Do you mean in the file /etc/pam.d/ssh?

Hans


On Thursday 27 March 2008 15:42, Georges A.K. wrote:
> You'll have to disable common-auth in /etc/pam.d and manually enter
> the authentications you want, for example:
> auth    required        pam_env.so
> auth    required        pam_unix2.so
>
> I had already done it and it worked.
>
> Georges.
>
> On Thu, Mar 27, 2008 at 11:48 AM, J.L.H.W. Linkels <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hello all,
> >
> >  fprint works great otherwise, but when I am logged in remotely thru SSH
> > and want to become root, PAM asks for a fingerprint scan. I only can
> > fulfill that request by going over to the laptop and swipe my finger.
> >
> >  Logging in remotely thru SSH is apparently detected and possible, no
> > finger print asked. Obviously logging in as root remotely is disabled, so
> > I must log in as user first and then do 'su'.
> >
> >  I am sure this is not so much a bug in fprint as something which has to
> > be configured. But how can you configure that 'su' must not use fprint
> > authentication when you are connected remotely? How can PAM detect that
> > you ssh in instead of using an xterm? And once this is detected, how do
> > you exclude fprint authentication? I found ways to include authentication
> > in the various /etc/pam.d file, but not how to exclude something. In each
> > file 'common-auth' is included, but 'common-auth' contains the line which
> > enables pam_fprint.
> >
> >  Thanks
> >  jlinkels
> >
> >  _______________________________________________
> >  fprint mailing list
> >  [email protected]
> >  http://lists.reactivated.net/mailman/listinfo/fprint
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