pam_tally (8) - Linux Manuals
pam_tally: The login counter (tallying) module
NAME
pam_tally - The login counter (tallying) module
SYNOPSIS
-
pam_tally.so [file=/path/to/counter] [onerr=[fail|succeed]] [magic_root] [even_deny_root_account] [deny=n] [lock_time=n] [unlock_time=n] [per_user] [no_lock_time] [no_reset] [audit] [silent] [no_log_info]
- pam_tally [--file /path/to/counter] [--user username] [--reset[=n]] [--quiet]
DESCRIPTION
pam_tally has several limitations, which are solved with pam_tally2. For this reason pam_tally is deprecated and will be removed in a future release.
pam_tally comes in two parts: pam_tally.so and pam_tally. The former is the PAM module and the latter, a stand-alone program. pam_tally is an (optional) application which can be used to interrogate and manipulate the counter file. It can display user counts, set individual counts, or clear all counts. Setting artificially high counts may be useful for blocking users without changing their passwords. For example, one might find it useful to clear all counts every midnight from a cron job. The faillog(8) command can be used instead of pam_tally to to maintain the counter file.
Normally, failed attempts to access root will not cause the root account to become blocked, to prevent denial-of-service: if your users aren't given shell accounts and root may only login via su or at the machine console (not telnet/rsh, etc), this is safe.
OPTIONS
GLOBAL OPTIONS
-
This can be used for
auth
and
account
module types.
onerr=[fail|succeed]
- If something weird happens (like unable to open the file), return with PAM_SUCCESS if onerr=succeed is given, else with the corresponding PAM error code.
file=/path/to/counter
- File where to keep counts. Default is /var/log/faillog.
audit
- Will log the user name into the system log if the user is not found.
silent
- Don't print informative messages.
no_log_info
- Don't log informative messages via syslog(3).
AUTH OPTIONS
-
Authentication phase first checks if user should be denied access and if not it increments attempted login counter. Then on call to
pam_setcred(3)
it resets the attempts counter.
deny=n
- Deny access if tally for this user exceeds n.
lock_time=n
- Always deny for n seconds after failed attempt.
unlock_time=n
- Allow access after n seconds after failed attempt. If this option is used the user will be locked out for the specified amount of time after he exceeded his maximum allowed attempts. Otherwise the account is locked until the lock is removed by a manual intervention of the system administrator.
magic_root
- If the module is invoked by a user with uid=0 the counter is not incremented. The sysadmin should use this for user launched services, like su, otherwise this argument should be omitted.
no_lock_time
- Do not use the .fail_locktime field in /var/log/faillog for this user.
no_reset
- Don't reset count on successful entry, only decrement.
even_deny_root_account
- Root account can become unavailable.
per_user
- If /var/log/faillog contains a non-zero .fail_max/.fail_locktime field for this user then use it instead of deny=n/ lock_time=n parameter.
no_lock_time
- Don't use .fail_locktime filed in /var/log/faillog for this user.
ACCOUNT OPTIONS
-
Account phase resets attempts counter if the user is
not
magic root. This phase can be used optionally for services which don't call
pam_setcred(3)
correctly or if the reset should be done regardless of the failure of the account phase of other modules.
magic_root
- If the module is invoked by a user with uid=0 the counter is not incremented. The sysadmin should use this for user launched services, like su, otherwise this argument should be omitted.
no_reset
- Don't reset count on successful entry, only decrement.
MODULE TYPES PROVIDED
The auth and account module types are provided.
RETURN VALUES
PAM_AUTH_ERR
- A invalid option was given, the module was not able to retrieve the user name, no valid counter file was found, or too many failed logins.
PAM_SUCCESS
- Everything was successful.
PAM_USER_UNKNOWN
- User not known.
EXAMPLES
Add the following line to /etc/pam.d/login to lock the account after too many failed logins. The number of allowed fails is specified by /var/log/faillog and needs to be set with pam_tally or faillog(8) before.
-
auth required pam_securetty.so auth required pam_tally.so per_user auth required pam_env.so auth required pam_unix.so auth required pam_nologin.so account required pam_unix.so password required pam_unix.so session required pam_limits.so session required pam_unix.so session required pam_lastlog.so nowtmp session optional pam_mail.so standard
FILES
/var/log/faillog
- failure logging file
AUTHOR
pam_tally was written by Tim Baverstock and Tomas Mraz.