Simon Wilkinson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > The best way I am aware of is to get your Kerberos 5 credentials using a > 'normal' pam_krb5, running in the auth section of the stack. Then, use a > PAM AFS session module to use these to get AFS credentials at session > establishment (in the 'session' part of the PAM stack). There are two > such modules of which I am currently aware:
> * Doug Engert's pam_afs2 > (ftp://achilles.ctd.anl.gov/pub/DEE/pam_afs2-0.1.tar and > ftp://achilles.ctd.anl.gov/pub/DEE/gafstoken-0.2.tar) > * Russ Allbery's pam_openafs_session > (http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/software/pam-afs-session/) > We're currently using pam_afs2 here - I think it's likely we'll > investigate moving to pam_openafs_session for our next major release. Very minor correction: my module is pam-afs-session. pam_openafs_session was another module written by Sam Hartman and mostly used in Debian, which is being superseded with pam-afs-session for the Debian lenny release. -- Russ Allbery ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) <http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/> _______________________________________________ OpenAFS-info mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.openafs.org/mailman/listinfo/openafs-info
