pam_sm_setcred(3) - Linux man page
Name
pam_sm_setcred - PAM service function to alter credentials
Synopsis
#define PAM_SM_AUTH #include <security/pam_modules.h>
- PAM_EXTERN int pam_sm_setcred(pam_handle_t *pamh, int flags, int argc, const char **argv);
Description
The pam_sm_setcred function is the service module's implementation of the pam_setcred(3) interface.
This function performs the task of altering the credentials of the user with respect to the corresponding authorization scheme. Generally, an authentication module may have access to more information about a user than their authentication token. This function is used to make such information available to the application. It should only be called after the user has been authenticated but before a session has been established.
Valid flags, which may be logically OR'd with PAM_SILENT, are:
- PAM_SILENT
- Do not emit any messages.
- PAM_DELETE_CRED
- Delete the credentials associated with the authentication service.
- PAM_REINITIALIZE_CRED
- Reinitialize the user credentials.
- PAM_REFRESH_CRED
- Extend the lifetime of the user credentials.
- The way the auth stack is navigated in order to evaluate the pam_setcred() function call, independent of the pam_sm_setcred() return codes, is exactly the same way that it was navigated when evaluating the pam_authenticate() library call. Typically, if a stack entry was ignored in evaluating pam_authenticate(), it will be ignored when libpam evaluates the pam_setcred() function call. Otherwise, the return codes from each module specific pam_sm_setcred() call are treated as required.
Return Values
PAM_CRED_UNAVAIL
- This module cannot retrieve the user's credentials.
- PAM_CRED_EXPIRED
- The user's credentials have expired.
- PAM_CRED_ERR
- This module was unable to set the credentials of the user.
- PAM_SUCCESS
- The user credential was successfully set.
- PAM_USER_UNKNOWN
- The user is not known to this authentication module.
- These, non-PAM_SUCCESS, return values will typically lead to the credential stack failing. The first such error will dominate in the return value of pam_setcred().
See Also
pam(3), pam_authenticate(3), pam_setcred(3), pam_sm_authenticate(3), pam_strerror(3), pam(8)
