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Diffstat (limited to 'modules/pam_env/pam_env.conf')
-rw-r--r-- | modules/pam_env/pam_env.conf | 73 |
1 files changed, 73 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/modules/pam_env/pam_env.conf b/modules/pam_env/pam_env.conf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..30e9d00 --- /dev/null +++ b/modules/pam_env/pam_env.conf @@ -0,0 +1,73 @@ +# +# This is the configuration file for pam_env, a PAM module to load in +# a configurable list of environment variables for a +# +# The original idea for this came from Andrew G. Morgan ... +#<quote> +# Mmm. Perhaps you might like to write a pam_env module that reads a +# default environment from a file? I can see that as REALLY +# useful... Note it would be an "auth" module that returns PAM_IGNORE +# for the auth part and sets the environment returning PAM_SUCCESS in +# the setcred function... +#</quote> +# +# What I wanted was the REMOTEHOST variable set, purely for selfish +# reasons, and AGM didn't want it added to the SimpleApps login +# program (which is where I added the patch). So, my first concern is +# that variable, from there there are numerous others that might/would +# be useful to be set: NNTPSERVER, LESS, PATH, PAGER, MANPAGER ..... +# +# Of course, these are a different kind of variable than REMOTEHOST in +# that they are things that are likely to be configured by +# administrators rather than set by logging in, how to treat them both +# in the same config file? +# +# Here is my idea: +# +# Each line starts with the variable name, there are then two possible +# options for each variable DEFAULT and OVERRIDE. +# DEFAULT allows and administrator to set the value of the +# variable to some default value, if none is supplied then the empty +# string is assumed. The OVERRIDE option tells pam_env that it should +# enter in its value (overriding the default value) if there is one +# to use. OVERRIDE is not used, "" is assumed and no override will be +# done. +# +# VARIABLE [DEFAULT=[value]] [OVERRIDE=[value]] +# +# (Possibly non-existent) environment variables may be used in values +# using the ${string} syntax and (possibly non-existent) PAM_ITEMs may +# be used in values using the @{string} syntax. Both the $ and @ +# characters can be backslash escaped to be used as literal values +# values can be delimited with "", escaped " not supported. +# Note that many environment variables that you would like to use +# may not be set by the time the module is called. +# For example, HOME is used below several times, but +# many PAM applications don't make it available by the time you need it. +# +# +# First, some special variables +# +# Set the REMOTEHOST variable for any hosts that are remote, default +# to "localhost" rather than not being set at all +#REMOTEHOST DEFAULT=localhost OVERRIDE=@{PAM_RHOST} +# +# Set the DISPLAY variable if it seems reasonable +#DISPLAY DEFAULT=${REMOTEHOST}:0.0 OVERRIDE=${DISPLAY} +# +# +# Now some simple variables +# +#PAGER DEFAULT=less +#MANPAGER DEFAULT=less +#LESS DEFAULT="M q e h15 z23 b80" +#NNTPSERVER DEFAULT=localhost +#PATH DEFAULT=${HOME}/bin:/usr/local/bin:/bin\ +#:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin/X11:/usr/bin/X11 +# +# silly examples of escaped variables, just to show how they work. +# +#DOLLAR DEFAULT=\$ +#DOLLARDOLLAR DEFAULT= OVERRIDE=\$${DOLLAR} +#DOLLARPLUS DEFAULT=\${REMOTEHOST}${REMOTEHOST} +#ATSIGN DEFAULT="" OVERRIDE=\@ |