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- Q1369730 subject Q13300410.
- Q1369730 subject Q8257707.
- Q1369730 subject Q8407568.
- Q1369730 subject Q8408039.
- Q1369730 subject Q8700919.
- Q1369730 abstract "A pluggable authentication module (PAM) is a mechanism to integrate multiple low-level authentication schemes into a high-level application programming interface (API). It allows programs that rely on authentication to be written independently of the underlying authentication scheme. PAM was first proposed by Sun Microsystems in an Open Software Foundation Request for Comments (RFC) 86.0 dated October 1995. It was adopted as the authentication framework of the Common Desktop Environment. As a stand-alone open-source infrastructure, PAM first appeared in Red Hat Linux 3.0.4 in August 1996. PAM is currently supported in the AIX operating system, DragonFly BSD, FreeBSD, HP-UX, Linux, Mac OS X, NetBSD and Solaris.Since no central standard of PAM behavior exists, there was a later attempt to standardize PAM as part of the X/Open UNIX standardization process, resulting in the X/Open Single Sign-on (XSSO) standard. This standard was not ratified, but the standard draft has served as a reference point for later PAM implementations (for example, OpenPAM).".
- Q1369730 wikiPageExternalLink pam-1.html.
- Q1369730 wikiPageExternalLink pam.php.
- Q1369730 wikiPageExternalLink article.aspx?p=20968.
- Q1369730 wikiPageExternalLink rfc86.0.txt.gz.
- Q1369730 wikiPageExternalLink 2120.
- Q1369730 wikiPageWikiLink Q1190931.
- Q1369730 wikiPageWikiLink Q13300410.
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- Q1369730 wikiPageWikiLink Q34236.
- Q1369730 wikiPageWikiLink Q388.
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- Q1369730 wikiPageWikiLink Q8257707.
- Q1369730 wikiPageWikiLink Q8407568.
- Q1369730 wikiPageWikiLink Q8408039.
- Q1369730 wikiPageWikiLink Q847593.
- Q1369730 wikiPageWikiLink Q8700919.
- Q1369730 wikiPageWikiLink Q977772.
- Q1369730 comment "A pluggable authentication module (PAM) is a mechanism to integrate multiple low-level authentication schemes into a high-level application programming interface (API). It allows programs that rely on authentication to be written independently of the underlying authentication scheme. PAM was first proposed by Sun Microsystems in an Open Software Foundation Request for Comments (RFC) 86.0 dated October 1995. It was adopted as the authentication framework of the Common Desktop Environment.".
- Q1369730 label "Pluggable authentication module".