512 185d5e19-27fe-0310-9dcf-9bff6b9f3609
2012-01-10 20:44:42 +00:00
bin Remove commented-out code 2011-11-03 09:46:52 +00:00
doc Document quoted option values. 2011-11-03 16:57:37 +00:00
include Set version number and release name 2011-12-18 14:13:08 +00:00
lib Style / consistency 2011-12-18 14:00:33 +00:00
misc Add support for bullet lists. 2011-11-02 20:34:26 +00:00
modules Update copyright and release notes. 2011-09-13 12:00:13 +00:00
CHECKLIST
CREDITS Document increased input validation, and credit Sebastian Krahmer for 2011-11-21 16:27:04 +00:00
HISTORY Set release date 2011-12-18 14:11:12 +00:00
INSTALL
LICENSE Update copyright and release notes. 2011-09-13 12:00:13 +00:00
Makefile.am
README
RELNOTES Update release notes for Lycopsida 2011-12-18 14:25:12 +00:00
autogen.des Build pamtest. 2011-11-02 23:42:51 +00:00
autogen.sh
configure.ac Tag OpenPAM Lycopsida. Embarrassingly enough, I forgot to commit this 2012-01-10 20:44:42 +00:00

README

OpenPAM is an open source PAM library that focuses on simplicity,
correctness, and cleanliness.

OpenPAM aims to gather the best features of Solaris PAM, XSSO and
Linux-PAM, plus some innovations of its own.  In areas where these
implementations disagree, OpenPAM tries to remain compatible with
Solaris, at the expense of XSSO conformance and Linux-PAM
compatibility.

These are some of OpenPAM's features:

   - Implements the complete PAM API as described in the original PAM
     paper and in OSF-RFC 86.0; this corresponds to the full XSSO API
     except for mappings and secondary authentication.  Also
     implements some extensions found in Solaris 9.

   - Extends the API with several useful and time-saving functions.

   - Performs strict checking of return values from service modules.

   - Reads configuration from /etc/pam.d/, /etc/pam.conf,
     /usr/local/etc/pam.d/ and /usr/local/etc/pam.conf, in that order;
     this will be made configurable in a future release.

Please direct bug reports and inquiries to <des@des.no>.

$Id$