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pam_mount(8)			pam_mount 2.14			  pam_mount(8)

Name
       pam_mount - A PAM module that can mount volumes for a user session

Overview
       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 and where stati‐
       cally mounting the entire /home from a server is a  security  risk,  or
       listing all possible volumes in /etc/fstab is not feasible.

       ·   Users can define their own list of volumes without having to change
	   (possibly non-writable) global config files.

       ·   Single sign-on feature - the user needs to type the	password  just
	   once (at login)

       ·   Transparent mount process

       ·   No stored passwords

       ·   Volumes  are	 unmounted on logout, freeing system resources and not
	   leaving data exposed.

       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.

       If you intend to use pam_mount to  protect  volumes  on	your  computer
       using  an  encrypted filesystem system, please know that there are many
       other issues you need to consider in order to protect  your  data.  For
       example,	 you  probably	want to disable or encrypt your swap partition
       (the cryptoswap can help you do this). Do not assume a system is secure
       without carefully considering potential threats.

Configuration
       The   primary   configuration   file   for   the	 pam_mount  module  is
       pam_mount.conf.xml.   On	 most  platforms  this	file  is   read	  from
       /etc/security/pam_mount.conf.xml.  On  OpenBSD pam_mount reads its con‐
       figuration file from  /etc/pam_mount.conf.xml.	See  pam_mount.conf(5)
       documenting its use.

       Individual  users  may define additional volumes to mount if allowed by
       pam_mount.conf.xml (usually ~/.pam_mount.conf.xml). The volume  keyword
       is the only valid keyword in these per-user configuration files. If the
       luserconf parameter is set in pam_mount.conf.xml, allowing user-defined
       volume,	then  users  may  mount and unmount any volume they own at any
       mount point they own. On some filesystem configurations this may	 be  a
       security	 flaw  so  user-defined volumes are not allowed by the example
       pam_mount.conf.xml distributed with pam_mount.

PAM configuration
       In addition, you must include two entries in  the  system's  applicable
       /etc/pam.d/service config files, as the following example shows:

		  auth	   required  pam_securetty.so
		  auth	   required  pam_pwdb.so shadow nullok
		  auth	   required  pam_nologin.so
	      +++ auth	   optional  pam_mount.so
		  account  required  pam_pwdb.so
		  password required  pam_cracklib.so
		  password required  pam_pwdb.so shadow nullok use_authtok
		  session  required  pam_pwdb.so
		  session  optional  pam_console.so
	      +++ session  optional  pam_mount.so

       When "sufficient" is used in the second column, you must make sure that
       pam_mount is added before this entry. Otherwise pam_mount will not  get
       executed	 should	 a  previous  PAM module succeed. Also be aware of the
       "include" statements. These make PAM look into the specified  file.  If
       there is a "sufficient" statement, then the pam_mount entry must either
       be in the included file before the "sufficient" statement or before the
       "include" statement.

       If  you use pam_ldap, pam_winbind, or any other authentication services
       that make use of PAM's sufficient keyword, model your configuration  on
       the following order:

	      ···
	      account sufficient  pam_ldap.so
	      auth    required	  pam_mount.so
	      auth    sufficient  pam_ldap.so use_first_pass
	      auth    required	  pam_unix.so use_first_pass
	      session optional	  pam_mount.so
	      ···

       This allows for:

       1.  pam_mount,  as  the first "auth" module, will prompt for a password
	   and export it to the PAM system.

       2.  pam_ldap will use the password from	the  PAM  system  to  try  and
	   authenticate the user. If this succedes, the user will be authenti‐
	   cated. If it fails, pam_unix will try to authenticate.

       3.  pam_unix will try to authenticate the user if pam_ldap  failed.  If
	   pam_unix fails, then the authentication will be refused (due to the
	   "required").

       Alternatively, the following is possible (thanks to Andrew  Morgan  for
       the hint!):

	      auth [success=2 default=ignore] pam_unix2.so
	      auth [success=1 default=ignore] pam_ldap.so use_first_pass
	      auth requisite pam_deny.so
	      auth optional pam_mount.so

       It  may	seem  odd,  but	 the first three lines will make it so that at
       least one of pam_unix2 or pam_ldap has to  succeed.  As	you  can  see,
       pam_mount will be run after successful authentification with these sub‐
       systems.

Encrypted disks
       pam_mount supports a few types of crypto. The most  common  are	encfs,
       dm-crypt and dm-crypt+LUKS.

       The first one uses the FUSE layer; files within the encfs container are
       stored as single encrypted files on the host in	a  previously-existing
       directory.  If  you  store  lots	 of files, it is recommended to have a
       lower filesystem that is strong in this area, such  as  xfs,  but  some
       software and/or your partitioning decisions may force you to use a dif‐
       ferent fs. The 1:1 mapping of files also allows encrypted files	to  be
       reasonably  efficiently rsync'ed for example without having to open the
       encrypted container. Creation is done through the encfs(1) tool.

       dm-crypt provides whole-filesystem/entire-partition encryption. You can
       also create a container file, but the idea is that it is represented as
       a block device on which you still have to create a filesystem. In fact,
       this  way  you  can select a filesystem of your choice. The downside is
       that shrinking is often not possible (there is no such issue  in	 encfs
       because it uses the lower fs). Suitable dm-crypt containers (and auxil‐
       iary files), using block devices or plain files, can be	created	 using
       the pmt-ehd(8) tool.

       pmt-ehd	creates	 filesystem  key  material  which is a bunch of random
       bytes that will be used to en-/decrypt the volume. This material itself
       is  encrypted  with  your  own  password - this is done so that you can
       change the password without having to reencrypt all of your data.

       LUKS is an extension for dm-crypt to support multi-password containers.
       Unless  you  specifically  need	it, the above two solutions are recom‐
       mended.

       NOTE: The key file that pmt-ehd(8) will create represents the  filesys‐
       tem  key	 material  as encrypted with your password. It is thus safe to
       store this on an unsecured filesystem.

Troubleshooting
       To ensure that your system and, possibly, the  remote  server  are  all
       properly configured, you should try to mount all or some of the volumes
       by  hand,  using	 the  same  commands  and  mount  points  provided  in
       pam_mount.conf.xml. This will save you a lot of grief, since it is more
       difficult to debug the mounting process via pam_mount.

       If you can mount the volumes by	hand  but  it  is  not	happening  via
       pam_mount,   you	  may	want   to   enable   the   "debug"  option  in
       pam_mount.conf.xml to see what is happening.

       Verify if the user owns the mount point and has sufficient  permissions
       over  that.  pam_mount  will  verify  this and will refuse to mount the
       remote volume if the user does not own that directory.

       If pam_mount is having trouble unmounting  volumes  upon	 logging  out,
       enable  the  debug variable. This causes pam_mount to run ofl on logout
       and write its output to the system's log.

Authors
       W. Michael Petullo

       Jan Engelhardt (current maintainer)

Community Support
       The following two forms of communication are available. The  maintainer
       has no preference, though you will reach more users who could answer by
       means of the mailing list.

       Mailing List:
	      http://sf.net/mail/?group_id=41452

       Bug Tracker (no registration needed):
	      http://sf.net/tracker/?group_id=41452

pam_mount 2.14			  2013-08-27			  pam_mount(8)
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