pam_timestamp.so
[
timestamp_timeout=number
] [
verbose
] [
debug
]
In a nutshell, pam_timestamp caches successful authentication attempts, and allows you to use a recent successful attempt as the basis for authentication. This is similar mechanism which is used in sudo.
When an application opens a session using pam_timestamp, a timestamp file is created in the timestampdir directory for the user. When an application attempts to authenticate the user, a pam_timestamp will treat a sufficiently recent timestamp file as grounds for succeeding.
-
timestamp_timeout=
number
How long should pam_timestamp treat timestamp as valid after their last modification date (in seconds). Default is 300 seconds.
-
verbose
Attempt to inform the user when access is granted.
-
debug
Turns on debugging messages sent to syslog(3).
- PAM_AUTH_ERR
The module was not able to retrieve the user name or no valid timestamp file was found.
- PAM_SUCCESS
Everything was successful.
- PAM_SESSION_ERR
Timestamp file could not be created or updated.
Users can get confused when they are not always asked for passwords when running a given program. Some users reflexively begin typing information before noticing that it is not being asked for.
auth sufficient pam_timestamp.so verbose auth required pam_unix.so session required pam_unix.so session optional pam_timestamp.so