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Diffstat (limited to 'etc/login.defs')
-rw-r--r-- | etc/login.defs | 500 |
1 files changed, 500 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/etc/login.defs b/etc/login.defs new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b5ba765 --- /dev/null +++ b/etc/login.defs @@ -0,0 +1,500 @@ +# +# /etc/login.defs - Configuration control definitions for the shadow package. +# +# $Id$ +# + +# +# Delay in seconds before being allowed another attempt after a login failure +# Note: When PAM is used, some modules may enforce a minimum delay (e.g. +# pam_unix(8) enforces a 2s delay) +# +FAIL_DELAY 0 + +# +# Enable logging and display of /var/log/faillog login(1) failure info. +# +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#FAILLOG_ENAB yes + +# +# Enable display of unknown usernames when login(1) failures are recorded. +# +LOG_UNKFAIL_ENAB no + +# +# Enable logging of successful logins +# +LOG_OK_LOGINS no + +# +# Enable logging and display of /var/log/lastlog login(1) time info. +# +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#LASTLOG_ENAB yes + +# +# Limit the highest user ID number for which the lastlog entries should +# be updated. +# +# No LASTLOG_UID_MAX means that there is no user ID limit for writing +# lastlog entries. +# +#LASTLOG_UID_MAX + +# +# Enable checking and display of mailbox status upon login. +# +# Disable if the shell startup files already check for mail +# ("mailx -e" or equivalent). +# +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#MAIL_CHECK_ENAB yes + +# +# Enable additional checks upon password changes. +# +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#OBSCURE_CHECKS_ENAB yes + +# +# Enable checking of time restrictions specified in /etc/porttime. +# +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#PORTTIME_CHECKS_ENAB yes + +# +# Enable setting of ulimit, umask, and niceness from passwd(5) gecos field. +# +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#QUOTAS_ENAB yes + +# +# Enable "syslog" logging of su(1) activity - in addition to sulog file logging. +# SYSLOG_SG_ENAB does the same for newgrp(1) and sg(1). +# +SYSLOG_SU_ENAB yes +SYSLOG_SG_ENAB yes + +# +# If defined, either full pathname of a file containing device names or +# a ":" delimited list of device names. Root logins will be allowed only +# from these devices. +# +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#CONSOLE /etc/securetty +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#CONSOLE console:tty01:tty02:tty03:tty04 + +# +# If defined, all su(1) activity is logged to this file. +# +#SULOG_FILE /var/log/sulog + +# +# If defined, ":" delimited list of "message of the day" files to +# be displayed upon login. +# +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#MOTD_FILE /etc/motd +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#MOTD_FILE /etc/motd:/usr/lib/news/news-motd + +# +# If defined, this file will be output before each login(1) prompt. +# +#ISSUE_FILE /etc/issue + +# +# If defined, file which maps tty line to TERM environment parameter. +# Each line of the file is in a format similar to "vt100 tty01". +# +#TTYTYPE_FILE /etc/ttytype + +# +# If defined, login(1) failures will be logged here in a utmp format. +# last(1), when invoked as lastb(1), will read /var/log/btmp, so... +# +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#FTMP_FILE /var/log/btmp + +# +# If defined, name of file whose presence will inhibit non-root +# logins. The content of this file should be a message indicating +# why logins are inhibited. +# +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#NOLOGINS_FILE /etc/nologin + +# +# If defined, the command name to display when running "su -". For +# example, if this is defined as "su" then ps(1) will display the +# command as "-su". If not defined, then ps(1) will display the +# name of the shell actually being run, e.g. something like "-sh". +# +SU_NAME su + +# +# *REQUIRED* +# Directory where mailboxes reside, _or_ name of file, relative to the +# home directory. If you _do_ define both, MAIL_DIR takes precedence. +# +MAIL_DIR /var/spool/mail +#MAIL_FILE .mail + +# +# If defined, file which inhibits all the usual chatter during the login +# sequence. If a full pathname, then hushed mode will be enabled if the +# user's name or shell are found in the file. If not a full pathname, then +# hushed mode will be enabled if the file exists in the user's home directory. +# +HUSHLOGIN_FILE .hushlogin +#HUSHLOGIN_FILE /etc/hushlogins + +# +# If defined, either a TZ environment parameter spec or the +# fully-rooted pathname of a file containing such a spec. +# +#ENV_TZ TZ=CST6CDT +#ENV_TZ /etc/tzname + +# +# If defined, an HZ environment parameter spec. +# +# for Linux/x86 +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#ENV_HZ HZ=100 +# For Linux/Alpha... +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#ENV_HZ HZ=1024 + +# +# *REQUIRED* The default PATH settings, for superuser and normal users. +# +# (they are minimal, add the rest in the shell startup files) +ENV_SUPATH PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin +ENV_PATH PATH=/bin:/usr/bin + +# +# Terminal permissions +# +# TTYGROUP Login tty will be assigned this group ownership. +# TTYPERM Login tty will be set to this permission. +# +# If you have a write(1) program which is "setgid" to a special group +# which owns the terminals, define TTYGROUP as the number of such group +# and TTYPERM as 0620. Otherwise leave TTYGROUP commented out and +# set TTYPERM to either 622 or 600. +# +TTYGROUP tty +TTYPERM 0600 + +# +# Login configuration initializations: +# +# ERASECHAR Terminal ERASE character ('\010' = backspace). +# KILLCHAR Terminal KILL character ('\025' = CTRL/U). +# ULIMIT Default "ulimit" value. +# +# The ERASECHAR and KILLCHAR are used only on System V machines. +# The ULIMIT is used only if the system supports it. +# (now it works with setrlimit too; ulimit is in 512-byte units) +# +# Prefix these values with "0" to get octal, "0x" to get hexadecimal. +# +ERASECHAR 0177 +KILLCHAR 025 +#ULIMIT 2097152 + +# Default initial "umask" value used by login(1) on non-PAM enabled systems. +# Default "umask" value for pam_umask(8) on PAM enabled systems. +# UMASK is also used by useradd(8) and newusers(8) to set the mode for new +# home directories if HOME_MODE is not set. +# 022 is the default value, but 027, or even 077, could be considered +# for increased privacy. There is no One True Answer here: each sysadmin +# must make up their mind. +UMASK 022 + +# HOME_MODE is used by useradd(8) and newusers(8) to set the mode for new +# home directories. +# If HOME_MODE is not set, the value of UMASK is used to create the mode. +#HOME_MODE 0700 + +# +# Password aging controls: +# +# PASS_MAX_DAYS Maximum number of days a password may be used. +# PASS_MIN_DAYS Minimum number of days allowed between password changes. +# PASS_MIN_LEN Minimum acceptable password length. +# PASS_WARN_AGE Number of days warning given before a password expires. +# +PASS_MAX_DAYS 99999 +PASS_MIN_DAYS 0 +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#PASS_MIN_LEN 5 +PASS_WARN_AGE 7 + +# +# If "yes", the user must be listed as a member of the first gid 0 group +# in /etc/group (called "root" on most Linux systems) to be able to "su" +# to uid 0 accounts. If the group doesn't exist or is empty, no one +# will be able to "su" to uid 0. +# +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#SU_WHEEL_ONLY no + +# +# If compiled with cracklib support, sets the path to the dictionaries +# +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#CRACKLIB_DICTPATH /var/cache/cracklib/cracklib_dict + +# +# Min/max values for automatic uid selection in useradd(8) +# +UID_MIN 1000 +UID_MAX 60000 +# System accounts +SYS_UID_MIN 101 +SYS_UID_MAX 999 +# Extra per user uids +SUB_UID_MIN 100000 +SUB_UID_MAX 600100000 +SUB_UID_COUNT 65536 + +# +# Min/max values for automatic gid selection in groupadd(8) +# +GID_MIN 1000 +GID_MAX 60000 +# System accounts +SYS_GID_MIN 101 +SYS_GID_MAX 999 +# Extra per user group ids +SUB_GID_MIN 100000 +SUB_GID_MAX 600100000 +SUB_GID_COUNT 65536 + +# +# Max number of login(1) retries if password is bad +# +LOGIN_RETRIES 5 + +# +# Max time in seconds for login(1) +# +LOGIN_TIMEOUT 60 + +# +# Maximum number of attempts to change password if rejected (too easy) +# +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#PASS_CHANGE_TRIES 5 + +# +# Warn about weak passwords (but still allow them) if you are root. +# +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#PASS_ALWAYS_WARN yes + +# +# Number of significant characters in the password for crypt(). +# Default is 8, don't change unless your crypt() is better. +# Ignored if MD5_CRYPT_ENAB set to "yes". +# +#PASS_MAX_LEN 8 + +# +# Require password before chfn(1)/chsh(1) can make any changes. +# +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#CHFN_AUTH yes + +# +# Which fields may be changed by regular users using chfn(1) - use +# any combination of letters "frwh" (full name, room number, work +# phone, home phone). If not defined, no changes are allowed. +# For backward compatibility, "yes" = "rwh" and "no" = "frwh". +# +CHFN_RESTRICT rwh + +# +# Password prompt (%s will be replaced by user name). +# +# XXX - it doesn't work correctly yet, for now leave it commented out +# to use the default which is just "Password: ". +#LOGIN_STRING "%s's Password: " + +# +# Only works if compiled with MD5_CRYPT defined: +# If set to "yes", new passwords will be encrypted using the MD5-based +# algorithm compatible with the one used by recent releases of FreeBSD. +# It supports passwords of unlimited length and longer salt strings. +# Set to "no" if you need to copy encrypted passwords to other systems +# which don't understand the new algorithm. Default is "no". +# +# Note: If you use PAM, it is recommended to use a value consistent with +# the PAM modules configuration. +# +# This variable is deprecated. You should use ENCRYPT_METHOD instead. +# +#MD5_CRYPT_ENAB no + +# +# Only works if compiled with ENCRYPTMETHOD_SELECT defined: +# If set to MD5, MD5-based algorithm will be used for encrypting password +# If set to SHA256, SHA256-based algorithm will be used for encrypting password +# If set to SHA512, SHA512-based algorithm will be used for encrypting password +# If set to BCRYPT, BCRYPT-based algorithm will be used for encrypting password +# If set to YESCRYPT, YESCRYPT-based algorithm will be used for encrypting password +# If set to DES, DES-based algorithm will be used for encrypting password (default) +# MD5 and DES should not be used for new hashes, see crypt(5) for recommendations. +# Overrides the MD5_CRYPT_ENAB option +# +# Note: If you use PAM, it is recommended to use a value consistent with +# the PAM modules configuration. +# +#ENCRYPT_METHOD DES + +# +# Only works if ENCRYPT_METHOD is set to SHA256 or SHA512. +# +# Define the number of SHA rounds. +# With a lot of rounds, it is more difficult to brute-force the password. +# However, more CPU resources will be needed to authenticate users if +# this value is increased. +# +# If not specified, the libc will choose the default number of rounds (5000), +# which is orders of magnitude too low for modern hardware. +# The values must be within the 1000-999999999 range. +# If only one of the MIN or MAX values is set, then this value will be used. +# If MIN > MAX, the highest value will be used. +# +#SHA_CRYPT_MIN_ROUNDS 5000 +#SHA_CRYPT_MAX_ROUNDS 5000 + +# +# Only works if ENCRYPT_METHOD is set to BCRYPT. +# +# Define the number of BCRYPT rounds. +# With a lot of rounds, it is more difficult to brute-force the password. +# However, more CPU resources will be needed to authenticate users if +# this value is increased. +# +# If not specified, 13 rounds will be attempted. +# If only one of the MIN or MAX values is set, then this value will be used. +# If MIN > MAX, the highest value will be used. +# +#BCRYPT_MIN_ROUNDS 13 +#BCRYPT_MAX_ROUNDS 13 + +# +# Only works if ENCRYPT_METHOD is set to YESCRYPT. +# +# Define the YESCRYPT cost factor. +# With a higher cost factor, it is more difficult to brute-force the password. +# However, more CPU time and more memory will be needed to authenticate users +# if this value is increased. +# +# If not specified, a cost factor of 5 will be used. +# The value must be within the 1-11 range. +# +#YESCRYPT_COST_FACTOR 5 + +# +# List of groups to add to the user's supplementary group set +# when logging in from the console (as determined by the CONSOLE +# setting). Default is none. +# +# Use with caution - it is possible for users to gain permanent +# access to these groups, even when not logged in from the console. +# How to do it is left as an exercise for the reader... +# +#CONSOLE_GROUPS floppy:audio:cdrom + +# +# Should login be allowed if we can't cd to the home directory? +# Default is no. +# +DEFAULT_HOME yes + +# +# The pwck(8) utility emits a warning for any system account with a home +# directory that does not exist. Some system accounts intentionally do +# not have a home directory. Such accounts may have this string as +# their home directory in /etc/passwd to avoid a spurious warning. +# +NONEXISTENT /nonexistent + +# +# If this file exists and is readable, login environment will be +# read from it. Every line should be in the form name=value. +# +# NOTE: This setting should be configured via /etc/pam.d/ and not in this file. +#ENVIRON_FILE /etc/environment + +# +# If defined, this command is run when removing a user. +# It should remove any at/cron/print jobs etc. owned by +# the user to be removed (passed as the first argument). +# +#USERDEL_CMD /usr/sbin/userdel_local + +# +# Enable setting of the umask group bits to be the same as owner bits +# (examples: 022 -> 002, 077 -> 007) for non-root users, if the uid is +# the same as gid, and username is the same as the primary group name. +# +# This also enables userdel(8) to remove user groups if no members exist. +# +USERGROUPS_ENAB yes + +# +# If set to a non-zero number, the shadow utilities will make sure that +# groups never have more than this number of users on one line. +# This permits to support split groups (groups split into multiple lines, +# with the same group ID, to avoid limitation of the line length in the +# group file). +# +# 0 is the default value and disables this feature. +# +#MAX_MEMBERS_PER_GROUP 0 + +# +# If useradd(8) should create home directories for users by default (non +# system users only). +# This option is overridden with the -M or -m flags on the useradd(8) +# command-line. +# +CREATE_HOME yes + +# +# Force use shadow, even if shadow passwd & shadow group files are +# missing. +# +#FORCE_SHADOW yes + +# +# Allow newuidmap and newgidmap when running under an alternative +# primary group. +# +#GRANT_AUX_GROUP_SUBIDS yes + +# +# Prevents an empty password field to be interpreted as "no authentication +# required". +# Set to "yes" to prevent for all accounts +# Set to "superuser" to prevent for UID 0 / root (default) +# Set to "no" to not prevent for any account (dangerous, historical default) + +PREVENT_NO_AUTH superuser + +# +# Select the HMAC cryptography algorithm. +# Used in pam_timestamp module to calculate the keyed-hash message +# authentication code. +# +# Note: It is recommended to check hmac(3) to see the possible algorithms +# that are available in your system. +# +#HMAC_CRYPTO_ALGO SHA512 |