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Full Discussion: failed login time limit
Operating Systems AIX failed login time limit Post 302074620 by zuessh on Wednesday 24th of May 2006 02:19:29 PM
Old 05-24-2006
Yes, I can reset the user without a problem. I was just curious as to how long AIX help failed login attempts. I too was under the impression it was reset after each successful login, but I tested this by entering my password incorrectly 3 times, then entered it correctly. I then entered it again incorreclty 3 times and it locked my account (failed logins is set to 5). So it appears it at least holds the failed logins for 5 minutes or so (that is how long it took to me test).
 

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FAILLOG(8)						      System Manager's Manual							FAILLOG(8)

NAME
faillog - examine faillog and set login failure limits SYNOPSIS
faillog [-u login-name] [-a] [-t days] [-m max] [-pr] DESCRIPTION
faillog formats the contents of the failure log, /var/log/faillog, and maintains failure counts and limits. The order of the arguments to faillog is significant. Each argument is processed immediately in the order given. The -p flag causes failure entries to be printed in UID order. Entering -u login-name flag will cause the failure record for login-name only to be printed. Entering -t days will cause only the failures more recent than days to be printed. The -t flag overrides the use of -u. The -a flag causes all users to be selected. When used with the -p flag, this option selects all users who have ever had a login failure. It is meaningless with the -r flag. The -r flag is used to reset the count of login failures. Write access to /var/log/faillog is required for this option. Entering -u login-name will cause only the failure count for login-name to be reset. The -m flag is used to set the maximum number of login failures before the account is disabled. Write access to /var/log/faillog is required for this option. Entering -m max will cause all accounts to be disabled after max failed logins occur. This may be modified with -u login-name to limit this function to login-name only. Selecting a max value of 0 has the effect of not placing a limit on the number of failed logins. The maximum failure count should always be 0 for root to prevent a denial of services attack against the system. Options may be combined in virtually any fashion. Each -p, -r, and -m option will cause immediate execution using any -u or -t modifier. CAVEATS
faillog only prints out users with no successful login since the last failure. To print out a user who has had a successful login since their last failure, you must explicitly request the user with the -u flag, or print out all users with the -a flag. Some systems may replace /var/log with /var/adm or /usr/adm. FILES
/var/log/faillog - failure logging file SEE ALSO
login(1), faillog(5) AUTHOR
Julianne Frances Haugh (jockgrrl@ix.netcom.com) FAILLOG(8)
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