Slackware does not include pam in its distribution.  It isn't installed on my 
system as far as I can tell.  

Some other system information, which I hadn't posted because I didn't think it 
would be relevant.  I'm using Kerberos 1.8.3 on Slackware 13.1 and Kerberos 1.8 
on the Slackware 13.0 boot.  The machine is 32 bit x86.   My afs principal name 
is [email protected] instead of the recommended 
afs/[email protected].

Tom

--- On Fri, 1/21/11, Marc Dionne <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Marc Dionne <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [OpenAFS] PAG lost after switching users on Slackware 13.1 box
To: "Tom Mukunnemkeril" <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]
Date: Friday, January 21, 2011, 3:05 AM

On Thu, Jan 20, 2011 at 9:17 PM, Tom Mukunnemkeril
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Hi all,
>
> For the past few months I've been debugging a problem where my webserver 
> cannot access files in AFS, despite using pagsh and kstart when I start up 
> apache.  I had this working on Slackware 13.0 but have been unable to make 
> this work on Slackware 13.1.
>
> So I did a simple test of just logging as root, running pagsh, getting 
> kerberos tickets and tokens and su to another user.  As expected, in 
> Slackware 13.0 the tokens remained, in the Slackware 13.1, the tokens did not.

Has anything changed in the pam configuration?  For instance a
pam_keyinit in the wrong spot can wipe the session keyring and result
in a lost PAG.

Marc
_______________________________________________
OpenAFS-info mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.openafs.org/mailman/listinfo/openafs-info



      

Reply via email to