pam_sm_setcred (3) - Linux Manuals
pam_sm_setcred: PAM service function to alter credentials
NAME
pam_sm_setcred - PAM service function to alter credentials
SYNOPSIS
#define PAM_SM_AUTH
#include <security/pam_modules.h>
-
PAM_EXTERN int pam_sm_setcred(pam_handle_t
* pamh, intflags, int argc, const char ** argv);
DESCRIPTION
This function performs the task of altering the credentials of the user with respect to the corresponding authorization scheme. Generally, an authentication module may have access to more information about a user than their authentication token. This function is used to make such information available to the application. It should only be called after the user has been authenticated but before a session has been established.
Valid flags, which may be logically OR'd with PAM_SILENT, are:
PAM_SILENT
- Do not emit any messages.
PAM_ESTABLISH_CRED
- Initialize the credentials for the user.
PAM_DELETE_CRED
- Delete the credentials associated with the authentication service.
PAM_REINITIALIZE_CRED
- Reinitialize the user credentials.
PAM_REFRESH_CRED
- Extend the lifetime of the user credentials.
The way the auth stack is navigated in order to evaluate the pam_setcred() function call, independent of the pam_sm_setcred() return codes, is exactly the same way that it was navigated when evaluating the pam_authenticate() library call. Typically, if a stack entry was ignored in evaluating pam_authenticate(), it will be ignored when libpam evaluates the pam_setcred() function call. Otherwise, the return codes from each module specific pam_sm_setcred() call are treated as required.
RETURN VALUES
PAM_CRED_UNAVAIL
- This module cannot retrieve the user's credentials.
PAM_CRED_EXPIRED
- The user's credentials have expired.
PAM_CRED_ERR
- This module was unable to set the credentials of the user.
PAM_SUCCESS
- The user credential was successfully set.
PAM_USER_UNKNOWN
- The user is not known to this authentication module.
These, non-PAM_SUCCESS, return values will typically lead to the credential stack failing. The first such error will dominate in the return value of pam_setcred().
SEE ALSO
pam(3), pam_authenticate(3), pam_setcred(3), pam_sm_authenticate(3), pam_strerror(3), PAM(8)