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authorSteve Langasek <vorlon@debian.org>2009-08-25 18:37:28 -0700
committerSteve Langasek <vorlon@debian.org>2019-01-08 21:25:57 -0800
commitc44ac87fd1e3e2bfb6cdce90613cbfe3c54d63c5 (patch)
tree11f3db3d3e622e721a88fb9984fc4e9f82863024 /debian/patches-applied
parentea998a54ee8be2ad7fe4a401a4856509f23e9891 (diff)
oops, we don't want to remove the manpages entirely...
Diffstat (limited to 'debian/patches-applied')
-rw-r--r--debian/patches-applied/fix-man-crud793
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 793 deletions
diff --git a/debian/patches-applied/fix-man-crud b/debian/patches-applied/fix-man-crud
index 770a5b49..c6fc2f9e 100644
--- a/debian/patches-applied/fix-man-crud
+++ b/debian/patches-applied/fix-man-crud
@@ -2781,562 +2781,6 @@ Index: pam.deb/modules/pam_unix/unix_update.8
.SH "DESCRIPTION"
.PP
-Index: pam.deb/doc/man/pam.conf.5
-===================================================================
---- pam.deb.orig/doc/man/pam.conf.5
-+++ /dev/null
-@@ -1,551 +0,0 @@
--.\" Title: pam.conf
--.\" Author: [FIXME: author] [see http://docbook.sf.net/el/author]
--.\" Generator: DocBook XSL Stylesheets v1.74.0 <http://docbook.sf.net/>
--.\" Date: 03/02/2009
--.\" Manual: Linux-PAM Manual
--.\" Source: Linux-PAM Manual
--.\" Language: English
--.\"
--.TH "PAM\&.CONF" "5" "03/02/2009" "Linux-PAM Manual" "Linux-PAM Manual"
--.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
--.\" * (re)Define some macros
--.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.\" toupper - uppercase a string (locale-aware)
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.de toupper
--.tr aAbBcCdDeEfFgGhHiIjJkKlLmMnNoOpPqQrRsStTuUvVwWxXyYzZ
--\\$*
--.tr aabbccddeeffgghhiijjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz
--..
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.\" SH-xref - format a cross-reference to an SH section
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.de SH-xref
--.ie n \{\
--.\}
--.toupper \\$*
--.el \{\
--\\$*
--.\}
--..
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.\" SH - level-one heading that works better for non-TTY output
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.de1 SH
--.\" put an extra blank line of space above the head in non-TTY output
--.if t \{\
--.sp 1
--.\}
--.sp \\n[PD]u
--.nr an-level 1
--.set-an-margin
--.nr an-prevailing-indent \\n[IN]
--.fi
--.in \\n[an-margin]u
--.ti 0
--.HTML-TAG ".NH \\n[an-level]"
--.it 1 an-trap
--.nr an-no-space-flag 1
--.nr an-break-flag 1
--\." make the size of the head bigger
--.ps +3
--.ft B
--.ne (2v + 1u)
--.ie n \{\
--.\" if n (TTY output), use uppercase
--.toupper \\$*
--.\}
--.el \{\
--.nr an-break-flag 0
--.\" if not n (not TTY), use normal case (not uppercase)
--\\$1
--.in \\n[an-margin]u
--.ti 0
--.\" if not n (not TTY), put a border/line under subheading
--.sp -.6
--\l'\n(.lu'
--.\}
--..
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.\" SS - level-two heading that works better for non-TTY output
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.de1 SS
--.sp \\n[PD]u
--.nr an-level 1
--.set-an-margin
--.nr an-prevailing-indent \\n[IN]
--.fi
--.in \\n[IN]u
--.ti \\n[SN]u
--.it 1 an-trap
--.nr an-no-space-flag 1
--.nr an-break-flag 1
--.ps \\n[PS-SS]u
--\." make the size of the head bigger
--.ps +2
--.ft B
--.ne (2v + 1u)
--.if \\n[.$] \&\\$*
--..
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.\" BB/BE - put background/screen (filled box) around block of text
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.de BB
--.if t \{\
--.sp -.5
--.br
--.in +2n
--.ll -2n
--.gcolor red
--.di BX
--.\}
--..
--.de EB
--.if t \{\
--.if "\\$2"adjust-for-leading-newline" \{\
--.sp -1
--.\}
--.br
--.di
--.in
--.ll
--.gcolor
--.nr BW \\n(.lu-\\n(.i
--.nr BH \\n(dn+.5v
--.ne \\n(BHu+.5v
--.ie "\\$2"adjust-for-leading-newline" \{\
--\M[\\$1]\h'1n'\v'+.5v'\D'P \\n(BWu 0 0 \\n(BHu -\\n(BWu 0 0 -\\n(BHu'\M[]
--.\}
--.el \{\
--\M[\\$1]\h'1n'\v'-.5v'\D'P \\n(BWu 0 0 \\n(BHu -\\n(BWu 0 0 -\\n(BHu'\M[]
--.\}
--.in 0
--.sp -.5v
--.nf
--.BX
--.in
--.sp .5v
--.fi
--.\}
--..
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.\" BM/EM - put colored marker in margin next to block of text
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.de BM
--.if t \{\
--.br
--.ll -2n
--.gcolor red
--.di BX
--.\}
--..
--.de EM
--.if t \{\
--.br
--.di
--.ll
--.gcolor
--.nr BH \\n(dn
--.ne \\n(BHu
--\M[\\$1]\D'P -.75n 0 0 \\n(BHu -(\\n[.i]u - \\n(INu - .75n) 0 0 -\\n(BHu'\M[]
--.in 0
--.nf
--.BX
--.in
--.fi
--.\}
--..
--.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
--.\" * set default formatting
--.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
--.\" disable hyphenation
--.nh
--.\" disable justification (adjust text to left margin only)
--.ad l
--.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
--.\" * MAIN CONTENT STARTS HERE *
--.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
--.SH "Name"
--pam.conf, pam.d \- PAM configuration files
--.SH "DESCRIPTION"
--.PP
--When a
--\fIPAM\fR
--aware privilege granting application is started, it activates its attachment to the PAM\-API\&. This activation performs a number of tasks, the most important being the reading of the configuration file(s):
--\FC/etc/pam\&.conf\F[]\&. Alternatively, this may be the contents of the
--\FC/etc/pam\&.d/\F[]
--directory\&. The presence of this directory will cause Linux\-PAM to ignore
--\FC/etc/pam\&.conf\F[]\&.
--.PP
--These files list the
--\fIPAM\fRs that will do the authentication tasks required by this service, and the appropriate behavior of the PAM\-API in the event that individual
--\fIPAM\fRs fail\&.
--.PP
--The syntax of the
--\FC/etc/pam\&.conf\F[]
--configuration file is as follows\&. The file is made up of a list of rules, each rule is typically placed on a single line, but may be extended with an escaped end of line: `\e<LF>\'\&. Comments are preceded with `#\' marks and extend to the next end of line\&.
--.PP
--The format of each rule is a space separated collection of tokens, the first three being case\-insensitive:
--.PP
--
--\fB service type control module\-path module\-arguments\fR
--.PP
--The syntax of files contained in the
--\FC/etc/pam\&.d/\F[]
--directory, are identical except for the absence of any
--\fIservice\fR
--field\&. In this case, the
--\fIservice\fR
--is the name of the file in the
--\FC/etc/pam\&.d/\F[]
--directory\&. This filename must be in lower case\&.
--.PP
--An important feature of
--\fIPAM\fR, is that a number of rules may be
--\fIstacked\fR
--to combine the services of a number of PAMs for a given authentication task\&.
--.PP
--The
--\fIservice\fR
--is typically the familiar name of the corresponding application:
--\fIlogin\fR
--and
--\fIsu\fR
--are good examples\&. The
--\fIservice\fR\-name,
--\fIother\fR, is reserved for giving
--\fIdefault\fR
--rules\&. Only lines that mention the current service (or in the absence of such, the
--\fIother\fR
--entries) will be associated with the given service\-application\&.
--.PP
--The
--\fItype\fR
--is the management group that the rule corresponds to\&. It is used to specify which of the management groups the subsequent module is to be associated with\&. Valid entries are:
--.PP
--account
--.RS 4
--this module type performs non\-authentication based account management\&. It is typically used to restrict/permit access to a service based on the time of day, currently available system resources (maximum number of users) or perhaps the location of the applicant user \-\- \'root\' login only on the console\&.
--.RE
--.PP
--auth
--.RS 4
--this module type provides two aspects of authenticating the user\&. Firstly, it establishes that the user is who they claim to be, by instructing the application to prompt the user for a password or other means of identification\&. Secondly, the module can grant group membership or other privileges through its credential granting properties\&.
--.RE
--.PP
--password
--.RS 4
--this module type is required for updating the authentication token associated with the user\&. Typically, there is one module for each \'challenge/response\' based authentication (auth) type\&.
--.RE
--.PP
--session
--.RS 4
--this module type is associated with doing things that need to be done for the user before/after they can be given service\&. Such things include the logging of information concerning the opening/closing of some data exchange with a user, mounting directories, etc\&.
--.RE
--.PP
--If the
--\fItype\fR
--value from the list above is prepended with a
--\fI\-\fR
--character the PAM library will not log to the system log if it is not possible to load the module because it is missing in the system\&. This can be useful especially for modules which are not always installed on the system and are not required for correct authentication and authorization of the login session\&.
--.PP
--The third field,
--\fIcontrol\fR, indicates the behavior of the PAM\-API should the module fail to succeed in its authentication task\&. There are two types of syntax for this control field: the simple one has a single simple keyword; the more complicated one involves a square\-bracketed selection of
--\fIvalue=action\fR
--pairs\&.
--.PP
--For the simple (historical) syntax valid
--\fIcontrol\fR
--values are:
--.PP
--required
--.RS 4
--failure of such a PAM will ultimately lead to the PAM\-API returning failure but only after the remaining
--\fIstacked\fR
--modules (for this
--\fIservice\fR
--and
--\fItype\fR) have been invoked\&.
--.RE
--.PP
--requisite
--.RS 4
--like
--\fIrequired\fR, however, in the case that such a module returns a failure, control is directly returned to the application\&. The return value is that associated with the first required or requisite module to fail\&. Note, this flag can be used to protect against the possibility of a user getting the opportunity to enter a password over an unsafe medium\&. It is conceivable that such behavior might inform an attacker of valid accounts on a system\&. This possibility should be weighed against the not insignificant concerns of exposing a sensitive password in a hostile environment\&.
--.RE
--.PP
--sufficient
--.RS 4
--success of such a module is enough to satisfy the authentication requirements of the stack of modules (if a prior
--\fIrequired\fR
--module has failed the success of this one is
--\fIignored\fR)\&. A failure of this module is not deemed as fatal to satisfying the application that this type has succeeded\&. If the module succeeds the PAM framework returns success to the application immediately without trying any other modules\&.
--.RE
--.PP
--optional
--.RS 4
--the success or failure of this module is only important if it is the only module in the stack associated with this
--\fIservice\fR+\fItype\fR\&.
--.RE
--.PP
--include
--.RS 4
--include all lines of given type from the configuration file specified as an argument to this control\&.
--.RE
--.PP
--substack
--.RS 4
--include all lines of given type from the configuration file specified as an argument to this control\&. This differs from
--\fIinclude\fR
--in that evaluation of the
--\fIdone\fR
--and
--\fIdie\fR
--actions in a substack does not cause skipping the rest of the complete module stack, but only of the substack\&. Jumps in a substack also can not make evaluation jump out of it, and the whole substack is counted as one module when the jump is done in a parent stack\&. The
--\fIreset\fR
--action will reset the state of a module stack to the state it was in as of beginning of the substack evaluation\&.
--.RE
--.PP
--For the more complicated syntax valid
--\fIcontrol\fR
--values have the following form:
--.sp
--.if n \{\
--.RS 4
--.\}
--.fam C
--.ps -1
--.nf
--.if t \{\
--.sp -1
--.\}
--.BB lightgray adjust-for-leading-newline
--.sp -1
--
-- [value1=action1 value2=action2 \&.\&.\&.]
--
--.EB lightgray adjust-for-leading-newline
--.if t \{\
--.sp 1
--.\}
--.fi
--.fam
--.ps +1
--.if n \{\
--.RE
--.\}
--.PP
--Where
--\fIvalueN\fR
--corresponds to the return code from the function invoked in the module for which the line is defined\&. It is selected from one of these:
--\fIsuccess\fR,
--\fIopen_err\fR,
--\fIsymbol_err\fR,
--\fIservice_err\fR,
--\fIsystem_err\fR,
--\fIbuf_err\fR,
--\fIperm_denied\fR,
--\fIauth_err\fR,
--\fIcred_insufficient\fR,
--\fIauthinfo_unavail\fR,
--\fIuser_unknown\fR,
--\fImaxtries\fR,
--\fInew_authtok_reqd\fR,
--\fIacct_expired\fR,
--\fIsession_err\fR,
--\fIcred_unavail\fR,
--\fIcred_expired\fR,
--\fIcred_err\fR,
--\fIno_module_data\fR,
--\fIconv_err\fR,
--\fIauthtok_err\fR,
--\fIauthtok_recover_err\fR,
--\fIauthtok_lock_busy\fR,
--\fIauthtok_disable_aging\fR,
--\fItry_again\fR,
--\fIignore\fR,
--\fIabort\fR,
--\fIauthtok_expired\fR,
--\fImodule_unknown\fR,
--\fIbad_item\fR,
--\fIconv_again\fR,
--\fIincomplete\fR, and
--\fIdefault\fR\&.
--.PP
--The last of these,
--\fIdefault\fR, implies \'all
--\fIvalueN\fR\'s not mentioned explicitly\&. Note, the full list of PAM errors is available in
--\FC/usr/include/security/_pam_types\&.h\F[]\&. The
--\fIactionN\fR
--can be: an unsigned integer,
--\fIn\fR, signifying an action of \'jump over the next
--\fIn\fR
--modules in the stack\'; or take one of the following forms:
--.PP
--ignore
--.RS 4
--when used with a stack of modules, the module\'s return status will not contribute to the return code the application obtains\&.
--.RE
--.PP
--bad
--.RS 4
--this action indicates that the return code should be thought of as indicative of the module failing\&. If this module is the first in the stack to fail, its status value will be used for that of the whole stack\&.
--.RE
--.PP
--die
--.RS 4
--equivalent to bad with the side effect of terminating the module stack and PAM immediately returning to the application\&.
--.RE
--.PP
--ok
--.RS 4
--this tells PAM that the administrator thinks this return code should contribute directly to the return code of the full stack of modules\&. In other words, if the former state of the stack would lead to a return of
--\fIPAM_SUCCESS\fR, the module\'s return code will override this value\&. Note, if the former state of the stack holds some value that is indicative of a modules failure, this \'ok\' value will not be used to override that value\&.
--.RE
--.PP
--done
--.RS 4
--equivalent to ok with the side effect of terminating the module stack and PAM immediately returning to the application\&.
--.RE
--.PP
--reset
--.RS 4
--clear all memory of the state of the module stack and start again with the next stacked module\&.
--.RE
--.PP
--Each of the four keywords: required; requisite; sufficient; and optional, have an equivalent expression in terms of the [\&.\&.\&.] syntax\&. They are as follows:
--.PP
--required
--.RS 4
--[success=ok new_authtok_reqd=ok ignore=ignore default=bad]
--.RE
--.PP
--requisite
--.RS 4
--[success=ok new_authtok_reqd=ok ignore=ignore default=die]
--.RE
--.PP
--sufficient
--.RS 4
--[success=done new_authtok_reqd=done default=ignore]
--.RE
--.PP
--optional
--.RS 4
--[success=ok new_authtok_reqd=ok default=ignore]
--.RE
--.PP
--
--\fImodule\-path\fR
--is either the full filename of the PAM to be used by the application (it begins with a \'/\'), or a relative pathname from the default module location:
--\FC/lib/security/\F[]
--or
--\FC/lib64/security/\F[], depending on the architecture\&.
--.PP
--
--\fImodule\-arguments\fR
--are a space separated list of tokens that can be used to modify the specific behavior of the given PAM\&. Such arguments will be documented for each individual module\&. Note, if you wish to include spaces in an argument, you should surround that argument with square brackets\&.
--.sp
--.if n \{\
--.RS 4
--.\}
--.fam C
--.ps -1
--.nf
--.if t \{\
--.sp -1
--.\}
--.BB lightgray adjust-for-leading-newline
--.sp -1
--
-- squid auth required pam_mysql\&.so user=passwd_query passwd=mada \e
-- db=eminence [query=select user_name from internet_service \e
-- where user_name=\'%u\' and password=PASSWORD(\'%p\') and \e
-- service=\'web_proxy\']
--
--.EB lightgray adjust-for-leading-newline
--.if t \{\
--.sp 1
--.\}
--.fi
--.fam
--.ps +1
--.if n \{\
--.RE
--.\}
--.PP
--When using this convention, you can include `[\' characters inside the string, and if you wish to include a `]\' character inside the string that will survive the argument parsing, you should use `\e]\'\&. In other words:
--.sp
--.if n \{\
--.RS 4
--.\}
--.fam C
--.ps -1
--.nf
--.if t \{\
--.sp -1
--.\}
--.BB lightgray adjust-for-leading-newline
--.sp -1
--
-- [\&.\&.[\&.\&.\e]\&.\&.] \-\-> \&.\&.[\&.\&.]\&.\&.
--
--.EB lightgray adjust-for-leading-newline
--.if t \{\
--.sp 1
--.\}
--.fi
--.fam
--.ps +1
--.if n \{\
--.RE
--.\}
--.PP
--Any line in (one of) the configuration file(s), that is not formatted correctly, will generally tend (erring on the side of caution) to make the authentication process fail\&. A corresponding error is written to the system log files with a call to
--\fBsyslog\fR(3)\&.
--.PP
--More flexible than the single configuration file is it to configure libpam via the contents of the
--\FC/etc/pam\&.d/\F[]
--directory\&. In this case the directory is filled with files each of which has a filename equal to a service\-name (in lower\-case): it is the personal configuration file for the named service\&.
--.PP
--The syntax of each file in /etc/pam\&.d/ is similar to that of the
--\FC/etc/pam\&.conf\F[]
--file and is made up of lines of the following form:
--.sp
--.if n \{\
--.RS 4
--.\}
--.fam C
--.ps -1
--.nf
--.if t \{\
--.sp -1
--.\}
--.BB lightgray adjust-for-leading-newline
--.sp -1
--
--type control module\-path module\-arguments
--
--.EB lightgray adjust-for-leading-newline
--.if t \{\
--.sp 1
--.\}
--.fi
--.fam
--.ps +1
--.if n \{\
--.RE
--.\}
--.PP
--The only difference being that the service\-name is not present\&. The service\-name is of course the name of the given configuration file\&. For example,
--\FC/etc/pam\&.d/login\F[]
--contains the configuration for the
--\fBlogin\fR
--service\&.
--.SH "SEE ALSO"
--.PP
--
--\fBpam\fR(3),
--\fBPAM\fR(8),
--\fBpam_start\fR(3)
Index: pam.deb/doc/man/pam_end.3
===================================================================
--- pam.deb.orig/doc/man/pam_end.3
@@ -4150,243 +3594,6 @@ Index: pam.deb/doc/man/pam_sm_open_session.3
.SH "DESCRIPTION"
.PP
The
-Index: pam.deb/doc/man/pam_xauth_data.3
-===================================================================
---- pam.deb.orig/doc/man/pam_xauth_data.3
-+++ /dev/null
-@@ -1,232 +0,0 @@
--.\" Title: pam_xauth_data
--.\" Author: [FIXME: author] [see http://docbook.sf.net/el/author]
--.\" Generator: DocBook XSL Stylesheets v1.74.0 <http://docbook.sf.net/>
--.\" Date: 03/02/2009
--.\" Manual: Linux-PAM Manual
--.\" Source: Linux-PAM Manual
--.\" Language: English
--.\"
--.TH "PAM_XAUTH_DATA" "3" "03/02/2009" "Linux-PAM Manual" "Linux-PAM Manual"
--.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
--.\" * (re)Define some macros
--.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.\" toupper - uppercase a string (locale-aware)
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.de toupper
--.tr aAbBcCdDeEfFgGhHiIjJkKlLmMnNoOpPqQrRsStTuUvVwWxXyYzZ
--\\$*
--.tr aabbccddeeffgghhiijjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz
--..
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.\" SH-xref - format a cross-reference to an SH section
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.de SH-xref
--.ie n \{\
--.\}
--.toupper \\$*
--.el \{\
--\\$*
--.\}
--..
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.\" SH - level-one heading that works better for non-TTY output
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.de1 SH
--.\" put an extra blank line of space above the head in non-TTY output
--.if t \{\
--.sp 1
--.\}
--.sp \\n[PD]u
--.nr an-level 1
--.set-an-margin
--.nr an-prevailing-indent \\n[IN]
--.fi
--.in \\n[an-margin]u
--.ti 0
--.HTML-TAG ".NH \\n[an-level]"
--.it 1 an-trap
--.nr an-no-space-flag 1
--.nr an-break-flag 1
--\." make the size of the head bigger
--.ps +3
--.ft B
--.ne (2v + 1u)
--.ie n \{\
--.\" if n (TTY output), use uppercase
--.toupper \\$*
--.\}
--.el \{\
--.nr an-break-flag 0
--.\" if not n (not TTY), use normal case (not uppercase)
--\\$1
--.in \\n[an-margin]u
--.ti 0
--.\" if not n (not TTY), put a border/line under subheading
--.sp -.6
--\l'\n(.lu'
--.\}
--..
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.\" SS - level-two heading that works better for non-TTY output
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.de1 SS
--.sp \\n[PD]u
--.nr an-level 1
--.set-an-margin
--.nr an-prevailing-indent \\n[IN]
--.fi
--.in \\n[IN]u
--.ti \\n[SN]u
--.it 1 an-trap
--.nr an-no-space-flag 1
--.nr an-break-flag 1
--.ps \\n[PS-SS]u
--\." make the size of the head bigger
--.ps +2
--.ft B
--.ne (2v + 1u)
--.if \\n[.$] \&\\$*
--..
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.\" BB/BE - put background/screen (filled box) around block of text
--.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--.de BB
--.if t \{\
--.sp -.5
--.br
--.in +2n
--.ll -2n
--.gcolor red
--.di BX
--.\}
--..
--.de EB
--.if t \{\
--.if "\\$2"adjust-for-leading-newline" \{\
--.sp -1
--.\}
--.br
--.di
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--.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
--.SH "Name"
--pam_xauth_data \- structure containing X authentication data
--.SH "Synopsis"
--.sp
--.ft B
--.fam C
--.ps -1
--.nf
--#include <security/pam_appl\&.h>
--.fi
--.fam
--.ps +1
--.ft
--.sp
--.fam C
--.ps -1
--.nf
--struct pam_xauth_data {
-- int namelen;
-- char *name;
-- int datalen;
-- char *data;
--};
--
--.fi
--.fam
--.ps +1
--.SH "DESCRIPTION"
--.PP
--The
--\fBpam_xauth_data\fR
--structure contains X authentication data used to make a connection to an X display\&. Using this mechanism, an application can communicate X authentication data to PAM service modules\&. This allows modules to make a connection to the user\'s X display in order to label the user\'s session on login, display visual feedback or for other purposes\&.
--.PP
--The
--\fIname\fR
--field contains the name of the authentication method, such as "MIT\-MAGIC\-COOKIE\-1"\&. The
--\fInamelen\fR
--field contains the length of this string, not including the trailing NUL character\&.
--.PP
--The
--\fIdata\fR
--field contains the authentication method\-specific data corresponding to the specified name\&. The
--\fIdatalen\fR
--field contains its length in bytes\&.
--.PP
--The X authentication data can be changed with the
--\fIPAM_XAUTH_DATA\fR
--item\&. It can be queried and set with
--\fBpam_get_item\fR(3)
--and
--\fBpam_set_item \fR(3)
--respectively\&. The value used to set it should be a pointer to a pam_xauth_data structure\&. An internal copy of both the structure itself and its fields is made by PAM when setting the item\&.
--.SH "SEE ALSO"
--.PP
--
--\fBpam_start\fR(3),
--\fBpam_get_item\fR(3),
--.SH "STANDARDS"
--.PP
--The
--\fBpam_xauth_data\fR
--structure and
--\fIPAM_XAUTH_DATA\fR
--item are Linux\-PAM extensions\&.
Index: pam.deb/modules/pam_tally2/pam_tally2.8
===================================================================
--- pam.deb.orig/modules/pam_tally2/pam_tally2.8