Involved Projects and Packages
Kerberos V5 is a trusted-third-party network authentication system,
which can improve your network's security by eliminating the insecure
practice of clear text passwords.
Kerberos V5 is a trusted-third-party network authentication system,
which can improve your network's security by eliminating the insecure
practice of clear text passwords.
Kerberos V5 is a trusted-third-party network authentication
system,which can improve your network's security by eliminating the
insecurepractice of clear text passwords. This package includes
extended documentation for MIT Kerberos.
Kerberos V5 is a trusted-third-party network authentication system,
which can improve your network's security by eliminating the insecure
practice of clear text passwords.
A tray applet for watching, renewing, and reinitializing Kerberos
tickets.
libHX is a C library (with some C++ bindings available) that provides
data structures and functions commonly needed, such as maps, deques,
linked lists, string formatting and autoresizing, option and config
file parsing, type checking casts and more.
libHX aids in quickly writing up C and C++ data processing programs,
by consolidating tasks that often happen to be open-coded, such as
(simple) config file reading, option parsing, directory traversal,
and others, into a library. The focus is on reducing the amount of
time (and secondarily, the amount of code) a developer has to spend
for otherwise implementing such.
LiMaL is an C++ framework enhancement for BloCXX. This package contains
the LiMaL core library which include some basic functionality like
logging and file handling.
Limal pluglib for AppArmor that provides hooks to enable and disable
the AppArmor service.
Scripts and templates for developing LiMaL modules and components.
Required for rebuilding the existing LiMaL modules and components.
LiMaL NFS Server Library provides methods for managing a NFS Server.
PAM (Pluggable Authentication Modules) is a system security tool that
allows system administrators to set authentication policies without
having to recompile programs that do authentication.
PAM (Pluggable Authentication Modules) is a system security tool that
allows system administrators to set authentication policies without
having to recompile programs that do authentication.
This package contains additional PAM Modules, which are necessary for a
working SuSE Linux System: pam_unix2, pam_pwcheck and pam_homecheck
The pam_ccreds module provides the means for Linux workstations to
locally authenticate using an enterprise identity when the network is
unavailable. Used in conjunction with the nss_updatedb utility, it
provides a mechanism for disconnected use of network directories.
PAM (Pluggable Authentication Modules) is a system security tool that
allows system administrators to set authentication policies without
having to recompile programs that do authentication.
pam_chroot is a Linux-PAM module that allows a user to be chrooted in
auth, account, or session.
This PAM module supports authentication against a Kerberos KDC. It also
supports updating your Kerberos password.
PAM (Pluggable Authentication Modules) is a system security tool that
allows system administrators to set authentication policies without
having to recompile programs that do authentication.
pam_mktemp is a PAM module which may be used with a PAM-aware login
service to provide per-user private directories under /tmp as a part of
PAM session or account management.
This module is aimed at environments with central file servers that a
user wishes to mount on login and unmount on logout, such as
(semi-)diskless stations where many users can logon.
The module also supports mounting local filesystems of any kind the
normal mount utility supports, with extra code to make sure certain
volumes are set up properly because often they need more than just a
mount call, such as encrypted volumes. This includes SMB/CIFS, FUSE,
dm-crypt and LUKS.
Author(s):
----------
Jan Engelhardt
PAM (Pluggable Authentication Modules) is a system security tool that
allows system administrators to set authentication policies without
having to recompile programs that do authentication.
pam_passwdqc is a simple password strength checking module forPAM-aware
password changing programs. In addition to checking regular passwords,
it offers support for passphrases and can provide randomly generated
ones.
Module pam_smb is a PAM module which allows authentication of UNIX
users using an NT server.
PAM (Pluggable Authentication Modules) is a system security tool that
allows system administrators to set authentication policies without
having to recompile programs that do authentication.
pam_userpass uses PAM binary prompts to ask the application for the
username and password.
A tool for automating interactive programs
The File::Tail module is designed for reading files which are
continously appended to (the name comes from the tail -f directive).
Usually such files are logfiles of some description.
This is the PERL POSIX compliant stty.
'IO::Tty' is used internally by 'IO::Pty' to create a pseudo-tty. You
wouldn't want to use it directly except to import constants, use 'IO::Pty'.
For a list of importable constants, see the IO::Tty::Constant manpage.
Windows is now supported, but ONLY under the Cygwin environment, see the
http://sources.redhat.com/cygwin/ manpage.
Please note that pty creation is very system-dependend. From my experience,
any modern POSIX system should be fine. Find below a list of systems that
'IO::Tty' should work on. A more detailed table (which is slowly getting
out-of-date) is available from the project pages document manager at
SourceForge the http://sourceforge.net/projects/expectperl/ manpage.
If you have problems on your system and your system is listed in the
"verified" list, you probably have some non-standard setup, e.g. you
compiled your Linux-kernel yourself and disabled ptys (bummer!). Please ask
your friendly sysadmin for help.
If your system is not listed, unpack the latest version of 'IO::Tty', do a
''perl Makefile.PL; make; make test; uname -a'' and send me
(_RGiersig@cpan.org_) the results and I'll see what I can deduce from that.
There are chances that it will work right out-of-the-box...
If it's working on your system, please send me a short note with details
(version number, distribution, etc. 'uname -a' and 'perl -V' is a good
start; also, the output from "perl Makefile.PL" contains a lot of
interesting info, so please include that as well) so I can get an overview.
Thanks!
Some commonly used perl modules don't have SSL support at all, even if the
protocol supports it. Others have SSL support, but most of them don't do
proper checking of the server's certificate.
The 'Net::SSLGlue::*' modules try to add SSL support or proper certificate
checking to these modules. Currently support for the following modules is
available:
* Net::SMTP - add SSL from beginning or using STARTTLS
* Net::LDAP - add proper certificate checking
* LWP - add proper certificate checking