diff options
author | Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek <zbyszek@in.waw.pl> | 2013-09-11 14:31:14 -0400 |
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committer | Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek <zbyszek@in.waw.pl> | 2013-09-11 15:35:06 -0400 |
commit | 5c390a4ae0d383b2003074ed011d47876c7e630c (patch) | |
tree | 26e32d558024e07feab46f28dcf759f0c15baccc /units | |
parent | 7b617155b50fdaad5d06359eb03e98f0c7b3087b (diff) |
Add pam configuration to allow user sessions to work out of the box
systemd-logind will start user@.service. user@.service unit uses
PAM with service name 'systemd-user' to perform account and session
managment tasks. Previously, the name was 'systemd-shared', it is
now changed to 'systemd-user'.
Most PAM installations use one common setup for different callers.
Based on a quick poll, distributions fall into two camps: those that
have system-auth (Redhat, Fedora, CentOS, Arch, Gentoo, Mageia,
Mandriva), and those that have common-auth (Debian, Ubuntu, OpenSUSE).
Distributions that have system-auth have just one configuration file
that contains auth, password, account, and session blocks, and
distributions that have common-auth also have common-session,
common-password, and common-account. It is thus impossible to use one
configuration file which would work for everybody. systemd-user now
refers to system-auth, because it seems that the approach with one
file is more popular and also easier, so let's follow that.
Diffstat (limited to 'units')
-rw-r--r-- | units/user@.service.in | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/units/user@.service.in b/units/user@.service.in index 8f9a3b3347..3f8b59d07f 100644 --- a/units/user@.service.in +++ b/units/user@.service.in @@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ After=systemd-user-sessions.service [Service] User=%I -PAMName=systemd-shared +PAMName=systemd-user Type=notify ExecStart=-@rootlibexecdir@/systemd --user Environment=DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS=unix:path=/run/user/%I/dbus/user_bus_socket |